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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50510 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50510)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boys' Book of Rulers, by Lydia Hoyt Farmer
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Boys' Book of Rulers
-
-Author: Lydia Hoyt Farmer
-
-Release Date: November 20, 2015 [EBook #50510]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOYS' BOOK OF RULERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Emmy, Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CHARLEMAGNE.]
-
-
-
-THE BOYS’ BOOK OF FAMOUS RULERS.
-
- BY
- LYDIA HOYT FARMER,
- AUTHOR OF “THE STORY OF SCIENCE,” “THE PRINCE OF THE FLAMING
- STAR,” “WHAT SHE MADE OF HER LIFE,” ETC.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK:
- THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.,
- No. 13 ASTOR PLACE.
-
-
-
- _Copyright_,
- BY THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.
- 1886.
-
- J. S. CUSHING & CO., PRINTERS, BOSTON.
-
-
-
- DEDICATED
- TO
- MY CHILDREN
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-THE aim of this book is to give in as concise manner as possible,
-consistent with graphic narration and biographical completeness, the
-most important and interesting events in the lives of these famous
-rulers; together with a brief history of the various epochs in which
-they lived, and a description of the manners and customs of the people
-comprising the several nations governed by these illustrious monarchs.
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
- PAGE
- AGAMEMNON 1
- CYRUS THE GREAT 30
- ALEXANDER THE GREAT 71
- JULIUS CÆSAR 110
- CHARLEMAGNE 142
- ALFRED THE GREAT 169
- RICHARD CŒUR DE LION 195
- ROBERT BRUCE 233
- FERDINAND V. OF SPAIN 266
- PHILIP II. OF SPAIN 291
- GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS 312
- LOUIS XIV. 334
- PETER THE GREAT 367
- FREDERICK THE GREAT 398
- NAPOLEON I. 433
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
- Charlemagne _Frontispiece_
- Jupiter sending the Evil Dream to Agamemnon _Page_ 9
- Hector chiding Paris 11
- Diomed casting his Spear against Mars 17
- Ajax defending the Greek Ships against the Trojans 18
- Hector’s Body dragged at the Car of Achilles 26
- The Funeral of Hector 27
- Persian Guardsman carrying Bow and Quiver 37
- Persian Soldier with Battle-Axe 37
- Persian Foot Soldiers 37
- Persian King seated on his Throne 38
- Persian Subjects bringing Tribute 58
- Chart of the Country around Babylon 60
- Supposed Plan of Ancient Babylon 62
- Babylonian King 64
- Persian Chariot 67
- Tomb of Cyrus 67
- Ruins of Babylon 70
- Temple of Diana at Ephesus 72
- Alexander the Great 74
- Demosthenes 80
- Darius 92
- Julius Cæsar—from the Antique Bust 110
- Julius Cæsar 116
- Cæsar in Gaul 122
- The Landing of Julius Cæsar in Britain 124
- Charlemagne—from Early Engraving 142
- The Huns at Châlons 144
- “Thrust him away or thou diest in his stead” 147
- Charlemagne 152
- Death of Roland 160
- Alfred the Great 170
- The Northmen invading France 174
- Alfred the Great 182
- Alfred and the Cakes 186
- Richard Cœur de Lion 196
- Richard Cœur de Lion 208
- Richard tearing down the Austrian Banner 221
- “Most Holy Land, Farewell!” 228
- King John 230
- Warren, Earl of Surrey, Governor of Scotland under Edward I. 235
- Robert Bruce 238
- “Bruce was not slow in taking the warning” 243
- “See! I have spoiled my good battle-axe” 260
- Ferdinand of Aragon 266
- Isabella of Castile 268
- Segovia: The Alcazar and Cathedral 271
- The Cathedral and Port of Malaga 274
- Court of Lions, Alhambra 280
- Columbus 282
- Prison of the Inquisition at Barcelona 286
- Tomb of Ferdinand and Isabella in the Cathedral of Granada 289
- Philip II. 291
- Queen Mary plighting her Troth to Philip 292
- Destroying Statues, etc., in the Cathedral at Antwerp 304
- Philip II. 308
- Gustavus Adolphus 312
- Gustavus Adolphus—from a picture by Van Dyck 318
- Death of Gustavus and his Page 332
- Louis XIV. 334
- Anne of Austria and Cardinal Mazarin 340
- Louis XIV. taking leave of Fouquet 344
- Death of Turenne 350
- Jean Baptiste Colbert 352
- Revocation of the Edict of Nantes 354
- Peter the Great 368
- The Krémlin of Moscow 373
- Peter saved from Slaughter by his Mother 374
- Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul in the Fortress 385
- Peter the Great in the Dutch Ship-yard 389
- Peter the Great 392
- Frederick II., King of Prussia, æt. 58 398
- Frederick the Great 418
- Arrest of Voltaire by order of Frederick 427
- Equestrian Statue of Frederick the Great, æt. 73 430
- Napoleon 434
- Napoleon in the Prison of Nice, 1794 442
- Napoleon at Fontainebleau 462
- Napoleon on Board the Bellerophon 466
- The Rock at St. Helena 474
-
-
-
-
-BOYS’ BOOK OF FAMOUS RULERS.
-
-
-
-
-AGAMEMNON.
-
-1184 B.C.
-
- “The rule
- Of many is not well. One must be chief
- In war, and one the king.”—_Iliad._
-
-
-FOR nine years the Greeks had besieged the city of Troy. This famous
-Trojan War, which is said to have occurred about 1184 B.C., has been
-embellished by romance and poetry; and although the real events have
-been much distorted by fabulous tales, it holds an important place in
-ancient Grecian history.
-
-The marvellous Greek poet Homer has immortalized the wonderful story
-of this contest, in which, according to the old Grecian belief, gods
-and heroes fought for mastery; and it seems more fitting to the subject
-that we should view these events through the eyes of those ancient
-Greeks, whose weird yet fascinating fables peopled the mountains
-and seas with gods and goddesses; over whom proud Zeus or Jupiter
-ruled on the dread Mount of Olympus, from whence he hurled his awful
-thunderbolts, and shook the earth and heavens in his wrathful moods,
-when gods or mortals had dared to defy his imperial will. Agamemnon,
-king of Mycenæ, was the commander of all the Grecian hosts which for
-these nine years had surrounded the walls of Troy. The cause of the
-quarrel may be thus briefly stated:—
-
-Priam was the richest and most powerful of all the kings of Troy. His
-wife, Queen Hecuba, had dreamed that one of her children should become
-a firebrand which should consume the whole city. Whereupon, Priam was
-so alarmed, that he ordered that her next child should be exposed in a
-desert place among the mountains, and left to perish. Paris was this
-child, and when an infant, was hidden by his mother, that he might not
-be thus destroyed. Paris grew to be a youth of marvellous beauty, and
-was at length brought by his mother to the court of Priam. The king was
-so charmed by his beauty and accomplishments, that Paris ventured to
-make himself known, and was received by Priam, his father, with great
-kindness; for he was so pleased with the noble youth, that he ceased
-to remember the evil dream. This dream, however, was very strangely
-fulfilled years afterwards. Paris made an expedition into Greece, which
-country was at that time divided into many small kingdoms or states,
-each governed by its own king. Agamemnon was king of Mycenæ, and his
-brother Menelaüs was king of Sparta.
-
-Agamemnon and Menelaüs were the sons of Plisthenes; but as their father
-died when they were very young, their mother Aërope was afterwards
-married to Atreus; and these two brothers were brought up by their
-step-father as his own children, to whom his name was given, as they
-were called Atridæ.
-
-Atreus was afterwards murdered, and Agamemnon’s uncle Thyestes ascended
-the throne of Mycenæ. Agamemnon and his brother Menelaüs then fled to
-Sparta. The king of Sparta agreed to recover the kingdom for Agamemnon,
-if he would marry his daughter Clytemnestra, and make her his queen.
-To this Agamemnon consented, and with the aid of Tyndarus, king of
-Sparta, he recovered his own kingdom, and married Clytemnestra. His
-brother Menelaüs afterwards became king of Sparta.
-
-During the expedition into Greece, of Paris, the son of King Priam,
-he visited the court of Sparta, and was received most kindly by King
-Menelaüs. But the handsome and fascinating Paris ill-repaid this
-courteous reception, for he fell in love with Helen, the beautiful
-wife of Menelaüs, and carried her off with him on his return to Troy.
-Menelaüs, enraged at this wicked treachery, persuaded his brother
-Agamemnon, king of Mycenæ, to espouse his quarrel, and to join him
-in waging war with the Trojans, to revenge his indignity, and to
-recover, if possible, his wife, the fair Helen, who was so exquisitely
-beautiful, that all who saw her fell in love with her. Agamemnon was
-chosen commander-in-chief of all the powerful Grecian princes who now
-combined their forces to fight against Troy. Homer gives us the names
-of the most famous of these Grecian warriors. Agamemnon was sovereign
-lord of all the host, and Achilles was the bravest and most valiant man
-amongst them. But besides these, there was the yellow-haired Menelaüs,
-king of Sparta, and husband of the beautiful Helen; Ajax Oïleus, or, as
-men called him, the lesser Ajax, king of the Locri, swiftest of foot
-among the Greeks, after the great Achilles; Ajax Telamon, from Salamis;
-Diomed, son of Tydeus, king of Argos, and with him Sthenelus; Nestor,
-king of Pylos, oldest and wisest among the Greeks; Ulysses, king of
-Ithaca, most crafty in counsel; Idomeneus, grandson of the great
-judge Minos, king of Crete, and with him Meriones; Tlepolemus, son of
-Hercules, from Rhodes; Eumelus, from Pheræ, son of that Alcestis, who
-died for her husband, and was brought back from death by Hercules,
-according to Grecian mythology; and many more heroes too numerous to
-mention: but the bravest and strongest of all was Ajax, son of Telamon,
-and the best horses were those of Eumelus; but there was none that
-could compare with Achilles and the horses of Achilles, bravest of men,
-and swiftest of steeds.
-
-The heroes upon the Trojan side were also great and brave. The most
-famous of their chiefs were Hector, son of King Priam, most valiant
-of all the Trojan warriors; Æneas, whose father was Anchises, and
-whose mother was supposed to be the goddess Aphrodité; Pandarus, from
-Mount Ida, to whom Apollo had given a marvellous bow; Asius, the son
-of Hyrtacus, who came from the broad salt river, the Hellespont;
-Pylæmenes, king of Paphlagonia; and Sarpedon from Lycia, whom men
-affirmed to be the son of Zeus himself; and lastly, Glaucus his friend.
-
-When the Grecian fleet had started upon this expedition against Troy, a
-wonderful incident had occurred. The fleet of the Greeks was detained
-by contrary winds at Aulis, owing to the wrath of the goddess Diana,
-whom King Agamemnon had offended by killing one of her favorite deer.
-In this emergency Calchas the soothsayer was consulted, and he declared
-that to appease the anger of the goddess. Iphigenia, the eldest
-daughter of King Agamemnon, must be sacrificed. She was accordingly
-led to the altar, and was about to be offered as a victim, when she
-is said to have suddenly disappeared, being caught up by Diana, who
-in pity substituted a stag in her place. Virgil, however, tells
-this story somewhat differently; for he relates that Iphigenia was
-actually sacrificed. The goddess having been appeased, the winds were
-favorable, and the Grecian fleet sailed onward, and arrived safely at
-Troy; and for nine long years these famous warriors had been waging war
-around the walls of that city, within which, in the palace of Paris,
-son of King Priam, was concealed the matchlessly beautiful Helen, and
-much rich treasure, which that treacherous but fascinating prince had
-stolen from the Greeks.
-
-But now within the Grecian camp a strife arises between King Agamemnon
-and Achilles, bravest of all his host. The Greeks, having been away
-from home so many years, were accustomed to make frequent raids upon
-the surrounding cities to supply their needs, and thus to enable them
-to continue still longer this weary siege. They had thus ruthlessly
-attacked a city called Chrysa, sacred to Apollo, where was a temple of
-that god.
-
-The Greeks, in their plunderings, had not dared to molest the temple
-or its priest; but they had carried off, with other prisoners, the
-daughter of the priest of Apollo, named Chryseïs. The spoils obtained
-from these expeditions were divided between the various kings
-and heroes in the Grecian host; and the maiden Chryseïs had been
-apportioned as the share of King Agamemnon. The next day the priest
-Chryses came to the Grecian camp, bringing much gold, and wearing on
-his head the priest’s crown, that men might thereby reverence him the
-more. He demanded the return of his daughter, and offered his gold as
-her ransom. The Grecian chiefs were favorable to his suit, but King
-Agamemnon angrily repulsed him, exclaiming,—
-
- “Hence, on thy life, and fly these hostile plains,
- Nor ask, presumptuous, what the king detains.
- Hence with thy laurel crown and golden rod;
- Nor trust too far those ensigns of thy god.
- Mine is thy daughter, priest, and shall remain,
- And prayers, and tears, and bribes, shall plead in vain.”
-
-The sorrowful priest turned away in silence, and as he walked along
-the seashore, he besought the aid of his god, Apollo, praying: “Hear
-me, God of the silver bow! If I have built thee a temple, and offered
-thee the fat of many bullocks and rams, hear me! and avenge me on these
-Greeks.”
-
-And Apollo heard him and descended with awful wrath from dread Olympus,
-where dwelt the gods. The rattle of his arrows filled the air, as he
-twanged his deadly bow, and sent the fateful shafts of pestilence
-upon the Grecian fleet below; meanwhile, enwrapping his own form in
-shadows black as night, from which his baleful darts shot forth like
-lightning’s flash. And so for ten long days the pestilence raged, till
-heaps of dead men and beasts lined the shore, and the black smoke
-ascended from myriad funeral piles. Then Achilles called upon the seer,
-Calchas, to tell them why Apollo was so wroth with them. To whom the
-sage replied,—
-
-“It is on behalf of his priest that Apollo is so wroth; for when he
-came to ransom his daughter, Agamemnon would not let the maiden go. Now
-then, ye must send her back to Chrysa without ransom, and with her a
-hundred beasts for sacrifice, so that the plague may be stayed.”
-
-Then, with a threatening frown, King Agamemnon started from his
-gorgeous throne, with eyes which flashed with angry light, as he
-exclaimed in fury,—
-
-“Prophet of plagues, forever boding ill! Still must that tongue some
-evil message bring. I will release the maid, that my people may be
-spared. But for this, my share of booty, shall the Greeks requite me.”
-
-Then Achilles answered,—
-
-“We have no treasures from which to make up thy loss. Let the maiden
-go! and when we capture Troy, we will repay thee fourfold.”
-
-Then Agamemnon replied,—
-
-“Shall I my prize resign while thou art possessed of thine? I will send
-back the maid to please Apollo; but know thou that I will seize thy
-share, even the girl Briseïs, that all may know that I am sovereign
-here.”
-
-Whereupon, Achilles was so fierce with anger, that he fain would have
-slain the monarch, and had, forsooth, half drawn his sword from the
-scabbard, to thrust it into the haughty king. But lo! the goddess
-Athené stood behind him, and caught him by his long yellow locks of
-hair. None saw the goddess, save only Achilles, to whom he said,—
-
-“Art thou come, fair Minerva, to witness these wrongs I bear from
-Atreus’ son? If thou dost see his crime, see also my proud vengeance.”
-
-Whereupon, he raised his sword to strike; but the goddess said,—
-
-“Forbear thy fury! Let great Achilles yield to reason. Put up thy
-sword; but if thou pleasest, use the dagger of thy tongue alone. With
-that, the gods permit thee to reproach him; but vengeance, leave thou
-to the care of heaven.”
-
-So spake the goddess, and Achilles thrust his sword back into its
-sheath, and in proud scorn exclaimed, while turning to the king with
-blazing eyes,—
-
-“Coward! thou rulest sure a puny race, else this had been thy last
-affront. Thou darest not to fight, but cowerest like a dog in safe
-retreat within the camp; but after we have fought and conquered, thou
-claimest the richest booty! But know, for this my grievous wrong,
-the gods shall avenge it! And when the Greeks lie in heaps before the
-walls of Troy, slain by the dreadful Hector, then shalt thou miss the
-strong arm of Achilles from thy side, and thy proud heart shalt mourn
-the affront thy madness gave. For thou hast made the bravest Greek thy
-bitterest enemy.”
-
-Then did Achilles dash his sacred sceptre on the ground, saying,—
-
-“As surely as this sceptre, which was once a branch from off a tree,
-now starred with golden studs and bound with bronze, an ensign of
-Jove’s favor, shall never blossom more, so surely shalt thou miss the
-arm of brave Achilles, when the Trojans press thee sore. Thou canst
-play the master over others, but think not to master me! As to the
-maid, my prize, which the Greeks gave me, let them take it again if
-they will, but if thou darest to invade my tent and touch whate’er is
-mine, thy blood shall stream forth at the point of my revengeful blade.”
-
-So saying, the great Achilles strode forth from the counsel-tent with
-wrathful looks, and the august brow of Agamemnon was overcast with
-threatening gloom. In vain had Nestor, eldest of the Grecian kings
-and wisest of counsellors, endeavored to quell this ominous quarrel.
-His words of reason moved not the two fierce warriors. And surely, in
-this strife, Achilles held the right, and Agamemnon showed himself a
-selfish, proud, and haughty monarch.
-
-The priest’s daughter, Chryseïs, was sent back to her home with
-offerings to the god, and Ulysses was appointed to conduct her thither.
-But King Agamemnon would not be persuaded to renounce his purpose
-of seizing upon the war-prize which had been awarded to Achilles,
-namely, the maiden Briseïs; and forthwith he sent heralds to the
-tent of Achilles to obtain her. The heralds approached the warrior with
-much dread, for they feared his awful wrath. But Achilles said to them,—
-
-[Illustration: JUPITER SENDING THE EVIL DREAM TO AGAMEMNON.]
-
-“Fear not, ye heralds! It is no fault of yours that you are sent on
-such an errand.”
-
-Whereupon he commanded that the maiden should be brought from her tent
-and given to the heralds, who led her, much against her will, to the
-haughty Agamemnon. Then Achilles called upon his mother Thetis, who was
-a goddess of the sea, to avenge his wrongs. Thetis rose like a mist
-from the waves, and coming to Achilles, who sat upon the seashore, she
-comforted him and asked his trouble. Whereupon Achilles told her the
-cause of his anger, and besought her to go to the great Zeus, whom
-Thetis had once aided, when the other gods would have bound great Jove,
-by bringing Briareus of the hundred hands, who so fought for the mighty
-Jupiter, that the other gods dared no longer defy his power. And owing
-this kindness to the goddess Thetis, her son thought rightly that the
-great Jove would listen to her petitions on his behalf. So Achilles
-asked his mother to go to Olympus, and pray Zeus that he would help the
-sons of Troy and give them victory over the Greeks, whose sovereign
-king had thus dishonored the bravest of all his host.
-
-This, Thetis did, going to the palace of Jupiter on the top of Olympus,
-and making her prayer in her son’s behalf. Zeus was loath to grant it,
-for he knew that it would anger his wife Heré, who loved the Greeks and
-hated the Trojans. Yet on account of the past favor of Thetis, he would
-not refuse, and in giving assent, nodded his awful head, thus causing
-Olympus to shake and tremble. So Zeus called one of his swift-winged
-messengers, called a Dream, and said,—
-
-“Fly hence, swift Dream, and to the tent of Agamemnon go! Bid him lead
-all the Grecians forth to battle against Troy. Persuade him that the
-gods intend to give him victory.”
-
-So this false Dream, flying to Agamemnon’s side, took to itself the
-shape of wise old Nestor, whom the king honored more than all beside,
-and thus the false Nestor counselled,—
-
-“Sleepest thou, Agamemnon? Arise! for now Zeus declares that the
-immortal gods are favorable to thy plans, and through thy mighty hosts
-will send the doom of destruction upon the city of Troy; and thou shalt
-reap the eternal glory.”
-
-Then Agamemnon awoke from sleep and, little thinking how he had
-been duped by this false Dream, quickly donned his tunic, fastened
-his sandals on his feet, and hung from his shoulders his mighty
-silver-studded sword. Wrapping his great cloak around him, he took in
-his right hand his royal sceptre, token of his sovereignty over all the
-Greeks. Thus attired, in martial grandeur, he went forth and roused his
-chiefs, and then the heralds called the hosts to battle. Only Achilles
-sat apart within his tent and went not forth to battle with the Greeks.
-
-Now, as the two forces were about to fight, Paris, the Trojan prince,
-rushed forth and challenged the bravest of the Greeks to fight with
-him. Then Menelaüs, whom he had so greatly wronged, leapt from his
-chariot and rushed to meet his treacherous foe. But Paris was more
-beautiful in form and feature than brave in heart, and seeing the man
-whom he had so cruelly wronged, he was afraid to fight, and cowardlike
-ran back into the Trojan ranks. Then his brother, brave Hector, thus
-rebuked his cowardice.
-
-[Illustration: HECTOR CHIDING PARIS.]
-
-“Fair art thou, Paris, beauteous indeed, but ill thy soul supplies a
-form so fair! Thou makest us the scorn of the proud Greeks, by thy
-unmanly fear. Little will it avail thee that thou art in form so
-stately, when thy soft curling locks and shapely limbs are lying in the
-dust. Thy silver lyre, nor all thy blandishments, will naught avert thy
-doom, for thou hast been the curse of Troy and ruin of thy race.”
-
-Then Paris, stricken with just shame, replied,—
-
-“Thou speakest well, Hector, and thy rebuke is just. Thy heart is like
-iron; yet are beauty and love also the gift of the gods, and not to be
-despised. Now let Menelaüs and me fight for the fair Helen and all her
-possessions, and if he prevail, let him take her, and them, and depart
-to Greece. But if I prevail, then shall the Greeks depart in peace
-without her.”
-
-This saying, which at last betokened some spirit, pleased Hector well;
-and going before the Trojan ranks, holding his spear by the middle,
-he kept them back. The Greeks would have hurled spears upon him, but
-Agamemnon cried out,—
-
-“Hold! Hector has somewhat to say to us.”
-
-Then Hector announced that Paris would fight with Menelaüs for the
-fair Helen and all her wealth. To which Menelaüs readily agreed, but
-demanded that King Priam should himself come and, with King Agamemnon,
-make a covenant with sacrifice, that the fair Helen and all her wealth
-should go to the one who should prevail.
-
-When the heralds went to bring the old King Priam, he was found on
-the wall with the beautiful Helen near him, to whom he was talking
-and asking the names of brave Grecian heroes whom he beheld among the
-hostile host. And in this wise he spake to fair Helen,—
-
-“Come near, my daughter, tell me about these old friends of thine.
-Who is that warrior, that I see, so fair and strong? There are others
-taller than he, but none of such majesty.”
-
-And Helen answered,—
-
-“Ah, my father, would that I had died before I left the fair land of
-Greece! That one is King Agamemnon, a good and brave soldier, and my
-brother-in-law, in the old days. And that one is Ulysses of Ithaca, who
-is better in craft and counsel than all other men.”
-
-Then Priam said,—
-
-“Who is that stalwart hero overtopping all others?”
-
-“That,” said Helen, “is mighty Ajax, the bulwark of the Greeks; and
-as for the other chiefs, I could name them all. But I see not my two
-brothers, Castor and Pollux;” for she wot not that they were already
-dead.
-
-Thereupon came the heralds and told King Priam that the armies had
-called for him. After the covenant between the Trojan and Grecian
-kings, Priam and Agamemnon, Hector and Ulysses marked out a space for
-the fight, and Hector shook two pebbles in a helmet, to decide which
-one should be the first to throw the spear, Paris or Menelaüs.
-
-The lot fell upon Paris, and the two warriors having armed themselves,
-came forth into the space and brandished their spears with wrathful
-eyes. Then Paris threw his spear. It struck the shield of Menelaüs,
-but pierced it not; and thereupon Menelaüs, with a prayer to Jupiter,
-cast his long-shafted spear. It struck the shield of Paris, pierced
-it through, and passing through both corselet and tunic, would have
-bruised the side of Paris, but he shrank aside, and so was wounded not.
-Then Menelaüs drew his sword and struck a mighty blow upon the top of
-Paris’ helmet; but the sword brake in four pieces in his hand. Then
-he rushed forward and seized Paris by the helmet, and fain would have
-dragged him to the Grecian host, but the goddess Aphrodité loosed the
-strap that was beneath the chin, and the helmet came off in the hand
-of Menelaüs, and the goddess snatched Paris away, covering him with a
-mist, and put him safely in his own palace in Troy.
-
-Then King Agamemnon said,—
-
-“Now, ye sons of Troy, give back the fair Helen and her wealth!”
-
-But just at this time the goddess Athené took upon herself the shape of
-Laodocus, and going to Pandarus, the false Laodocus, said,—
-
-“Darest thou aim an arrow at Menelaüs?”
-
-Now Pandarus had a marvellous bow made from the horns of a wild
-goat and tipped with beaten gold, and Pandarus strung his bow, his
-comrades, meanwhile, hiding him behind their shields. Then took he a
-sharp-pointed arrow from his quiver and laid it on the bow-string and
-let it fly. Right well the aim was made; but the gods decreed that
-the dart should not be fatal. For though it passed through belt and
-corselet and strong girdle, and pierced the skin so that the red blood
-rushed out, which sight filled Menelaüs and King Agamemnon with sore
-dismay, Menelaüs soon perceived the barb of the arrow, and so knew that
-the wound was not fatal; and when it was drawn forth by the physician
-Machaon, and the blood was staunched with healing drugs, King Agamemnon
-rejoiced that he should not thus lose his brave brother Menelaüs.
-
-Then the mighty hosts of Greeks and Trojans went forward to the battle,
-and on either side the gods urged them on, Athené aiding the Greeks,
-and Ares—called also Mars—strengthening the Trojan warriors. Many
-were the valiant exploits that day performed; but we can mention but
-a few of them. So close pressed host on host, that the armies dashed
-together, shield on shield and spear on spear. Ajax Telamon slew
-Simoisius, and Antiphon, son of King Priam, aimed at Ajax, but missing
-him, slew Leucus, the friend of the valiant Ulysses.
-
-Whereupon, Ulysses, in great anger, to avenge his death, strode boldly
-midst the Trojan ranks and hurled his spear at Democoön, a son of
-Priam, whom he slew. At length the Trojan hosts were borne backward by
-the mighty onslaught of the Greeks, till Apollo cried from the heights
-of Pergamos,—
-
-“On, Trojans! The flesh of these Greeks is not stone or iron, that ye
-cannot pierce it; and remember that the great Achilles fights not with
-them to-day!”
-
-Athené also urged the Greeks to valiant deeds. This goddess aroused
-Diomed to battle, making a wondrous fire shine forth from his helmet,
-which made him seem a god, and he raged through the battle so
-furiously, that he was now seen amongst the Grecian ranks, now boldly
-invading the Trojan forces, and striking down his foes with mighty arm.
-Then Pandarus aimed an arrow at him and smote him on the shoulder. But
-the brave Diomed cared not for the arrow, and leaping from his chariot
-he called to Sthenelus, his charioteer, to draw the arrow from the
-wound; and praying to Athené for aid, he rushed madly into the Trojan
-ranks, slaying a man at every blow.
-
-Meanwhile, Æneas, driving his swift chariot, said to Pandarus,—
-
-“Climb up into my chariot, and thou shalt fight, and I will drive.”
-
-So Pandarus mounted the chariot, and the two drove towards Diomed, and
-as they came near, Pandarus cast his spear, which passed through the
-shield of Diomed and reached his corselet; whereupon Pandarus cried,—
-
-“Ha, now he bleeds! Low will this haughty Grecian lie!”
-
-But Diomed replied,—
-
-“Thy dart has erred! Now I will try my spear.”
-
-And straightway he hurled his keen lance toward his boasting foe.
-Through nose and jaw it crashed, and cleft the tongue in two; and the
-bright point came forth beneath the chin.
-
-Pandarus fell from the chariot mortally wounded, and Æneas leapt to
-the ground with drawn spear to defend the dead body of his friend. But
-Diomed raised a huge stone and hurled it at Æneas, and crushed his
-hip-bone, felling him to the earth.
-
-Then had brave Æneas perished, but his goddess mother, Aphrodité,
-caught him in her white arms and threw her veil about him. But so
-great was the rage of Diomed, that he spared not even the goddess, but
-rushing upon her, he wounded her in the wrist, and with a shriek of
-pain she dropped her son; but Apollo caught him up and covered him with
-a thick mist. Thrice Diomed pursued, and thrice Apollo drove him back.
-But as the rash Diomed advanced a fourth time, the god exclaimed,—
-
-“O son of Tydeus, beware! Nor think to match the immortal gods!”
-
-So Apollo carried Æneas out of the battle and placed him in safety
-in Troy. Meanwhile, fair Venus, pale from the wound which mortal man
-had dared inflict, was conducted by swift-winged Iris to the stern
-god Mars, her brother; and Venus begged his car to mount the distant
-skies, where in the fair realms of the gods her wounded hand was healed
-by sacred balm. Then Mars went down upon the field of battle to aid the
-Trojans, and Hector rushed to the front with the god Mars by his side;
-and he dealt death and destruction through the Grecian ranks. Juno and
-Minerva saw him from Mount Olympus, and they prayed Jupiter to allow
-them to stop him in his fury. The mighty Zeus consented, and the two
-goddesses yoked horses to the chariot of Juno and passed down to earth
-with flying strides. Having reached the battle-field, Juno took the
-shape of Stentor with the lungs of brass, whose voice was as the voices
-of fifty men, and thus she cried,—
-
-“Shame, men of Greece! When Achilles fought, the Trojans dare not leave
-the city; but now they fight even by the very ships.” Then Minerva
-chided Diomed for want of bravery, to whom he replied: “I know thee,
-great goddess, daughter of Jupiter! and ’tis thy commands I obey. Thou
-didst bid me fight with none of the immortals save only with Aphrodité;
-and therefore I gave place to Hector, for I perceived that he was aided
-by great Mars.”
-
-But Athené answered: “Heed not Ares! drive thy chariot at him and hurl
-thy spear. This morning did stern Mars promise to aid the Greeks, and
-now he joins with our Trojan foes.”
-
-So saying, the goddess pushed the charioteer of Diomed from his
-place, and herself mounted and seized the reins and lashed the horses
-furiously. With swift speed they drove together till they found the god
-Mars, or Ares, where he had just slain Periphas the Ætolian. Minerva
-was even invisible to the god, for she had donned the helmet of Hades;
-and so Ares, not seeing her, cast his spear at Diomed; but the goddess
-caught the spear and turned it aside. Then Diomed thrust forth his
-spear, and Minerva leaned upon it, so that it even pierced the side of
-the god Mars, who shouted so loudly with the pain that the Greeks and
-Trojans trembled with fear; while the god of war, wounded by the fair
-goddess Athené, covered himself with a thunder-cloud, and in much rage
-ascended to Olympus.
-
-[Illustration: DIOMED CASTING HIS SPEAR AGAINST MARS.]
-
-When Ares had departed, the Greeks prevailed again; but the seer
-Helenus said to Hector and Æneas: “Draw back the Trojan army and
-encourage them; and you, Hector, go within the city and bid thy mother
-queen, with the daughters of Troy, take the costliest robe she hath,
-and go to the temple of Athené and offer it to the goddess with prayers
-and sacrifice, that perchance she may relent and have pity on us and
-keep this terrible Diomed from our walls.”
-
-This counsel prevailed, and Hector departed to the city, whence he
-dispatched his queen mother to Athené’s temple, and exhorted his
-brother Paris to arm himself and come forth to battle. Hector then took
-a fond farewell of his much-loved wife Andromaché and his only child,
-called beautiful-headed as a star, and departed with Paris, who came
-forth clad in shining armor; and they fell upon the hosts of the Greeks
-and slew many chiefs of fame.
-
-Again came Athené to help the Greeks; and meeting the god Apollo, they
-agreed to stay the battle for that day; and to this end inspired Hector
-and King Agamemnon to agree that Hector should fight alone with the
-bravest of the Greeks, while both armies should rest from battle.
-
-Then Menelaüs desired to meet brave Hector in single combat. But King
-Agamemnon would not consent to this, fearing his brother would perish.
-Whereupon it was resolved to decide the matter by lot, which fell
-upon Ajax the Greater, who, having armed himself, stepped forth to
-battle with the mighty Hector. First Hector hurled his spear, which
-passed through six folds of Ajax’s shield. Then Ajax threw his lance,
-striking proud Hector’s shield. Through shield, corselet, and tunic it
-passed, but Hector shrank from the sharp point, and the flesh was not
-pierced. Then again they rushed together with wild fury. And Ajax drove
-his spear at Hector’s shield and grazed his neck, so that the blood
-leaped forth. Then Hector hurled a mighty stone at Ajax; but his shield
-broke not. Whereupon Ajax raised a mightier stone and threw it with
-such aim that it broke the shield of Hector and felled him backwards
-to the ground. But Apollo raised him up, and as they drew their swords
-for deadlier conflict, the heralds held their sceptres between them
-and bid them cease. So Hector and Ajax, both mighty warriors and brave
-of heart, agreed to part as friends; in token whereof, Hector gave to
-Ajax a silver-studded sword, and Ajax to Hector a buckler splendid with
-purple. So they parted, and the conflict was stayed that night. In the
-morning came Trojan heralds to King Agamemnon’s host, saying: “This is
-the word of Priam and the sons of Troy. Paris will give back all the
-treasures of the fair Helen and much more besides, but the fair Helen
-herself will he not give up. But grant a truce that we may bury our
-dead.”
-
-[Illustration: AJAX DEFENDING THE GREEK SHIPS AGAINST THE TROJANS.]
-
-So the truce was given, and the dead of both armies were burnt. Then
-the Greeks and Trojans both feasted through the night. But all through
-the hours of darkness the terrible thunder rolled on Mount Olympus; for
-mighty Zeus was counselling evil against the hapless Trojans.
-
-When the morning came, the two hosts again went forth to battle with
-each other. Till midday neither side prevailed; but then great Jupiter
-sent fear and panic amidst the Grecian forces, and they fled to their
-ships in terror.
-
-As the Greeks were flying in wild confusion, brave Hector driving in
-his chariot pursued them; and called to his horses, “Now Xanthus,
-Æthon, Lampus, and Podargus, speed ye well! Ye Flame of Fire, White
-Foot, and Brilliant, named! carry me fast, and well repay the tender
-care of my sweet wife Andromaché, who often from her fair white hands
-has fed thee! For I would win old Nestor’s marvellous shield of purest
-gold, and strip from off proud Diomed his boasted breastplate, wrought
-by the mighty Vulcan.”
-
-But Jupiter willed not that this should be; for King Agamemnon prayed
-aloud to Zeus for succor, and Jupiter heard his prayer, in token
-whereof he sent a sign, namely: an eagle flew above the Grecian hosts
-and dropped a kid out of his claws. Then did the Greeks take courage
-and renewed the fight with vigor. But the darkness came, and each host
-rested on their arms.
-
-Meanwhile, King Agamemnon called a council of war, and fain would
-have returned to Greece and leave this invincible city of Troy. But
-brave King Diomed would not receive such craven counsel, and angrily
-exclaimed,—
-
-“Even though all the men of Greece depart, yet will I and Sthenelus
-abide the doom of Troy, for surely the gods have brought us hither.”
-
-To these brave words the Grecian chiefs agreed; and wise Nestor
-counselled that King Agamemnon should send to brave Achilles and seek
-to make peace with him that they might have the strong help of his
-mighty arm. To which King Agamemnon consented, and sent messengers to
-the tent of Achilles to seek his favor, promising him seven kettles of
-brass, ten talents of gold, twenty caldrons, twelve fleet horses, seven
-women slaves skilled in the work of the loom, and, more than all, the
-return of the maid Briseïs, the cause of all their quarrel; and when
-Troy should be taken, much spoil besides. And even more; for when they
-should return to Greece, King Agamemnon promised him one of his own
-daughters for his wife, and seven cities by the sea. But all this moved
-not the wrathful soul of stern Achilles, and he would not be appeased;
-nor would he come to help the Greeks against the Trojans, but still sat
-silent in his tent. Then it was decided that Diomed and Ulysses should
-go that night disguised into the Trojan camp, to spy out, if possible,
-their strength and plans. This same strategy had Hector also planned,
-and had already sent one Dolon, swift of foot, towards the Grecian
-host. But as he ran he met Diomed and Ulysses, who seized him, and
-under threatenings forced him to reveal the Trojan secrets. Then did
-they slay Dolon, and forthwith proceeded to where some men of Thrace,
-allies of the Trojans, lay sleeping. These Thracians possessed most
-matchless steeds—horses so fair and tall, whiter than snow and fleeter
-than the winds. Diomed and Ulysses would fain secure these as a rich
-prize, and so they slew the sleeping Thracians and led the captured
-horses back to the Grecian hosts, and arrived in safety at the ships.
-The next day the battle waged hot again. Ulysses was wounded, and Paris
-shot an arrow and pierced the brave physician Machaon. Meanwhile,
-Achilles was standing on his ship and looking upon the conflict. When
-he beheld Nestor bearing the wounded Machaon to the ships, he called to
-his friend Patroclus and bid him see if Machaon’s wound was fatal.
-
-Most fierce the battle raged. On the left, the Grecians prevailed, but
-on the right brave Hector and his host fought even to the very ships,
-dealing most deadly blows. So great were the shouts of battle that old
-Nestor, who was tending the wounded Machaon, was roused; and going
-forth he met King Agamemnon, and with him Diomed and Ulysses, who had
-been wounded that day. Then they counselled together. Again Agamemnon
-advised flight; but the others thought it not good to flee thus, and
-they counselled King Agamemnon that he should go to the Grecian ranks,
-bidding them bear themselves bravely and put courage into their hearts.
-This did he do, and roused their waning strength to fresh exploits.
-Then Ajax smote brave Hector with a mighty stone, which felled him to
-the ground; and the Greeks, with a great cry, rushed forth to bear him
-to their ranks; but the Trojans held their shields before him, and his
-friends lifted him up and carried him to a place of safety. But he was
-sorely bruised. Then Apollo, at Jupiter’s bidding, poured courage into
-his heart and healed him of his wound, so that he rushed once more upon
-the field of battle, strong and well and valiant as ever. Then were the
-Greeks struck with dire dismay. Then did Patroclus lament to Achilles
-on account of the ill fortune of the Greeks, and besought the mighty
-warrior, if he would not fight himself in their behalf, to let him
-go accompanied by the valiant Myrmidons, whom Achilles always led to
-battle. At which the heart of Achilles was moved; and he said,—
-
-“I will not go to battle until it reaches my own ships, but thou mayest
-put my armor upon thee and lead my Myrmidons to the fight.”
-
-So this was done; and when the Trojans beheld these famous Myrmidons
-led by one who wore the armor of the mighty Achilles, their hearts were
-faint with fear, for they supposed great Achilles himself had come
-against them. Thrice did Patroclus rush against the men of Troy, and
-each time slew nine chiefs of fame; but the fourth time Apollo stood
-behind him and struck him, and his eyes were darkened, and the helmet
-fell off his head, so that the waving plumes were soiled with dust.
-Never before had this proud helmet of Achilles touched the ground. Then
-Apollo broke his spear, and struck the shield from his arms, and loosed
-his corselet. Then all-amazed, poor Patroclus stood defenceless; so
-Hector struck him dead, and seized the matchless armor of the mighty
-Achilles.
-
-Fierce was the fight about the body of Patroclus, and many chiefs fell
-dead striving to obtain the prize. Then fled Antilochus to bear the ill
-tidings to the great Achilles, who, upon hearing of this dire defeat,
-poured dust upon his head, and called upon his goddess-mother to come
-to his aid.
-
-“Why weepest thou, my son?” said the sea-goddess Thetis, rising from
-the waves.
-
-“My friend Patroclus is dead, and Hector has my arms I gave him to
-wear, and, as for me, I care not to live unless I can avenge myself.”
-
-Thus Thetis said,—
-
-“Be comforted, my son; to-morrow I will go to mighty Vulcan; he shall
-forge new arms for thee.”
-
-Even as they spoke together, so sore the Trojans pressed the Greeks,
-that Jupiter sent Iris to Achilles, and bade him show himself to the
-Greeks that they might be filled with courage.
-
-“How can I go without arms?” replied Achilles.
-
-But the gods gave him courage, and he went, and Athené put her
-matchless shield upon his shoulders, and wrapped a golden halo round
-his head, so that he seemed clothed in godlike armor; and he shouted to
-the Trojans with a mighty voice, which so filled them with fear that
-they fell back, and the horses of the Trojan chariots were so terrified
-at the flaming fire above his head that they thrice fell back, and
-trampled on the Trojans, as thrice the awful voice of Achilles was
-heard and his shining form revealed. Thus was the body of Patroclus
-then secured, and carried on a bier, Achilles walking, weeping by his
-side.
-
-That night the conflict rested. Meanwhile, Thetis the goddess went to
-the dread Vulcan, and prayed him make new armor for her son Achilles.
-To this did stern Hephæstus consent, saying, “Be of good cheer! I will
-obey thy wish; for kind thou wast to me when my mother thrust me forth
-from heaven because she saw I was deformed and lame. I will make such
-arms for Achilles as the gods themselves might proudly wear.”
-
-So great Vulcan wrought at his mighty forge. First he made a ponderous
-shield, and wrought upon it the earth, and sky, and sea, and sun, and
-moon, and stars. He pictured upon it, also, two cities; one at peace,
-and one in dire confusion where war raged. In the peaceful city, they
-led a bride to her home with music and dancing, and women stood to
-see the show, and in the market-place judges sat, and men bartered.
-But around the other city, an army was besieging, and soldiers stood
-upon the walls, defending. Also, he wrought fields where men ploughed,
-and others reaped, and vineyards where youths and maidens gathered
-baskets of grapes while minstrels played on harps of gold. Also, he
-wrought herds of oxen going to the pasture, and sheepfolds, and a
-dance of youths and maidens who wore coronets of gold and belts of
-silver. Then, too, he pictured a fierce fight between lions and angry
-bulls. Around the shield he wrought the mighty ocean. He made also a
-corselet, brighter than fire, and a helmet of gold. At dawn the goddess
-Thetis brought to her son this marvellous armor, which when Achilles
-saw, his eyes flashed wild with joy; and seizing them, he put them on
-most eagerly, and rushed forth to rouse the Greeks to battle. Then an
-assembly was called, and Achilles stood up in the midst, saying, he had
-put away his wrath, and King Agamemnon, who had been wounded in the
-battle, declared that he had been wrong, and straightway commanded to
-be sent to the tent of Achilles all that he had promised him, including
-the maid Briseïs, which was done. The Greeks gathered again to battle.
-Then did the fight wage sore against the Trojans, who fled within the
-city gates; only brave Hector remained outside to meet the mighty
-Achilles, who rushed towards him to engage in single combat. Then did
-King Priam and Queen Hecuba beseech their much-loved son that he would
-come within the city walls, and not risk his life by thus meeting this
-dread foe; but Hector answered,—
-
-“Woe is me if I go within the walls!”
-
-But as Achilles came near, brandishing his great Pelian spear, while
-the flash of his arms was as a flame of fire, Hector trembled, and
-dared not abide to meet him, but fled around the walls, Achilles
-pursuing. Thrice they ran round the city, while the immortal gods
-looked down upon them from dread Olympus, and Jupiter said: “My heart
-is grieved for Hector. Come, ye gods! shall we save him?”
-
-But Minerva—she who was called the goddess of wisdom, for she sprang
-forth from the mighty head of Jove completely armed—thus counselled,—
-
-“Great Sire, is it well to rescue a man already doomed to die? If it be
-thy august will, then do it; but the other gods approve not.”
-
-To whom Zeus answered,—
-
-“My heart is loath, but be it as thou wilt.”
-
-Then did the goddess descend down from high Olympus in hot haste, and
-Athené lighted from the air at Achilles’ side, and whispered: “This is
-our day of glory, great Achilles! Hector shall be slain; but tarry a
-moment, that I may give him heart to meet thee in battle; so shalt thou
-slay him.”
-
-Then Minerva took the form of Deïphobus, and came near to Hector,
-saying, “Achilles presseth thee hard, my brother; let us stay and fight
-him.”
-
-Then was brave Hector glad to find one of his brothers faithful to him,
-and answered,—
-
-“I always loved thee best of all my brothers, good Deïphobus, and much
-more now to know thou darest to stand by my side in this hour of deadly
-peril.”
-
-Thus was Hector encouraged to meet Achilles, and Hector said to him:
-“Thrice, great Achilles, hast thou pursued me round the walls of
-Troy, and I dared not withstand thee; but now I will meet thee like a
-warrior. If Jupiter gives me the victory, I will do no dishonor to thy
-body; only thine armor will I take. Do thou the same to me.”
-
-But Achilles frowned, and answered,—
-
-“I make no covenants with thee. There is no agreement between wolves
-and sheep. Show thyself a warrior if thou canst. Athené shall kill thee
-by my spear.”
-
-[Illustration: HECTOR’S BODY DRAGGED AT THE CAR OF ACHILLES.]
-
-Then did they meet in deadliest conflict. Achilles threw his mighty
-spear; but Hector, crouching, avoided it, and the great spear fixed
-itself in the ground beyond. But, unseen by Hector, Athené brought it
-back to proud Achilles. Whereupon, Hector cried, “Thou hast missed thy
-aim, great Achilles. Look out for my spear!”
-
-And as he spake, he threw his long-shafted spear with so good an aim,
-that it struck the very middle of Achilles’ shield; but it pierced it
-not, and it bounded far away. And when Hector turned to his supposed
-brother, Deïphobus, to get from him another spear, lo! he was gone; and
-Hector knew then that his doom had come. Then thought he to himself:
-“Though Athené has cheated me, and Jupiter and Apollo are against me,
-if I must die, I will die in such manner as shall do honor to my name.”
-Then he drew his mighty sword, and rushed upon Achilles. But at that
-same instant Achilles charged to meet him, and holding his shining
-shield before him, with his helmet plumes waving in the air, he raised
-his long-pointed spear, which gleamed like a star, and drove it through
-the neck of the brave Hector, so that the point stood out behind; and
-Hector fell dying in the dust. Then with his last breath, he besought
-Achilles to spare his body from the Greeks; for King Priam would ransom
-it with much gold and treasure, to give it burial rites. But Achilles,
-moved with fierce wrath, cried,—
-
-“Dog, seek not to entreat me! No gold could ransom thee.”
-
-Then Hector died, and Achilles drew out the spear from the corpse, and
-stripped off the arms. Then great Achilles did a shocking deed; for he
-bound the body of the dead Hector to his chariot, letting the brave
-and noble head lie in the dust; and so he dragged the corpse of the
-valiant Trojan round the walls of Troy, even to the Grecian ships. And
-sorrowing Priam saw him from the walls; and fair Andromaché, the wife
-of Hector, also beheld this dreadful spectacle, and thereupon fell in a
-deadly swoon; and from her beautiful head dropped the golden wreath and
-diadem, which Aphrodité gave her on her bridal day.
-
-[Illustration: THE FUNERAL OF HECTOR.]
-
-Then did old King Priam gather rich gifts, and aided by the gods, mount
-his swift chariot and go to the tent of great Achilles, to beg the body
-of his much loved son, brave Hector, praying to Jupiter that Achilles
-might have pity on him. This did Jove grant; for Achilles received
-him kindly, and gave up the body of dead Hector, which King Priam
-carried back into the city of Troy. For nine days the people wailed and
-mourned, and gathered much wood for a funeral pile, upon which they
-laid brave Hector; and when his body was burnt to ashes, they gathered
-up the white bones and put them in a chest of gold, and covered it
-with purple. This chest they placed in a coffin and laid upon it many
-stones, even until they had raised a mighty mound above it. Thus did
-they bury the valiant Hector, bravest of Trojan princes.
-
-Such is a brief outline of the story of the famous Trojan War, as told
-by the illustrious Homer in his matchless poem of the “Iliad.” Now we
-return to the few further facts regarding King Agamemnon which can be
-culled from history.
-
-There are two different accounts of the final overthrow and capture
-of Troy. According to one of these, Antenor and Æneas treacherously
-betrayed the Palladium to the Greeks, and at the same time threw open
-the gates of the city at night. The other account relates that the
-capture was effected by the stratagem of the wooden horse, which was
-planned by the cunning of Ulysses. A huge, hollow structure resembling
-a horse, was filled with armed men, and left standing in the plain,
-while the Greeks went on board their ships and sailed to the island of
-Tenedos, which lay not far distant. By an artful manœuvre, the Trojans
-were made to believe that this horse was an offering to Minerva, and
-that they would achieve a great triumph by carrying it into the city.
-Accordingly they made a breach in the wall, and transported the horse
-within. In the dead of night the Greeks broke out of their concealment,
-and set the city on fire. The fleet, on a signal given, sailed back
-from Tenedos; the army landed. Troy was taken and destroyed.
-
-This event is usually placed about 1184 B.C. In the division of the
-spoils, after the taking of Troy, Cassandra, one of the daughters
-of King Priam, fell to the lot of Agamemnon. She was endued with
-the gift of prophecy, and warned Agamemnon not to return to Mycenæ.
-This warning, however, was disregarded by the king, who, upon his
-return from Troy, was carried by a storm to that part of the coast
-of Argolis where Ægisthus, the son of Thyestes, resided. This king,
-Ægisthus, had entered into a wicked agreement with Clytemnestra, wife
-of Agamemnon, to put that monarch to death upon his return from Troy,
-so that Ægisthus could seize the throne of Mycenæ, and marry Queen
-Clytemnestra. There are two accounts of the death of Agamemnon. One
-states that Ægisthus had set a watchman, with a promise of a large
-reward, to give him the earliest tidings of the return of the king. As
-soon as he learned that Agamemnon’s fleet was on the coast, he went
-out to welcome him, and invited him to his mansion. At the banquet in
-the evening, with the consent of Clytemnestra, he placed twenty
-armed men in concealment, who fell on King Agamemnon and killed him,
-together with Cassandra and all their attendants. Another account makes
-Agamemnon to have fallen by the hands of his wife Clytemnestra, after
-he had just come forth from a bath, and while he was endeavoring to put
-on a garment, the sleeves of which she had previously sewed together,
-as well as the opening for his head; thus giving her time to commit the
-bloody deed before any succor could reach him. His death, however, was
-avenged by his son Orestes.
-
-With regard to the extent of Agamemnon’s sway, Homer states that
-he ruled over many islands, and over all Argos; meaning not the
-city Argos, over which Diomed ruled, but a large portion of the
-Peloponnesus, including particularly the cities of Mycenæ and Tiryns.
-Homer also says that Agamemnon possessed the most powerful fleet;
-and as he was chosen the sovereign of all the Grecian kings, and
-commander-in-chief of all the Grecian hosts during the Trojan War, he
-may doubtless be called the greatest and most famous of all the more
-ancient Grecian rulers.
-
-
-
-
-CYRUS THE GREAT.
-
-599-529 B.C.
-
- “Death makes no conquest of this conqueror;
- For now he lives in fame, though not in life.”
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-
-IN a lonely and desolate country, in the depths of a dark forest, at
-the edge of a yawning precipice, there once lay an infant, robed in
-costly garments, which betokened noble or royal birth. The baby lay
-in a small basket cradle, made of golden wires and lined with richly
-embroidered cushions. It seemed to be slumbering, for it moved not,
-even when the afternoon shadows gathered more densely around it; and
-a rapacious bird of prey might have been seen hovering above its
-dangerous retreat, and the noise of wild beasts was heard in the dark
-forests around. Was there no one near to protect and care for this
-lovely child? Ah, see! as that vulture swoops down towards its helpless
-victim, a lonely watcher rushes forth from the forest, and drawing
-his bow, an arrow flies into the heart of the bird, which falls dead
-into the awful chasm below. But why does not the babe awake? and why
-is it left in this desolate spot? Just then a lion steals out of the
-brushwood, and after a stealthy glance at the tempting prey so near
-his reach, he prepares to spring. But again the watcher leaps forth
-from the shadow, and hurls a sharp javelin with so true an aim that the
-lordly beast is mortally wounded, and retreats to the forest, roaring
-with pain. And still the infant sleeps on.
-
-Just outside of the dreary forest is a poor herdsman’s hut. Here, too,
-might have been found an infant; but it is crowing and smiling as it
-raises its chubby fists to its mouth and tries to catch the sunshine,
-which streams in through the open door, and falls upon the wall over
-its head. This baby is clothed in the coarse garments of a peasant’s
-child. And yet the infant in the costly robes, in the wild forest, is
-really the dead child of a poor herdsman; and this crowing, laughing
-baby, dressed in peasant clothes, and lying in the lowly hut, is none
-other than the future Cyrus the Great, upon whom hang the destinies
-of a vast empire. The remarkable story regarding the birth and early
-boyhood of Cyrus the Great is recounted by Herodotus, one of the
-greatest and earliest of Grecian historians. Herodotus and Xenophon—a
-noted Grecian general, as well as historian—are the chief sources of
-information regarding most of the important historical events of that
-period of the world. Some parts of their accounts are thought to be
-historical romances, founded on facts; but as they have become a part
-of the history of those times, I shall gather the story of Cyrus from
-the events related by both these writers.
-
-About 599 B.C. there were three kingdoms in the centre of Asia:
-Assyria, Media, and Persia. Astyages was king of Media. One night
-Astyages awoke from a terrible dream: he had dreamed that a fearful
-inundation had overwhelmed his kingdom. As the deluge seemed in some
-mysterious manner to be connected in his mind with his only daughter,
-Mandane, he imagined that it portended that evil should come to his
-throne through her children. And so he arranged that she should marry
-Cambyses, ruling prince of Persia. In this manner he hoped to remove
-her so far distant, and place her in so weak a kingdom, that he need
-have no fears.
-
-A year after his daughter’s marriage to the king of Persia, Astyages
-had another dream,—of a great vine which overspread his kingdom. This
-vine also appeared to be associated in his mind with his daughter. So
-he called the soothsayers, who declared that it portended the future
-power of his daughter’s son, who should become a king.
-
-Astyages was now so alarmed that he determined to destroy the child.
-So, with seeming kindness, he invited his daughter Mandane to make
-him a visit. He placed her in a palace and surrounded her with his
-own spies and servants. As soon as the infant son was born, Astyages
-sent for an officer of his court, named Harpagus, whom he thought
-was unscrupulous enough to obey his evil commands. Astyages ordered
-Harpagus to go and request the attendants of Mandane to allow him to
-see the infant; and then, under pretence that his grandfather Astyages
-desired that the infant should be brought to him, Harpagus should take
-the child away, and in some manner cause it to be put to death.
-
-Harpagus did not dare to refuse, and accordingly went to the palace in
-which Mandane was residing. Her attendants, not suspecting his evil
-designs, arrayed the infant in its most beautiful robes, and delivered
-it into his care. Harpagus took the child home and consulted with his
-wife what he should do. He did not dare to disobey the king, and also,
-as Mandane was the daughter of the king, he feared to carry out the
-terrible deed himself.
-
-In his perplexity he sent for one of his herdsmen, named Mitridates,
-living near wild and desolate forests. When Mitridates arrived,
-Harpagus gave the infant to him, commanding him to expose it in the
-forests for three days, and when the child was dead, to send him word.
-
-The herdsman dared not refuse this wicked mission, and took the child
-home to his hut. His wife Spaco had at that time just lost an infant of
-the same age, and its dead body was still unburied. When she saw the
-beautiful babe of Mandane, she implored her husband to let her keep it
-in place of her dead child, who was accordingly arrayed in the costly
-robes of the young prince, while the royal baby was dressed in the
-coarse garments of the little dead peasant. The body of the dead infant
-was then placed in the royal cradle, or basket, in which the little
-prince had been carried from the palace; and after being exposed in
-the forest for three days, attended by watchers to keep away the wild
-beasts, the herdsman sent word to Harpagus that the infant was dead.
-Harpagus sent trusty messengers to see if the report was true; and when
-they saw the dead infant in the royal robes, they returned with the
-assurance that his orders had been complied with, and that they had
-seen the dead child. Harpagus gave orders to have the body buried, and
-sent word to King Astyages that the infant was dead.
-
-The truth about the young Cyrus was not discovered until ten years
-after, and came about in a very strange way. Cyrus had now grown to be
-a strong, bright boy of ten years of age, and was supposed to be the
-son of the peasant herdsman. Several of the sons of the Median nobles
-were accustomed to meet in the neighborhood where he lived, for their
-sports, and Cyrus was always their leader in all pursuits. The story
-goes that he was once chosen as their king in a boyish game; and one
-of the nobles’ sons, being one of his subjects, and having disobeyed
-his commands, the boy king Cyrus punished him very severely. The father
-of the young noble complained to King Astyages of this ill treatment
-which his son had suffered at the hands of a peasant boy. Whereupon,
-the herdsman Mitridates and his supposed son were summoned to appear at
-court.
-
-When the young Cyrus entered the presence of the king, Astyages was
-astonished at his manly bearing and his unusual beauty, and with an
-unaccountable feeling of interest in the supposed peasant boy, he
-inquired if the complaint of the noble was true. The little disguised
-prince looked up into the face of the dread monarch, in whose presence
-all his subjects trembled, and with perfect self-possession, replied,—
-
-“My lord, what I have done I am able to justify. I did punish this boy,
-and I had a right to do so. I was king, and he was my subject, and he
-would not obey me. If you think that for this I deserve punishment
-myself, here I am; I am ready to suffer for it.”
-
-Astyages was so surprised at this unlooked-for answer that he hastily
-commanded that Mitridates should be brought before him; and under
-threats of severe punishment, he demanded that he should tell him
-the truth about the lad; for he had grave doubts about his being the
-peasant’s son. Mitridates, frightened by the stern manner of the king,
-confessed the truth, and related all the circumstances regarding the
-infant who had been committed to him by Harpagus.
-
-Astyages had deeply regretted his evil intentions towards his grandson,
-which, as he supposed, had ended in his death, and gladly claimed Cyrus
-as his own. But with strange inconsistency, he was equally incensed
-against Harpagus, who had dared to disobey his commands, by not
-causing the infant to be put to death; and he determined to celebrate
-in a strange and most shocking manner his joy at the recovery of his
-grandson, and his anger at the disobedience of Harpagus. So with
-wicked craftiness he sent word to Harpagus that his grandson had been
-discovered, and commanded that Harpagus should send his son, a boy
-about thirteen years of age, up to the palace to be a companion for
-young Cyrus. Furthermore, he announced that he was about to celebrate
-his joy at the recovery of his grandson, by a grand festival, at which
-he invited Harpagus to be present.
-
-Harpagus suspecting no evil, and rejoicing at the happy sequel of
-that deed which had occasioned him much disquiet, having sent his son
-to the palace, according to the command of the king, related to his
-wife the strange events which had taken place. Neither of them were
-suspicious of any evil design in this seeming kindliness of Astyages,
-and thought it a fitting honor for their son, that he should be chosen
-as the companion of Prince Cyrus. Harpagus went to the festival, and
-was given a seat of honor at the table. Various dishes were set before
-the guests, and the attendants were especially attentive to see that
-Harpagus was most bountifully served. At the end of the feast, Astyages
-asked Harpagus how he had liked his fare. Harpagus expressed himself as
-being well pleased. The king then ordered the servants to bring in a
-basket, which they uncovered before Harpagus, and he beheld with horror
-the head, hands, and feet of his own son.
-
-The story relates that Harpagus did not display his terrible despair by
-word or look; and when the wicked king asked him if he knew what he had
-been eating, he replied that he did, and whatever was the will of the
-king was pleasing to him. Such shocking cruelties reveal the wickedness
-of those despotic times.
-
-Harpagus satisfied his revenge against the cruel Astyages, many
-years afterwards, in a manner which will be disclosed as this story
-continues. A king whose greed of power could condemn an own grandson to
-death would not scruple at other crimes. Astyages now again consulted
-the soothsayers as to his safety in recognizing Cyrus as his grandson
-and giving him his royal place at court. The Magi now replied, that as
-Cyrus had already been a king, even though it was only in a childish
-game, still, as he had been called a king, the oracles had been
-fulfilled, and Astyages need fear no further danger to his kingdom.
-Astyages therefore sent Cyrus to his parents in Persia, who received
-their long-lost son with overwhelming delight; and the youthful Cyrus
-was no doubt astonished and rejoiced to find himself the son and
-grandson of powerful kings, rather than a simple peasant boy, the son
-of a poor herdsman.
-
-[Illustration: PERSIAN GUARDSMAN CARRYING BOW AND QUIVER.]
-
-[Illustration: PERSIAN SOLDIER WITH BATTLE-AXE.]
-
-[Illustration: PERSIAN FOOT SOLDIERS.]
-
-Cyrus is described by the historians as being tall and handsome, and
-excelling in all youthful exploits.
-
-Xenophon describes the life of young Cyrus in the court of his father
-Cambyses, king of Persia. The sons of all the nobles and officers
-of the court were educated together in the royal palace. They were
-not taught to read, as there were no books, but they had certain
-teachers who explained to them the principles of right and wrong, and
-described to them the various laws of the land, and the rules by which
-controversies should be settled. These were put to practical use in
-deciding the various cases which occurred among the boys themselves;
-and judges were chosen from their number who should discuss and
-decide these questions. Right decisions were rewarded, and wrong ones
-punished. Cyrus himself was once punished for a wrong decision. The
-case was this:—
-
-A larger boy took away the coat of a smaller boy, whose coat was
-bigger than his own, and gave him his own smaller coat. The smaller boy
-appealed to Cyrus, who decided that each boy should keep the coat that
-fitted him. The teacher condemned his decision in these words,—
-
-“When you are called upon to consider a question of what fits best,
-then you should determine as you have done in this case; but when
-you are appointed to decide whose each coat is, and to adjudge it to
-the proper owner, then you are to consider what constitutes right
-possession, and whether he who takes a thing by force from one who
-is weaker than himself, should have it, or whether he who made it or
-purchased it, should be protected in his property. You have decided
-against law and in favor of violence and wrong.”
-
-The boys at this Persian court were taught many kinds of manly
-exercises. They were trained to wrestle and run, and were instructed in
-the use of all kinds of arms then known. Each one was furnished with
-a bow and arrows, a shield, a sword, or dagger, which was worn at the
-side in a scabbard, and two javelins, one of which they were to throw,
-and the other to keep in the hand for use in close combat with the wild
-beasts which they might encounter in their hunting expeditions. These
-excursions were often long and fatiguing, which they took by turns with
-the king in the neighboring forests.
-
-They were subjected to long marches, to cold and hunger and storms,
-and sometimes dangerous conflicts. These experiences were considered
-necessary to fit them to become good soldiers in the future.
-
-When Cyrus was about twelve years of age, he was invited by his
-grandfather Astyages to make him a visit in Media. When Cyrus arrived
-in Media with his mother Mandane, he was surprised at the magnificence
-and pomp of the royal court; as the manners and habits of the Persians
-were very simple, and as he had been sent to Persia as soon as his
-royal rank had been discovered, he had not before had an opportunity of
-seeing the splendor of his grandfather’s court.
-
-[Illustration: PERSIAN KING SEATED ON HIS THRONE.]
-
-In his first interview with Astyages, Cyrus displayed his great
-tact and natural courtesy. When he came into the presence of his
-grandfather, who wore a purple robe richly embroidered with gold and
-covered with precious stones, and bracelets upon his arms, and a long,
-flowing wig, while his face was painted and powdered, Cyrus exclaimed,—
-
-“Why, mother, what a handsome man my grandfather is!”
-
-Cyrus was dazzled by the great display around him, for in the Persian
-court, Cambyses his father, and all his nobles, were clothed with great
-simplicity. Mandane then said to Cyrus,—
-
-“Which one do you think the handsomer man, your father or your
-grandfather?”
-
-It was a very unwise question to ask a child, but Cyrus was equal to
-the emergency, and replied with great tact and politeness,—
-
-“My father is the handsomest man in Persia, but my grandfather is the
-handsomest of all the Medes.”
-
-Astyages was much pleased with the aptness of this reply, and Cyrus
-became a great favorite with his grandfather, who lavished upon him
-costly garments, rich feasts, rare jewels, and the attentions of a
-retinue of servants. But after the first novelty had passed away, Cyrus
-preferred his more simple raiment and plainer food.
-
-At one time, Astyages invited Cyrus and his mother to one of his
-grand feasts in his palace, and ordered the rarest viands to be served
-for Cyrus in the most elegant and costly dishes. Instead of being
-flattered, Cyrus showed no particular pleasure or surprise, and when
-Astyages asked him if he did not delight in such rich and delicate
-food, and if the feast before him was not much finer than any he had
-seen in Persia, Cyrus replied,—
-
-“We manage much better in Persia; it is very troublesome to eat a
-little of so many things.”
-
-“How do you manage in Persia?” asked Astyages.
-
-“When we are hungry, we eat plain meat and bread, and so we get health
-and strength and have very little trouble,” answered Cyrus.
-
-Astyages then told Cyrus that he might continue his plain fare in
-Media, if he thought it was better for his health. Cyrus then asked his
-grandfather if he would give him all the costly dishes before him to do
-as he wished with them. To this Astyages consented, and Cyrus, calling
-up one of the attendants after another, presented to them as gifts the
-various elegant dishes with their contents. To one he said, “I give you
-this because you serve the king faithfully”; to another, “I make you
-this present because you are faithful to my mother”; and to another,
-“Because you have taught me to throw the javelin.” Thus he went on
-until all the gifts had been disposed of. Now the king had one servant,
-whom he honored above all others, who held the office of cup-bearer.
-
-In those days this was an important trust, for those despotic
-monarchs possessed so many enemies that they were in constant danger
-of assassination or of being poisoned. The king’s cup-bearer must
-superintend the food of his master, and taste all wines himself before
-offering them to the king.
-
-Great dexterity and grace were necessary to perform the latter service
-acceptably, as the king’s cup must not be placed to the lips of his
-cup-bearer, but a small portion must be poured into the palm of his
-hand, and lifted gracefully to his mouth.
-
-Astyages’ cup-bearer was a Sacian; he was an officer of high rank,
-tall and handsome, and magnificently dressed. In distributing his
-gifts, Cyrus had neglected this officer, and when Astyages asked him
-his reason, Cyrus replied that he did not like the Sacian. Astyages
-inquired the cause of this dislike, and remarked, “Have you not
-observed how gracefully and elegantly he pours out the wine for me, and
-then hands me the cup?”
-
-Cyrus replied that he could pour out the wine and offer the cup as well
-as the Sacian, and requested his grandfather to allow him to try. To
-this the amused king consented, and Cyrus, taking a goblet of wine in
-his hand, retired from the room. He soon re-entered with the pompous
-and dignified bearing of the Sacian, and so mimicked his manner of
-gravity and self-importance as to occasion much mirth amongst the
-assembled guests.
-
-Cyrus, having advanced to the king, presented him with the cup,
-neglecting not even one single motion of the usual ceremony, except
-tasting the wine himself. Mandane and the king laughed heartily, and
-the would-be cup-bearer, becoming the child again, jumped into his
-grandfather’s arms, exclaiming, “Now, Sacian, you are ruined; I shall
-get my grandfather to appoint me in your place. I can hand the wine as
-well as you, and without tasting it myself at all.”
-
-“But why did you not taste it?” asked his grandfather.
-
-“Because the wine was poisoned,” replied Cyrus.
-
-“What makes you think it is poisoned?” inquired Astyages.
-
-“Because,” said Cyrus, “it was poisoned the other day when you made a
-feast for your friends on your birthday. It made you all crazy. The
-things that you do not allow us boys to do you did yourselves, for you
-were very rude and noisy; you all bawled together so that nobody could
-hear or understand what any other person said. Presently you went to
-singing in a very ridiculous manner, and when a singer ended his song,
-you applauded him, and declared that he had sung admirably, though
-nobody had paid attention. You went to telling stories too, each one
-of his own accord, without succeeding in making anybody listen to him.
-Finally, you got up and began to dance, but it was out of all rule and
-measure; you could not even stand erect and steadily. Then you all
-seemed to forget who and what you were; the guests paid no regard to
-you as their king, but treated you in a very familiar and disrespectful
-manner, and you treated them in the same way; so I thought that the
-wine that produced these effects must be poisoned.”
-
-“But have not you ever seen such things before?” asked Astyages. “Does
-not your father ever drink wine until it makes him merry?”
-
-“No,” replied Cyrus, “indeed, he does not; he drinks only when he is
-thirsty, and then only enough for his thirst, and so he is not harmed.”
-He then added in a contemptuous tone, “He has no Sacian cup-bearer, you
-may depend, about him.”
-
-“But why do you dislike this Sacian so much, my son?” asked Mandane.
-
-“Why, every time that I want to come and see my grandfather,” replied
-Cyrus, “he always stops me, and will not let me come in. I wish,
-grandfather, you would let me have the rule of him for just three
-days.”
-
-“What would you do?” asked Astyages.
-
-“I would treat him as he treats me now,” answered Cyrus. “I would stand
-at the door, as he does when I want to come in, and when he was coming
-for his dinner, I would stop him and say, ‘You cannot come in now; he
-is busy.’” Cyrus repeated these words in the tones and with the grave
-manner of the Sacian.
-
-“Then,” continued Cyrus, “when he was coming to get his supper, I would
-say, ‘You must not come in now; he is bathing, or he is going to sleep;
-you must come some other time, for he cannot be disturbed.’ Thus I
-would torment him all the time, as he now torments me in keeping me
-from you when I want to see you.”
-
-When the time arrived for Mandane to return to Persia, Astyages was
-very desirous to have Cyrus remain with him; Mandane gave her consent
-if Cyrus should wish to do so. Astyages told Cyrus that if he would
-stay, the Sacian should torment him no more, but that he should be
-allowed to come into his presence whenever he wished to do so, and,
-moreover, he should have the use of all his grandfather’s horses. He
-should also have boys of his own age for companions, and they would
-be allowed to hunt the animals in the park. They could pursue them on
-horseback and shoot them with bows and arrows, or throw the javelins
-at their prey. This pleasure of riding and hunting was a rare one to
-Cyrus, for the Persians had few horses, and there were no bodies of
-cavalry in their armies. Cyrus represented to his mother the great
-advantage it would be to him to be a skilful horseman, as that would
-give him a superiority over all the Persian youths. Mandane was
-somewhat anxious lest the luxurious habits and haughty manners of his
-grandfather should prove a bad example for Cyrus, but he assured her
-that she need have no fears, as his grandfather required all to be
-submissive to himself, and allowed imperiousness in no one but the
-king. So it was decided that Cyrus should remain in Media, and Mandane
-departed for Persia.
-
-Cyrus now applied himself with great diligence to acquire all the
-various accomplishments and arts then most highly prized, such as
-leaping, vaulting, racing, riding, throwing the javelin, and drawing
-the bow. In the friendly contests among the boys, Cyrus would
-courteously challenge those superior to himself in these exercises,
-thus giving them the pleasure of winning the prize, and benefiting
-himself by thus having the greater stimulus of contesting with
-attainments higher than his own. He accordingly made rapid progress,
-and speedily learned to equal and then surpass his companions without
-occasioning any envy or jealousy.
-
-It was their favorite amusement to hunt the deer in his grandfather’s
-park; but at last, so vigorous had been their onslaught, that the
-animals were wellnigh exhausted, and Astyages went to great trouble to
-secure further supplies. Cyrus then requested that they be allowed to
-hunt in the forests, and hunt the wild beasts with the men. As Cyrus
-had now grown up into a tall, robust young man, able to sustain the
-fatigues of the hunt, his grandfather consented that Cyrus should go
-out with his son Cyaxares. The party set out in high spirits. There
-were certain attendants appointed to keep particular guard over Cyrus,
-and prevent him from rushing rashly into danger. His attendants told
-him that the dangerous animals were bears, lions, tigers, boars, and
-leopards; and as they often attacked man, he must avoid them; but that
-he could hunt the stags, goats, and wild sheep as much as he pleased.
-They also told him of the dangers in riding over a rough country where
-the broken ground and steep, rocky precipices made riding difficult,
-and hunters driving impetuously over such a country were often thrown
-from their horses, or fell with them into the chasms and were killed.
-Cyrus promised to remember their warning; but no sooner had he entered
-into the excitement of the chase than he forgot all their counsels,
-and riding furiously after a stag, his horse came to a chasm which he
-was obliged to leap. But the distance was too great, and the horse
-fell upon his knees as he reached the farther side, and for a moment
-before he recovered his footing Cyrus was in imminent danger of being
-precipitated to the bottom of the deep precipice. But Cyrus was
-fearless; and as soon as his horse had regained his feet and cleared
-the chasm, he pressed on after the stag, overtook him, and killed him
-with his javelin. As soon as his frightened attendants came up to him,
-they reproved him for his reckless daring, and they threatened to
-report to his grandfather. Just at the instant he heard a new halloo,
-as fresh game had been started, and forgetting all his resolutions,
-Cyrus sprang upon his horse with a loud shout and followed the chase.
-The game now started was a dangerous wild boar, and Cyrus instead
-of shunning the peril, as he should have done in obedience to his
-grandfather’s orders, dashed after the boar, and aimed so true a thrust
-with his javelin against the beast as to transfix him in the forehead.
-The boar fell dying upon the ground, and Cyrus waited for the party to
-arrive, with pride and triumph. When his uncle Cyaxares came near, he
-reproved Cyrus for running such risks, and said that if his grandfather
-knew what he had done, he would punish him. “Let him punish me,” said
-Cyrus, “if he wishes after I have shown him the stag and the hoar, and
-you may punish me too if you will only let me show him the animals I
-have killed.” Cyaxares consented, and ordered the bodies of the beasts
-and the bloody javelins to be carried home. Cyrus presented them to
-his grandfather, who thanked him for the presents, but said he had no
-such need of game as to require his grandson to thus expose himself to
-danger. “Well, grandfather,” said Cyrus, “if you don’t wish the meat
-yourself, will you let me give it to my friends.” Astyages agreed to
-this, and Cyrus divided his booty amongst all his young companions who
-had hunted with him in the park. The boys took their several portions
-home, giving glowing accounts of the skilful exploits of the giver.
-Thus was Cyrus thus early ambitious of spreading his own fame.
-
-When Cyrus was about sixteen years of age he went with his uncle
-Cyaxares on an excursion for plunder into some neighboring provinces.
-Neither the kings of those times nor their historians seem to have
-considered such expeditions as unjust or wrong, but rather as a more
-noble enterprise than even their favorite hunting. In this expedition
-Cyrus so distinguished himself by his exploits, that his father,
-hearing the reports thereof, concluded that if his son was beginning to
-take part as a soldier in military campaigns, it was time to recall him
-to his own country. He therefore sent for Cyrus to return home.
-
-There was great sadness in the Median court when Cyrus departed, for he
-had become a special favorite with king and people.
-
-The succeeding events of Cyrus’ life take us more out of the field of
-romance and are more strictly confined to the facts of history. Cyrus
-on his return to Persia grew rapidly in strength and stature, and
-soon became distinguished for his manly beauty, his personal grace,
-and winning manners, as well as excelling all others in the martial
-accomplishments he had acquired in Media. He gained great ascendancy
-over the minds of others, and as he advanced to manhood his thoughts
-turned from athletic sports and hunting to plans of war and ambitions
-for more extended dominions.
-
-Meanwhile, Harpagus, who had always meditated revenge upon Astyages
-for the horrible death of his son, though at the time he had been too
-wary to express resentment, was constantly watching every opportunity
-to work evil against the king. Fifteen years had now passed since the
-terrible deed was committed. He remained all this time in the court of
-Astyages, where he outwardly demeaned himself as the friend and zealous
-subject of the king, but meanwhile he plotted revenge.
-
-He kept up a constant communication with Cyrus, and at last went so far
-as to try to induce him to collect an army and march into Media against
-Astyages. The plausible motives which he suggested made it appear to
-Cyrus as though he would only be endeavoring to free his own Persia
-from ignoble bondage, as Persia was a Median dependency. Meanwhile,
-Harpagus sympathized with all the disaffected Medians, whose numbers
-rapidly increased, as the tyranny of Astyages made numerous enemies.
-
-At length the time came when Harpagus thought the right moment
-had arrived for a revolt. Cyrus had now determined to attempt
-the enterprise. Astyages had been guilty of some unusual acts of
-oppression, by which he had produced great dissatisfaction among his
-people. Harpagus found the principal men around him willing to enter
-into the conspiracy, so he desired that Cyrus should come into Media
-with as large a force as he could raise, and head the insurrection
-against the government of Astyages.
-
-Harpagus did not dare to trust this message to any messenger, and so
-he took this novel way of communicating with Cyrus. He wrote a letter
-to Cyrus, and then taking a dead hare he opened the body and concealed
-the letter within, and then neatly sewed up the skin again so that no
-signs remained of the incision. He then delivered the hare to some
-trusty servants, who should also carry hunting weapons, as though about
-to go upon some hunting expedition. He also commanded that they should
-give the hare to Cyrus himself, and that he should open it alone. The
-plan was successful; the hare reached the hands of Cyrus in safety, and
-opening it, he read a letter which was in substance as follows:—
-
-“It is plain, Cyrus, that you are a favorite of Heaven, and that you
-are destined to a great and glorious career. You could not otherwise
-have escaped, in so miraculous a manner, the snares set for you in your
-infancy. Astyages meditated your death, and he took such measures to
-effect it as would seem to have made your destruction sure. You were
-saved by the special interposition of Heaven. You are aware by what
-extraordinary incidents you were preserved and discovered, and what
-great and unusual prosperity has since attended you. You know, too,
-what cruel punishments Astyages inflicted upon me for my humanity in
-saving you. The time has now come for retribution. From this time the
-authority and the dominions of Astyages may be yours. Persuade the
-Persians to revolt. Put yourself at the head of an army and march into
-Media. I shall probably myself be appointed to command the army sent
-out to oppose you. If so, we will join our forces when we meet, and I
-will enter your service. I have conferred with the leading nobles in
-Media, and they are all ready to espouse your cause. You may rely upon
-finding everything thus prepared for you here. Come, therefore, without
-delay.”
-
-Cyrus determined to comply with the proposal of Harpagus. He therefore
-resorted to deceit, or, as he called it, stratagem. Thus war upholds
-and justifies falsehood and treachery under the name of stratagem.
-Cyrus had a letter prepared in the form of a commission from Astyages,
-appointing him commander of a body of Persian forces to be raised in
-the service of the king. He then read this false letter at a public
-assembly, and called upon all the Persian warriors to join him.
-
-Cyrus did not at first make known to them his designs, but commanded
-them all to assemble on a certain day at a place named, and each one
-was to provide himself with an axe. When they were thus mustered, he
-marched them into the forest, and employed them all day in felling
-trees. He gave them, moreover, only the coarsest food. When the day was
-over, he ordered them all to assemble again on the morrow. When they
-came the next day, instead of hard work and poor food, most sumptuous
-feasts had been provided for them, and they spent the day in merriment
-and revelry.
-
-In the evening Cyrus called them all together and revealed to them his
-plans, and said to them that if they would follow him, they should live
-in ease and plenty; otherwise, if they should continue as they were,
-they would spend their lives in toil and privation; and he reminded
-them of the two days just spent, and asked them which they preferred
-to live. The soldiers received his proposals with joy, and eagerly
-promised to follow him into Media. When everything was ready, Cyrus
-led his army into Media. In the meantime Astyages, hearing of his
-insurrection, had collected a large force, and as had been anticipated,
-placed it under the command of Harpagus. When the battle was joined,
-the honest part of the Median army fought valiantly at first; but
-discovering that they were being deserted by their comrades, they fled
-in confusion. Cyrus, thus reinforced by the deserting Medians with
-Harpagus at their head, now found himself the leader of a large force,
-and advanced toward the capital. When Astyages heard of the treachery
-of Harpagus and the desertion of his army, he was frenzied with rage.
-The long-dreaded prediction of his dream seemed about to be fulfilled,
-and the Magi who had assured him that he was safe, as Cyrus had been a
-king when a boy, had proved themselves false.
-
-He directed them all to be seized and crucified. He then ordered every
-man capable of bearing arms, into the ranks, and putting himself at
-the head of this large force, he marched against Cyrus. But he was
-defeated, and he himself was taken prisoner. Harpagus was present when
-he was taken, and he exulted in triumph over his downfall. Harpagus
-asked him what he thought now of the supper in which he had compelled a
-father to feed upon the flesh of his own child. Astyages asked Harpagus
-if he thought the success of Cyrus was owing to what he had done.
-Harpagus replied that it was, and revealed to him how he had schemed
-for his destruction, and the preparation he had made in aid of Cyrus,
-so that Astyages might see that his downfall had been effected by
-Harpagus himself, in terrible retribution for the shocking crime he had
-committed so many years before.
-
-The result of this battle was the complete overthrow of the power and
-kingdom of Astyages, and the establishment of Cyrus on the throne of
-the united kingdoms of Media and Persia.
-
-Cyrus treated his grandfather with kindness, though he kept him in a
-sort of imprisonment. The people rejoiced in his downfall, and were
-well pleased with the milder and more equitable government of Cyrus.
-Astyages met His death years after, in a strange manner. Cyrus sent
-for him to come into Persia, where he was then himself residing. The
-officer who had Astyages in charge, led him into a desolate wilderness,
-where he perished from hunger and exposure. Cyrus punished the officer
-for this crime, though it was supposed by some that it was done by the
-secret order of Cyrus, in retribution, perhaps, for the evil intentions
-of Astyages toward himself in his infancy, which, if they had been
-obeyed, would have resulted in his own death from the same cause.
-
-The character and nobleness of Cyrus, as evinced by numerous generous
-deeds throughout his life, would, however, seem to refute such a
-supposition. Harpagus continued in the service of Cyrus, and became one
-of his most celebrated generals.
-
-Such is one of the stories of the accession of Cyrus to the thrones
-of Media and Persia. Another account gives a different version of it,
-and states that Astyages died while king of Media, and was succeeded
-by his son Cyaxares, brother to Cyrus’ mother Mandane, or Mandana, as
-her name is given by some historians. The years of the reign of Cyrus
-are computed differently. Some make his reign thirty years, beginning
-from his first setting out from Persia at the head of an army to succor
-his uncle Cyaxares, who was in war with the Babylonians. Others make
-the duration of it to be but seven years, because they date only from
-the time when, by the death of Cambyses and Cyaxares, Cyrus became
-sole monarch of the entire empire of both Media and Persia. But as
-Cyrus seems to have been the leader in both the Median and Persian
-empires long before the death of these kings, he probably ruled them
-both in partnership with them; and notwithstanding Cyrus conquered and
-acquired Babylon by his own valor, he complacently allowed his uncle
-Cyaxares, whose forces had been engaged with his own, to hold the
-first rank. This Cyaxares is called in the Bible Darius the Mede; and
-it was under his reign in Babylon, which only lasted two years, that
-Daniel the prophet had several revelations. But as our interest is more
-particularly in the life and conquests of Cyrus himself, rather than
-those of Cyaxares and Cambyses, and as the vast power and dominion
-of both Media and Persia seemed to have been owing to the valor and
-executive ability of Cyrus alone, our story will confine itself to the
-achievements of Cyrus the Great, without further mention of Cambyses or
-Cyaxares.
-
-We now come to the history of Cyrus and Crœsus, and before we recount
-the conquest of the kingdom of Lydia, it will make it more interesting,
-perhaps, to give a slight sketch of Crœsus, king of Lydia, and also to
-mention the oracles which played such an important part in the history
-of this king. The country of Lydia, over which this famous king ruled,
-was in the western part of Asia Minor bordering on the Ægean Sea.
-Crœsus, king of Lydia, acquired the enormous riches for which he was
-so famous, from the golden sands of the river Pactolus, which flowed
-through his kingdom. The river brought down the gold particles from
-the mountains above, and the slaves of Crœsus washed the sands, thus
-separating the metal, which was obtained in such vast quantities that
-this king’s name has become a proverb for fabulous wealth, in the old
-saying, “Rich as Crœsus.”
-
-The people of those days, however, had a very different story of the
-origin of the gold in the river Pactolus. Their legend was that ages
-before, a certain king named Midas had rendered some service to a god,
-who thereupon promised to grant him any favor he should ask. Midas
-prayed that the power might be granted him of turning everything he
-touched into gold. This power was bestowed by the god, and after Midas
-had turned many objects into gold, he began to find his gift very
-inconvenient, and was in danger of starving to death in the midst
-of all his wealth. For no sooner had he touched any food than it
-straightway became gold. Midas was then as anxious to get rid of his
-dangerous gift as he had been to secure it.
-
-He implored the god to take back the gift.
-
-The god told him to go and bathe in the river Pactolus, and he should
-be restored to his former state.
-
-Midas did so, and was saved, but in the operation a great portion of
-the sands of the river were transformed to gold.
-
-Crœsus was at one time visited by a famous Grecian lawgiver, named
-Solon. Crœsus received Solon with great distinction, and showed him all
-his treasures.
-
-One day the king asked Solon, who of all the persons he had ever met,
-he considered to be the happiest man.
-
-Of course Crœsus imagined that the sage would name himself, the king,
-as the happiest mortal. But Solon gave him the name of Tellus, a quiet
-Athenian citizen.
-
-Crœsus asked why he should place such a man before a monarch occupying
-such a throne as his own.
-
-Solon replied,—
-
-“You are now at the height of your power, but I cannot decide whether
-you are a fortunate and happy man, until I know your end.”
-
-Crœsus had two sons. One was deaf and dumb, the other was a young man
-of much promise; but he was killed while hunting.
-
-As soon as Cyrus had become established on his throne as king of the
-Medes and Persians, his power began to extend westward toward the
-empire of Crœsus, king of Lydia.
-
-Crœsus was roused from the dejection into which he had been plunged by
-the death of his son, by the danger which now threatened his kingdom.
-In his uncertainty regarding the future, he determined to consult the
-oracles. The three most important of these oracles were situated, one
-at Delphi, one at Dodona, and the third at the Oasis of Jupiter Ammon.
-
-Delphi was a small town built on the southern side of Mount Parnassus.
-This mount was a famous place. From a deep cavern in the rocks there
-issued a stream of gaseous vapor, which was said to inspire all persons
-inhaling it with a spirit of divination and poetry. A temple was
-built upon this mountain, in which a priestess resided, and she gave
-responses to all who came to consult the oracle. When she gave her
-answers, she sat upon a three-legged stool, which was afterwards called
-the sacred tripod. This oracle became so renowned that many monarchs
-came great distances to consult it; and they made very costly presents
-to the shrine. The deity who was supposed to dictate the predictions
-was Apollo. Crœsus sent messengers to all of the various oracles to
-ask what should be the result of his contest with Cyrus. The replies
-were all unsatisfactory, except the Delphic oracle. Crœsus now decided
-that this was the oracle upon which he must rely, and immediately
-made preparations to send most magnificent and costly presents to the
-Delphic shrine. Some of the treasures were to be deposited in the
-temple, and some were to be offered as a burnt sacrifice to the god.
-
-After the ceremonies were completed, everything that had been used in
-the services, including gold and silver vessels, richly embroidered
-garments, and numerous other costly articles, were gathered into one
-vast funeral pile and burnt. So much gold had been employed in making
-these things, that it melted in the fire and ran into plates of great
-size. These were then collected and formed into an image of a lion,
-which was placed in the temple. Crœsus also presented the temple with
-a silver cistern, or tank, large enough to hold three thousand gallons
-of wine. There was one strange piece of statuary which he sent to this
-shrine, which we must not omit to mention. It was a statue of gold of a
-woman-servant in the household of Crœsus. It was called The Breadmaker.
-Its origin was this:—
-
-When Crœsus was a child, his mother died, and his father married
-again. His stepmother desired to have one of her children succeed to
-the throne instead of Crœsus. So she gave some poison to the woman who
-was accustomed to make the bread for the family, telling her to put
-it in the portion intended for Crœsus. This servant, however, instead
-of minding the wicked queen, revealed the plot to Crœsus, and put the
-poison in the bread of the queen’s own children. In gratitude for his
-preservation by this slave, Crœsus ordered a statue of gold to be made
-in her honor, when he came to the throne; and this he sent to the
-temple at Delphi. After Crœsus had presented all these magnificent
-gifts to the shrine, he consulted the oracle. The answer was as
-follows:—
-
-“If Crœsus crosses the Halys and prosecutes a war with Persia, a mighty
-empire will be overthrown. It will be best for him to form an alliance
-with the most powerful states of Greece.”
-
-Crœsus was much pleased with this answer, and then asked furthermore,
-whether his power would ever decline.
-
-The oracle replied,—
-
-“Whenever a mule shall mount upon the Median throne, then, and not till
-then, shall great Crœsus fear to lose his own.”
-
-These replies strengthened the belief of Crœsus that he should be
-victorious; but as the sequel shows, we will learn how vague and
-indefinite were the answers of the oracles, and so given that they
-could correspond with the event, whatever might be the result.
-
-Crœsus now sent ambassadors to Sparta to seek their aid, and meanwhile
-went on making great preparations for his campaign. When all things
-were ready, the army commenced its march eastward until it reached the
-river Halys.
-
-The army encamped upon its banks until some plan could be formed for
-crossing the river. Crœsus had with his army a very celebrated engineer
-named Thales. This engineer succeeded in getting the army of Crœsus
-over the river by ordering a large force of laborers to cut a new
-channel for the river behind the army, into which the water flowed, and
-Crœsus and his force passed on. Cyrus had heard of his approach, and
-soon the armies were face to face.
-
-Cyrus had been conquering all the nations in his path, as he went
-forward to meet Crœsus, and thus had been reinforced by all of the
-neighboring people, except the Babylonians, who were allied with Crœsus
-against him. A great battle was fought at Pteria, which continued all
-day, and at its close the combatants separated without either of them
-having gained much advantage.
-
-Crœsus thinking that this battle was enough for the present, and
-supposing that Cyrus would now go home, having found that he could not
-overcome him, determined to return to his own city Sardis, and there
-prepare for a more vigorous campaign in the spring.
-
-Cyrus quietly remained in his position until Crœsus had time to return
-to Sardis. Whereupon, he followed with his entire army.
-
-Crœsus was now thoroughly alarmed, and collecting all the forces he
-could command, he marched forth to a great plain just without the city,
-to meet Cyrus.
-
-The Lydian army was superior to that of Cyrus in cavalry, and upon
-this plain they would have a much greater advantage. To avoid this,
-Cyrus ordered all his large train of camels, which had been employed as
-beasts of burden, to be drawn up in line in front of his army, each one
-having a soldier upon his back, armed with a spear.
-
-It is said that horses cannot endure the sight or smell of a camel; and
-when the two armies met, the cavalry of Crœsus, riding furiously to the
-attack, were confronted by the line of huge, awkward camels, with their
-soldier riders. The horses were so frightened by the spectacle, that
-they turned and fled in dismay, trampling down their own forces, and
-causing complete confusion in the Lydian army. The army of Crœsus was
-totally defeated, and they fled into the city of Sardis and entrenched
-themselves there.
-
-Cyrus now besieged the city for fourteen days, endeavoring to find
-some place to scale the walls which surrounded it. One part of the
-wall passed over rocky precipices which were considered impassable.
-At length one of the soldiers of Cyrus, named Hyræades, observed
-one of the sentinels, who was stationed on the wall overlooking the
-precipice, leave his post, and come partway down the rocks to get his
-helmet, which had dropped down. Hyræades reported this incident to
-Cyrus, and so an attempt was made to scale the walls at that point. It
-was successful, and thus the city was taken. It is reported that in
-the confusion and noise of storming the city the life of Crœsus was
-saved by the miraculous speaking of his deaf-and-dumb son. Cyrus had
-commanded his soldiers not to kill Crœsus, but that they should take
-him alive, and he should then be brought to him. As Crœsus was escaping
-with his son a party of Persian soldiers took him prisoner, and were
-about to kill him, not knowing who he was, when the dumb boy cried out,—
-
-“It is Crœsus; do not kill him!”
-
-Cyrus had not ordered Crœsus to be spared from any motives of kindness;
-but that he himself might determine his fate.
-
-He commanded Crœsus to be put in chains, and a huge funeral pile to be
-built in a public square, and Crœsus and fourteen of the young Lydian
-nobles were placed upon the pile.
-
-Just as the torch was applied, Crœsus cried out in a tone of anguish
-and despair,—
-
-“Oh, Solon! Solon! Solon!”
-
-The officers who had charge of the execution asked him what he meant,
-and Cyrus, also hearing him, and being desirous of receiving an
-explanation of his mysterious words, commanded the fires to be put out,
-and ordered Crœsus to be unbound and to be brought to him. Cyrus now
-treated Crœsus with much kindness.
-
-[Illustration: PERSIAN SUBJECTS BRINGING TRIBUTE.]
-
-Crœsus was very much incensed against the oracle at Delphi for having
-deceived him by false predictions; but the priests of the oracle
-replied that the destruction of the Lydian dynasty had long been
-decreed by fate on account of the guilt of Gyges, the founder of the
-line, who had murdered the rightful monarch, and usurped the crown.
-The oracles had foretold that a mighty empire would be overthrown, and
-Crœsus had wrongly imagined that it referred to the destruction of the
-kingdom of Cyrus. As to the other prediction made by the oracle, that
-when he should find a mule upon the throne of Media, he would lose his
-own, this had been fulfilled, as Cyrus, who was descended from the
-Persians on his father’s side, and from the Medians on his mother’s,
-had thus become a hybrid sovereign, represented by the mule.
-
-In his advance towards the dominions of Crœsus in Asia Minor, Cyrus had
-passed to the northward of the great and celebrated city of Babylon.
-He had now conquered all the nations from the Ægean Sea to the river
-Euphrates. He then subdued Syria and Arabia. After this he entered into
-Assyria and advanced towards Babylon, the only large city of the East
-yet unsubdued.
-
-The taking of Babylon is one of the greatest events in ancient history,
-and the principal circumstances with which it was attended were
-foretold in the Bible many years before it happened. Babylon, at this
-time, was the most magnificent city in the world. It was situated in
-a large plain, and was surrounded by walls which were eighty-seven
-feet thick, three hundred and fifty feet high, and sixty miles in
-circumference. These walls were in the form of a square, each side of
-which was fifteen miles long. They were built of large bricks cemented
-together with bitumen, which bound bricks so firmly together that the
-mortar soon became harder than the bricks themselves. This wall was
-surrounded by a deep, wide trench filled with water. The great wall of
-Babylon contained 200,000,000 yards of solid masonry, or nearly twice
-the cubic contents of the famous wall of China. Each of the bricks
-was stamped with the name of Nebuchadnezzar. The wall was so wide
-that four chariots could move abreast upon its summit. Two hundred
-and fifty towers, each ten feet higher than the walls, rose above
-the parapet. One hundred gates of brass opened to as many streets.
-Each of the fifty streets was fifteen miles long, and one hundred and
-forty feet broad, crossing each other at right angles; these avenues
-divided the city into six hundred and seventy-six squares, each being
-two and a half miles in circuit. The buildings were erected around
-these squares with an open court in the centre, containing beautiful
-gardens and fountains. The river Euphrates flowed through the city, and
-was spanned by a bridge, five hundred feet long and thirty feet wide.
-Above the bridge rose an obelisk one hundred and twenty-five feet high.
-As the melting of the snows upon the mountains of Armenia caused the
-river Euphrates to overflow its banks in the months of June, July, and
-August, two artificial canals were cut, some distance above the city,
-which turned the course of these waters into the Tigris before they
-reached Babylon. To keep the river within its channel, they raised
-immense artificial banks on both sides, built with bricks cemented with
-bitumen. In making these works it was necessary to turn the course of
-the river another way. For this purpose a prodigious artificial lake
-was dug, forty miles square, one hundred and sixty in circumference,
-and thirty-five feet deep.
-
-[Illustration: CHART OF THE COUNTRY AROUND BABYLON.]
-
-Into this lake the whole river was turned by an artificial canal, cut
-from the west side of it, until the entire work was finished, when
-the river was allowed to flow into its former channel. This lake was
-kept, however, as a reservoir, as a means of irrigating the surrounding
-fields.
-
-Along the banks of the river were the famous Hanging Gardens, where the
-many terraces bloomed with brilliant flowers, and were shaded by groves
-of trees, and cooled by fountains of sparkling water. These beautiful
-gardens, which were considered one of the Seven Wonders of the World,
-were constructed by Nebuchadnezzar to please his wife Amytis, whose
-native land was Media, as she was the daughter of Astyages.
-
-Surrounded by a triple wall, and guarded by gates of brass, rose the
-magnificent royal palace, whose walls were adorned by pictures of
-the chase, and martial and festive processions, and whose apartments
-were furnished with the rich carpets of Persia, the costly fabrics of
-Damascus, and the jewels of Bokhara.
-
-Rising above all the other structures was the lofty Tower of Belus,
-or Babel. The tower was six hundred feet high, and was crowned with
-a statue of Belus, forty feet high, made of pure gold, which shone
-resplendent in the sunlight, or gleamed with matchless beauty in the
-soft moonlight. It is said that this tower far exceeded the greatest
-pyramid of Egypt in height. The ascent to the top was by stairs round
-the outside of it; and as the tower proper was composed of eight
-stories, each decreasing gradually in size, the entire tower formed
-a pyramid. In the different stories were many rooms, which were
-richly adorned with tables, censers, cups, and other sacred vessels of
-massive gold. Diodorus, one of the ancient historians, estimates the
-value of the riches contained in this temple to amount to $93,240,000.
-This temple stood in the time of Xerxes, but on his return from his
-Grecian expedition, he entirely destroyed it, having plundered it of
-all its immense treasures. Alexander the Great purposed to rebuild
-it, and employed ten thousand men to remove the rubbish which had
-accumulated around it, but after they had labored two months, Alexander
-died, and that put an end to the undertaking.
-
-Belshazzar gave a great feast in his palace to all his chief officers
-and nobles, even though Cyrus the Great was then besieging Babylon.
-It was during this impious feast, after Belshazzar had commanded that
-the sacred vessels, which had been taken from the Temple of Jehovah in
-Jerusalem, should be desecrated by being used by his drunken guests
-as wine-goblets, that the marvellous writing appeared upon his palace
-wall, and the words “Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin” were traced in
-letters of fire by a mysterious hand. Belshazzar was aroused from his
-drunken carousal and filled with terror on account of the strange omen.
-None of his magicians could interpret its meaning. At last his mother,
-Queen Nitocris, remembered the old prophet Daniel, and his previous
-wonderful interpretations for Nebuchadnezzar. Daniel, being summoned,
-declared that it predicted the destruction of his kingdom, which should
-be divided, and given to the Medes and Persians.
-
-Swiftly, indeed, did the dread catastrophe overtake the wicked king.
-Cyrus had caused great ditches to be dug on both sides of the city,
-above and below, so that the water of the river Euphrates might run
-into them. That very night he caused those great receptacles to be
-opened; and while Belshazzar and his drunken army were carousing in
-mad revellings, the channel of the river was emptied, and the hostile
-forces marched into the dry channel in two bodies of troops; one
-entering above the city, and one below. A guide who had promised to
-open all the gates to Cyrus left open the gates of brass which were
-made to shut up the descents from the quays to the river.
-
-[Illustration: SUPPOSED PLAN OF ANCIENT BABYLON.]
-
-Thus the army of Cyrus was enabled to penetrate into the very heart
-of the city without opposition. Arriving at the royal palace, they
-surprised the guards and killed them. Then rushing into the palace, and
-meeting the king, who had seized a sword, and stood in the midst of his
-frightened and helpless guests, the soldiers of Cyrus killed Belshazzar.
-
-Cyrus, having entered the city, put all to the sword who were found
-in the streets. He then commanded the citizens to bring him all their
-arms, and afterwards to shut themselves up in their houses. Early the
-next morning, the garrison which kept the citadel, learning that the
-city had been taken, and their king killed, surrendered themselves
-to Cyrus. Thus did this prince, almost without striking a blow, find
-himself in possession of the strongest place in the world.
-
-In the first year after Cyrus conquered Babylon, he published the
-famous edict permitting the Jews to return to Jerusalem. Cyrus at the
-same time restored to the Jews all the vessels of the temple of the
-Lord, which Nebuchadnezzar had brought from Jerusalem, and placed in
-the temple of his god Belus, or Baal.
-
-After this conquest, Cyrus established his residence in the midst of
-the countries within his vast dominions. He spent seven months of
-the year at Babylon in the winter season, because of the warmth of
-that climate; three months at Susa in the spring; and two months at
-Ecbatana, during the heat of summer.
-
-There is an interesting story, told by Xenophon, of a princess, named
-Panthea, in connection with the expedition of Cyrus against the
-Assyrians. Among the prisoners of war taken by his army was a very
-beautiful princess, Panthea, the wife of Abradates, king of Susiana.
-Her husband was an Assyrian general, though he himself was not captured
-at this time with his wife. Cyrus committed this princess to the care
-of one of his young nobles, named Araspes. This nobleman fell in love
-with Panthea, and ventured to express to her his admiration for her.
-She was offended; and when Araspes continued his declarations of
-love, she complained to Cyrus. Cyrus severely reproved his officer
-for proving unworthy of the trust reposed in him. Araspes, mortified
-and repentant, was overwhelmed with fear and remorse. Cyrus, hearing
-of this, sent for Araspes, and instead of upbraiding him, sent him
-upon a trusty and difficult mission as a spy among the Assyrians. The
-loss of so brave an officer, who was supposed to have gone over to the
-enemy, greatly affected the army. Panthea, who imagined that she had
-been the cause of this loss to Cyrus, told him that she would supply
-the place of Araspes with an officer of equal merit. Accordingly, she
-sent for her husband Abradates. Upon his arrival, she told him of the
-kindness and consideration with which she had been treated by Cyrus,
-the generous conqueror.
-
-“And how,” said Abradates, “shall I be able to acknowledge so important
-a service?”
-
-[Illustration: BABYLONIAN KING.]
-
-“By behaving towards him as he has done towards me,” replied Panthea.
-
-Whereupon, Abradates immediately expressed his gratitude to Cyrus, and
-offered to espouse his cause as his faithful ally. Cyrus received him
-with a noble and courteous manner and accepted his offer. Abradates
-then fitted up for Cyrus one hundred chariots at his own expense,
-and provided horses to draw them, from his own troop. These armed
-chariots were a very expensive sort of force. The carriages were heavy
-and strong and were usually drawn by two horses. They had short,
-scythe-like blades of steel projecting from the axletrees on each side,
-by which the ranks of the enemy were mowed down when the chariots
-were driven among them. Each chariot could hold one or more warriors
-beside the driver of the horses. The warriors stood on the floor of
-the carriage, and fought with javelins and spears. Abradates made
-one chariot much larger than the rest for himself, as he intended to
-command this corps of chariots.
-
-His wife Panthea took much interest in these preparations, and
-unknown to Abradates, she furnished from her own treasures a helmet,
-a corselet, and arm-pieces of gold for her husband. She also provided
-breast-pieces and side-pieces for the horses. When the day arrived
-for Abradates to go into battle with his chariot corps, Panthea
-presented her munificent gifts to him, which were most royal. Besides
-the defences of gold, there were other articles for ornament. There
-was a purple robe, a violet crest for the helmet, waving plumes, and
-costly bracelets. Abradates was greatly astonished, and exclaimed with
-surprise and pleasure,—
-
-“And so to provide me with this splendid armor and dress, you have been
-depriving yourself of all your finest and most beautiful ornaments!”
-
-“No,” lovingly replied Panthea; “you are yourself my finest ornament,
-if you appear in the eyes of others as you do in mine; and I have not
-deprived myself of you.”
-
-There were many spectators present to see Abradates mount in his
-gorgeous chariot and drive away; but the attention of the beholders was
-centred upon the exquisite beauty of Panthea, as she stood by the side
-of his chariot to bid adieu to her husband. This was their last parting.
-
-As Panthea turned away from the royal train, her husband waved her a
-fond farewell.
-
-On the field of battle Abradates displayed heroic courage. His chariot
-was observed by Cyrus, in the thickest of the fight, rushing fearlessly
-into the places of the greatest danger.
-
-The victory was gained by Cyrus; but Abradates was killed in his
-chariot; and when Cyrus inquired about him, it was reported that
-Panthea was then attending to the interment of the body on the banks of
-a river which flowed near the field of battle.
-
-Cyrus immediately went to the spot, where Panthea sat weeping over the
-remains of her beloved husband. Cyrus leaped from his horse, and knelt
-beside the corpse, exclaiming,—
-
-“Alas! thou brave and faithful soul, and art thou gone?”
-
-Cyrus said what he could to console Panthea; but she was unconsolable.
-He gave directions that everything should be furnished for her comfort.
-Panthea thanked him for his kindness.
-
-After Cyrus had left her, Panthea sent away all her servants but her
-waiting-maid, saying that she wished to be alone with the dead body of
-her husband. She then drew forth a small dagger, which she had kept
-concealed beneath her robe; and telling her maid to envelop her dead
-body in the same mantle with her husband, and to have them buried
-together in the same grave, she pierced her heart with the weapon
-before her affrighted servant could prevent the fatal wound. Abradates
-and Panthea were buried together in one grave, as the heart-broken
-wife had requested, over which Cyrus erected a lofty monument to their
-memory.
-
-Cyrus, finding himself master of all the East by the taking of Babylon,
-did not imitate the example of most other conquerors, who sully the
-glory of their victories by their cruelties and wicked lives. Cyrus
-is justly considered one of the wisest conquerors and one of the most
-accomplished of the princes to be found in profane history. He was
-possessed of all the qualities necessary to make a great man. Cicero
-observes, that during the entire time of the rule of Cyrus he was never
-heard to speak one rough or angry word.
-
-Cyrus, according to his belief, was very religious. He was, to be sure,
-a pagan; but he reverenced sacred things, and as his deliverance of the
-Jews showed, he acknowledged the power of Jehovah, even though we have
-no account of his complete conversion from idolatry. But his devotion
-to what he held to be religion is an example for the worshippers of the
-one true God.
-
-Cyrus, having established himself in the midst of his wide kingdom,
-with his chief residence at Babylon, resolved to appear before the
-people in an august religious ceremony, by marching in a grand
-cavalcade to the places consecrated to the gods, in order to offer
-sacrifices to them. He ordered the superior officers of the Persians
-and allies to attend him; and he presented each one with a suit of
-clothes of the Median fashion. These were long garments, of various
-colors, of the finest and brightest dyes, richly embroidered with
-gold and silver. One of the historians gives this description of this
-gorgeous pageant.
-
-[Illustration: PERSIAN CHARIOT.]
-
-[Illustration: TOMB OF CYRUS.]
-
-“When the time appointed for the ceremony was come, the whole company
-assembled at the king’s palace by break of day. Four thousand of the
-guards, drawn up four deep, placed themselves in front of the palace,
-and two thousand on the two sides of it, ranged in the same order. All
-the cavalry were also drawn out, the Persians on the right, and that
-of the allies on the left. The chariots of war were ranged half on one
-side and half on the other. As soon as the palace gates were opened,
-a great number of bulls of exquisite beauty were led out, by four and
-four. These were to be sacrificed to Jupiter and other gods, according
-to the ceremonies prescribed by the Magi. Next followed the horses
-that were to be sacrificed to the sun. Immediately after them a white
-chariot, crowned with flowers, the pole of which was gilt; this was to
-be offered to Jupiter. Then came a second chariot of the same color,
-and adorned in the same manner, to be offered to the sun. After these
-followed a third, the horses of which were caparisoned with scarlet
-housings. Behind came the men who carried the sacred fire in a large
-hearth.
-
-“When all these were on the march, Cyrus himself made his appearance
-upon his car, with his upright tiara upon his head, encircled with the
-royal diadem. His under-tunic was of purple mixed with white, which
-was a color peculiar to kings; over his other garments he wore a large
-purple cloak. His hands were uncovered. A little below him sat the
-master of the horse, who was of a comely stature, but not so tall as
-Cyrus, for which reason the stature of the latter appeared still more
-advantageously.
-
-“As soon as the people perceived the prince, they all fell prostrate
-before him and worshipped him; whether it was that certain persons
-appointed on purpose, and placed at proper distances, led others
-by their example, or that the people were moved to do it of their
-own accord, being struck by the appearance of so much pomp and
-magnificence, and with so many awful circumstances of majesty and
-splendor.
-
-“The Persians had never prostrated themselves in this manner before
-Cyrus till on this occasion. When Cyrus’ chariot was come out of the
-palace, the four thousand guards began to march; the other two thousand
-moved at the same time, and placed themselves on each side of the
-chariot.
-
-“The eunuchs, or great officers of the king’s household, to the number
-of three hundred, richly clad, with javelins in their hands and mounted
-upon stately horses, marched immediately after the chariot. After
-them were led two hundred horses of the king’s stable, each of them
-having embroidered furniture and bits of gold. Next came the Persian
-cavalry divided into four bodies, each consisting of ten thousand men;
-then the Median horse, and after those the cavalry of the allies. The
-chariots of war, four abreast, brought up the rear and closed the
-procession. When they came to the fields consecrated to the gods, they
-offered their sacrifices first to Jupiter and then to the sun. To the
-honor of the first, bulls were burnt, and to the honor of the second,
-horses. They likewise sacrificed some victims to the earth, according
-to the appointment of the Magi; then to the demigods, the patrons and
-protectors of Syria. In order to amuse the people after this grave and
-solemn ceremony, Cyrus thought fit that it should conclude with games
-and horse and chariot races.
-
-“The place chosen for them was large and spacious. He ordered a certain
-portion of it to be marked out, and proposed prizes for the victors of
-each nation, which were to encounter separately and among themselves.
-He himself won the prize in the Persian horse-races, for nobody was
-so complete a horseman as he. The chariots ran but two at a time, one
-against another. Some days after, Cyrus, to celebrate the victory he
-had obtained in the horse-races, gave a great entertainment to all
-his chief officers, as well strangers as Medes and Persians. They had
-never yet seen anything of the kind so sumptuous and magnificent. At
-the conclusion of the feast he made every one a noble present, so
-that they all went home with hearts overflowing with joy, admiration,
-and gratitude; and all-powerful as he was, master of all the East and
-so many kingdoms, he did not think it descending from his majesty to
-conduct the whole company to the door of his apartment.
-
-“Such were the manners and behavior of those ancient times, when men
-understood how to unite great simplicity with the highest degree of
-human grandeur.”
-
-There are two accounts given of the death of Cyrus. Herodotus relates
-that Cyrus made war against the Scythians, and after having attacked
-them, made a feint of retreating, leaving a great quantity of
-provisions and wine behind him. The Scythians, supposing he had indeed
-departed, seized the booty and were soon thoroughly drunk from the
-effects of the wine. While they were still in a drunken slumber, they
-were surprised by Cyrus and completely routed. The son of Tomyris,
-queen of the Scythians, had commanded the vanquished army, and was
-taken prisoner. When he recovered from his drunken fit and found
-himself in captivity, with a disgrace hanging over his head which
-he could never hope to wipe out, he killed himself in despair. His
-mother, Queen Tomyris, determining to avenge the death of her son,
-collected a large force; and meeting the Persians in a second battle,
-they were defeated, and more than two hundred thousand of their number
-were killed, together with their king, Cyrus. Tomyris was so enraged
-against Cyrus, that even his death did not suffice her vengeance; but
-it is said that she ordered his head to be cut off and flung into a
-vessel full of blood. This shocking account, however, is not given
-by Xenophon, who relates that when Cyrus perceived the time of his
-death to be near, he ordered his children and officers of state to be
-assembled about him. After thanking the gods for their favors to him,
-he declared his oldest son, Cambyses, to be his successor, and left the
-other, whose name was Tanaoxares, several important governments. Having
-taken his leave of them all, he addressed these words to his sons:—
-
-[Illustration: RUINS OF BABYLON.]
-
-“I could never imagine that the soul only lived while in a mortal body,
-and died when separated from it. But if I mistake, and nothing of me
-shall remain after death, at least fear the gods, who never die, who
-see all things, and whose power is infinite. Fear them, and let that
-fear prevent you from ever doing, or deliberating to do, anything
-contrary to religion and justice. For my body, my sons, when life has
-forsaken it, enclose it neither in gold or silver, nor any other matter
-whatever; restore it immediately to the earth. Adieu, my dear children;
-may your lives be happy. Carry my last remembrance to your mother. And
-for you, my faithful friends, receive this last farewell, and may you
-live in peace.” Having said these words, he covered his face and died,
-sincerely lamented by all his people.
-
-
-
-
-ALEXANDER THE GREAT.
-
-356-323 B.C.
-
- “Self-conquest is the greatest of victories.”—PLATO.
-
-
-ONE day a terrible event transpired in the ancient city of Ephesus.
-The magnificent temple of Diana, one of the famous Seven Wonders of
-the World, was in flames. The people from all parts of the country
-flocked to the scene of the imposing conflagration. This marvellous
-temple had been built at the expense of all Asia Minor. One hundred
-and twenty-seven kings had contributed one hundred and twenty-seven
-magnificent columns of Parian marble, which were sixty feet in height,
-and wrought by the most famous artists. Pliny says that two hundred
-and twenty years were occupied in rearing this vast structure. But now
-the flames mount higher and higher. All the efforts of the distracted
-people to subdue them are in vain. See! the rapacious tongues of fire
-are nearing the sacred image of the goddess, which the Ephesians
-believed had fallen from heaven. Why does not Diana, the great goddess,
-prevent the destruction of this, her most imposing and sacred shrine?
-The people call upon her in their wild despair; but still the flames
-devour with fury the magnificent structure, and the air is rent with
-the cries of the horror-stricken multitude. That very night, while the
-heavens were still red with the lurid light of the burning temple,
-another event occurred upon the other side of the Ægean Sea, in the
-royal palace of the kingdom of Macedon. A tiny infant first opened
-its eyes upon this strange world; and above his royal cradle, king and
-nobles bent in gratified delight, and welcomed the little stranger
-with proud joy. But what had this helpless babe to do with the burning
-temple in Ephesus? This baby was the infant Alexander the Great; and
-so superstitious were the people of those times that in order to
-explain the strange fatality of a great goddess like Diana allowing her
-magnificent temple to be burned and destroyed without any miraculous
-intervention on her part, to punish such a sacrilegious desecration of
-her shrine by wicked mortals, the historians of those days declared
-that as Diana was at that time lending her aid and presence to insure
-the future greatness of the new-born infant Alexander, it was on
-account of her absence on so beneficent an errand, that her temple was
-not guarded from this impious destruction.
-
-[Illustration: TEMPLE OF DIANA AT EPHESUS.]
-
-But what mortal had so dared to insult the gods, as to apply the torch
-to this most sacred shrine? At last it was discovered that a person
-named Herostratus had fired the temple; not by accident, but with
-wicked intent. Upon being put to the torture in order to force him to
-confess the motive for so infamous a crime, he declared that it was to
-immortalize his own name, that he might be known to all posterity as
-the destroyer of this famous structure. A decree was then published
-that all should be prohibited from mentioning his name. But this decree
-only caused greater curiosity, and scarcely one of the historians of
-those times have failed to mention the name of this wicked and vain man.
-
-These events happened about 356 B.C. Alexander was born the heir to the
-throne of one of the Grecian kingdoms. His father was King Philip of
-Macedon. The kingdom of Macedon was in the northern part of Greece.
-The mother of Alexander was Olympias, the daughter of the king of
-Epirus, which was a kingdom lying west of Macedon. Olympias was a woman
-of very strong character, but possessed also some unlovely traits. His
-father, King Philip, was a great warrior, and during the boyhood of
-Alexander, he made many conquests in various parts of Greece. Alexander
-was much favored in the circumstances of his early life, and also in
-the possession of a superior mind, and handsome face and figure, and
-most winning manners. He was born to rule; and had he always used his
-many gifts as wisely as he employed his executive powers and physical
-courage, he would have been one of the greatest of men, whereas now he
-can be called only one of the greatest of conquerors, whose life was
-marred by some of the most terrible of vices.
-
-But the boy Alexander is intensely attractive and interesting. He
-seemed to possess few of the faults of youth. He was active, and full
-of ardor and enthusiasm, and at the same time he was calm and prudent
-in emergencies, and very thoughtful and far-seeing. He was kind and
-considerate, faithful to his friends, and generous to his foes. He
-possessed a remarkable mind, and delighted in study and in improving
-conversation with his teachers. He was privileged to be a pupil of the
-famous Aristotle. The progress of the pupil was equal to the care and
-ability of the preceptor. Alexander became very fond of philosophy and
-metaphysics, even though a young boy; and he did not omit mathematics
-and the study of the wonders of nature. But Alexander applied himself
-chiefly to the study of morality, as it contributes to the good conduct
-of a prince and the best government of a people. How sad it was that,
-with all these desirable qualities of heart and mind, his later years
-were marred by the greatest of vices, and his natural noble impulses
-were deadened by a life of brutal ferocity and drunken debauchery,
-which tarnished the brightness of his glory and sullied the reputation
-of a great conqueror, whose brilliant actions and intrepid bravery
-dazzled the eyes of friends and foes!
-
-[Illustration: ALEXANDER THE GREAT.]
-
-But we must not suppose that the youthful Alexander was a melancholy
-dreamer or an embryo philosopher. His greatest delight was to read of
-the exploits of the Grecian heroes, which were described by Homer, an
-ancient poet who lived four or five hundred years before the time of
-Alexander. There were then no printed books, but these and other works
-were written on parchment rolls, which the young scholars were taught
-to read. As Homer’s tales were written in Greek, which was the native
-language of Alexander, he could understand them very easily, and was
-greatly excited with the stirring scenes there depicted. Aristotle
-ordered a beautiful copy of Homer’s poems to be prepared expressly for
-his princely pupil. Alexander afterwards carried this copy with him in
-all his campaigns; and years after, when he was fighting the Persians,
-among the spoils taken from them was a very costly casket, which King
-Darius had used for jewels or perfumes. This box was always afterwards
-employed by Alexander as a receptacle for his beautiful copy of Homer;
-and he placed it with his sword beneath his pillow at night. Although
-he was a prince, he was not brought up in habits of luxury. The Greeks
-in those days had no firearms, and in battle combatants fought in
-hand-to-hand conflicts. It was the business of the officers to lead the
-men on, and set them the example of bravery by performing themselves
-deeds of daring and valor. It was considered necessary to accustom the
-young, even though princes, to hardship and fatigue. Alexander was
-full of energy and spirit. He early evinced a great degree of ambition;
-and when news of his father’s many conquests would be brought to the
-court in Macedon, Alexander often remarked to his companions, in a tone
-of sorrow and dejection,—
-
-“There will be nothing left for us to conquer.”
-
-The story of Bucephalus, his famous horse, illustrates the courage and
-also the keen observation of Alexander. A spirited war-horse had been
-sent to Philip while Alexander was quite a young boy. The king and his
-courtiers went out into one of the parks to view and try the horse; but
-so furious was the animal that no one dared to mount him, as he seemed
-entirely unmanageable. Philip was very much provoked, and gave orders
-that the horse should be sent back into Thessaly, as useless.
-
-Alexander had stood quietly by, noticing the actions of the animal and
-attentively studying his traits. He perceived that the horse seemed
-to be frightened at his own shadow; and he begged the consent of his
-father to allow him to try the experiment of mounting him. Philip at
-last gave a reluctant consent, as the attempt seemed so hazardous
-for a young boy, when all his experienced grooms condemned the horse
-as too vicious to be subdued. Alexander, however, quickly turned
-the frightened creature round, so that he could not see his shadow;
-and patting him on the head and neck, reassured him with the gentle
-tones of his voice; and as he became less restive, he sprang upon
-the animal and gave him full rein to run as he pleased. King Philip
-and his nobles first looked on in terror, then in admiration, as the
-splendid steed flew over the plains like the wind, with his intrepid
-rider seated in calm grace upon his back, evidently perfectly fearless
-and self-possessed. Having allowed the horse to tire himself with
-his free run, Alexander reined him in with perfect ease, and returned
-safely to the king. Philip was so pleased and proud of his son that he
-embraced Alexander when he had alighted, and kissing his forehead, he
-said to him, “My son, seek a kingdom more worthy of thee, for Macedon
-is below thy merit.” This Bucephalus afterwards became the famous
-war-horse of Alexander the Great, and many surprising stories are told
-of his marvellous sagacity. When this horse was saddled and equipped
-for battle, he seemed to realize his proud position, and would allow
-no one to approach him but Alexander. When his master wished to mount
-him, he would kneel upon his forelegs. Some historians relate that
-when Alexander was fighting in a desperate battle, and had plunged too
-imprudently amidst his infuriated foes, Bucephalus, though severely
-wounded, bore his master to a place of safety, although he was himself
-bleeding to death, pierced with the fatal darts of the enemy. Then,
-perceiving that Alexander was safe, he fell exhausted, and expired.
-Others say that Bucephalus lived to be thirty years of age, and that
-Alexander so mourned for him at his death that he built a city on the
-spot where his faithful horse had been buried, and called it Bucephalia
-in honor of the noble and trusty steed.
-
-When Alexander was only sixteen years of age, his father, Philip, made
-him regent of Macedon while he was absent on a great military campaign
-against the other Grecian states.
-
-At this time some ambassadors from the Persian court arrived in
-Macedon. In the absence of Philip, Alexander received them with
-courtesy. They, supposing that he would be interested in hearing about
-the splendors of the Persian court, entertained him with stories of
-the famous Hanging Gardens of Babylon; and the vine of gold, the grapes
-of which were emeralds, rubies, and other precious stones; and the
-marvellous golden plantain-tree. But Alexander, instead of appearing
-absorbed and delighted with these glowing accounts of fabulous wealth,
-inquired about the geography of the country, the various roads, and the
-strength and power of the Persian king. What battles he had fought,
-how he behaved towards his enemies, and how he governed his people.
-The ambassadors, astonished at such maturity in one so young, and
-filled with admiration for the Grecian prince, began to compare among
-themselves Alexander and their own Artaxerxes, saying, “This young
-prince is great, while our king is only rich.”
-
-When Alexander was eighteen years of age, King Philip took him with him
-on one of his military campaigns, during which Philip fought one of his
-great battles in Bœotia. Philip gave the command of one of the wings
-of his army to Alexander; and so valiantly did he lead his troops,
-that his wing was victorious, and Philip and his command had to exert
-themselves to prevent being outdone by the youthful prince. His mother,
-Olympias, was of a haughty and imperious temper, and Philip himself was
-headstrong and obstinate, and the result of their frequent quarrels
-was a final separation, and Philip obtained a divorce from his wife,
-she returning to the court of her father. Philip then married a young
-and beautiful princess, and at the wedding festivities an incident
-occurred which illustrated the traits of both father and son. The uncle
-of the new queen, having made some disparaging remark about Olympias,
-the mother of Alexander, that prince threw the cup from which he had
-been drinking at the offender’s head. Attalus, the queen’s uncle, then
-threw his cup at Alexander, and Philip, enraged at such disturbance at
-the feast, seized his sword, and rushed towards his son. Having a lame
-foot, he stumbled, and fell upon the floor; and Alexander, looking upon
-him with scorn and contempt, exclaimed, “What a fine hero the states of
-Greece have to lead their armies, a man who cannot get across the floor
-without tumbling down!” He then turned away and left the palace, and
-afterwards joined his mother in Epirus, and espoused her cause in the
-quarrel with his father.
-
-Philip had been planning a great expedition into Asia. He had formed a
-strong combination among the states of Greece, and had raised a large
-army. Alexander is said to have taken sides with his mother, not so
-much out of filial devotion, as because he was jealous of his father’s
-conquests, and desirous himself of reaping the glory which seemed to
-await the Grecian army in the coming campaign. Before setting forth
-upon this expedition, Philip desired to become reconciled to his son
-Alexander, and Olympias. He realized the importance of securing the
-co-operation of Alexander in his plans; and it would be dangerous to
-leave his own kingdom with a son so near in open hostility. Whereupon,
-Philip sent conciliatory messages to Olympias and Alexander, and he
-proposed that one of his own daughters should marry the present king of
-Epirus, who was the brother of Olympias. His overtures were peacefully
-received; and Olympias and Alexander returned to Macedon, where great
-preparations were made for the proposed wedding festivities. Philip
-determined that this event should be celebrated with most gorgeous pomp
-and splendor.
-
-He received very costly presents from the other states of Greece;
-and though their professions of friendship were very hollow on both
-sides, he took this occasion to pay marked attention to their kings and
-generals; and they sent him golden crowns, most beautifully wrought,
-and large embassies, expressing their good wishes. Athens, the seat of
-literature in Greece, sent a poem, in which the history of Philip’s
-expedition into Persia was related in anticipation, and in which he was
-described as being most triumphantly successful.
-
-The wedding was at length celebrated with much splendor, and the day
-after the nuptials was devoted to games and processions. In one of the
-latter, which was a religious ceremony, twelve statues of the gods,
-carved with marvellous art, were carried with great pomp through the
-streets. A thirteenth, which surpassed them all in magnificence, was
-a statue of Philip, representing him as a god. The procession was
-moving towards a great theatre, where games and spectacles were to be
-exhibited. At length Philip himself appeared in the procession. He
-had ordered that a wide space should be left around him, so that he
-might be more plainly visible to the populace, and also as a proof
-of his confidence in the love of his people, thus to expose himself
-without a guard. He was clothed in white robes, and adorned with a
-sparkling crown. Just as the statues of the gods had been carried into
-the theatre, and as that of Philip was about to be born in, an officer
-of the guards, a young Macedonian nobleman, named Pausanias, advanced
-quickly towards King Philip, and before the spectators suspected his
-design, he plunged his dagger into the heart of the king, who fell dead
-upon the ground. All was now confusion. The murderer was instantly cut
-to pieces by the guards; and an officer of state hastened to inform
-Alexander of his father’s death, and his succession to the throne. An
-assembly of the leading statesmen was hastily summoned, and Alexander
-was proclaimed king. It was by some supposed that the motive which
-induced Pausanias to murder Philip was a private revenge for a personal
-insult he had received from the uncle of Philip’s present wife, which
-insult Philip would not notice. But others believed that the murder was
-instigated by the other states of Greece, who were hostile to Philip.
-Demosthenes, the celebrated orator, was Philip’s bitterest enemy, and
-he used his eloquence in stirring up the Grecians against him. These
-orations were called his Philippics.
-
-[Illustration: DEMOSTHENES.]
-
-Alexander’s first measures were to punish his father’s murderers.
-Although it could not be ascertained who were involved in the plot,
-several were suspected, and put to death. Alexander decided not to make
-any change in his father’s appointments, and to carry out his proposed
-campaigns. There were two officers in particular, who were the especial
-confidants of Philip,—Antipater and Parmenio. Antipater had charge
-of the civil, and Parmenio of military affairs. Alexander, at this
-time, was only twenty years of age; and Parmenio, a very distinguished
-general, was sixty years old. But the genius, power, and enthusiasm of
-Alexander’s character made even men of such age and experience willing
-to obey his orders, and aid in the execution of his plans.
-
-The Macedonians advised Alexander not to attempt to hold all the states
-of Greece; but to relinquish the conquests of Philip, and join with
-them in an alliance. But Alexander determined to march boldly into
-their midst, and demand their continued subjection, which his father
-had gained. This was a bold measure for so young a prince. He thereupon
-collected his forces, and set forth at their head. He first marched
-his troops to the banks of the Danube, which he crossed in one night.
-He defeated the king of the Triballi in a great battle, and subdued
-several barbarous nations. While he was thus engaged, several of the
-Grecian cities, inflamed by the eloquence of Demosthenes, who harangued
-the people, calling Alexander “a child, a hare-brained boy,” formed
-a powerful alliance against him. A false report that Alexander was
-dead inspired the Thebians with a boldness which proved their ruin.
-Alexander, having secured his kingdom from the barbarians, marched with
-much expedition towards Greece, and passed the Strait of Thermopylæ.
-He then said to his army, “Demosthenes called me, in his orations,
-a child, when I was in Illyria, and among Triballi; he called me a
-young man, when I was in Thessaly; and I must now show him, before the
-walls of Athens, that I am a man grown.” At the Pass of Thermopylæ, a
-great council was held between Alexander and the Thessalians, who were
-favorable to his claims. Alexander now appeared so suddenly before
-the city of Thebes, as to astonish them. He demanded only that they
-should deliver up to him the two ringleaders of the revolt against
-him, and then he promised a general freedom to the citizens. But the
-Thebans insultingly replied that they would only comply, if two of
-his generals were delivered to them. Alexander now determined upon a
-speedy punishment, and attacked them so vigorously, that the city was
-taken, and a large number of the Thebans were killed. Alexander then
-resolved to make Thebes a warning to all the Grecian states, and the
-city was accordingly destroyed, and thirty thousand of the Thebans were
-sold into slavery. He, however, set the priests at liberty; and those
-who had opposed the revolt, and also the descendants of Pindar, the
-famous poet. Alexander now sent word to Athens, and demanded that they
-should deliver up to him ten orators, whom he supposed had influenced
-the people against Philip and himself. The Athenians, though in this
-dilemma, were still unwilling to deliver up their orators to death;
-and at last, one Demades, who was a friend of Alexander’s, offered to
-undertake the embassy alone, and plead for them. Alexander, having
-now satiated his revenge, and believing that the Grecians were enough
-subdued to be controlled, waived his demand.
-
-He then summoned all the monarchs and potentates of Greece, to meet him
-at Corinth, that he might obtain from them the same supreme command
-against the Persians which had been conferred by them upon his father
-Philip. The deliberations of the assembly were short, and Alexander was
-appointed generalissimo against the Persians.
-
-There is a story told of Alexander and the philosopher Diogenes, who
-was then at Corinth. Alexander supposed that Diogenes would of course
-come with the officers and governors of cities, and philosophers, who
-waited upon him immediately to congratulate him upon his election. But
-Diogenes did not come, and so Alexander, having curiosity to see a
-man who would thus slight a king, condescended to call upon Diogenes.
-Attended by his courtiers, he paid the philosopher a visit.
-
-Diogenes was found lying in the sun, and seeing the crowd of people
-advance toward him, he sat up and fixed his eyes upon Alexander.
-
-That prince was surprised to see so great a philosopher in such seeming
-poverty, and accosting him kindly, asked him courteously if there was
-anything he wanted.
-
-“Yes,” replied Diogenes, “that you would stand a little out of my
-sunshine.”
-
-The courtiers of the monarch were astounded at such audacious boldness;
-but Alexander exclaimed,—
-
-“Were I not Alexander, I would be Diogenes.” For Alexander perceived,
-that even with all his wealth and power, he was in some sense inferior
-to a man to whom he could give, and from whom he could take, nothing.
-
-Alexander now returned to Macedon to prepare for his great expedition
-into Asia. As king of Macedon he possessed large estates and revenues,
-which were his own personal property, independent of the state. He
-apportioned these among his officers and generals, both those who were
-to go with him, and those who were to remain to guard his kingdom, over
-which he placed Antipater as viceregent during his absence.
-
-He displayed such generosity in his gifts, that his friends asked him
-what he had reserved for himself.
-
-“Hope,” replied Alexander.
-
-After all things were ready, Alexander celebrated the religious
-sacrifices and ceremonies. This great Macedonian festival was held in
-honor of the Muses, as well as Jupiter. The Muses, according to the
-belief of the Greeks, were nine singing and dancing maidens, who were
-very beautiful in face and form, graceful in motion, and brilliant in
-mind. They were supposed to have first come from Thrace, and having
-gone to Mount Olympus, they were made goddesses by Jupiter. At last
-they selected for their place of residence a palace in Mount Parnassus.
-They were worshipped all over Greece and Italy as the goddesses of
-music and dancing. Afterwards arts and sciences were assigned to
-them,—one being the goddess of history, another of astronomy, another
-of tragedy, etc.
-
-Alexander celebrated these festivities with great magnificence and
-pomp, and then bid a long farewell to his native land. His army
-consisted of about thirty thousand foot and four or five thousand
-horse. But they were all brave men. His officers were experienced men
-of sixty years of age, who had served under Philip his father. Parmenio
-commanded the infantry, Philotas his son the cavalry. Alexander sent a
-fleet of one hundred and fifty galleys over the Ægean Sea, to land at
-Sestos, to be ready to transport his army across the Hellespont. The
-army marched to Sestos by land. Having arrived there, Alexander left
-Parmenio to conduct the transportation of the army, while he himself
-went in a single galley to visit the ruins of Troy, which city was the
-scene of Homer’s poems, which had so charmed Alexander in his early
-years. So Alexander resolved that his first landing in Asia should be
-at Troy. As they approached the Asiatic shore, Alexander took the helm
-and steered the galley himself, and just before he reached the land, he
-stood upon the prow and threw a javelin at the shore as he approached,
-as a sign of his purpose to take possession. He then leaped upon the
-land before any of his crew, and afterwards offered sacrifices to the
-gods, having erected altars on the shore to Jupiter, Minerva, and to
-Hercules.
-
-A large part of Asia Minor had been settled by the Greeks, and
-sometimes these cities had been under Grecian rule, and sometimes under
-Persian. They were now included in the dominion of Persia. One of
-these cities, called Lampsacus, had incurred the anger of the Greeks,
-because it had formerly revolted from their rule. Alexander determined
-to destroy this city. The ambassador sent by the city to implore his
-mercy was a famous historian, who had once been Alexander’s teacher.
-Alexander knowing his errand, and fearing his former friendship might
-weaken his resolve, declared with a solemn oath, as the ambassador
-approached him, that he would not grant the request he was about to
-make. The witty historian replied,—
-
-“I have come to implore you to _destroy_ Lampsacus.”
-
-Alexander, pleased with the readiness of the reply, kept his oath; and
-of course the city was saved.
-
-In his progress onward, Alexander found himself obliged to cross either
-Mount Ida, or a river which descended from its slopes, called the
-Granicus. As they neared the river, some of the Grecian scouts, or as
-they were called by the Greeks, _prodromi_, reported that the opposite
-side was lined with Persian troops, waiting to dispute the passage.
-
-Parmenio counselled Alexander against an immediate crossing, but
-Alexander was unwilling to delay. Accordingly, the army advanced to
-the banks in order of battle. The centre portion of the Grecian troops
-was arranged in a peculiar manner, and was called a phalanx. The men
-composing it were heavily armed. They bore a shield upon the left
-arm, and they carried spears sixteen feet long and pointed with iron,
-which they clasped firmly with both hands, with the points projecting
-in front. These men were placed in line, one behind another, to the
-number of sixteen, all facing the enemy. So that a phalanx contained
-sixteen thousand men. The spears were so long, that when drawn up in
-close lines, the points of eight or ten of the ranks projected in
-front, forming a bristling wall of sharp points of steel. This wall no
-force could penetrate; men, horses, elephants, rushed upon it, only to
-meet inevitable destruction. If their enemies threw javelins from a
-distance, the shields upon their arms were held in such a manner as
-to form a mass of close scales of metal, upon which the javelins fell
-harmlessly. The troops upon the sides of the phalanx were called the
-wings, and were composed of cavalry and foot-soldiers, who were more
-lightly armed, and could therefore move with greater speed.
-
-Alexander commanded one wing, and Parmenio the other. The Persians had
-assembled in vast numbers upon the opposite shore. The Grecian army,
-led by Alexander, descended into the stream, and moved on through the
-water. The Persians dashed down the farther banks, and strove to oppose
-their landing. A terrible battle ensued, the soldiers grappling with
-each other in the midst of the waves, and the Granicus ran red with the
-blood of the wounded. Alexander was fearless and irresistible, and his
-long white plume, waving from his shining helmet, was a conspicuous
-target for the arrows and javelins of the enemy. At one time, meeting
-the foe in close combat, a Persian horseman aimed a blow at his head
-with a sword. The weapon took off the white plume, and cut into the
-helmet of Alexander, who immediately stabbed his antagonist through the
-heart. Just as a second Persian had raised his sword to strike a fatal
-blow upon the exposed head of the Grecian hero, a Macedonian general
-cut the uplifted arm from the assailant’s body, and saved the life of
-Alexander the Great. The Persians were defeated, and Alexander landed
-his brave band of warriors upon the opposite bank, while the terrified
-Persians fled in dire confusion.
-
-Darius himself had not commanded this Persian force, and he employed
-all of the following winter in preparing for a vigorous defence of his
-dominions from the encroaching foe.
-
-Alexander, however, did not remain idle during the winter. He marched
-from province to province, meeting with many adventures. During this
-time Parmenio had remained in the western part of Asia Minor, with
-quite a large force. As the spring approached, Alexander ordered him to
-meet him at Gordium. One reason which influenced Alexander in this plan
-was the desire to attempt to untie the famous Gordian knot. The story
-of the Gordian knot was this:—
-
-Gordius was a sort of mountain farmer. One day he was plowing, and an
-eagle flew down and alighted upon his yoke, and remained there until he
-had finished his plowing. This was an omen; but Gordius did not know
-what it meant. So he went to a neighboring town to consult the prophets
-and soothsayers. On his way he met a maiden who was going forth to draw
-water. Gordius fell into conversation with her, and related to her
-the occurrence which had just transpired. The maiden advised him to
-go back and offer a sacrifice to Jupiter. Finally she consented to go
-back with him and aid him. The affair ended in her becoming his wife,
-and they lived in peace and happiness for many years upon their farm.
-They had a son named Midas. The father and mother were accustomed to
-go out in their wagon drawn by oxen, with Midas as their driver. One
-day they were going into the town in this manner, at a time when it
-happened that there was an assembly convened, which was in a state
-of great perplexity, on account of civil dissensions in the country.
-They had just inquired of an oracle what they should do. The oracle
-said that “a cart would bring them a king who would terminate their
-eternal broils.” Just then Midas came up, driving the cart in which his
-father and mother were seated. The assembly thought at once that this
-must be the cart meant by the oracle, and they made Gordius king by
-acclamation. They took the cart and yoke to preserve as sacred relics,
-consecrating them to Jupiter, and Gordius tied the yoke to the pole of
-the cart by a thong of leather, making a knot so close and complicated
-that nobody could untie it again. It was called the Gordian knot. The
-oracle afterwards said that whoever should untie this knot should
-become monarch of all Asia. Thus far, nobody had succeeded.
-
-Alexander was very desirous of examining this wonderful knot and
-trying his own fortune. He accordingly went into the temple where the
-sacred cart had been placed, and after looking at the knot, he became
-convinced that it could not be untied, whereupon he cut it to pieces
-with his sword.
-
-From this story comes the old saying, when any one gets out of a
-difficulty by very violent means, “He has cut the Gordian knot.”
-
-After leaving Gordium, Alexander proceeded with his whole army against
-Darius, who was now advancing to meet him.
-
-On a very warm day, after a long and fatiguing march, the Grecian army
-reached the river Cydnus, a small stream which came down from Mount
-Taurus, near the city of Tarsus. Alexander, warm and weary, plunged
-into the cold mountain stream, and was taken with a violent chill, and
-as he was lifted out of the water, he fainted away. He was borne to his
-tent. A severe and protracted fever came on. Alexander bewailed this
-enforced delay, and summoned his physicians, to whom he said,—
-
-“The present condition of my affairs will not admit either of slow
-remedies or fearful physicians. A speedy death is more eligible to me
-than a slow cure. In case the physicians think it is in their power to
-do me any good, they are to know that I do not so much wish to live as
-to fight.”
-
-All his physicians but one, however, were afraid to dare any violent
-and hazardous remedies, especially as an unfavorable result would
-endanger their honor; for Darius had published that he would reward
-with a thousand talents the man who should kill Alexander.
-
-His old family physician, named Philip, who had attended him from
-childhood, offered to give him a dose of medicine which would be speedy
-in its effects, but desired three days to prepare it. During this
-interval of waiting Alexander received a letter from Parmenio, who had
-been left behind in Cappadocia, warning him against this physician
-Philip, and stating that Darius had bribed him by promising a thousand
-talents, and his sister in marriage. Alexander courageously refrained
-from divulging its contents, and placed the letter under his pillow.
-
-When Philip entered the tent with the medicine, Alexander took the cup,
-and handing the letter at the same time to the physician, he swallowed
-the dose without waiting his perusal of it. After reading the letter,
-Philip replied,—
-
-“Royal sir, your recovery will soon clear me of the guilt of murder,
-with which I am charged.”
-
-Three days after, Alexander showed himself to his army, who were filled
-with delight at his wonderful recovery; and the accused physician was
-now the recipient of the most lavish praises, and looked upon with the
-deepest reverence, because he had saved the life of their sovereign.
-
-Slowly Darius marched in stately grandeur to meet his advancing enemy.
-A description of his martial procession reads more like a picture of a
-grand tournament than the march of an army. One of the historians thus
-describes this gorgeous pageant:—
-
-“The king advanced with his troops towards the Euphrates. It was a
-custom long used by the Persians never to set out upon a march till
-after sunrise, at which time the trumpet was sounded for that purpose
-from the king’s tent. Over this tent was exhibited to the view of the
-whole army the image of the sun set in crystal, as the Persians were
-worshippers of the sun and fire.
-
-“The order they observed in their march was as follows: First, they
-carried silver altars, on which there was fire, called by them sacred
-and eternal; and these were followed by the Magi, singing hymns after
-the manner of their country. They were accompanied by three hundred
-and sixty-five youths, corresponding to the number of days in a
-year, clothed in purple robes. Afterwards came a chariot consecrated
-to Jupiter, drawn by white horses, and followed by a courser of a
-prodigious size, to whom they gave the name of the sun’s horse; and the
-equerries were dressed in white, each having a rod of gold in his hand.
-
-“Ten chariots, adorned with sculptures in gold and silver, followed
-after. Then marched a body of horse, composed of twelve nations,
-whose manners and customs were various, and all armed in a different
-style. Next advanced those whom the Persians called the Immortals,
-amounting to ten thousand, who surpassed the rest of the barbarians in
-the sumptuousness of their apparel. They all wore gold collars, were
-clothed in robes of gold tissues, with surtouts completely covered with
-precious stones. Then followed those called the king’s relations, to
-the number of fifteen thousand, in habits very much resembling those
-worn by women, and more remarkable for the vain pomp of their dress
-than the glitter of their arms. Then came the king’s guards; they
-carried the cloak of the monarch, and walked before his chariot, in
-which he seemed to sit as on a high throne. This chariot was enriched
-on both sides with images of the gods in gold and silver; and from the
-middle of the yoke, which was covered with jewels, rose two statues
-a cubit in height, the one representing war, the other peace, having
-a gold eagle between them, with wings extended, as ready to take its
-flight.
-
-“But nothing could equal the magnificence of the king. He was clothed
-in a vest of purple, striped with silver, and over it a long robe
-glittering all over with gold and precious stones, that represented two
-falcons rushing from the clouds and pecking at one another. Around his
-waist he wore a gold girdle, called cidaris, after the manner of women,
-from which hung his scimitar, the scabbard of which flamed all over
-with gems. On his head he wore a tiara, or mitre, round which was a
-fillet of blue mixed with white. On each side of him walked two hundred
-of his nearest relations, followed by ten thousand pikemen, whose pikes
-were adorned with silver and tipped with gold; and lastly, thirty
-thousand infantry, who composed the rear-guard. These were followed by
-the king’s horses, four hundred in number, all of which were led.
-
-“Then came the chariots of his wife Statira and his mother Sysigambis,
-with the several female attendants of both queens, riding on horseback.
-After them came fifteen large chariots, in which were the king’s
-children and those who had the care of their education, escorted by
-a band of household officers. Then followed three hundred and sixty
-carriages, containing the ladies of the court, dressed in the costumes
-of princesses.
-
-[Illustration: DARIUS.]
-
-“After these marched six hundred mules and three hundred camels,
-which carried the king’s treasure, and were guarded by a great body
-of archers. After these came other chariots, in which rode the wives
-of the crown officers and of the greatest lords of the court; then
-the sutlers and servants of the army. In the rear were a body of
-light-armed troops, with their commanders, who closed the imposing
-procession.”
-
-Darius, at the head of six hundred thousand men, and surrounded with
-this mighty pomp, considered himself invincible, and imagined that he
-had only to show his gorgeous army to the few Grecian troops led by the
-boy Alexander, in order to inspire such awe as should cause them to fly
-in terror.
-
-The two opposing forces came in sight of each other upon a plain
-near the city of Issus. It was now evening. At midnight the army
-of Alexander had reached a defile in the chain of mountains called
-Mount Taurus. Among these mountains there are various tracts of open
-country, and upon one of these the army of Darius was encamped.
-Alexander ascended one of the eminences from whence he could look
-down upon the great plain beyond, which was dimly illuminated by the
-smouldering fires of the Persian encampment. Alexander there sacrificed
-by torchlight to the gods of the Grecians, and returning to his army,
-prepared for an early conflict. In the morning, at break of day,
-Alexander began his march down to the plain. The battle waged hotly
-all day, and at sunset all the valleys and defiles around the plain of
-Issus were thronged with the vast masses of the Persian hosts, flying
-in confusion from the victorious Macedonians. The flight of Darius had
-been so sudden that he had left his wife and mother and children and
-much of his treasure behind in the deserted camp. He pressed on
-in his chariot as far as he could, and then mounted a horse and fled
-for his life. Alexander and his army soon abandoned the pursuit, and
-returned to take possession of the Persian camp. The tents of King
-Darius were filled with gold and silver vessels, caskets, boxes of rich
-perfumes, and many articles of luxury. The greater part of his vast
-treasures, however, he had previously sent to Damascus, where they were
-afterwards captured by Parmenio. So that Alexander came into possession
-of all his splendid treasures, upon which he had so prided himself.
-Alexander treated the captive wife, mother, and children of Darius with
-great kindness, and gave them every attention he would have paid to
-honored guests.
-
-Darius got together a small remnant of his army and continued his
-flight. After he had crossed the Euphrates, he sent an ambassador to
-Alexander to make propositions for peace. He offered him any sum he
-desired as a ransom for his wife, mother, and child, and agreed to
-become his ally and friend if he would deliver them up and depart to
-his own dominions. Alexander replied by a brief letter. He reminded him
-that the Persians had been the first to invade Greece. “I am acting
-only on the defensive,” wrote Alexander. “The gods, who always favor
-the right, have given me the victory. I am now monarch of a large part
-of Asia, and your sovereign king. If you will admit this, and come to
-me as my subject, I will restore your wife, mother, and child without
-any ransom. And, at any rate, whatever you decide in respect to these
-proposals, if you wish to communicate with me on any subject hereafter,
-I shall pay no attention to what you send unless you address it to me
-as your king.”
-
-As the vast army of the Persian king had now been defeated, none of the
-smaller kingdoms or provinces thought of resisting. They yielded one
-after another, and Alexander appointed governors of his own to rule
-over them. He then advanced along the shores of the Mediterranean Sea,
-until he reached the city of Tyre.
-
-The Tyrians wished to avoid a quarrel if possible, and so sent
-complimentary congratulations to Alexander, presenting him with a
-golden crown. Alexander replied courteously, and stated that his reason
-for coming to Tyre was to offer sacrifices to Hercules, a god whom the
-Tyrians worshipped. The Tyrians, fearful of allowing him to enter the
-city, sent him word that it would not be in their power to receive
-him in the city, but that he could offer the sacrifice on the site of
-ancient Tyre, as there was a temple sacred to Hercules among the ruins
-there.
-
-This answer displeased Alexander, and he now determined to build a
-broad causeway from the mainland to the island upon which the present
-city of Tyre stood. This causeway he would build out of the ruins of
-old Tyre, and then march his army over it and take the new city. His
-soldiers accordingly commenced this work. But the Tyrians constantly
-harassed the workers; now attacking them with arrows and javelins;
-then they took a large galley and filled it with combustibles, and
-towing it near the enemy’s works, they set fire to it; and putting it
-in motion towards the pier where there was the largest collection of
-engines and machines, the vessel drifted down upon Alexander’s works,
-and notwithstanding the most strenuous efforts of the Macedonians, the
-whole mass was destroyed. Not long after this the sea itself came to
-the aid of the Tyrians, and a fearful storm destroyed the portions of
-the work which had escaped the fire. Whereupon the Tyrians deridingly
-inquired, “Whether Alexander was greater than Neptune, and if they
-pretended to prevail over that God?”
-
-But Alexander was not to be defeated by fire, or storm, or the hostile
-Tyrians, and again ordered his men to repair the pier. Meanwhile,
-Alexander himself collected and equipped a fleet, and sailed into the
-Tyrian seas.
-
-The fleet of galleys now protected the men at work on the pier, and
-Alexander began to prepare for the final assault. He proposed to force
-his entrance on the southern side of the city, where there was a large
-breach in the wall.
-
-The plan was successful. He prepared a number of ships, with platforms
-raised upon them in such a manner that on getting near the walls they
-could be let down, and form a sort of bridge, over which the men could
-pass to the broken fragments of the wall, and thence ascend through the
-breach above.
-
-The ships advanced to the proposed place of landing. The bridges were
-lowered, and before the Tyrians realized their danger the city was
-filled with thirty thousand infuriated soldiers, who showed them no
-mercy. Thus the city was stormed.
-
-Alexander here displayed a brutal ferocity which tarnished the
-brightness of his victory. The inhabitants were put to the sword,
-some were executed, some thrown into the sea; and it is said that two
-thousand were crucified along the seashore.
-
-Prosperity and power were beginning to exert a baneful influence upon
-the character of Alexander. He became haughty, imperious, and cruel.
-About this time Darius sent him a second communication, proposing terms
-of peace. Darius offered him a large sum of money for the ransom of
-his wife, mother, and child, and agreed to give him all the country he
-had conquered. He also offered him his daughter Statira in marriage.
-He recommended that he should be content with his conquests, and added
-that he could not hope to succeed in crossing the mighty rivers of the
-East, which were in the way of his march toward the Persian dominions.
-
-Alexander replied “that if he wished to marry the daughter of Darius,
-he could do it without his consent; as to ransom, he was not in want
-of money; and as to the offer of Darius to give him all the territory
-west of the Euphrates, it was absurd for a man to speak of giving
-what was no longer his own; that he had crossed too many seas in his
-military expeditions, since he left Macedon, to feel any concern about
-the _rivers_ that he might find in his way; and that he should continue
-to pursue Darius wherever he might retreat in search of safety and
-protection, and he had no fear but that he should find and conquer him
-at last.”
-
-The siege and storming of Tyre has been considered one of the greatest
-of Alexander’s exploits.
-
-After the subjugation of Tyre, Alexander commenced his march for
-Egypt. His route led him through Judea. This was about three hundred
-years before the birth of Christ. A Jewish writer, named Josephus, who
-lived and wrote a few years after Christ, relates the circumstances of
-Alexander’s visit to Jerusalem.
-
-When Alexander had been besieging Tyre, he had sent to Judea for
-supplies, which were refused, as the Jews were subjects of Darius.
-Hearing that Alexander was about to pass through Jerusalem, they began
-to fear a fate like that of Tyre. Accordingly the high priest Jaddus,
-who was the chief magistrate at Jerusalem, caused great sacrifices to
-be offered to Almighty God, and public and solemn prayers were made, to
-implore his guidance and protection.
-
-The day after these services he told the people that they need fear
-nothing; for God had appeared to him in a dream, and directed him what
-to do. “We are not to resist the conqueror,” said he, “but go forth to
-meet him and welcome him. We are to strew the city with flowers, and
-adorn it as for a festive celebration. The priests are to be dressed in
-their pontifical robes, and lead the procession, and the people are to
-follow. In this way we are to go out to meet Alexander as he advances,
-and all will be well.”
-
-When Alexander met this procession he stopped, and appeared both
-pleased and surprised. He advanced to meet the high priest with an air
-of the profoundest reverence.
-
-Parmenio, astonished at such a sudden change in his sovereign, asked
-for an explanation. To which Alexander replied,—
-
-“When I was in Macedon, before setting out on this expedition, one
-night I had a remarkable dream. In my dream this very priest appeared
-before me, dressed just as he is now. He exhorted me to banish every
-fear, to cross the Hellespont boldly, and to push forward into the
-heart of Asia. He said that God would march at the head of my army, and
-give me the victory over the Persians. I recognize this priest as the
-same person who appeared to me then. It is through his encouragement
-and aid that I am here, and I am ready to worship and adore the God
-whose service he administers.”
-
-Alexander then joined the high priest in the procession, and returned
-with him to Jerusalem. The high priest afterwards read and interpreted
-to Alexander some of the prophecies of Daniel, which were supposed to
-refer to that conqueror; and Alexander then assured the Jews that they
-should be protected in their rights, and especially in their religious
-worship.
-
-Alexander next proceeded to the city of Gaza. This was a place of
-considerable importance, and was under command of a governor, named
-Betis, whom Darius had appointed. This Betis refused to surrender the
-place to Alexander; whereupon, he besieged it for two months. Having
-captured the city, Alexander treated the wretched captives with extreme
-cruelty. He cut the garrison to pieces, and sold the inhabitants into
-slavery. Then becoming still more brutal, his punishment of Betis was
-most shocking. He ordered him into his presence, and said to him, “You
-are not going to die the simple death that you desire. You must suffer
-the worst torments that revenge can invent.”
-
-Betis calmly looked at Alexander, without reply. This still more
-incensed the cruel conqueror.
-
-“Observe his dumb arrogance,” said Alexander; “but I will conquer him.
-I will show him that I can draw groans from him, if nothing else.”
-
-He then ordered holes to be made through the heels of his helpless
-victim; and passing a rope through the wounds, commanded the body
-to be fastened to a chariot, and dragged about the city until the
-poor captive was dead. Thus had prosperity and conquest degraded the
-character of Alexander.
-
-Having destroyed Gaza, with such inhuman brutality, Alexander now
-formed a more ambitious project. The heroes of Homer were represented
-as sons of the gods; and Alexander now began to aspire to supernatural
-honors, and accordingly resolved that he should be declared to be the
-son of a god. He determined to visit the temple of Jupiter Ammon, in
-the Oasis of Siwah, and bribe the priests there to declare his divine
-origin.
-
-The priests at the great temple of Jupiter Ammon received Alexander
-with marks of distinction and honor. After most solemn and magnificent
-ceremonies, the priests, pretending to confer with the god in the
-temple, declared that Alexander was indeed his son; and accordingly
-they paid him almost divine honors. Alexander, in his subsequent orders
-and decrees, styled himself Alexander king, son of Jupiter Ammon.
-
-On his return from the Oasis, Alexander began building a city at the
-mouth of the river Nile. This city he called Alexandria. This city
-is the only monument of his greatness which still remains. Upon an
-island near the coast, opposite the city of Alexandria, a magnificent
-lighthouse was erected, which was considered in those days one of the
-Seven Wonders of the world. It was said to have been five hundred feet
-high.
-
-The building of the city of Alexandria was one of the most beneficent
-acts of Alexander. How much better for the world, as well as for
-his own true glory, if good deeds had been the rule instead of the
-exception in the life of this famous man!
-
-Alexander was now master of Asia Minor, Phœnicia, Judea, and Egypt. He
-now continued his pursuit of Darius.
-
-The Persian army had crossed the Tigris river, and encamped upon the
-extensive plain of Arbela. Here Darius waited the approach of his
-relentless foe.
-
-The night before the noted battle between Alexander and Darius, the
-conqueror, who had come within sight of the Persian host, having
-completed his arrangements for the morrow’s conflict, retired to rest.
-Early in the morning Parmenio awoke him, and expressed surprise at his
-sleeping so quietly when such vast issues were at stake. “You seem
-as calm,” said he, “as if you had fought the battle and gained the
-victory.”
-
-“I have done so,” replied Alexander; “I consider the whole work done,
-when we have gained access to Darius, and forced him to give us battle.”
-
-Alexander is thus described as he appeared at the head of the army on
-this important occasion. “He wore a short tunic, girt close around him,
-and over it a linen breastplate, strongly quilted. The belt by which
-the tunic was held was embossed with figures of beautiful workmanship.
-Upon his head was a helmet of polished steel, surmounted with a white
-plume. He wore also a neck-piece of steel, ornamented with precious
-stones; he carried a shield, lance, and sword.”
-
-The Persians employed elephants in their wars. They also had chariots,
-armed with long scythes. But the terrible Macedonian phalanx, with
-columns of infantry and flying troops of horsemen on either side, cut
-through the mighty mass of their enemies with irresistible force. The
-elephants turned and fled. The Persian troops were routed, and Darius
-himself was obliged to flee. Alexander went to Babylon, where he was
-received as a conqueror. The storehouse of the Persian treasures
-were at Susa, a strong city east of Babylon. Alexander then marched
-to Susa, and took possession of the vast treasures collected there.
-Besides these treasures, Alexander here found a number of trophies
-which had been brought from Greece by Xerxes, some hundred years
-before. Alexander sent them all back to Greece. He then proceeded
-in a triumphal march to Persepolis, the great Persian capital. Here
-Alexander exhibited another striking instance of wicked weakness. He
-was giving a great banquet to his officers. Among the women at this
-feast was a vain and foolish woman named Thais. While the guests were
-half intoxicated from the effects of wine, this Thais, seizing a
-burning torch and waving it above her head, proposed that they should
-set fire to the great palace of Persepolis, which had been built by
-Xerxes, and amuse themselves by watching the imposing conflagration.
-Alexander, flushed with wine, consented; and the drunken guests
-sallied forth, alarming the inhabitants with their boisterous shouts
-and flaming torches. Arriving at the magnificent palace, they applied
-their torches, and the gorgeous structure was soon a frightful mass of
-lurid flames. Alexander, sobered by the sublime and awful spectacle,
-repented of his wild folly. He ordered the fire to be extinguished; but
-it was too late; the infamous deed was done; the grand old palace was a
-hopeless mass of ruins, and another blot, which never can be effaced,
-tarnished the fame and character of Alexander.
-
-Notwithstanding Alexander’s evil deeds, he was kind to his mother. He
-sent her rich presents after his conquests; and though she was proud
-and imperious, and made Antipater, whom Alexander had left in command
-in Macedon, much trouble, so that Antipater was forced to complain of
-her, Alexander said that a single tear of his mother’s would outweigh
-ten thousand accusations against her. Olympias, however, did not
-repay his devotion with equal nobleness; she wrote frequent letters
-to him full of petty fault-finding, and making unkind comments upon
-his officers and generals; and though Alexander showed her respect,
-he evinced more love towards the mother of Darius, treating her
-and the captive children of his foe with the greatest kindness and
-consideration. After the battle of Arbela, while Alexander marched to
-Babylon and Susa, Darius had fled to Ecbatana. He was thus in one of
-the Persian royal palaces, while his family were with his conqueror
-at another. The wife of Darius had died before this time, while still
-a captive in the Grecian camp. Many of the forces of Darius had gone
-over to Alexander’s side, about forty thousand remaining faithful to
-him. But among these seeming friends were treacherous foes. A general,
-names Bessus, formed the plan of seizing Darius, and making him a
-prisoner, and then taking the command of the army himself. If Alexander
-should be likely to conquer him, he would then try to save himself
-by giving up Darius. If, on the other hand, their forces should be
-successful, he would then get Darius out of his way by assassinating
-him, and usurping the throne. Bessus communicated his plans to many
-of the chief officers, who agreed to become parties in the plot. The
-Grecian soldiers in the Persian army revealed this conspiracy to
-Darius, but he would not believe in the treachery of his countrymen. As
-Alexander advanced, Darius had retreated from Ecbatana, and Alexander
-followed him. While halting for rest, a Persian nobleman came into the
-Macedonian camp, and informed Alexander that the enemies’ forces were
-two days’ march in advance. Bessus was in command, and Darius deposed,
-the plot having been successfully carried out. Alexander immediately
-set forward in pursuit of Bessus and his royal prisoner. Alexander
-had now been two years advancing from Macedon into the heart of Asia,
-in pursuit of Darius. His conquest would not be complete until that
-monarch was captured. As soon as Bessus and the Persian army found
-that Alexander was close upon them, they attempted to hurry forward in
-the hope of escaping. Darius was in a chariot. They urged this chariot
-on, but it was too cumbersome for rapid flight. Bessus and his chief
-conspirators then called upon Darius to mount a horse and escape with
-them, leaving the rest of the army to its fate. Darius refused. Having
-become convinced of their treachery, he said he would rather trust
-himself in the hands of Alexander than to such traitors as they. Bessus
-and his confederates, exasperated by this reply, thrust their spears
-into Darius’ body as he sat in the chariot, and galloped away. Darius
-remained in his chariot, wounded and bleeding. His many sorrows had at
-last overwhelmed him. His kingdom was lost; his beloved wife was in
-the grave; his family were in captivity; his cities were sacked; his
-palaces and treasures plundered; and now, betrayed and abandoned, he
-was dying, slain by his treacherous countrymen, whom he had trusted
-as his friends. Alone, deserted by all the world, he, the once mighty
-monarch of vast dominions, now lay there, faint and bleeding, waiting
-the coming of death or his victorious conqueror.
-
-The Macedonians at last discovered the chariot in which Darius was
-lying pierced with spears. The floor of the chariot was covered with
-blood. They raised him a little, and he spoke; he called for water. A
-Macedonian soldier went to get some; others hurried to find Alexander,
-and bring him to the spot where his long-pursued enemy was dying. When
-the soldier returned with the water, Darius received the drink, and
-then said to those about him, “That he charged them to tell Alexander
-that he died in his debt, though he had never obliged him; that he gave
-him a multitude of thanks for the great humanity he had exercised
-towards his wife, mother, and his children, whose lives he had not only
-spared, but treated them with the greatest consideration and care,
-and had endeavored to make them happy; that he besought the gods to
-give victory to his arms, and make him monarch of the universe; that
-he thought it was not necessary to entreat him to revenge his murder,
-as this was the common cause of kings.” Then taking Polystratus, one
-of the Macedonians who had brought him the desired water to relieve
-his agonizing thirst, he continued, “Give Alexander thy hand, as I
-give thee mine, and carry him in my name the only pledge I am able
-to offer,—of my gratitude and affection.” Saying these words, Darius
-breathed his last.
-
-Alexander, coming up a moment after, was shocked at the spectacle
-before him, and wept bitterly. He then spread his own military cloak
-over the dead monarch. Having ordered the body to be embalmed, it was
-then enclosed in a costly coffin, and sent to Sysigambis, the mother of
-Darius, in order that it might be buried with the ceremonies usually
-paid to Persian monarchs, and be entombed with his ancestors.
-
-The Persian generals under Bessus now resolved to betray him, as he
-had betrayed his master. They sent word to Alexander that they would
-deliver him into his hands if he would send a small force to the place
-where they designated. Accordingly this command was entrusted to a
-Macedonian officer named Ptolemy, who found Bessus in a small walled
-town, to which he had fled for refuge.
-
-When Bessus was brought to Alexander, that monarch ordered the prisoner
-to be publicly scourged, and then caused his face to be mutilated in
-a manner customary in those days when a criminal was condemned to
-be stamped with a perpetual mark of infamy. Alexander then sent the
-traitor as a second present to Sysigambis, to be dealt with as her
-revenge for the death of Darius might dictate.
-
-After being terribly tortured, the miserable Bessus paid the last
-penalty of his crimes by a most shocking death, inflicted upon him by
-Sysigambis, to avenge her murdered son.
-
-Alexander was now twenty-six years of age. He was now the undisputed
-master of all western Asia. His wealth was boundless, his power was
-supreme, but his character was fearfully demoralized. He lived in the
-palaces of the Persian kings, and gave himself up to all sorts of
-vices. He spent his time in drunken debaucheries. The strong sentiment
-of love and respect with which he had formerly inspired all around him
-was gone, and conspiracies and treason prevailed. When the suspicions
-of Alexander were aroused, he put to death some of his most trusted
-officers.
-
-At last there was a conspiracy, in which Philotas, the son of the
-faithful Parmenio, was implicated. Being arrested and put to the
-torture, Philotas accused his father, in the hopes of saving himself.
-Though there was no evidence against that trusty general, Alexander
-caused them both to be put to death.
-
-The death of Parmenio and his son, in this violent manner, raised much
-unfavorable feeling against Alexander.
-
-Another case exemplifies the wicked deeds of Alexander when under the
-influence of wine, and puffed up with vain-glorious pride.
-
-One of his oldest and most faithful generals, named Clitus, was present
-at one of the frequent banquets given by Alexander. That monarch,
-excited with wine, had been boastfully recounting his own exploits, and
-had spoken disparagingly of those of his father Philip in comparison.
-Clitus, also heated with wine, began to praise Philip, under whom he
-had fought; and then growing bolder, he upbraided Alexander for the
-death of Parmenio. Alexander, frenzied with wine and rage, seized a
-javelin, hurled it at Clitus, and struck him down, saying, “Go then,
-and join Philip and Parmenio.” Alexander, as soon as he came to
-himself, was overwhelmed with remorse and shame. He could not, however,
-restore Clitus to life, or remove the disgrace from his own name.
-
-Alexander continued for two or three years his expeditions and
-conquests in Asia. He penetrated into India as far as the banks of the
-Indus. But his soldiers refused to go further. He made an address to
-his army, but he could not change their decision. At last one of his
-officers said to him:—
-
-“We have done all for you that it was possible for man to do. We have
-crossed seas and land. We have marched to the end of the world, and you
-are now meditating the conquest of another, by going in search of new
-Indias, unknown to the Indians themselves. Such a thought may be worthy
-of your courage and resolution, but it surpasses ours, and our strength
-still more. Look at these ghastly faces, and these bodies covered with
-wounds and scars. Remember how numerous we were when first we set out
-with you, and see how few of us remain. The few who have escaped so
-many toils and dangers have neither courage nor strength to follow you
-any further. They all long to revisit their country and their homes,
-and to enjoy for the remainder of their lives the fruits of all their
-toils. Forgive them these desires so natural to man.”
-
-Alexander was bitterly disappointed, but found himself obliged to
-relinquish further conquest. He returned to Babylon, where his
-triumphal entrance was a scene of magnificence and gorgeous splendor.
-
-But his life soon evinced the hopeless degradation into which he had
-fallen. He not only indulged in vice himself, but encouraged others
-to follow his evil example. He would offer prizes at his banquets to
-those who would drink the most, thus causing forty deaths at one of his
-entertainments.
-
-Alexander now entered upon a life of the most effeminate luxury and
-profligate dissipation. He separated himself more and more from his old
-Macedonian friends, and delighted in Persian associates. He married
-Statira, the eldest daughter of Darius, and gave the youngest daughter
-to his particular friend Hephæstion, who was his chosen companion in
-all his drunken revels.
-
-Alexander’s habits of intoxication and vice rapidly increased. On one
-occasion, after he had spent a whole night in drinking and carousing,
-some of the guests proposed that they should begin a second banquet
-instead of retiring.
-
-Alexander half intoxicated, agreed. There were twenty present at this
-new feast. Alexander, to show how much he was able to drink, pledged
-each one separately, and then all together.
-
-There was a very large cup, called the bowl of Hercules, which he now
-called for, and having filled it to the brim, he drank it off, and
-again filled the huge bowl, and again drank the entire contents. His
-strength soon failed him, and he sank to the floor.
-
-They bore him away to his apartments. A violent fever followed this
-terrible debauch, which his physicians in vain tried to allay. At
-last, finding he must die, he drew his signet ring off from his finger;
-this was the token that he felt all was over. He handed the ring to one
-of his friends, saying, “When I am gone, take my body to the temple of
-Jupiter Ammon, and inter it there.”
-
-Being asked to whom he left his kingdom, he replied: “To the most
-worthy.” Thus died Alexander the Great, at the age of thirty-two.
-
-Preparations were now made to convey his body with royal pomp to its
-last resting-place, in accordance with his orders.
-
-A very large and magnificent funeral carriage was built. “The spokes
-of the wheels were overlaid with gold, and the axles were adorned upon
-the outside with massive golden ornaments. The platform, or floor, of
-the carriage was eighteen feet long and twelve feet wide. Upon this
-there was erected a magnificent pavilion, supported by Ionic columns,
-profusely ornamented, both within and without, with purple and gold.
-The interior of the pavilion was resplendent with gems and precious
-stones.
-
-“A throne was raised in the centre of the platform, richly carved and
-gilded. It was empty; but the crowns of the various nations over which
-Alexander had ruled were hung upon it. At the foot of the throne was
-the coffin, made of solid gold, containing the remains of the great
-conqueror. The arms of Alexander were placed between the throne and the
-coffin.
-
-“On the four sides of the carriage were sculptured figures representing
-Alexander. There were Macedonian soldiers, Persian squadrons, elephants
-of India, troops of horse, and various other emblems of the departed
-hero’s conquests, sculptured upon this magnificent funeral carriage.
-Around the pavilion was a network of golden lace, to which bells were
-attached, which tolled mournfully as the carriage moved slowly along.
-Sixty-four mules, selected for their great size, drew this ponderous
-car. Their harness was mounted with gold and enriched with precious
-stones.”
-
-Notwithstanding all this gorgeous pomp, the body of Alexander never
-reached its first destination. Ptolemy, the officer, to whom Egypt was
-given in the division of Alexander’s empire, came forth to meet this
-solemn procession, and preferring that the body of Alexander should
-be buried in the city of Alexandria, it was interred there, and an
-imposing monument was erected over his grave. This monument is said to
-have remained standing for fifteen hundred years, though no remains of
-it are to be found.
-
-The most fitting comment upon the life and character of Alexander the
-Great will be found in these brief words of Napoleon Bonaparte, who
-said of Alexander: “He commenced his career with the mind of Trajan,
-but closed it with the heart of Nero and the morals of Heliogabalus.”
-
-
-
-
-JULIUS CÆSAR.
-
-100-44 B.C.
-
- “The elements
- So mix’d in him, that Nature might stand up
- And say to all the world, This was a man!”
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-
-THERE was wild tumult in the ancient city of Rome. The populace
-thronged the streets, carrying stones and bludgeons. Armed troops
-hurried hither and thither. The members of the Senate, a sort of
-House of Lords, were assembled in confusion; and their blanched faces
-denoted the terror which rendered them powerless to help. Several of
-the principal citizens had been murdered, and the other Roman lords,
-or patricians, knew not how soon their doom might come. But who was
-their terrible foe? Had some wild barbarian horde invaded their land
-and taken possession of their proud and magnificent city? Why did the
-nobles and men of rank tremble; and why were the common people roused
-to this wild outburst of fury?
-
-[Illustration: JULIUS CÆSAR.]
-
-It was no barbarian enemy, but civil discord amongst themselves, which
-thus filled the streets with murderers and the patricians with terror.
-Two powerful rivals were fighting for the possession of the Eternal
-City, which, at that time, was mistress of the world.
-
-Marius, the plebian, or champion of the common people, had roused the
-populace to fight against Sylla, the patrician, who had been absent
-with his army in Italy. Sylla had been appointed by the Senate to
-command the forces which were to wage war with Mithridates, a powerful
-Asiatic monarch. But during his absence, his enemy, Marius, had
-contrived to have this appointment revoked, and to gain for himself
-this coveted command. Two officers, called tribunes, were sent to
-Sylla’s camp, to inform him of this advantage which his rival had
-gained over him. Sylla killed the two officers for daring to bring him
-such a message, and immediately marched towards Rome.
-
-Marius, in retaliation, caused some of Sylla’s friends in the city to
-be put to death, and with his bands of soldiers endeavored to resist
-the entrance of Sylla and his army by throwing stones upon the troops
-from the roofs of the houses as they entered the city. Sylla then
-ordered every house to be set on fire, from which missiles had been
-thrown, and thus the helpless citizens were endangered by lawless and
-infuriated mobs on the one side, and relentless flames on the other.
-Marius was conquered, and obliged to flee for his life. He was an old
-man of seventy years of age. The Senate declared him a public enemy,
-and offered a large sum for his head. Alone and friendless, Marius
-wandered from place to place, enduring the greatest privations, and
-encountering many dangers, till at last he crossed the Mediterranean
-Sea, and took refuge in a poor hut among the ruins of ancient Carthage.
-Surely it would seem that his days of conquest were over. Alone,
-starving, helpless, old, and banished, with a heavy price set upon his
-head, his fortunes seemed indeed hopeless.
-
-Leaving this fallen champion in his hut, amidst the ruins of a past
-power which could only remind him of his own hopeless prospects, we
-must return to the city of Rome, and look upon another scene.
-
-A religious procession is wending its way through the famous Forum.
-This Forum was a magnificent square, surrounded by splendid edifices
-and adorned with sculptures and statues and many gorgeous trophies of
-past victories. There were vast colonnades forming covered porticoes,
-where the populace assembled and where courts of justice were held.
-This Forum was constantly embellished with new monuments, temples,
-statues, arches, and columns by the successful generals, as they
-returned in triumph from foreign campaigns. Here the various orators
-delivered their famous orations which inflamed the people to arms, or
-moved them to wild outbursts of enthusiastic applause in favor of some
-successful candidate, or calmed their boisterous tumult into silent and
-breathless attention to the impassioned and eloquent words which fell
-from the lips of these intellectual monarchs over the minds of their
-less gifted countrymen. It is night now in this great public square,
-and as the procession of priests and attendants slowly pass beneath a
-row of majestic colonnades and enter one of the temples, we note the
-face and figure of the foremost one. He is scarcely more than a boy,
-but he wears the purple robe called _læna_, and a conical mitre known
-as the _apex_, which mark his distinguished rank as holding the office
-of _Flamen Dialis_, or High Priest of Jupiter. This youth, seventeen
-years of age, is tall and fair, and though slender in form, is handsome
-and noble in bearing. He is descended from patrician families of
-high rank and proud position; and as he passes within the portal of
-the sacred temple, the beholder would involuntarily cast upon him an
-admiring glance, and if a stranger, would surely inquire who was this
-comely, noble youth who so early in life was distinguished by so high
-an office and royal bearing.
-
-Again we enter the Forum, but it is now high noon. A noted orator
-has ascended the pulpit, where public speakers were accustomed to
-stand when addressing the assemblies. This pulpit was ornamented with
-brazen beaks of ships, which had been taken by the Romans in their
-many wars. Such a beak was named a rostrum, and the pulpit so adorned
-was called the _Rostra_, or the Beaks,—often termed in modern books
-a rostrum. As the orator of the day began to speak, a youth might
-have been seen pressing through the crowd, and listening with wrapt
-attention to the eloquent words which fell from the speaker’s lips. As
-the burst of impassioned appeal became more persuasive, the dark eyes
-of the youth flashed with responsive fire, and his cheek glowed with
-a flush of kindling enthusiasm. Though he wears now the robes of a
-Roman patrician, we recognize him as the same person whom we beheld at
-midnight entering the temple in the attire of a High Priest of Jupiter.
-
-Again the scene changes to midnight, but it is not in the Roman Forum,
-but at a grand feast in one of the sumptuous palaces of a Roman lord.
-Amidst a party of gay and joyous young men, seemingly intent only upon
-luxurious pleasures, we see once more the face and figure of this
-same youth who has already so attracted our interest and admiration.
-Priest, student, devotée of pleasure, little did his companions or
-acquaintances imagine that this young Julius Cæsar, patrician born,
-but at the same time personally inclined towards the plebeian party,
-would become Julius Cæsar, future Master of Rome, and therefore ruler
-of nearly all of the then known world. This Julius Cæsar became the
-greatest hero of Roman history, and ranks as one of the three heroes of
-ancient days,—Alexander of the Greeks, Hannibal of the Carthaginians,
-and Julius Cæsar of the Romans, forming the famous trio.
-
-Again we must return to the old exile among the ruins of Carthage.
-One day he is awakened from his hopeless despondency by wild rumors
-from Rome. His rival and enemy, Sylla, had equipped a fleet and sailed
-away to wage war with Mithridates. The friends of Marius now rally
-again, and the old exile is brought back from Africa in triumph and
-given the command of a large army. As he pretended to be the friend of
-the common people, they flocked to his standard. Vast multitudes of
-revolted slaves, outlaws, and desperadoes joined his forces, which now
-advanced toward Rome. As soon as Marius gained possession of the city,
-he began a dreadful work of murder and destruction. He beheaded one of
-the consuls, and ordered his head to be set up as a spectacle of horror
-in the public square. Blood ran like a red river in the streets of
-Rome. Patricians of the highest rank and station were everywhere seized
-without warning, without trial, and put to torture and death.
-
-It is midnight in the great city, and under cover of the darkness, the
-evil deeds of blood-thirsty men, fired by hatred and lawless ambition,
-are renewed with fresh ferocity.
-
-Against his bitterest enemies Marius contrived special modes of
-execution, in order to wreak upon them his insatiable revenge for his
-exile, and consequent sufferings and privations.
-
-See! a party of men, composed of soldiers, and an enfuriated mob of
-people are dragging a lord of noble rank up to the top of a high rock,
-known as the Tarpeian Rock, from the summit of which state criminals
-were hurled down the precipice, upon sharp rocks below, where they
-were left to die in awful torture. This patrician, or Roman noble, had
-incurred the especial animosity of Marius, and so by his orders, the
-proud old man is torn from family and friends; and without trial, with
-the senate powerless to help, he is dragged here at midnight to suffer
-the ignominious and terrible death of a state criminal. This noted
-Tarpeian Rock still stands in Rome, and it received its name from this
-ancient story. In early times there was a Roman girl, named Tarpeia,
-living in the ancient city, when it was besieged by an army from a
-neighboring country. The soldiers of the besieging forces wore golden
-bracelets upon their arms, as well as shields; and upon demanding
-that Tarpeia should open the gates to them, she declared that if they
-would give her, “those things they wore upon their arms,” she would
-comply with their demands. She meant, of course, their bracelets; but
-not knowing the word by which they were designated, she brought upon
-herself a fearful doom. The soldiers agreed to grant her desire, and
-so she opened to them the gates. As they passed within, they threw
-their shields upon the poor girl, in proud derision, instead of giving
-her the coveted bracelets, exclaiming, “Here are the things we wear
-upon our arms.” Tarpeia was crushed to death beneath the weight of the
-ponderous shields; and so the spot where she fell became a rock of
-blood, and was ever afterwards called, in remembrance of her sad fate,
-the Tarpeian Rock. There is a further legend connected with this spot,
-for some of the ignorant people believe that in the interior of one of
-the many caverns, which have been found perforating this rock, Tarpeia
-still sits, enchanted, covered with gold and jewels. But should any one
-attempt to find her, he is fated to lose his way, and never to return
-from his reckless adventure. But the bloody triumph of Marius was of
-short duration. He was seized with a fatal sickness, and the cruel
-tyrant was obliged to meet an enemy he could not conquer. Death meted
-out to him some of the horrible torments he had inflicted upon others,
-as he died in delirious ravings, haunted by the presence of phantom
-foes. His son Marius assumed his father’s power; but Sylla, having
-returned from the Asiatic wars, and in his turn taking possession of
-the city of Rome, the followers of Marius were put to death with the
-same ferocity with which they had murdered others, and Sylla even
-exceeded the bloody deeds which had so brutally been performed by
-his hated rival. Thus the city of Rome was again plunged into wild
-confusion, and the scenes of murder and massacre, with all their
-shocking horrors, were re-enacted.
-
-[Illustration: JULIUS CÆSAR.
-
-(From Photograph of Bust in Capitol, Rome.)]
-
-It is at this time that the young Julius Cæsar first becomes a
-prominent figure in that bloody drama. Although Julius Cæsar was a
-patrician by birth, he was favorable to the plebian party. The elder
-Marius had married his aunt, and Cæsar himself had married a daughter
-of Cinna, who was four times consul, and was a powerful and ardent
-partisan of the party of Marius. Julius Cæsar, although at this time a
-very young man, was too prominent a person to be overlooked by Sylla,
-in his vengeance against the plebian party. The friends of Julius
-Cæsar tried to plead his youth with Sylla, saying that surely such a
-mere boy could do no harm. But Sylla had marked the aspiring spirit of
-the young nobleman, who with all his love of gayety and pleasure had
-not neglected his studies, and who was already gaining the dangerous
-reputation of an eloquent orator. Sylla now demanded that Julius
-Cæsar should divorce his wife Cornelia, the daughter of Cinna. Cæsar
-absolutely refused, partly from devotion to his wife, and partly
-from a proud indomitable spirit, which thus early was a prominent
-trait in his character, and which made him brave any danger rather than
-allow himself to be controlled. Knowing that punishment for his refusal
-to comply with the commands of Sylla would be destruction, Cæsar fled
-from Rome. Sylla deprived him of his rank and titles, confiscated the
-property of his wife and his own estates, and placed his name on the
-list of public enemies.
-
-Cæsar was now a fugitive and exile. He was also suffering from
-intermittent fever, and was obliged to seek some new place of refuge
-each day, as a price was set upon his head. He was at one time seized
-by a centurion, but Cæsar offered him a bribe sufficient to secure
-his release. After various adventures, he wandered into Asia Minor,
-and coming to the kingdom of Bithynia, he joined himself to the
-court of the king Nicomedes, and remained some time in that country.
-After leaving Bithynia, Julius Cæsar, while sailing near the isle of
-Pharmacusa, was taken prisoner by some pirates from a mountainous
-country called Cilicia. These Cilician pirates were half sailors and
-half mountaineers. They built swift galleys, and made excursions
-over the Mediterranean Sea for conquest and plunder. Cæsar asked the
-pirates what sum they demanded for his ransom. They replied twenty
-talents, whereupon Cæsar laughed at such a paltry sum being considered
-sufficient for his ransom, and told them they evidently did not know
-who he was. He then declared he would give them fifty talents, and
-forthwith sent all of his companions and attendants to the shore to
-go to the cities where he was known, and secure the sum required.
-Meanwhile he boldly remained among these rough men, with no attendants
-but a physician and two servants. Cæsar now assumed command over his
-very captors, giving orders, and demanding quiet when he wished to
-sleep. He joined them in their sports, and wrote and read orations to
-them as though he was their ruler. His boldness and skill elicited
-their profound admiration. The pirates one day asked him what he would
-do to them if he should ever capture them after obtaining his own
-release. He replied laughingly that he would crucify them all. This,
-though a seeming jest, was well fulfilled. His attendants, having
-returned with the ransom money, Julius Cæsar was released. He proceeded
-immediately to Miletus, equipped a small fleet, then sailed back to the
-place where the ships of the pirates still lay at anchor, and having
-attacked them, he recovered the ransom money, seized their ships, and
-took all the men prisoners. He carried his captives to the land, and
-having cut all their throats he hung their dead bodies upon crosses, in
-fulfilment of his threat.
-
-Julius Cæsar then went to Rhodes, where his former teacher Apollonius,
-a noted philosopher and rhetorician, resided. Cicero was also one of
-the pupils of this philosopher. Cæsar at length obtained pardon from
-Sylla, through the intercession of the vestal virgins and some of his
-friends. When Sylla at last yielded to their importunity, he exclaimed,
-“Your suit is granted; but know that this man, for whose safety you are
-so extremely anxious, will some day or other be the ruin of the party
-of the nobles, in defence of which you are leagued with me, for in
-this one Cæsar you will find many a Marius.” Sylla had since died, and
-though the aristocratical party were still in the ascendency, the party
-of Marius were recovering somewhat from their overthrow.
-
-Julius Cæsar now returned to Rome, and boldly espoused the popular
-cause. His first public act was the arraignment of Dolabella,
-governor of the province of Macedonia. When the trial came on Cæsar
-appeared in the Forum, and gained great applause for his eloquence and
-daring. Dolabella was defended by noted orators, and was acquitted by
-the Senate. But Julius Cæsar had displayed his marvellous powers of
-eloquence, which immediately gave him great renown.
-
-Cæsar now devoted himself to public speaking in the Forum, and acquired
-much celebrity. He pronounced a splendid panegyric upon the wife of
-Marius at her funeral; and also upon his wife Cornelia, who died
-soon after. Cæsar now became ambitious of securing public offices,
-and lavished large sums in shows and spectacles to amuse the people
-and secure their votes. He thus became deeply involved in debt, but
-he was still successful in rising from one office to still higher
-positions, until he obtained that of _quæstor_ in the province of
-Spain. This was the second office in command, the first officer being
-called a _prætor_. During his absence in Spain, Cæsar beheld a statue
-of Alexander the Great, which adorned one of the public buildings in
-the city of Cadiz, or Hades, as it was then called. Cæsar was now
-about thirty-five years of age, and reflecting upon the conquests of
-Alexander, who had died when only thirty-two years of age, Cæsar sighed
-over his own tardy accomplishment of his lofty ambitions, and leaving
-his post, returned to Rome, determined to seek higher honors.
-
-He was chosen _ædile_ by the people. He now had charge of the public
-edifices of the city, and of the games and spectacles which were
-exhibited in them. The arrangements made by him for the amusement of
-the people were on the most magnificent and extravagant scale. He
-exhibited three hundred and twenty pair of gladiators, and he made
-great additions to the public buildings. He now endeavored to have
-Egypt assigned to him as a province; but the senate resisted this plan,
-and Cæsar was obliged to abandon it. About this time, Cæsar obtained
-a triumph over the senate, who were very jealous of his increasing
-power. He replaced the statues and trophies of Marius in the capital,
-which had been taken down and destroyed by the order of Sylla when
-he returned to power. In their place, Cæsar had ordered magnificent
-new ones to be made, and put up secretly in the night. The senate
-endeavored to take them down again, but the people rallied in such
-vast numbers, as to prevent the work of destruction, and Cæsar was
-triumphant.
-
-A dangerous conspiracy, headed by the notorious Catiline, was now
-discovered, and several conspirators were arrested. It was when the
-senate was debating whether they should be put to death, that Cæsar
-made his noted speech which was replied to so hotly by Cato.
-
-Cæsar was by some accused of being cognizant of this plot, if he were
-not indeed a participant.
-
-After the death of Cornelia, Cæsar had married Pompeia, but he
-afterwards divorced her. Julius Cæsar now began to plan for a still
-higher office, and upon the death of Metellus, the chief pontiff, Cæsar
-solicited the office.
-
-He was now so heavily involved in debt, that he faced ruin if defeated,
-or glory if elected. When the day of election came, Cæsar parted with
-his mother, saving,—“You will see me this day either chief pontiff or
-an exile.”
-
-But he succeeded in gaining the election. Having obtained this added
-power, he desired to procure the position of _prætor_ in Spain. This
-he also secured, but so large were his debts, that Crassus, a man of
-immense wealth, was, by Cæsar’s promises of using his political power
-in his behalf, persuaded to lend him the sum needed to satisfy his
-creditors.
-
-Cæsar was very successful in his province in Spain, and he returned in
-a short time with military glory, and with money sufficient to pay his
-debts, and furnish fresh supplies for further bribes to secure still
-higher positions. He now aspired to the office of consul, which was the
-highest office in the Roman state.
-
-At this time, Pompey was the military idol of the people, and Crassus,
-powerful on account of his vast wealth, was Pompey’s bitter enemy.
-Cæsar conceived the plan of reconciling these two dangerous foes,
-and availing himself of the aid of both to further his own ambitious
-projects.
-
-Cæsar was successful in this plan, and they then formed a triple
-league, binding themselves to promote the political elevation of each
-other. Having secured such powerful adherents, Cæsar now pushed his
-claims for consulship. He chose a man of great wealth, named Lucceius,
-to be associated with himself, who agreed to pay all the expenses of
-the election, for the sake of the honor of being consul with Cæsar. But
-the political enemies of Cæsar, knowing that they could not defeat his
-election, determined to place Bibulus, in the place of Lucceius, as the
-associate of Cæsar. Accordingly they raised as much money to expend for
-Bibulus as Lucceius should employ. The result was the election of Cæsar
-and Bibulus as the two consuls. But having entered upon the duties
-of that office, Cæsar so completely ignored Bibulus, and assumed so
-entirely the whole control of the consular power, that Bibulus retired
-to his house in chagrin and mortification, and allowed Cæsar to have
-his own way. Two consuls were always required by law, and so the wags
-of the city, in speaking of Cæsar’s consulship, instead of saying, “In
-the year of Cæsar and Bibulus, consuls,” according to the usual form,
-would often say, “In the year of Julius and Cæsar, consuls,” ignoring
-the name of Bibulus, and taking the two names of Cæsar to denote his
-supreme rule.
-
-[Illustration: CÆSAR IN GAUL.]
-
-Cæsar’s ambition was not yet satisfied. He had secured the highest
-place in the state, and now he aspired to military glory and foreign
-conquest. Having obtained the command of an army, he entered upon a
-campaign in the heart of Europe, which he continued for eight years.
-
-The large tract of country now known as Northern Italy, Switzerland,
-France, Germany, and England, was then spoken of as Gaul. The part on
-the Italian side of the Alps was called Cisalpine Gaul, and that which
-lay beyond was termed Transalpine Gaul.
-
-Cæsar now placed himself at the head of an army of three Roman legions,
-and set out for Gaul. The first battle he fought was with the German
-king Ariovistus. Cæsar was victorious, and the Germans were put in
-complete subjection. Other provinces of Gaul now submitted without
-resistance, and those who determined to league together to resist this
-new military power were soon brought to submission.
-
-One of the most interesting of the various excursions made by Cæsar
-during these eight years was his expedition into Great Britain.
-
-When Cæsar arrived on the northern shores of France, he began to
-inquire of all the travelling merchants whom he met, and who in those
-days journeyed from one nation to another to buy and sell goods, about
-the best manner of crossing the channel, and regarding the people on
-the English side of the water. But the merchants could give him little
-information, and so he fitted out a galley, manned with many oarsmen,
-and placing it under the command of an officer, he directed him to
-cross the channel and discover the best harbors to land on the other
-side, and then to return and report. This officer was gone five days,
-and upon his return, Cæsar determined to transport his troops across
-the channel. Cæsar had collected a large number of sailing vessels upon
-which he embarked his forces, and upon a given day, at one o’clock in
-the morning, the fleet set sail.
-
-The Britons had in the meantime learned of Cæsar’s intended invasion,
-and they collected in vast numbers to guard the shore.
-
-When the Roman fleet approached the land, the cliffs were everywhere
-lined with troops of Britons, and every available point was well
-guarded.
-
-Cæsar now proceeded with his fleet along the shore, the Britons
-following on the land until a level plain was reached. Here Cæsar
-determined to attempt to disembark. A dreadful struggle ensued. The
-Britons plunged into the water, and the Romans shot darts and arrows
-from the decks of the vessels upon the assailants of their comrades,
-who were endeavoring to make the landing. The Britons were at last
-driven back, and Cæsar succeeded in obtaining possession of the shore.
-
-These campaigns of Cæsar, in a military point of view, were a
-succession of magnificent exploits. The people at Rome were unbounded
-in their enthusiastic praise, and decreed him triumph after triumph,
-and were prepared to welcome him with high honors when he should
-return. Plutarch says of these eight years of foreign conquest, that
-Cæsar took eight hundred cities, conquered three hundred nations,
-fought pitched battles, at separate times, with three millions of men,
-took one million of them prisoners, and killed another million on the
-field.
-
-[Illustration: THE LANDING OF JULIUS CÆSAR IN BRITAIN.]
-
-From a humane standpoint, however, what a fearful destruction of
-human lives, to satisfy the insatiable ambition of one man. How much
-more desirable would have been the fame of blessing, rather than
-destroying and injuring three millions of his fellow men. The time
-was now drawing near for Cæsar’s return to Rome. During his absence a
-dangerous rival had become the idol of the fickle people. After the
-death of Pompey’s wife Julia, who was the daughter of Julius Cæsar, the
-former alliance between these two powerful rivals had been broken, and
-they were now open foes. While Cæsar was absent in Gaul, he had not
-neglected to endeavor to retain his hold upon the populace of Rome. He
-had distributed vast sums for the adornment of the city. He expended
-over four million dollars in purchasing ground for the enlargement of
-the Forum; and when he heard of the death of his daughter Julia, the
-wife of Pompey, he ordered her funeral to be celebrated with gorgeous
-splendor. He distributed corn in immense quantities among the people,
-and sent home many captives to be trained as gladiators to amuse the
-populace in the theatres. Men were astounded at the magnitude of these
-vast expenditures; but Pompey was, nevertheless, fast securing the
-heart of the people. Pompey, in his vanity, imagined that he was so far
-above Cæsar that he need feel no solicitude at the return of his rival,
-and therefore took no precautions to resist any hostile designs. Cæsar
-had now advanced toward the Rubicon, which was a little stream that
-formed the boundary line between the north of Italy, which was a Roman
-province called Hither Gaul, and the immediate jurisdiction of the city
-of Rome.
-
-Generals commanding in Gaul were never allowed to pass this river
-with an army. Hence, to cross the Rubicon with an armed force, was
-rebellion and treason. When Cæsar arrived at the farther shore of this
-small but significant stream, he halted at a small town called Ravenna,
-and established his headquarters there. Pompey now sent to him to
-demand the return of a legion he had lent him when they were friends.
-Cæsar returned the legion immediately, adding some of his own troops to
-show his indifference to the size of his own force.
-
-In the meantime, the partisans of Cæsar and Pompey in the city of Rome,
-grew more threatening in their struggles. The friends of Cæsar demanded
-that he should be elected consul. The friends of Pompey replied that
-Cæsar must first resign the command of his army, and come to Rome and
-present himself as a candidate in the character of a private citizen,
-as the constitution of the state required. Cæsar replied that if
-Pompey would lay down his arms, he would also do so; but otherwise,
-it was unjust to require it of him. This privilege he demanded as a
-recompense for the services he had rendered to the state. A large part
-of the people sided with Cæsar; but the partisans of Pompey, with the
-inflexible Cato at their head, withstood the demand. The city was much
-excited over the impending conflict. Pompey displayed no fear, and
-urged the Senate to resist all of Cæsar’s claims, saying, that if Cæsar
-should presumptuously dare to march with his forces to Rome, he could
-raise troops enough to subdue him by merely stamping on the ground.
-Cæsar meanwhile had been quietly making his preparations at Ravenna.
-It was his policy to move as privately as possible. Accordingly, he
-sent some cohorts to march secretly to the banks of the river, and
-encamp there, while he employed himself in his usual occupation. He had
-established a fencing school, and on the very eve of his departure
-he went as usual to this school, then feasted with his friends, going
-afterwards with them to a public entertainment. As soon as it was
-dark enough, and the streets were deserted, he stole away with a few
-attendants. During the night, Cæsar and his guides found themselves
-lost, and they wandered about until nearly break of day, when a peasant
-guided them to the shore, where he found his troops awaiting him.
-Having arrived at the banks of the stream, Cæsar stood for some moments
-musing upon the step he was about to take. If he crossed that narrow
-stream retreat would be impossible. The story is told that a shepherd
-coming up took the trumpet from one of Cæsar’s trumpeters, and sounded
-a charge, marching rapidly over the bridge at the same time. “An omen!
-a prodigy!” exclaimed Cæsar. “Let us march where we are called by such
-a divine intimation—_The die is cast!_”
-
-As soon as the bridge was crossed, Cæsar called an assembly of his
-troops, and made an eloquent appeal to them, urging them to stand
-faithful to him, and promising them large rewards should he be
-successful. The soldiers responded with enthusiastic applause. As
-Cæsar advanced towards Rome, several towns surrendered to him without
-resistance. He met with but one opposition. The Senate had deposed
-Cæsar from his command during the hot debates preceding his crossing of
-the Rubicon, and had appointed Domitius to succeed him. That general
-had crossed the Apennines at the head of an army, and had reached the
-town of Corfinium. Cæsar advanced and besieged him there. The town was
-soon captured; and Cæsar, to the surprise of everyone, who supposed he
-would wreak vengeance upon his foes, received the troops into his own
-service, and let Domitius go free. News had now reached the city of
-Rome, of Cæsar’s crossing the Rubicon, and rapid advance. The Senate
-were terribly alarmed, and looked to Pompey in vain for help. Pompey
-himself was terrified, but could do nothing; and the Senate then
-derisively called upon him to raise the promised army of which he had
-boasted, telling him they thought it was high time to stamp with his
-feet, as he declared that by so doing he could secure a force large
-enough to defeat Cæsar. Cato and many of the prominent men fled from
-the city.
-
-Pompey, calling upon all his partisans to follow him, set forth at
-night to retreat across the country towards the Adriatic Sea.
-
-Cæsar was rapidly advancing toward Rome. As all supplies of money were
-cut off by his crossing the Rubicon, which severed his connection
-with the government, his soldiers voted to serve him without pay. His
-treatment of Domitius was much applauded by the people. He himself
-says, in a letter written to a friend at the time, “I am glad that you
-approve of my conduct at Corfinium. I am satisfied that such a course
-is the best one for us to pursue, as by so doing we shall gain the
-good will of all parties, and thus secure a permanent victory. Most
-conquerors have incurred the hatred of mankind by their cruelties, and
-have all, in consequence of the enmity they have thus awakened, been
-prevented from long enjoying their power. Sylla was an exception, but
-his example of successful cruelty I have no disposition to imitate. I
-will conquer after a new fashion, and fortify myself in the possession
-of the power I acquire by generosity and mercy.”
-
-Cæsar now pursued Pompey to Brundusium, whither Pompey had retreated.
-Cæsar laid siege to the city, but Pompey secretly made preparations
-for embarking his troops. He caused all the streets to be barricaded,
-except two, which led to the landing, and in the darkness of the
-night, he began embarking his forces as fast as possible on board of
-transports already provided. Cæsar was made aware of this fact, and
-his army quickly brought ladders and scaled the walls of the city, but
-the barricaded streets so impeded their progress through the darkness
-of the night, that Pompey and his troops succeeded in sailing away.
-As Cæsar had no ships, he continued his march to Rome, and entering
-the city without opposition, re-established the government and took
-control. After various subsequent campaigns in Italy, Spain, Sicily,
-and Gaul, which resulted in completely subjugating these nations to his
-dominion, he commenced the pursuit of Pompey, across the Adriatic Sea.
-
-As Pompey had cleared the seas of every vessel which could aid him in
-his flight, Cæsar had great difficulty in procuring even a sufficient
-number of galleys to transport a part of his army, and embarking with
-these he landed on the opposite shore, and sent back the galleys for
-the remainder of his forces, while he pursued Pompey with the troops
-already with him. Some of Pompey’s generals intercepted a part of
-Cæsar’s galleys, and destroyed them; the sea also, becoming very
-boisterous, the troops were afraid to embark, not being stimulated to
-courage by the presence and voice of Cæsar. Julius Cæsar still pursued
-Pompey, who constantly retreated; and the winter wore away with no
-decided battle, and leaving both armies in a suffering condition.
-At last, one stormy night, Cæsar determined to embark upon a galley
-and return to the Italian side, and bring the remainder of his army
-over. Cæsar disguised himself in a long cloak, with his head muffled
-in his mantle, and thus got aboard the galley and ordered the men
-to row him across. A violent wind arose, and the waves were so high
-that at last the rowers declared they could go no further; Cæsar then
-came forward, threw off his mantle, and exclaimed: “Friends, you have
-nothing to fear; you are carrying Cæsar!” Thus inspired the men put
-forth herculean efforts, but all to no purpose, and Cæsar was obliged,
-reluctantly, to turn back. His army on the Italian shore, however,
-hearing of this brave deed were inspired with new courage, and making
-another attempt, they were successful in joining Cæsar, who, thus
-strengthened, planned for a vigorous attack in the spring. A parley had
-been held several times between the hostile hosts, but to no effect;
-and many skirmishes and partial conflicts took place, but no decided
-battle. At one time, Pompey’s troops so hemmed in the army of Cæsar
-that his forces suffered for want of food, but his soldiers bravely
-made use of a sort of root which they dug from the ground, and made
-into a kind of bread, telling Cæsar they would live upon the bark of
-trees rather than abandon his cause. At length the army of Pompey was
-in turn hemmed in by Cæsar’s forces, and becoming very desperate, on
-account of the distress occasioned by want of food and water, Pompey
-made some successful attacks upon Cæsar’s lines, and broke away from
-his enemy’s grasp.
-
-At last, however, they came to open battle on the plain of Pharsalia.
-As Pompey’s forces far outnumbered those of Cæsar he felt confident
-of victory. “The hour at length arrived; the charge was sounded by
-the trumpets, and Cæsar’s troops began to advance with loud shouts
-and great impetuosity toward Pompey’s lines. There was a long and
-terrible struggle, but the forces of Pompey began finally to give
-way. Notwithstanding the precautions which Pompey had taken to guard
-and protect the wing of his army which was extended toward the land,
-Cæsar succeeded in turning his flank upon that side by driving off
-the cavalry, and destroying the archers and slingers; and he was thus
-enabled to throw a strong force upon Pompey’s rear. The flight then
-soon became general, and a scene of dreadful confusion and slaughter
-ensued. The soldiers of Cæsar’s army, maddened with the insane rage
-which the progress of a battle never fails to awaken, and now excited
-to frenzy by the exultation of success, pressed on after the affrighted
-fugitives, who trampled one upon another or fell pierced with the
-weapons of their assailants, filling the air with their cries of agony
-and their shrieks of terror.”
-
-When Pompey perceived that all was lost he fled from the field, and
-having disguised himself as a common soldier, he retreated with a few
-attendants until he reached the Vale of Tempe in Thessaly. Here, in
-this picturesque spot, noted for its beautiful scenery, the fallen
-Pompey took his weary way. Having at length reached the Ægean Sea, he
-took refuge in a fisherman’s hut; hearing still of Cæsar’s pursuit he
-did not dare to rest, but embarked the next morning in a little vessel,
-with three attendants. He was afterwards taken up by the commander of
-a merchant ship, and was at length conveyed to the island of Lesbos,
-where his wife, Cornelia, was residing; Pompey had married her after
-the death of Julia, Cæsar’s daughter. Cornelia now provided a small
-fleet, and, determining to accompany her husband, they set sail upon
-the Mediterranean Sea. At last Pompey decided to seek refuge in Egypt.
-Some years before Pompey had been the means of restoring a king of
-Egypt to his throne; this king had since died, but had left his
-daughter, the famous Cleopatra, on the throne, to rule, conjointly,
-with a younger brother, named Ptolemy. At this time, the Egyptian
-ministers, who acted for the young prince, who was not old enough to be
-invested with the royal power, had dethroned Cleopatra that they might
-thus govern alone.
-
-Cleopatra went into Syria to raise an army to recover her lost throne,
-and Ptolemy’s ministers had gone forth to battle with her. It was
-then that Pompey arrived in Egypt, and thinking that the young prince
-Ptolemy would receive him on account of the services Pompey had
-rendered to the Egyptian king, father of Ptolemy, Pompey and Cornelia,
-with their little fleet, approached the shore intending to land. A
-messenger was sent to the young king to solicit a kind reception.
-The Egyptian ministers of Ptolemy persuaded him that it would be
-dangerous either to grant or refuse Pompey’s request, and therefore,
-counselled that he might be invited to their camp, and then that he
-should be killed; this would please Cæsar, who was now so powerful,
-and it would put Pompey out of their way. This ungrateful counsel
-prevailed, and an Egyptian was appointed to perform the bloody deed. A
-courteous invitation was sent to Pompey to land, who, however, parted
-with his wife, Cornelia, with many forebodings of evil. As the boat
-of the Egyptians reached Pompey’s galley the officers hailed him with
-every mark of respect; bidding Cornelia farewell, Pompey, with two
-centurions, stepped into the Egyptian boat and was rowed to the shore.
-Just as he was about to step from the boat the assassins drew their
-swords, and Pompey was slain before the very eyes of his wife, who
-beheld the bloody scene from the deck of her galley, and her piercing
-shriek was wafted to the ears of her dying husband. The Egyptians then
-cut off the head of Pompey, leaving the headless body lying upon the
-shore. The two centurions who had accompanied Pompey, afterwards burned
-the body, and sent the ashes to the heartbroken Cornelia.
-
-Cæsar, in pursuit of Pompey, soon after reached Alexandria, where
-he learned of his death; and the Egyptians, hoping to please him,
-presented to him the bloody head of his late enemy. But though Cæsar
-was very ambitious, he was not blood-thirsty, nor brutal in his wars.
-Instead of being pleased with such a ghastly gift, Cæsar turned from
-the shocking spectacle in horror. While Cæsar was in Alexandria many
-of Pompey’s officers came and surrendered themselves to him; and
-Cæsar, finding himself so powerful, determined to use his authority as
-Roman consul, to settle the dispute between Cleopatra and her brother
-Ptolemy. It was at this time that Cleopatra, in order to plead her
-cause, was brought by her commands to Cæsar’s quarters, rolled up in a
-bale of carpeting, and carried upon the shoulders of a slave. As all
-the avenues of approach to Cæsar’s apartments were in the possession
-of her enemies she feared falling into their hands. Cæsar espoused her
-cause, and determined that she and her brother Ptolemy should reign
-jointly. Ptolemy was so incensed against his sister, for thus securing
-Cæsar’s allegiance, that a violent war was waged between the Egyptians
-and Cæsar. This is called in history the Alexandrine War. In the course
-of this contest Cæsar took possession of the famous lighthouse of
-Pharos, one of the Seven Wonders of the world. During the progress of
-this war a great disaster occurred, which was the burning of the famous
-Alexandrian library. The number of volumes, or rolls of parchment
-there collected, was said to have been seven hundred thousand. When we
-remember that the people in those days possessed no printed books, and
-that each one of these rolls had been written by hand, with immense
-labor, and at vast expense, the loss to the world of works which could
-never be reproduced was irreparable. Cæsar was victorious in this war.
-The young king Ptolemy was defeated, and in attempting to retreat
-across one of the branches of the Nile he was drowned. Cæsar finally
-settled Cleopatra and a younger brother upon the throne of Egypt and
-returned to Rome. While Cæsar was in Egypt three great powers had
-arisen against him, in Asia Minor, in Africa, and in Spain.
-
-He first went to Asia Minor and so quickly defeated his enemies there,
-that it was in reference to this battle that he wrote the famous
-inscription for his banner, which appeared in his triumphal procession,
-“_Veni, Vidi, Vici_,” I came, I saw, I conquered. Cæsar then proceeded
-to Africa, where his old enemy Cato had raised a large force against
-him. Cæsar was successful also in this contest, and finally shut up
-Cato in the city of Utica. Cato, finding defence hopeless, killed
-himself.
-
-From Africa, Cæsar returned to Rome for a short time, and then went
-to Spain to put down the rebellion there which was led by the sons of
-Pompey. Here also he was successful, and the conqueror returned to
-Rome the undisputed master of the whole Roman world. Then came his
-magnificent triumphs. Cæsar celebrated four triumphs for his four great
-campaigns, in Egypt, in Asia Minor, in Africa, and in Spain. These were
-celebrated upon separate days. These triumphs were gorgeous in the
-extreme. Forty elephants were employed as torch-bearers in one triumph
-which took place at night, each elephant holding a great blazing
-flambeau in his proboscis and waving it proudly in the air. These
-triumphal processions are thus described by one historian. “In these
-triumphal processions everything was borne in exhibition which could
-serve as a symbol of the conquered country or a trophy of victory.
-Flags and banners, taken from the enemy; vessels of gold and silver
-and other treasures loaded in vans; wretched captives conveyed in open
-carriages, or marching sorrowfully on foot, and destined, some of
-them, to public execution when the ceremony of the triumph was ended;
-displays of arms and implements and dresses and all else which might
-serve to give the Roman crowd an idea of the customs and usages of the
-remote and conquered nations; the animals they used caparisoned in the
-manner in which they used them; these and a thousand other trophies
-and emblems were brought into the line to excite the admiration of
-the crowd, and to add to the gorgeousness of the spectacle. In these
-triumphs of Cæsar a young sister of Cleopatra, wearing chains of
-gold, was in the line of the Egyptian procession. In that devoted to
-Asia Minor was a great banner containing the words already referred
-to, Veni, Vidi, Vici. There were great paintings, too, borne aloft,
-representing battles and other striking scenes. Of course, all Rome was
-in the highest state of excitement during the days of the exhibition of
-this pageantry.
-
-“The whole surrounding country flocked to the capital to witness it,
-and Cæsar’s greatness and glory were signalized in the most conspicuous
-manner to all the world. After these triumphs, a series of splendid
-public entertainments were given, over twenty thousand tables having
-been spread for the populace of the city. Shows of every character
-and variety were exhibited. There were dramatic plays and equestrian
-performances in the circus, and gladiatorial combats, and battles with
-wild beasts, and dances and chariot races and every other amusement
-which could be devised to gratify a population highly cultivated in
-all the arts of life, but barbarous and cruel in heart and character.
-Some of the accounts which have come down to us of the magnificence of
-the scale on which these entertainments were conducted are absolutely
-incredible. It is said that an immense basin was constructed near the
-Tiber, large enough to contain two fleets of galleys, which had on
-board two thousand rowers each and one thousand fighting men. These
-fleets were then manned with captives,—the one with Asiatics, and the
-other with Egyptians,—and when all was ready, they were compelled to
-fight a real battle for the amusement of the spectators who thronged
-the shores, until vast numbers were killed, and the waters of the lake
-were dyed with blood. It is also said that the entire Forum and some of
-the great streets in the neighborhood, where the principal gladiatorial
-shows were held, were covered with silken awnings to protect the vast
-crowds of spectators from the sun, and thousands of tents were erected
-to accommodate the people from the surrounding country, whom the
-buildings of the city could not contain.”
-
-All open opposition to Cæsar’s power was now put down. The Senate
-vied with the people to do him honor. He was first made consul for
-ten years, and then perpetual dictator. They conferred upon him the
-title of “The Father of his Country.” Cæsar now began to form plans
-for immense improvements which should benefit his empire. He completed
-the regulation of the calendar. “The system of months in use in his
-day corresponded so imperfectly with the annual circuit of the sun,
-that the months were moving continually along the year in such a manner
-that the winter months came at length in the summer, and the summer
-months in the winter. This led to great practical inconveniences.
-For whenever, for example, anything was required by law to be done
-in certain months, intending to have them done in the summer, and
-the specified month came at length to be a winter month, the law
-would require the thing to be done in exactly the wrong season. Cæsar
-remedied all this by adopting a new system of months which should
-give three hundred and sixty-five days to the year for three years,
-and three hundred and sixty-six for the fourth; and so exact was the
-system which he thus introduced that it went on unchanged for sixteen
-centuries. The months were then found to be eleven days out of the
-way, and a new correction was introduced by Pope Gregory XIII., and it
-will now go on three thousand years before the error will amount to a
-single day. Cæsar employed a Greek astronomer to arrange the system he
-adopted, and for this improvement one of the months was called July,
-after Julius Cæsar. Its former name was Quintilis.”
-
-Cæsar commenced the collection of vast libraries; formed plans for
-draining the Pontine Marshes, and for bringing great supplies of water
-into the city by an aqueduct; and he intended to cut a new passage
-for the Tiber from Rome to the sea. He also planned a road along the
-Apennines, and a canal through the Isthmus of Corinth, and intended to
-construct other vast works which should make Rome the wonder of the
-world.
-
-But in the midst of all these grand projects he was suddenly stricken
-down. Although the Romans disliked the thought of being ruled by a
-king, they preserved certain statues of their kings in some of the
-public buildings, and the ambition of Cæsar led him very foolishly
-to place his own statue among them. He also had a seat prepared for
-himself in the Senate in the form of a throne. On one occasion, when
-the members of the Senate were to come to him in a temple to announce
-certain decrees they had passed to his honor, Cæsar received them
-sitting upon a magnificent chair, which seemed a throne, so gorgeous
-was it; and he did not even rise to welcome them, as was the usual
-custom, thus showing that he would receive them as a monarch, who
-never rises in the presence of inferiors. This incident, small as it
-may seem, aroused much indignation. His statue was also found adorned
-with a laurel crown, to which was fastened a white fillet, which was
-an emblem of royalty. On another occasion, at a public entertainment,
-an officer placed a diadem upon the head of Cæsar, who pretended to
-be disinclined to receive it, and taking it off, it was offered twice
-again, and refused, when Cæsar sent the diadem to a temple near by as
-an offering to Jupiter. Although he thus appeared to reject the honor,
-his manner indicated that he only desired to be more warmly pressed to
-receive it. There was now formed a strong conspiracy against Cæsar,
-headed by Cassius, who had for a long time been Cæsar’s enemy. Cassius
-at last succeeded in persuading Marcus Brutus to join him. The plan was
-then divulged to such men as the conspirators thought most necessary
-to the success of their plot. It was agreed that Cæsar must be slain.
-They at length decided that the Roman Senate was the proper place.
-As it had been rumored that Cæsar’s friends were about to attempt to
-crown him as a king on the Ides of March, that day was chosen by the
-conspirators as a fitting one on which Julius Cæsar should meet his
-doom. Cæsar received many warnings of his approaching fate, and the
-soothsayers reported many strange omens which betokened some portentous
-event. One of these soothsayers informed Cæsar that he had been
-warned, by certain signs at a public sacrifice, that some terrible
-danger threatened his life on the Ides of March; and he besought him
-to be cautious until that day should have passed. The Senate were to
-meet on the Ides of March in a new and magnificent edifice, which had
-been erected by Pompey. In this Senate Chamber was a statue of Pompey.
-The day before the Ides of March, some birds of prey from a neighboring
-grove came flying into this hall, pursuing a little wren which had a
-sprig of laurel in its beak. The birds tore the poor wren to pieces,
-and the laurel fell from its bill to the marble pavement below. As
-Cæsar had been crowned with laurel after his victories, and always
-wore a wreath of laurel on public occasions, this event was thought
-to portend some evil to him. The night before the Ides of March, both
-Cæsar and his wife Calpurnia awoke from terrible dreams. Cæsar dreamed
-that he ascended into the skies and was received by Jupiter, and
-Calpurnia, awakening with a wild shriek, declared that she had dreamed
-that the roof of the house had fallen in, and that her husband had been
-stabbed by an assassin. When morning came, Calpurnia endeavored to
-persuade Cæsar not to go to the Senate, and he had consented to comply
-with her wish, until one of the conspirators, who had been appointed to
-accompany Cæsar to the Senate, came to the house of Julius Cæsar, and
-by his declarations that the people were waiting to confer upon their
-dictator the title of king throughout all the Roman dominions excepting
-Italy alone, he at length persuaded Cæsar to go with him. On the way
-to the Senate, a Greek teacher, having learned something of the plot,
-wrote a statement of it, and as Cæsar passed him he gave it to him,
-saying, “Read this immediately; it concerns yourself, and is of the
-utmost importance.” Cæsar made the attempt to do so, but the crowd of
-people who pressed towards him and handed him various petitions, as was
-the usual custom when a state officer appeared in public, prevented
-Cæsar from thus learning of the dreadful fate awaiting him. There was
-one warm friend of Cæsar, named Marc Antony, whom the conspirators
-feared might interfere with the successful completion of their plot,
-and so it was arranged that one of their number should engage the
-attention of Antony, while the petitioner chosen should advance and
-make his appeal to Cæsar, which should be the signal for the bloody
-deed. This conspirator made a pretence of asking Cæsar for the pardon
-of his brother, which request, as they had expected, Cæsar declined to
-grant. This occasioned an outburst of pretended fury, under cover of
-which the conspirators rushed upon Cæsar and stabbed him with their
-swords. Cæsar at first attempted to defend himself, but as Brutus, his
-former friend, also plunged his dagger into his side, he exclaimed,
-“And you, too, Brutus?” and drawing his mantle over his face, he fell
-at the feet of Pompey’s statue and expired. Now again the city of Rome
-was in wild tumult.
-
-The conspirators marched boldly through the streets with their bloody
-swords. They boasted of their shocking deed, and announced that they
-had delivered their country from a tyrant. The people, stunned by
-the daring of this terrible act, knew not what to think or do. Some
-barricaded their houses in fear; others hurried through the streets
-with blanched faces; and still others excitedly seized any kind of
-weapon near at hand, and joined a mob, which threatened to break out in
-awful violence, to avenge the death of Cæsar, their idol.
-
-During all this time the body of Cæsar lay unheeded at the foot of
-Pompey’s statue, pierced with twenty-three wounds, made by the hands of
-men he thought were his friends. Three slaves were his only guardians;
-and at last they lifted the poor bruised, bleeding, and ghastly corpse,
-and carried it home to the distracted Calpurnia. The next day, Brutus
-and the other conspirators called the people together in the Forum, and
-there addressed them, endeavoring to persuade them that the deed had
-been committed only in the interests of the people, to rid them of a
-tyrant. But the subsequent famous funeral speech of Marc Antony, roused
-the people to such a wild frenzy of revenge, that the conspirators were
-only saved from death with great difficulty by the intervention of the
-Senate.
-
-The Field of Mars had been chosen as the place for the funeral pile;
-but after the speech of Marc Antony in the Forum, where the body of
-Cæsar had been placed on a gilded bed covered with scarlet and cloth of
-gold, under a gorgeous canopy made in the form of a temple, the people
-in their wild outbursts of love for Cæsar, as they had then learned
-from his will, which Antony read aloud to them, of his munificent
-bequests to the Roman citizens, became ungovernable in their desires
-to do him reverence. As a crier, by Antony’s order, read the decrees
-of the Senate, in which all honors, human and divine, had been been
-ascribed to Cæsar, the gilded bed upon which he lay was lifted and
-borne out into the centre of the Forum; and two men, having forced
-their way through the crowd, with lighted torches set fire to the bed
-on which the body of Cæsar lay, and the multitudes with shouts of
-enthusiastic applause, seized everything within reach and placed them
-upon the funeral pile. The soldiers then threw on their lances and
-spears; musicians cast their instruments into the increasing flames;
-women tore off their jewels to add to the gorgeous pile, and all
-vied with each other to contribute something to enlarge the blazing
-funeral pile. So fierce were the flames that they spread to some of the
-neighboring buildings, and a terrible conflagration which would have
-given Cæsar the most majestic funeral pile in the annals of the world,
-for it would have been the blazing light from the burning city of Rome
-itself, was only prevented by the most strenuous efforts.
-
-Some time after, Octavius Cæsar, the successor of Julius Cæsar, and
-Marc Antony, waged war with Cassius and Brutus; and at the battle of
-Philippi, where Cassius and Brutus were defeated, and while they were
-fleeing from the field, hopeless of further defence, they both killed
-themselves with their own swords.
-
-Cæsar died at the age of fifty-six. The Roman people erected a column
-to his memory, on which they placed the inscription, “To the Father
-of His Country.” A figure of a star was placed upon the summit of
-this memorial shaft, and some time afterwards, while the people were
-celebrating some games in honor of Cæsar’s memory, a great comet blazed
-for seven nights in the sky, which they declared to be a sign that the
-soul of Cæsar was admitted among the gods.
-
-
-
-
-CHARLEMAGNE.
-
-742-814 A.D.
-
- “To whom God will, there be the victory.”
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-
-THERE was great terror and dismay among the inhabitants of the city of
-Paris, called in those early days, Lutetia.
-
-[Illustration: CHARLEMAGNE.
-
-(From Early Engraving.)]
-
-The Gauls, who dwelt in that part of the country, were now menaced by a
-foe even more terrible than the Roman soldiers led by the famous Julius
-Cæsar, who had invaded their land about 500 years before, and made
-their country a Roman province.
-
-But now a fearful war-cry rings through the air; and as the frightened
-Gauls hastily arm themselves for resistance, a horde of Teutonic
-giants, with light complexions, long yellow hair waving in the wind,
-and eyes so bright and cat-like that they fairly shone with a green
-glare of animal-like ferocity, which was heightened by their clothing
-made of the skins of the bear, the boar, and the wolf, making them
-look in the distance like a herd of wild beasts, came rushing like an
-avalanche of destruction over the peaceful homes of the Gauls. These
-hordes advanced in a mighty wedge-like phalanx, formed of their bravest
-warriors, each man carrying in his right hand a long lance, and in the
-left a buckler, or skin-covered shield, while his girdle held a sharp
-two-edged axe, which became, with dexterous handling, a most dangerous
-weapon, and was hurled from a distance with marvellous aim. With
-mounted warriors protecting the wings of this invincible phalanx,
-on came this fierce, wild tribe, charging to battle with a terrible
-war-whoop, which they made more shrill by placing the edge of the
-buckler to the mouth.
-
-In vain the Gauls looked to Rome for help. There was too much trouble
-in Italy for the Roman government to help any one. So these giant
-Franks came rushing unchecked on to Paris, while the frightened Gauls
-were powerless to resist them. The leader of this horde was called
-Hilperik, the son of Meerwig; and having taken possession of Paris, and
-several surrounding provinces, he founded the kingdom afterwards called
-France, from this tribe who were called Franks.
-
-The story of kings is too often a story of blood and cruelty, and the
-kingdom which the great Charlemagne inherited had been the scene of
-fearful and continual conflicts.
-
-The Goths, one of the fierce German nations, had conquered a large part
-of Gaul after it had become a Roman province, and in the year 451,
-the Huns, a more terrible nation still, whose chief was the famous
-Attila, who called himself the “Scourge of God,” invaded Gaul with
-his army,—horrible looking men, whose faces had been gashed by their
-savage parents in their infancy, that they might look more dreadful.
-The poor Gauls thought rightly, that it was more fearful to fall
-into their hands than into those of the Franks; but the Huns came no
-further than Orleans, where an army, composed of Gauls, Franks, Goths,
-Burgundians, all under the Roman general Ætius, attacked the Huns at
-Châlons-sur-Marne, beat them, and drove them back. Châlons was the last
-victory in Gaul, won under the Roman banners, and now the poor Gauls
-were obliged to meet their enemies alone. The chief tribes of those
-warlike races, who swarmed over Europe, both north and south, were
-the Goths who conquered Rome, and settled in Spain; the Longbeards
-or Lombards, who spread over the north of Italy; the Burgundians, or
-town-livers, who held all the country around the Alps; the Swabians
-and Germans, who stayed in the middle of Europe; the Saxons, who dwelt
-south of the Baltic, and finally conquered South Britain; the Northmen,
-who found a home in Scandinavia; and the Franks, who had been long
-settled on the rivers Sale, Meuse, and Rhine. Their name meant freemen,
-and they were noted for using an axe, called after them. Of the Franks
-there were two noted tribes,—the Salian, from the river Sale, and the
-Ripuarian. They were great horsemen, and the Salians had a family of
-kings, who were supposed to have descended from one of their warlike
-gods, called Odin. Although the Franks were a ferocious and sometimes
-cruel race, they were in some respects superior to the other barbaric
-tribes, and were liked better by the Gauls than any other of those
-various nations.
-
-[Illustration: THE HUNS AT CHÂLONS.]
-
-After Cæsar’s conquest many of the Romans had remained in Gaul, and had
-built and conquered cities, and lived under Roman laws. They taught the
-Gauls to speak Latin, and organized many schools and colleges among
-them. The Gauls adopted the Roman dress and religion. The religion of
-the ancient Gauls had been taught to the people by priests, called
-Druids. Druidism was a confusion of mingled ideas of Oriental dreams
-and traditions, borrowed from the mythologies of the East and the
-North; and although it was degraded by barbaric practices such as human
-sacrifices in honor of the gods or of the dead, it possessed one germ
-of truth, for the Druids believed in the immortality of the soul. Their
-priests were old and wise men, who had studied often for twenty
-years before they were considered wise enough to become “Men of the
-Oak,” as the chief Druids were called. They made laws for the people
-and settled questions of dispute. Once every year the Druids went out
-to look for the mistletoe, which they considered a sacred plant. When
-a mistletoe was found growing upon an oak, the people came from all
-parts of the country and stood around the tree. Then a Druid, clothed
-in white, climbed up the oak-tree, and cut off the sacred mistletoe
-with a golden sickle, and the much prized plant was caught by the other
-Druids below, in a white cloth, and was carried away to be preserved as
-a great treasure.
-
-But the Gauls living in those provinces conquered by the Romans, had
-given up their old Druidical religion, and adopted that of their
-conquerors, which was no improvement, for it was also a paganism, and
-was such a mass of superstition and idolatry, derived from Grecian
-mythology and old traditions, that it did not even possess the vital
-force of the Druidical belief. For the Druids worshipped, as they
-thought, living deities, while the Græco-Roman paganism was a dead
-religion, with only dead gods, buried beneath their still standing
-altars. Such were the superstitions and false religions with which
-the Christians of the early centuries had to contend in laboring to
-convert the then known world to the worship of the one true and living
-God and His Son Jesus Christ, who had already lived his holy life
-upon this earth, and given himself a sacrifice for the salvation of
-mankind. Already the disciples of Christ had founded Christian churches
-in Asia Minor and Palestine, and many of them had died as martyrs for
-the faith. St. Paul had preached at Athens and at Rome, and having
-finished his glorious work he had received his crown of martyrdom.
-And all down these early centuries teachers had been sent out by the
-Christian churches, to endeavor to convert the heathen world around
-to a belief in the one true and only religion which could secure the
-salvation of the immortal soul. The Roman emperors had all persecuted
-the Christians and sought to uphold paganism. But when A.D. 312, the
-Emperor Constantine declared himself a Christian, “paganism fell, and
-Christianity mounted the throne.” Previous to the conquest of Gaul by
-the Franks, the Gauls had adopted Christianity, and when Hilperik,
-king of the Franks, conquered Paris and the surrounding country, and
-at his death left this kingdom to his son, named Hlodwig, or Clovis,
-there were many Christians and churches and monasteries in Gaul. Clovis
-conquered many of the surrounding provinces, and at last became the
-ruler of nearly the whole of Gaul. Clovis had married a Burgundian
-maiden, named Clothilda, and as she was a Christian he allowed her
-to worship God in the Christian churches. But in the great battle of
-Tolbiacum, which Clovis fought with the Germans, when it seemed as
-though the Franks would be defeated, Clovis took an oath that if the
-God of his wife would give him the victory he would become a Christian.
-The Franks were victorious, and Clovis was baptized with all his chief
-warriors.
-
-[Illustration: “THRUST HIM AWAY, OR THOU DIEST IN HIS STEAD.”]
-
-When Clovis died, he left four sons, among whom he divided his kingdom.
-One was the king of Paris; another, king of Orleans; a third, king of
-Soissons; and the fourth, who reigned over that part of Gaul nearest
-Germany and the Rhine, was called king of Metz. In a battle with the
-Burgundians, the king of Orleans, Clodomir, was killed, leaving three
-young sons who were placed in the care of their grandmother Clothilda.
-At length the kings of Paris and Soissons became jealous of these
-children of their elder brother Clodomir, and sent for the children,
-under pretence of placing them upon the throne of their father. But
-as soon as they had them in their cruel power, they sent a pair of
-scissors and a sword to Clothilda, with a message, saying: “We wait
-thy wishes as to the three children; shall they be slain or shorn?”
-meaning, shall they be killed or shut up in monasteries? Clothilda, in
-despair, cried out: “Slain, rather than shorn!” and the messengers,
-not waiting to hear her further words, returned to the cruel kings,
-and announced that they had secured the consent of Clothilda for the
-shocking deed. The wicked kings then hastily entered the room where the
-three helpless boys were imprisoned, and having slain the eldest, the
-second one clung to the knees of his uncle Childebert, king of Paris,
-who was for a moment moved with pity, and asked his brother Clotaire
-to spare the boy. But the wicked Clotaire, king of Soissons, exclaimed
-in wrath, “Thrust him away or thou diest in his stead!” Whereupon,
-Childebert tried no more to save him, and Clotaire seized the poor boy,
-who was now shrieking with terror, and plunged a hunting-knife into his
-side, as he had his brother’s, and slew him. These murdered children
-were only ten and seven years old. The third brother was snatched up by
-some brave friends, and hidden away where the cruel uncles could not
-find him. He was afterwards placed in a monastery, and became a monk,
-and founded a monastery near Paris, called after him, St. Cloud. After
-the sons of Clovis there followed a line of kings in France called the
-Meerwings, or long-haired kings, known in history as the Merovingians;
-and only two of them are important enough to be mentioned, and those
-only on account of their crimes. One of the sons of Clovis left four
-sons; and two of these, named Hilperik and Siegbert, married the two
-daughters of the king of the Goths, in Spain. These sisters were
-called Galswinth and Brunehild. Hilperik loved a slave girl he owned,
-named Fredegond, and either with or without his consent, his wife
-Galswinth was found strangled in her bed, and he afterwards married
-the murderess, Fredegond, who, though most atrociously wicked, became
-a powerful queen. Brunehild persuaded her husband Siegbert to make
-war upon Hilperik, to avenge the death of her sister. Hilperik was
-defeated, but the Queen Fredegond contrived to have Siegbert murdered,
-and afterwards killed her husband’s other children, thus leaving her
-own son heir to the throne. She then ordered her husband also to
-be put to death, so that she could reign alone in the name of her
-infant son. The four kingdoms left by Clovis had been now merged into
-three,—Neustria, which is now the north of France; Austrasia, which is
-now the north-east corner of France, and part of Belgium, and part of
-the western side of Germany; and the third kingdom was called Burgundy.
-The Neustrians and the Austrasians were usually at war with each other,
-the Burgundians taking now one side of the quarrel and now the other.
-Queen Fredegond’s part of Gaul was Neustria, while Queen Brunehild
-governed Austrasia. But Brunehild quarrelled with the chiefs of the
-country; and after many years of wars, plots, and murders, she was at
-last brutally killed by the son of Fredegond, who became king of all
-the Franks; and in Neustria every one obeyed him; but in Austrasia
-the great chiefs and bishops were opposed to him. The bishops had by
-this time become rich and powerful, for a great amount of land had
-been left to the church by the wills of dying Christians, or as gifts
-from kings and chiefs. When Clotaire, son of Fredegond, died, he left
-two sons; one of them named Dagobert made himself master of Neustria
-and Austrasia, and gave his brother land in the south part of the
-country, which had not been visited before by a Frankish king. Dagobert
-took Paris for his chief town; he made himself a splendid court, took
-journeys through his kingdom, doing justice to his subjects, and
-encouraged the building of churches, and had copies of the old Frankish
-laws written out and sent throughout his kingdom. The people liked him;
-but the powerful chiefs and the bishops, who had become so worldly that
-they thought a great deal more about piling up riches than in turning
-the people to Christianity, were filled with dismay to have so wise and
-just a king, who was fast gaining a great power over the people. After
-ten years Dagobert died and left two sons; one was king of Austrasia;
-and the younger king of Neustria. After these, there followed three
-more kings in Neustria, and four in Austrasia, but they had no power,
-and were only called kings, while the government was really in the
-hands of a new set of men, from which line the illustrious Charlemagne
-sprang. The chief man next the king in these countries was called the
-Mayor of the Palace. He had the chief command in times of war, and at
-last became in truth the sovereign ruler; and they only put up one of
-their do-nothing kings as a figure-head. After the death of Dagobert,
-there was no other Frankish king of any importance in the line of the
-Merovingians. The Fainéants, or do-nothing kings, as they were called,
-sat on the throne and pretended to rule, but the mayor of the palace
-told them what they must say to the people and what they must do.
-This went on for nearly a hundred years. When Dagobert died, the mayor
-of the palace was named Pepin, and through several reigns he really
-governed both Austrasia and Neustria. He made war against the Germans,
-and sometimes when they were very troublesome he went with an army and
-subdued them; and at other times he sent monks to try and convert them
-to Christianity. When Pepin died, his son Karl became the mayor of the
-palace. Now Karl wished to secure money to give to his chiefs, so that
-they would fight for him, and so he took away from the bishops the rich
-lands which belonged to the church, and gave them to his warriors.
-Karl had first to fight the Saxons, whom he defeated, and then there
-appeared a new foe. The Arabs lived in Arabia, on the east side of the
-Red Sea, in Asia.
-
-They had always been a poor, wandering people. But about one hundred
-and fifty years before this time, an Arab had appeared among his
-countrymen, claiming to be a mighty prophet, and teaching them a new
-religion. It was not the Christian religion; but this man, who was
-named Mohammed, claimed that he had been sent by God to teach the
-people; and so the religion he proclaimed was called Mohammedanism.
-Now the Arabs had never left their own country before, but they
-determined to go forth and conquer the world, and make all the nations
-Mohammedans. They conquered Persia, Egypt, Spain, and a part of Africa.
-When they overcame any nation, if the people would consent to become
-Mohammedans, the Arabs treated them with kindness; but if they refused,
-they made slaves of them, and sometimes put them to death. Having
-conquered Spain, the Arabs wished to become masters of France.
-
-When they had passed the Pyrenees, Karl went forth to meet them. There
-was a great battle, known in history as the Battle of Tours, and at
-length Karl conquered the Mohammedans, and drove them out of France.
-Some accounts state that three hundred thousand Arabs were killed.
-
-This mayor of the palace has been called Karl the Hammer, or in
-French, Charles Martel, in memory of the blows he inflicted upon these
-Mohammedan enemies. He was afterwards called the Duke of the Franks.
-
-In the time of Charles Martel, several kings became monks. An English
-monk named Winfrid had been sent by the Pope and Charles Martel to
-preach to the Saxons. After persuading thousands of the people to be
-baptized, this monk was made bishop and then archbishop. But he thought
-more of converting the heathen than of wearing honors, and leaving his
-bishopric to another, he went forth into a wild part of the country
-to preach Christianity. When a large number of people had assembled
-to be baptized, an armed force of the heathen attacked them, killing
-Winfrid and all the Christian people. This good monk is called also St.
-Boniface.
-
-After the death of Charles Martel his two sons ruled for six years
-together, and then one of them went into a monastery, leaving the
-younger, Pepin, who now became the only duke of the Franks.
-
-The people began to think it absurd to have a useless set of lazy,
-do-nothing, Merovingian, or long-haired kings, who were only puppets in
-the hands of the reigning duke. So Pepin, also called Le Bref, or the
-Short, asked the Pope to make him king, instead of the figure-head who
-sat upon the throne, who at that time bore the name of Hilperik. The
-answer of the Pope was, “He who has the power ought also to have the
-name of king.”
-
-[Illustration: CHARLEMAGNE.]
-
-As the Pope had thus consented to the change, all the Franks were
-delighted, and they took the useless king from his throne, cut off
-his long yellow hair, which was his sign of royalty, and shut him up
-in a monastery. He died two years afterwards, and was the last of the
-Merovingian kings.
-
-Pepin was now crowned by St. Boniface, as this event preceded the death
-of that king, and thus he became the first of the Carlovingian kings,
-so called from Carolus, the Latin for Charles, which was the name of
-Pepin’s father, and his still greater son.
-
-Pepin now aided the Pope by marching into Italy and fighting the
-Lombards; and having conquered them, he took their lands and gave them
-to the Pope, which property afterwards descended from one pope to
-another, so that the popes at last became masters of quite a kingdom in
-Italy. Pepin also besieged a town in Southern Gaul, belonging to the
-Arabs, and after seven years captured it, and drove the Arabs over the
-Pyrenees, into Spain. He reigned for sixteen years, and dying left his
-kingdom to his two sons Karl and Karloman, who divided it between them;
-but Karloman lived but three years, when Karl became the king of France.
-
-While his Austrasian subjects, who spoke German, called him Karl, the
-Neustrians, whose language was a mingling of the Latin and the German,
-which has since become the French language, called him Charles; and
-after he became so famous, the Latin word _magnus_, meaning great, was
-added, and Charles-Magnus thus became the Charlemagne of history.
-
-Very little can be learned regarding the early life of Charlemagne. One
-of the old writers, named Eginhard, who afterwards became the secretary
-of Charlemagne, records that neither he himself, nor any one then
-living, knew anything about the birth of this prince, nor about his
-infancy, nor even youth. His father, King Pepin, had his two sons
-associated with himself, when he received the title of king from the
-Bishop of Rome; but neither of them received any separate government
-during their father’s life. They were taught, with the other young
-nobles, by Peter of Pisa, whom Pepin retained at his court for this
-purpose. It is supposed that King Pepin took the young princes with
-him in his Italian expeditions, and that Charlemagne accompanied his
-father in the Aquitanian war. When King Pepin died, his eldest son was
-twenty-six years and a half old, while the younger was barely nineteen.
-Both were already married to wives of the Frank race. Charles, or
-Charlemagne, to Himiltrude, and Carloman to Gerberge.
-
-The first battle in which Charlemagne engaged was soon after his
-father’s death, with the Aquitanians, who were the people living in
-the south-west part of France. The brother-kings raised troops to
-meet them, but Carloman through jealousy withdrew his forces, leaving
-Charlemagne to carry on the war alone. He was victorious, and the
-Aquitanians submitted. The queen-mother Bertrada now used her influence
-to secure a permanent alliance between the Lombards and the Franks, and
-persuaded Charlemagne to divorce his wife and marry Desiderata, the
-daughter of Didier the Lombard king. This Charlemagne consented to do,
-even against the advice of the Pope, and he suffered for his folly,
-or wickedness; for so it was, even though his mother did sanction
-it, for he was so unhappy with Desiderata, that in about a year he
-put her away and married Hildegarde. In those days kings married and
-divorced their wives as often as they pleased, and Charlemagne, with
-all his greatness and his aid to Christianity, was in this particular
-very culpable, and his domestic life was not at all in keeping with
-the majesty, and goodness, and uprightness of his public life. After
-the death of Hildegarde, he married two other wives. One Fastrada, an
-Austrasian, was a very wicked woman, and caused him much trouble. The
-last one, whom he loved the most, was named Luitgarda. She was kind and
-gentle, and her influence over Charlemagne was very beneficial after
-the wicked Fastrada had led him into so much trouble. The French have
-an old legend, which relates that the evil influence which Fastrada
-exercised over the strong mind of the great king, leading him to acts
-of injustice and tyranny, which alienated the affections of his nobles,
-was due to the magic spell of a ring which she wore. On her death, the
-ring came into possession of a bishop, for whom Charlemagne immediately
-showed such admiration, that the bishop found it unpleasant, and cast
-the ring into a neighboring lake. Here it also exercised its magic
-charm, and the king would sit for hours gazing into the waters of the
-lake, as though spell-bound. But this legend cannot disguise the weak
-side of Charlemagne’s character, and we can only turn from it and fix
-our attention upon his great career.
-
-He was one of the wisest and most powerful of kings. His life was one
-of constant war. He fought the Saxons for thirty-three years, but
-at last he conquered Witikind, the great Saxon leader, in 785, and
-persuaded him to be baptized. Charlemagne made him Duke of Saxony, and
-he lived in good faith to the new vows he had taken. Notwithstanding
-this victory over the Saxons, Charlemagne foresaw the evils which
-should come upon Europe through the formidable Northmen. The monk of
-St. Gall relates this incident: “Charlemagne arrived unexpectedly in
-a certain town of Narbonnese Gaul. Whilst he was at dinner, and was
-as yet unrecognized of any, some corsairs of the Northmen came to ply
-their piracies in the very port. When their vessels were descried, they
-were supposed to be Jewish traders according to some, African according
-to others, and British in the opinion of others; but the gifted monarch
-perceiving by the build and lightness of the craft that they bare not
-merchandise, but foes, said to his own folk, ‘These vessels be not
-laden with merchandise, but manned with cruel foes.’ At these words,
-all the Franks, in rivalry one with another, ran to their ships, but
-uselessly, for the Northmen, indeed, hearing that yonder was he whom it
-was still their wont to call Charles the Hammer, feared lest all their
-fleet should be taken or destroyed in the port, and they avoided by a
-flight of inconceivable rapidity not only the blows, but even the eyes
-of those who were pursuing them.
-
-“Pious Charles, however, a prey to well-grounded fear, rose up from
-table, stationed himself at a window looking eastward, and there
-remained a long while, and his eyes were filled with tears. As none
-durst question him, this warlike prince explained to the grandees who
-were about his person the cause of his movement and of his tears. ‘Know
-ye, my lieges, wherefore I weep so bitterly? Of a surety I fear not
-lest these fellows should succeed in injuring me by their miserable
-piracies; but it grieveth me deeply that whilst I live, they should
-have been nigh to touching at this shore, and I am a prey to violent
-sorrow when I foresee what evils they will heap upon my descendants and
-their people.’”
-
-But during all the years of the Saxon wars, Charlemagne had been
-carrying on various campaigns elsewhere. The Lombards were again at
-war with the Popes, and the king of Lombards, Didier, whose daughter
-Charlemagne had married and so soon divorced, had now become his bitter
-foe. The new Pope, Adrian I., sought the aid of Charlemagne in this
-war with the Lombards, and he prepared for this Italian expedition. He
-raised two armies,—one to cross the Valais and descend upon Lombardy
-by Mount St. Bernard, and the other, to be led by Charlemagne, was
-to go by the way of Mount Cenis. Didier had with him a famous Dane,
-named Ogier, who had quarrelled with Charlemagne and taken refuge in
-Lombardy. One of the monks of that time thus describes Charlemagne’s
-arrival before Pavia, where Didier and the Dane Ogier had shut
-themselves up, as it was the strongest place in Lombardy.
-
-“When Didier and Ogger (for so the monk calls him) heard that the dread
-monarch was coming, they ascended a tower of vast height, whence they
-could watch his arrival from afar off and from every quarter. They
-saw, first of all, engines of wars, such as must have been necessary
-for the armies of Darius or Julius Cæsar. ‘Is not Charles,’ asked
-Didier of Ogger, ‘with this great army?’ But the other answered, ‘No.’
-The Lombard, seeing afterwards an immense body of soldiery gathered
-from all quarters of the vast empire, said to Ogger, ‘Certes, Charles
-advanceth in triumph in the midst of this throng.’ ‘No, not yet; he
-will not appear so soon,’ was the answer. ‘What should we do, then,’
-rejoined Didier, who began to be perturbed, ‘should he come accompanied
-by a larger band of warriors?’ ‘You will see what he is when he comes,’
-replied Ogger; ‘but as to what will become of us I know nothing.’ As
-they were thus parleying appeared the body of guards that knew no
-repose, and at this sight the Lombard, overcome with dread, cried,
-‘This time ’tis surely Charles.’ ‘No,’ answered Ogger, ‘not yet.’ In
-their wake came the bishops, the abbots, the ordinaries of the chapels
-royal, and the counts; and then Didier, no longer able to bear the
-light of day or to face death, cried out with groans, ‘Let us descend
-and hide ourselves in the bowels of the earth, far from the face and
-the fury of so terrible a foe.’ Trembling the while, Ogger, who knew
-by experience what were the power and might of Charles, and who had
-learned the lesson by long usage in better days, then said, ‘When ye
-shall behold the crops shaking for fear in the fields, and the gloomy
-Po and the Ticino overflowing the walls of the city with their waves
-blackened with steel (iron), then may ye think that Charles is coming.’
-He had not ended these words when there began to be seen in the west,
-as it were, a black cloud, raised by the north-west wind or by Boreas,
-which turned the brightest day into awful shadows. But as the emperor
-drew nearer and nearer, the gleam of arms caused to shine on the people
-shut up within the city a day more gloomy than any kind of night. And
-then appeared Charles himself, that man of steel, with his head encased
-in a helmet of steel, his hands garnished with gauntlets of steel,
-his heart of steel and his shoulders of marble protected by a cuirass
-of steel, and his left hand armed with a lance of steel which he held
-aloft in the air, for as to his right hand, he kept that continually on
-the hilt of his invincible sword. The outside of his thighs, which the
-rest for their greater ease in mounting a horseback were wont to leave
-unshackled even by straps, he wore encircled by plates of steel. What
-shall I say concerning his boots? All the army were wont to have them
-invariably of steel; on his buckler there was nought to be seen but
-steel; his horse was of the color and the strength of steel. All those
-who went before the monarch, all those who marched at his side, all
-those who followed after, even the whole mass of the army, had armor of
-the like sort, so far as the means of each permitted. The fields and
-the highways were covered with steel; the points of steel reflected
-the rays of the sun; and this steel, so hard, was borne by a people
-with hearts still harder. The flash of steel spread terror throughout
-the streets of the city. ‘What steel! alack, what steel!’ Such were
-the bewildered cries the citizens raised. The firmness of manhood and
-of youth gave way at sight of the steel, and the steel paralyzed the
-wisdom of the gray beards. That which I, poor tale-teller, mumbling
-and toothless, have attempted to depict in a long description, Ogger
-perceived at one rapid glance, and said to Didier, ‘Here is what ye
-have so anxiously sought’; and whilst uttering these words he fell down
-almost lifeless.”
-
-But notwithstanding all King Didier’s fear, he and the Lombards evinced
-such resistance, that Charlemagne was obliged to settle down before
-Pavia in a long siege. His camp without the city became a town, so
-that he sent for his wife, Queen Hildegarde, and her court, also his
-children and their attendants, and said to the chiefs of his army, “Let
-us begin by doing something memorable.” So men were at once set to
-work to build a basilica, and within a week it was completed, with its
-walls, roofs, and painted ceilings, which would seemingly have required
-a year to erect.
-
-In this chapel, Charlemagne, and his family, court, and warriors,
-celebrated the festival of Christmas, 773. But just before Easter,
-774, Charlemagne determined to leave his lieutenants to continue the
-siege, and attended by a numerous and brilliant retinue, he set off for
-Rome. On Holy Saturday, when Charlemagne was about three miles from
-Rome, the magistrates and citizens and pupils of the schools came forth
-to meet him, bearing palm-branches and singing hymns. At the gate of
-the city, Charlemagne dismounted before the cross, and entered Rome
-on foot, and having ascended the steps of the ancient basilica of St.
-Peter, he was received at the top by the Pope himself. Then a chant was
-sung by the people all around him: “Blessed be he that cometh in the
-name of the Lord.”
-
-According to the custom of pilgrims, Charlemagne visited all the
-basilicas in Rome. He confirmed his father’s gift to the former Pope,
-and added new gifts of his own. The Pope gave to Charlemagne a book
-containing a collection of the canons written by the pontiffs from the
-origin of the church. This he dedicated to Charlemagne, and wrote in
-it, “Pope Adrian, to his most excellent son Charlemagne, king.”
-
-Charlemagne then returned to his camp before Pavia, and having
-captured the city, received the submission of all the Lombards. In 778
-Charlemagne had a war with the Arabs in Spain. He crossed the Pyrenees
-and went as far as the Ebro, but the Arabs gave him large gifts of gold
-and jewels, and persuaded him to spare their fine cities. As he was
-returning over the mountains, his army was attacked by a wild people
-called the Basques; and several of his bravest leaders were killed,
-among them the famous Roland, concerning whom various stories are told,
-one being that he blew a blast on his bugle with his last breath, to
-warn Charlemagne, who was far in the front, of this unexpected danger.
-Another legend makes him to have possessed herculean strength, in
-token of which a great cleft is shown in the Pyrenean Hills, said to
-have been made by one stroke of his sword, and it bears the name of the
-“La Brèche de Roland.” Pfalgraf, or Count of the Palace, was the name
-given to some of the bravest Frank lords, and in old romances Roland
-and others are called the Paladins.
-
-[Illustration: DEATH OF ROLAND.]
-
-Charlemagne had three sons, Carl, Pepin, and Lodwig, afterwards called
-Louis le Débonnaire. In 781 Charlemagne took his two younger sons,
-Pepin, aged four, and Louis, only three years of age, to Rome, where
-they were anointed by Pope Adrian I.,—Pepin as king of Italy, and Louis
-as king of Aquitaine. On returning from Rome, Charlemagne sent the baby
-Louis at once to take formal possession of his kingdom. He was carried
-to Orleans in a cradle, and then the little prince was clad in a tiny
-suit of armor, and attendants held him up on horseback as he entered
-his kingdom of Aquitaine. He was accompanied by many officers and men
-of state who were to form his council of guardians. Afterwards the poor
-baby king was taken back to his father’s palace to be educated.
-
-Charlemagne founded Aix-la-Chapelle and made it his favorite winter
-residence. He went out to fight each summer, and came back to his
-kingdom in the winter. He was very seldom defeated in war, for he was
-wise and energetic, and moved his army about so quickly that he was
-a match for much larger forces than his own. He held a council of
-war every Easter when all his chiefs assembled, and Charlemagne made
-known to them his plans for his coming campaign. He made improvements
-in the armor and weapons of his soldiers. Their helmets were provided
-with visors which could be brought down to protect their faces in
-battle, and their shields were long and large, instead of the small
-round skin-covered bucklers of the early Gauls. His soldiers fought
-with sharp-pointed, two-handed swords, and they employed also heavy
-clubs covered with iron knobs, which were most formidable weapons.
-Charlemagne’s forces were mounted on strong fleet horses from the
-Rhine, and so great was his knowledge of all the surrounding countries,
-that he could despatch an army to any part of his kingdom at short
-notice, and with perfect accuracy as to route.
-
-On the 23d of November, 800, Charlemagne arrived at Rome, where he was
-met by Pope Leo III., whom he had several times aided in conflicts with
-his enemies, at one time receiving Leo into his own palace for a year,
-when conspirators at Rome were seeking the Pope’s life. In return for
-these favors, and to secure the help of so mighty a warrior, Pope Leo
-crowned Charlemagne Emperor of Rome. The ceremony was performed on
-Christmas day, 800. Eginhard thus described the scene: “The king came
-into the basilica of the blessed St. Peter, apostle, to attend the
-celebration of mass. At the moment when in his place before the altar
-he was bowing down to pray, Pope Leo placed upon his head a crown,
-and all the Roman people shouted, ‘Long life and victory to Charles
-Augustus, crowned by God, the great and pacific emperor of the Romans!’
-After this proclamation the pontiff prostrated himself before him, and
-paid him adoration according to the custom established in the days of
-the old emperors; and thenceforward Charles, giving up the title of
-patrician, bore that of emperor and Augustus.” Charlemagne had now
-become emperor of France, of Germany, and of Italy.
-
-But it is not only as a great warrior that Charlemagne is famous. His
-government was a model for those times, and he held his subjects, so
-diverse as to nationality and education, under a most wise and powerful
-authority; and out of a chaos of different nations—the wild anarchy of
-ruined Rome, and the ill-regulated force of barbaric hordes—he founded
-a monarchy strong in him alone, and though it fell at his death, each
-piece of his great empire possessed enough of the vitalizing force,
-which his mind and wisdom had given to it, to enable it to rise an
-empire by itself. So, though Charlemagne’s kingdom could not be
-preserved by his successors, from that great power rose the separate
-empires of France, Germany, and Italy. One of Charlemagne’s humane acts
-was his care for the slaves in Gaul. At that time all the chiefs were
-warriors, while their lands were tilled by serfs, or slaves, who went
-with the land as part of the property, whether bought or captured. He
-made laws to protect the slaves as far as possible against unjust and
-cruel masters.
-
-Charlemagne was also fond of study. He learned Latin and Greek, and
-improved his native German language by inventing German words for the
-months and the winds. He paid great attention to astronomy and music,
-and in theological studies evinced a strong interest. He caused to be
-commenced the first Germanic grammar. But with all his learning there
-was one thing he could not accomplish, which was to write a good hand,
-though he zealously practiced the art, even putting his little tablets
-under his pillow that he might catch at any odd moments day or night
-to perfect his imperfect writing. At whatever palace Charlemagne was
-residing, he always formed there a school called the School of the
-Palace, where many learned men were gathered together, and where
-members of the royal family, including Charlemagne himself, and his
-children, took lessons in the different sciences, grammar, rhetoric,
-and theology. Two names are famous among these wise men, who became
-the particular advisers and confidants of Charlemagne, Alcuin and
-Eginhard, who afterwards became the biographer of Charlemagne, and the
-adviser of his son Louis le Débonnaire. It was the custom for members
-of this school to assume other names than their own: thus Charlemagne
-was called David; Alcuin, Flaccus; Angilbert, Homer; and Eginhard,
-Bezaleel,—that nephew of Moses to whom God had granted the gift of
-knowing how to work skilfully in wood and all materials needed for
-the ark and tabernacle. All of these scholars afterwards became great
-dignitaries in the church. Charlemagne was of a cheerful disposition,
-and fond of hunting and other sports. He was especially expert in
-swimming. He sometimes played jokes upon his chiefs and nobles, and the
-old monks of his time tell several stories regarding his sly humor.
-At one time when he thought his courtiers were too much given to fine
-clothes, he commanded a party of them when decked out in their finest
-trappings, to follow him in the chase through the rain, mud, and
-brambles. He was of a tall figure, and though his dress was rich and
-gorgeous when the occasion demanded it, he was not fond of finery. His
-appearance is thus described by Eginhard:—
-
-“Charlemagne was large and robust in person, his stature was lofty,
-though it did not exceed just proportion, for his height was not more
-than seven times the length of his foot. The summit of his head was
-round, his eyes large and bright, his nose a little long, beautiful
-white hair, and a smiling and pleasant expression. There reigned
-in his whole person, whether standing or seated, an air of grandeur
-and dignity; and though his neck was thick and short, and his body
-corpulent, yet he was in other respects so well proportioned that these
-defects were not noticed. His walk was firm, and his whole appearance
-manly, but his clear voice did not quite harmonize with his appearance.
-His health was always good, except during the four years which preceded
-his death. He then had frequent attacks of fever, and was lame of one
-foot. In this time of suffering he treated himself more accordingly
-to his own fancies than by the advice of the physicians, whom he had
-come to dislike because they would have had him abstain from the roast
-meats he was accustomed to, and would have restricted him to boiled
-meats. His dress was that of his nation; that is to say, of the Franks.
-He wore a shirt and drawers of linen, over them a tunic bordered with
-silken fringe, stockings fastened with narrow bands, and shoes. In
-winter, a coat of otter or martin fur covered his shoulders and breast.
-Over all he wore a long blue mantle.”
-
-He would not adopt the short mantle worn by the later Franks, but
-preferred the long cloak of the ancient Franks, which made him a
-distinguished and royal-looking person amidst his short-cloaked
-courtiers. He was always girded with his sword, which became so famous
-that it received the name of Joyeuse, whose hilt was of gold and
-silver, his girdle being also of gold. Upon solemn festive occasions
-this sword was replaced by one enriched with precious stones. After
-he became Emperor he sometimes wore the long tunic, the chlamys, and
-the sandals of the Romans. At great feasts or festivals his dress was
-embroidered with gold, and his shoes adorned with precious stones. His
-mantle was fastened with a brooch of gold, and he wore upon his head
-a glistening diadem of gold and gems; but his usual dress was simple.
-He avoided all excesses at the table, particularly that of drinking,
-for he abhorred drunkenness. While he was dining he liked to have
-histories or poems read to him. He took great pleasure in the works of
-St. Augustine. He was endowed with a natural eloquence which rendered
-his speech delightful. His chosen name of David was not inappropriate,
-for he was a founder and benefactor of the church, and was very
-devout in the outward observances of the Christian religion; but his
-domestic life was an irretrievable blot upon his character, which no
-plea of the laxity of those times can remove. It is true that the same
-fault mars the greatness of Alexander, Julius Cæsar, and other famous
-rulers; but Alexander and Cæsar were not Christians, while Charlemagne
-stands forth as the great champion and upholder of the religion of the
-spotless Christ. Charlemagne caused to be erected at Aix-la-Chapelle a
-magnificent basilica, or chapel, which he adorned with gold and silver,
-and with screens and gates of brass from Rome, and marbles and columns
-from Ravenna. He always attended service here night and morning,
-and often arose to assist at some especial worship in the night. He
-introduced great improvements in the lessons and the psalmody, and
-is said to have composed several hymns, among them the “Veni Creator
-Spiritus,” that invocation of the Holy Spirit which is sung at
-ordinations. Charlemagne was always ready to help poor Christians, not
-only in his own kingdom, but in Syria, Egypt, in Africa, at Jerusalem,
-Alexandria, Carthage, and elsewhere. Of all the holy places he had
-most veneration for the Church of St. Peter at Rome. He sent rich
-gifts of gold and silver and precious stones to that cathedral, for
-he desired to make it surpass all other churches in its decorations
-and riches. But he was only able to go four times during his reign
-of forty-seven years, to visit that cherished place. Toward the end
-of his vigorous life and magnificent career, the Emperor Charlemagne
-met with severe family losses. In less than two years his sister,
-daughter, and his sons, the two Pepins, one of whom was a hunchback,
-died; and lastly his son Charles, whom he intended should be crowned
-emperor, also died, leaving only Louis and several daughters. But
-Louis was the worthiest of all the sons of Charlemagne to succeed his
-illustrious father. In the year 813 Charlemagne, fearing that his end
-was drawing near, assembled all his chief men at Aix-la-Chapelle, and
-in a grand ceremonial in the chapel he caused his son to be declared
-emperor, bidding him take the diadem himself from the altar, and place
-it on his own head, whereupon Charlemagne exclaimed, “Blessed be the
-Lord, who hath granted me to see my son sitting on my throne!” But he
-did not at that time resign the crown. Louis went back to his kingdom
-in Aquitaine; and Charlemagne, in spite of his growing infirmities,
-continued through the autumn his usual hunting excursions, returning
-to Aix in November. In January Charlemagne was seized with a fever,
-but he determined to doctor himself, as was his usual method, which
-was to “starve” the fever. But pleurisy set in, and still refusing to
-be ministered to by physicians, on the seventh day after he had taken
-to his bed, having received communion, he expired about nine o’clock
-in the morning on the 28th of January, 814, in the seventy-first year
-of his age, and the forty-seventh year of his reign. He was buried
-with unusual grandeur. A large and beautifully carved sarcophagus of
-classical workmanship, was lying empty in the basilica of Aix. But
-they placed Charlemagne in a large marble chair in the crypt beneath
-the dome of his great basilica. The chair was ornamented with gold,
-and Charlemagne was clad in his royal robes with his sparkling crown
-upon his head, and his royal sceptre in his hand, and the good sword
-Joyeuse, which had served him in so many famous battles, was girded to
-his side, while his pilgrim’s pouch was suspended from his girdle, and
-a copy of the Gospels was laid upon his knees. Thus was he seated on
-the throne chair, with his feet resting in the carved sarcophagus, as
-though the great emperor was not to be shut up in a coffin like common
-mortals, but even in death still sat upon his throne in royal state.
-Beneath the dome, on the stone which closed the entrance to the tomb,
-was carved the following epitaph in Latin:—
-
-“In this tomb reposeth the body of Charles, great and orthodox emperor,
-who did gloriously extend the kingdom of the Franks, and did govern it
-happily for forty-seven years. He died at the age of seventy years, in
-the year of the Lord, 814, in the seventh year of the Indication, on
-the fifth of the Kalends of February.”
-
-This crypt was opened two hundred years afterwards by the Emperor Otho
-III., when he found the remains of Charlemagne, as described above. A
-huge black flagstone now lies under the dome, bearing the inscription,
-“Carolo Magno,” and it is supposed to cover the entrance to the tomb of
-Charlemagne. Over it hangs a large golden candelabrum which the Emperor
-Barbarossa gave to burn above the grave. In the time of Barbarossa, the
-church enrolled the name of the great emperor in its Calendar as St.
-Charlemagne.
-
-No sovereign ever rendered greater service to the civilized world
-than Charlemagne, by stopping in the north and south the flood of
-barbarians and Arabs, Paganism and Islamism. This was his great
-success, and although he ultimately failed in founding a permanent
-empire which should exist in unity and absolute power after his death,
-though at one time he seemed to be Cæsar, Augustus, and Constantine
-combined, his death ended his empire; but he had opened the way for
-the Christian religion and human liberty to establish other and more
-lasting governments. The illustrious French writer, Guizot, thus sums
-up the life and achievements of Charlemagne. “Great men are at one and
-the same time instruments and free agents in a general design which
-is infinitely above their ken, and which, even if a glimpse of it be
-caught, remains inscrutable to them,—the design of God towards mankind.
-Charlemagne had this singular good fortune, that his misguided attempt
-at imperialism perished with him, whilst his salutary achievement, the
-territorial security of Christian Europe, has been durable to the great
-honor, as well as great profit, of European civilization.”
-
-
-
-
-ALFRED THE GREAT.
-
-849-901 A.D.
-
- “An honest man’s the noblest work of God.”
- POPE.
-
-
-STORY and song have immortalized the romantic traditions regarding the
-early inhabitants of the British realm, and although many of them are
-no doubt fabulous tales, the romantic history of Alfred the Great would
-be robbed of much of its weird fascination if no mention were made of
-these fantastic but charming traditions. King Alfred’s reign was eight
-hundred years after the Christian Era. Authentic history takes us back
-through those eight hundred years to the time of Julius Cæsar and his
-invasion of Great Britain, and traditions carry us still farther back,
-for eight hundred years more, to the days of Solomon.
-
-There is a story that at the close of the Trojan war, which we have
-described in the life of Agamemnon, Æneas landed in Italy with a
-company of Trojans. They settled near the spot upon which Rome was
-afterwards built. One day, while Brutus, the great-grandson of Æneas,
-was hunting in the forests, he accidentally killed his father with an
-arrow. Brutus, fearing evil consequences from this terrible accident,
-fled from Italy. Going to Greece, he collected a band of Trojans, and
-they made war upon a king named Pandrasus. Brutus conquered this king
-but promised to make peace with him if he would agree to provide a
-fleet of ships for Brutus, and give him his daughter in marriage. This
-Pandrasus did, and Brutus sailed with his bride and fleet, until they
-arrived at a deserted island, upon which they found the ruins of a city
-and an ancient temple of Diana, where there still remained an image of
-the goddess.
-
-[Illustration: ALFRED]
-
-The story goes that Brutus consulted this oracle of Diana, and received
-the following answer:—
-
- “Far to the West, in the ocean wide,
- Beyond the realm of Gaul, a land there lies;
- Sea-girt it lies, where giants dwelt of old.
- Now void, it fits thy people; thither bend
- Thy course; there shalt thou find a lasting home.”
-
-Brutus followed this direction, and proceeded westward through the
-Mediterranean Sea. He arrived at the Pillars of Hercules, which was the
-name given in those days to the Rock of Gibraltar, and then he turned
-northward and coasted along Spain. At length they arrived on the shores
-of Britain. They found the island covered with rich verdure, and in the
-forests were many wild beasts and the remnants of a race of giants.
-
-Brutus and his forces drove the wild beasts into the mountains of Wales
-and Scotland, and killed the giants, and seized upon the island as
-their own. Many wild adventures are told of his successors, down to the
-time of the invasion of Julius Cæsar. Such is the story in brief of the
-early Britons.
-
-After the conquest by Cæsar, the Romans retained possession of the
-island for four hundred years. During this time there were many
-rebellions in the various provinces, until at last the Britons
-submitted to their sway. Now another enemy advanced against this
-picturesque island. The Picts and Scots, hordes of lawless barbarians,
-who inhabited the mountains of Ireland and Scotland, made continual
-expeditions for plunder into the fair land of the Britons. At length
-one of the Roman emperors named Severus, visited the island of Britain,
-and endeavored to conquer the Picts and Scots. It was at this time
-that the famous Wall of Severus was built. The wall extended across
-the island, from the mouth of the Tyne on the German Ocean, to the
-Solway Frith, nearly seventy miles. This wall was a good defence
-against the barbarians, as long as Roman soldiers remained to guard
-it. But about two centuries after the time of Severus, the Roman
-soldiers were required by their own government at home, and the Britons
-were left to fight with the Picts and Scots alone. During this time
-another brave and warlike race had arisen. The Anglo-Saxons had now
-become powerful sea-rulers on the German Ocean and Baltic Sea. They
-delighted in storms and tempests, and cared not whether it was summer
-or winter when they sailed the seas, so brave and fearless were they.
-They would build small vessels of osiers, covering them with skins,
-and in these frail boats they courageously sailed amidst the rough
-winds and foaming surges of the German Ocean, in search of conquest
-and wild adventure. If they fought they conquered, and if they pursued
-their enemies they were sure to overtake them, and if they retreated
-they successfully made their escape. Neither winds, waves, nor enemies
-could quell this adventurous and brave race, which was fast rising into
-power and renown. They were clothed in loose and flowing garments, and
-wore their hair long, floating about their shoulders. They had much
-skill in fabricating arms of superior workmanship, which gave them a
-great advantage over their enemies. The landing of a few boat-loads of
-these determined and fearless Anglo-Saxons, on a small island near
-the mouth of the Thames, was an event which marks an important epoch
-in English history, as it was the real beginning of British greatness
-and power. The names of the commanders who headed the expedition of the
-Anglo-Saxons which first landed in Britain, were Hengist and Horsa.
-They were brothers. The island where they landed was called Thanet.
-The name of the king of Britain at this time was Vortigern. When the
-Anglo-Saxons arrived, his kingdom was distracted by the constant
-incursions of the Picts and Scots. In this danger, Vortigern appealed
-to the Anglo-Saxons for help. He offered to give them a large tract
-of territory in the part of the island where they had landed, if they
-would aid him in his contest with his enemies. Hengist and Horsa
-agreed to this proposal, and they thereupon engaged in battle with the
-Picts and Scots, and defeated them, and they were driven back to their
-mountains in the north. The Anglo-Saxons now established themselves in
-the part of the island assigned to them, and it is related that Hengist
-gave his daughter Rowena in marriage to King Vortigern, to strengthen
-the alliance more closely. At last the Britons became alarmed at the
-increasing power of the Anglo-Saxons, and the result was a fierce
-contest. It is related that King Vortigern, with three hundred of his
-officers, were invited by Hengist to a feast, and a quarrel having
-arisen, an affray occurred in which the Britons were all killed, except
-Vortigern who was taken prisoner, and was only ransomed by ceding three
-whole provinces to his captors.
-
-The famous King Arthur, whose Knights of the Round Table have been so
-celebrated in fable and song, was a king of the Britons during these
-wars between his people and the Saxons. He is said to have performed
-marvellous exploits of strength and valor. He was of prodigious size,
-and undaunted courage. He slew giants, killed the most ferocious wild
-beasts, gained many splendid victories, and is said to have made long
-expeditions into foreign countries, once even going to Jerusalem on
-a pilgrimage to obtain the Holy Cross. He was afterwards killed in a
-combat with his nephew, who had gained the affections of Arthur’s wife
-during his absence. Arthur had been a deadly enemy of the Saxons. He
-fought twelve great pitched battles with them, in every one of which
-he gained the victory. It is related that he killed with his own hand,
-four hundred and seventy men in one of these contests. The landing of
-the Saxons, under Hengist and Horsa, is supposed to have been in the
-year 449. It was more than two hundred years after this before the
-Britons were entirely subdued, and the Saxon power became supreme. In
-one or two centuries more the Saxons had, in their turn, to meet an
-implacable and powerful enemy. These new invaders were the Danes.
-
-The territory of Britain was divided into seven or eight Saxon
-kingdoms, each under a separate king. This power is known in history
-as the Saxon Heptarchy. The Danes were not exclusively the natives of
-Denmark. They came from all the shores of the Northern and Baltic Seas.
-They were a race of bold naval adventurers, as the Saxons themselves
-had been two or three centuries before. They were banded together in
-large hordes, each ruled by a chieftain, called a sea-king. One of the
-most famous of these sea-kings was named Ragnar Lodbrog. His father was
-a prince of Norway, and Ragnar had married a Danish princess, and had
-acquired a sort of right to a Danish kingdom, which right was disputed
-by one Harald. The Franks aided Harald in this contest, and Ragnar was
-defeated. But he now brought the other sea-kings under his control,
-and raising a large force, he invaded France, and landing at Rouen he
-marched to Paris. The king of the Franks finding himself completely in
-his power, bought off the sea-kings by paying a large sum of money,
-and Ragnar and his hordes returned to the Baltic Sea with riches and
-wide renown for their daring adventures. Ragnar afterwards invaded
-Spain, and finally grew bold enough to attack the Anglo-Saxons on the
-island of Britain. For this contest, Ragnar had prepared two enormous
-ships, and, filling them with picked men, he sailed down the coast of
-Scotland until he reached Northumbria. Here he encountered a large
-force of Saxons under their king Ella. A terrible struggle ensued.
-Ragnar was defeated and taken prisoner, and was afterwards put to death
-in a barbarous manner by the Saxons. They filled a den with poisonous
-snakes, and drove the captive Ragnar amongst these horrid reptiles,
-by whose venomous fangs he was killed. In 851 a large horde of Danes
-landed on the island of Thanet, and afterwards advanced boldly up the
-Thames. They plundered London and Canterbury, and marched thence into
-one of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, called Mercia. Although the Danes were
-there defeated by a large force of Saxons, new hordes were continually
-arriving, and becoming more formidable. At length an immence force
-of Danes landed, under the command of Guthrum and Hubba. This horde
-was led by eight kings and twenty earls. Hubba was one of Ragnar’s
-sons, and many of the horde were his relatives and friends, who swore
-vengeance for his cruel death. It was at this time that young Alfred
-appears prominently upon the scene of English history.
-
-[Illustration: THE NORTHMEN INVADING FRANCE.]
-
-Alfred was the youngest child of Ethelwolf, king of the West Saxons.
-Under Egbert, the father of Ethelwolf, the kingdoms of the West Saxons
-had been united; and Egbert is called king of the English, he having
-given the name of Anglia to the whole kingdom.
-
-When young Alfred was five years old, his father sent him to Rome to
-see the Pope, and to be anointed by him as king of the West Saxons;
-as Ethelwolf intended to pass over his elder sons and give his throne
-to his favorite son Alfred. This journey was made with great pomp and
-splendor; and a large train of nobles and ecclesiastics accompanied
-the young prince, who was received with splendid entertainments as he
-passed through France. Two years after this journey, Alfred’s father
-Ethelwolf determined himself to go to Rome, and his favorite son
-accompanied him. Ethelwolf placed his elder sons in command of his
-affairs at home, and with a magnificent retinue crossed the channel,
-and landed in France on his way to Rome. King Ethelwolf and Prince
-Alfred were received with great distinction by King Charles of France,
-and after a short stay in the French court they proceeded to Rome. The
-king of England carried most costly presents to the Pope. Ethelwolf
-had been educated for the monastery, as he was a younger son, but the
-death of his father and elder brother placed him on the throne instead
-of in an ecclesiastical office. Therefore his religious inclinations
-were always very strong, and this pilgrimage to Rome was made as a
-religious ceremony as well as for political objects, and his offerings
-were very magnificent. One gift was a crown of pure gold, weighing four
-pounds. Another was a sword richly mounted in gold. There were also
-many vessels of gold and silver, and several robes richly adorned. King
-Ethelwolf also distributed money to all the inhabitants of Rome; giving
-gold to the nobles and clergy, and silver to the people. So great was
-his munificence, and so magnificent was his courtly retinue, that this
-visit attracted universal attention, and made the little Alfred, on
-whose especial account the journey was performed, an object of great
-interest. King Ethelwolf remained a year at Rome, to give young Alfred
-the benefit of the advantages of the schools which had been established
-there. As they returned home through France, King Ethelwolf was married
-to the young daughter of the king of France, Princess Judith, who was
-only twelve or fourteen years of age. The mother of Alfred had died
-about three years before, and although this marriage occasioned much
-trouble in the kingdom of Ethelwolf, the young bride Judith was a kind
-and affectionate stepmother to Alfred, who was at this time about eight
-years of age. The story is related, that on one occasion Judith was
-showing Alfred and his older brothers a manuscript of some Saxon poems.
-Although much care had been bestowed upon the education of Alfred, he
-could not yet read. Indeed, very few even of the princes or kings in
-those days ever learned to read. Reading was considered as a necessary
-art, only for those who were to become professional teachers. Alfred
-expressed so much delight in this manuscript, which was beautifully
-illuminated with hand drawings, that Judith promised the volume to the
-one who should first learn to read it. Alfred’s brothers, although much
-older, did not aspire to this honor, and Alfred made such diligent
-use of his time, that with the help of his teachers he was soon able
-to read the poems fluently, and so claimed and received the prize.
-About two years after, the father of Alfred died, and Judith became
-the wife of Ethelbald, the eldest brother of Alfred, who succeeded
-to the throne. He died soon after, however, and Judith returned to
-France, where she married a Flemish noble, whom her father afterwards
-made Count of Flanders. We cannot stop to trace the life of Judith any
-farther, but we must mention that Alfred the Great afterwards gave his
-daughter Elfrida in marriage to the second count of Flanders, who was
-the eldest son of Judith. Through this marriage the English sovereigns
-trace their descent from Alfred the Great.
-
-There is a strange story connected with the youth of Alfred, which is
-best given in the quaint language of one of the biographers of this
-good and brave king. “As he advanced through the years of infancy and
-youth, his form appeared more comely than those of his brothers, and
-in look, speech, and manners he was more graceful than they. He was
-already the darling of the people, who felt that in wisdom and other
-qualities he surpassed all the royal race. Alfred, then, being a youth
-of this fair promise, while training himself diligently in all such
-learning as he had the means of acquiring, and especially in his own
-mother tongue and the poems and songs which formed the chief part of
-Anglo-Saxon literature, was not unmindful of the culture of his body,
-and was a zealous practiser of hunting in all its branches, and hunted
-with great perseverance and success. But before all things he was
-wishful to strengthen his mind in the keeping of God’s commandments;
-and finding that worldly desires and proud and rebellious thoughts
-which the devil, who is ever jealous of the good, is apt to breed in
-the minds of the young, were likely to have the mastery of him, he
-used often to rise at cock-crow in the early mornings, and repairing
-to some church or holy place, there cast himself before God in prayer,
-that he might do nothing contrary to His holy will. But finding himself
-still hard tempted, he began at such times to pray, as he lay prostrate
-before the altar, that God in his great mercy would strengthen his
-mind and will by some sickness, such as would be of use to him in
-the subduing of his nature, but would not show itself outwardly, or
-render him powerless or contemptible in worldly duties, or less able
-to benefit his people. For King Alfred from his earliest years held in
-great dread leprosy and blindness, and every disease which would make a
-man useless or contemptible in the conduct of affairs. And when he had
-often, and with much fervor, prayed to this effect, it pleased God to
-afflict him with a very painful disease, which lay upon him with little
-respite until he was in his twentieth year. At this age he became
-betrothed to her who was afterwards his wife, Elswitha, the daughter
-of Ethelred, the Earl of the Gaini in Mercia. Alfred, then, at that
-time being on a visit to Cornwall for the sake of hunting, turned aside
-from his sport, as his custom often was, to pray in a certain chapel
-in which was buried the body of St. Guerir. There he entreated God
-that he would exchange the sickness with which he had been up to that
-time afflicted for some other disease, which should in like manner not
-render him useless or contemptible. And so, finishing his prayers, he
-got up and rode away, and soon after perceived within himself that he
-was made whole of his old sickness. So his marriage was celebrated in
-Mercia, to which came great numbers of people, and there was feasting
-which lasted through the night as well as by day. In the midst of which
-revelry Alfred was attacked by sudden and violent pain, the cause of
-which neither they who were then present, nor indeed any physician
-in after years, could rightly ascertain. At the time, however, some
-believed that it was the malignant enchantment of some person amongst
-the guests; others, that it was the special spite of the devil; others
-again, that it was the old sickness come back on him, or a strange kind
-of fever. In any case, from that day until his forty-fourth year he
-was subject to this same sickness, which frequently returned, giving
-him the most acute pain, and, as he thought, making him useless for
-every duty. But how far the king was from thinking rightly in this
-respect, those who read of the burdens that were laid upon him, and
-the work which he accomplished, can best judge for themselves.” Such
-is this quaint account of Alfred’s religious devotion, and his patient
-endurance of suffering.
-
-According to the will of Ethelwolf, the father of Alfred, Ethelbald,
-his eldest son, was to retain the throne of Wessex until his death,
-when he should be succeeded by his two youngest brothers, Ethelred
-and Alfred, in succession; while Ethelbert, the second son, should be
-king of Kent, Sussex, and Surrey. His estates and other property were
-divided amongst his children. From 858 until 860 Ethelred and Alfred
-lived in Kent with their brother Ethelbert. Upon the death of Ethelbald
-in 860, Ethelred and Alfred both waived their rights, and allowed
-Ethelbert to ascend the throne of Wessex. In 866 Ethelbert also died,
-and Ethelred now became the sovereign, and Alfred the crown prince.
-Alfred was very fond of study, and also very devout, as the above
-description from the old annals shows. During his youth he had gathered
-together the Services of the Hours, called _Celebrationes Horarum_,
-with many of the Psalms, which he had written in a small handbook that
-he always carried with him; and on battle-field, or exiled in the wild
-forests, or ruling the nation as a proud king, this little book of
-devotion was always within reach, and constantly perused.
-
-Within six weeks after his marriage he was called to arms by the
-invasion of the Danes, already mentioned, under Guthrum and Hubba;
-and within a few short months his brother Ethelred had been killed in
-battle, he himself had become king, and nine pitched battles had been
-fought in his own kingdom of Wessex under his leadership.
-
-To understand more clearly the character of the Danes, a slight
-description of their weird and fantastic religious ideas is necessary.
-Woden was the chief figure in their ancient mythology. He was the
-god of battles, “who giveth victory, who re-animates warriors, who
-nameth those who are to be slain.” This Woden had been an inspired
-teacher as well as a conqueror, and had given to these wild Northmen a
-Scandinavian alphabet, and songs of battle. Their traditions related
-that Woden had led them from the shores of the Black Sea to the fiords
-of Norway, the far shores of Iceland. Having departed from them, he
-drew their hearts after him, and lived ever after in Asgard, the garden
-of the gods. There in his own great hall, Valhalla, the hall of Odin,
-he dwelt. And it was believed that the brave slain in battle should be
-permitted to go to Valhalla, and feast there with the mighty Odin.
-
-There were also supposed to be other gods in this hall of Valhalla.
-Chief of these was Balder, the sun-god, white, beautiful, benignant;
-and Thor, the thunder-god, with terrible smiting hammer and awful
-brows, engaged mainly in expeditions into Jotun land, a chaotic world,
-the residence of the giants, or devils, known as frost, fire, tempest,
-and the like. Thor’s attendant was Thealfi, or manual labor. This
-thunder-god was described to be full of unwieldly strength, simplicity,
-and rough humor. There was supposed to be a tree of life also in the
-unseen world,—Igdrasil, with its roots in Hela, the kingdom of death,
-at the foot of which sit the three Nornas, known as the past, present,
-and future. They also believed that there would some day be a struggle
-of the gods and Jotuns, or dwellers in the chaotic world, and that
-at last the gods, Jotuns, and Time himself would all sink down into
-darkness, from which in due season there should issue forth a new
-heaven and a new earth, in which a higher god and supreme justice shall
-at last reign.
-
-So their religion was only a religion of war; and, to be brave in
-battle, they thought the most pleasing devotion they could show to
-their warlike gods. So this contest between the Danes and Saxons was
-not only one for the possession of the fruitful land of England, but
-was a contest between Paganism and Christianity. King Alfred was a
-devout Christian, and although the Saxons’ ideas of religion were
-mixed with much superstition and bigotry, they believed in the true
-God, Jehovah, and in salvation through the redemption of Jesus Christ;
-although the pure Gospel, as taught by Christ himself when on the earth
-more than eight hundred years before this time, had become mixed with
-all sorts of legends of saints and marvellous stories fabricated by
-the priests, and handed down as traditions among the people, whose
-ignorance placed them completely under the sway of the only class of
-men who were educated sufficiently to read and write, and by whom all
-copies were made of such books as they possessed at that day, which
-consisted only of rolls of parchment, penned laboriously by hand in
-the various monasteries, scattered throughout the different kingdoms of
-the then civilized world. The most famous battle between the Saxons and
-the Danes is known as the battle of Ashdown, and is thus described in
-the old English annals:—
-
-[Illustration: ALFRED.
-
-_Roy d’Angleterre,_
-
-_Né en 849. Mort le 28.8bre. 899._]
-
-“At early dawn the hosts were on foot. Alfred marched up promptly with
-his men to give battle, but King Ethelred stayed long time in his tent
-at prayer hearing the mass. Now the Christians had determined that King
-Ethelred with his men should fight the two pagan kings, and that Alfred
-his brother, with his men, should take the chance of war against the
-earls. Things being so arranged, the king remained long time in prayer,
-while the pagans pressed on swiftly to the fight. Then Alfred, though
-holding the lower command, could no longer support the onslaught of
-the enemy without retreating, or charging upon them without waiting
-for his brother. A moment of fearful anxiety was this for the young
-prince, who thus no doubt mused: ‘Bagsac and the two Sidrocs at the
-top of the down with double my numbers, already overlapping my flanks:
-Ethelred still at mass—dare I go up at them? In the name of God and St.
-Cuthbert, yes!’ and with a strong heart, brave for this great crisis,
-Alfred puts himself at the head of his men, and leads them up the slope
-against the whole pagan host, ‘With the rush of a wild boar.’ For he
-too relied on the help of God. He formed his men in a dense phalanx to
-meet the foe, which was never broken in that long fight. Mass being
-over, Ethelred comes up to the help of his brother, and the battle
-raged along the whole hillside. The pagans occupied the higher ground,
-and the Christians came up from below. There was also in that place,
-a single stunted thorn-tree. Round this tree the opposing hosts
-came together with loud shouts from all sides, the one party to pursue
-their wicked course, the other to fight for their lives, their wives
-and children, and their country. And, when both sides had fought long
-and bravely, at last the pagans, by God’s judgment, gave way, being no
-longer able to abide the Christian onslaught; and after losing a great
-part of their army, broke in shameful flight. One of their two kings
-and five earls were there slain, together with many thousand pagans,
-who covered with their bodies the whole plain of Ashdown. And all the
-pagan host pursued its flight, not only until night, but through the
-next day, even until they reached the stronghold from which they had
-come forth. The Christians followed, slaying all they could reach until
-dark. Neither before nor since was ever such slaughter known since the
-Saxons first gained England by their arms.”
-
-Alfred’s decision and promptness, in that time of emergency, not only
-won the day, but hardened his own nerve to flint, and his judgment,
-amid the clash of arms, to steel. Through all the weary years of
-battle and misfortune that followed, there was no sign of indecision
-and faint-heartedness. He had conquered fear and hesitancy there, as
-valiantly as he had conquered temptations to evil in his earlier youth.
-About two months after the battle of Ashdown, Ethelred and Alfred
-fought for the last time together, against their unwearied foes. In
-this contest Ethelred was mortally wounded, and died soon after, and
-was buried by Alfred with kingly honors in Wimborne Minster.
-
-Alfred, now at the age of twenty-three, ascended the throne of
-his fathers, which seemed at that time tottering, and was not an
-inheritance to be desired in the year of 871, when Alfred succeeded
-his brother. It would not be surprising if for a moment he lost heart
-and hope, and allowed himself to doubt whether God would by his hand
-deliver his afflicted people from their relentless foes. In the eight
-pitched battles which had been fought with the pagan army, the flower
-of the youth of the Saxon nation had fallen. Kent, Sussex, and Surrey
-were at the mercy of the Danes. London had been pillaged and was in
-ruins, and several provinces in his own Wessex had been desolated. The
-Danes were even then striking into new districts, and if the rich lands
-yet unplundered were to be saved from their voracious grasp, it would
-only be by prompt and decisive action.
-
-A month has passed since the death of Alfred’s brother and his
-succession to this tottering throne. Alfred, with the greatest
-difficulty, collects enough men to take the field openly. The first
-great battle that Alfred fought, as king, was at Wilton. At first
-Alfred’s troops carried all before them, but the tide turned in favor
-of the Danes, and Alfred and the Saxons were driven from the field.
-There was immense loss upon both sides, and a treaty was agreed upon
-between Alfred and Hubba, the Danish chieftain. By this treaty, the
-Danes were to retire from Alfred’s dominions, provided that he would
-not interfere with their conquests in other parts of England. Alfred
-has been censured for making this treaty; but he was obliged to
-choose between protection for his own realm, and perhaps the entire
-destruction and overthrow of not only his dominions, but of all
-England. He had no power to aid others, and therefore endeavored to
-protect, if possible, his own subjects. The Danes then went to Mercia.
-The king of Mercia was Buthred, the brother-in-law of Alfred. Buthred
-paid the Danes large sums of money to leave his kingdom. The Danes
-departed for a while, but treacherously returned, and were again
-bought off. Hubba scarcely left the kingdom this time, but spent the
-money received, and then went to plundering as before, regardless of
-all promises. Buthred, in despair, fled the country and went to Rome,
-where he died soon after of grief. The Danes then took possession
-of Mercia, and set over the people a king from whom they demanded
-an annual tribute. In the meantime, new hordes of Danes arrived in
-England; and one place after another was plundered by them, and they
-obtained possession of the town of Exancester (now Exeter), which was
-a great loss to Alfred. King Alfred then determined to meet the Danes
-upon their own element; and he built and equipped a small fleet, and
-was successful in his first encounter with his enemies, having defeated
-a fleet of Danish ships in the channel, and having captured one of the
-largest of their vessels.
-
-But after all, Alfred gained no decisive victory over his foes. He
-then tried to bind the Danes by Christian oaths, in making a treaty
-with them. The Danes were accustomed to swear by a certain ornament
-which they wore, when they wished to impose a very solemn religious
-oath; and to swear by this bracelet was to place themselves under the
-most solemn obligations they could assume. Alfred, however, was not
-satisfied with this pagan ceremony, but obliged them, in one treaty,
-to swear by certain Christian relics, which were held in great awe and
-sacredness by the Saxons. But the Danes broke their treaties with the
-most reckless defiance; and, as years passed, Alfred found his army
-broken, his resources exhausted, his towns and castles taken, until
-about eight years after his coronation at Winchester, as monarch of
-the most powerful of all the Saxon kingdoms, he found himself unable
-to resist the further attacks of the Danes, who had come over in fresh
-hordes, and captured his kingdom of Wessex; which calamity Alfred was
-powerless to prevent.
-
-[Illustration: ALFRED AND THE CAKES.]
-
-The Saxon chieftains and nobles fled in terror, and Alfred himself,
-with only one or two trusty friends, retired to the vast forests, which
-skirted the remote western frontiers of his once proud realm. It was
-during these homeless wanderings that the incident is said to have
-occurred, which has ever since been related of this bitter experience
-of want and misery in the life of Alfred the Great. The story is, that
-Alfred, weary and hungry, sought shelter in the miserable hut of a
-cow-herd, who gave him such poor fare as his lowly lot allowed. Alfred,
-while remaining with these simple folks, was one day engaged in mending
-his arrows, when the cow-herd’s wife, totally unconscious of the rank
-and station of her guest, requested him, in no polite terms, to watch
-her cakes which were baking in the coals, while she employed herself in
-other labors. King Alfred, absorbed in his sorrowful musings, forgot
-the injunctions of the ill-natured woman, and so allowed her cakes to
-burn; which, when she perceived, she gave him a good scolding; saying,
-“You man! you will not turn the bread you see burning, but you will be
-very glad to eat it when it is done!” This unlucky woman little thought
-she was addressing the great King Alfred.
-
-Alfred, though restless and wretched in his apparently hopeless
-seclusion, bore his privations with patience and fortitude, and did
-not cease to plan some way by which he might reorganize his forces
-and rescue his country from the ruin into which it had fallen. Alfred
-now established himself at a place called Ethelney; and, having
-gradually collected a few followers, they built a kind of fortress,
-where Alfred’s family at length joined him, and to which numbers of
-his old troops began to repair. The following incident is recorded in
-the old annals concerning this time in King Alfred’s life. It was very
-difficult to supply his little garrison with food, and sometimes they
-found themselves in sore want. At one time the provisions in the house
-were nearly exhausted, and to add to their distress, it was also in
-the winter. All of Alfred’s little band having gone away with their
-fishing apparatus and bows and arrows in the hope of securing some
-food, Alfred was left alone with only one attendant. King Alfred was
-sitting reading, when a beggar came to the door and asked for food.
-Alfred, looking up from his book, inquired of his attendant what food
-there was in the house. It was found that there was only a single loaf
-of bread remaining, and a little wine in a pitcher. This would not
-be half enough for their own wants, should the hunting party return
-unsuccessful. Alfred ordered half of the loaf to be given to the
-stranger; but when he had been served he was seen no more, and the loaf
-remained whole, as though none had been taken from it, and the pitcher
-was now full to the brim. Alfred, meantime, had turned to his reading,
-over which he fell asleep, and dreamed that St. Cuthbert stood by him
-and told him it was he who had been his guest; and that God had seen
-his afflictions and those of his people, which were now about to end,
-in token whereof his people would return that day from their expedition
-with a great take of fish. And while Alfred yet mused on this strange
-dream from which he had awakened, his servants came in, bringing fish
-enough to have fed an army. The legend also goes on to say, that on
-the next morning King Alfred went forth in the forests and wound his
-horn thrice, which drew to him before noon five hundred men. Another
-story is told of the manner in which King Alfred discovered the number
-and power of his enemies’ forces. It is said that he assumed the garb
-of a minstrel, and with one attendant visited the camp of the Dane
-Guthrum. Here he stayed, amusing the Danish king and nobles with his
-songs and harp, boldly venturing into their very tents, until he had
-learned all he desired to know concerning their plans.
-
-Whereupon he returned to Ethelney; and the time having arrived for a
-great effort, he sent word to his people to meet him at a place called
-Egbert’s Stone. Here, on the 12th of May, 878, King Alfred met his
-gathered forces, and losing no time, moved forward toward Guthrum’s
-camp. Alfred encamped for the night on an eminence from which he could
-watch the movements of his enemies. That night, as he was sleeping in
-his tent, he had a remarkable dream. St. Neot appeared to him, and told
-him to have no fear of the immense army of pagans whom he was about
-to encounter on the morrow, as God had taken him under his special
-protection, having accepted his penitence for all his faults; he might
-now go forward into the battle without fear, as God was about to give
-him the victory over all his enemies.
-
-The king related this dream to his army the next morning, and the
-men were inspired with new ardor and enthusiasm as Alfred led them
-to the camp where their enemies lay; for it was Alfred’s intention
-to surprise the Danes. The Saxons advanced to the attack; and the
-Danes, surprised and terror-stricken, soon began to yield. At last
-the flight among the pagans became general. They were pursued by
-Alfred’s victorious columns. The retreating army was in a short time
-reduced to a small force, which, with Guthrum at their head, reached a
-castle, where they took refuge. Guthrum, shut up in this castle, was
-now besieged by Alfred’s forces; and when many of his men were raving
-in the delirium of famine and thirst, or dying in dreadful agony, he
-could resist no longer, but surrendered to Alfred. Thus King Alfred was
-once more in possession of his kingdom. The treaty which Alfred now
-made with the Danes evinces his generous Christian forgiveness; and
-perhaps even the pagan Guthrum, in accepting the terms proposed, was
-influenced by emotions of gratitude and admiration for the example of
-Christian virtue which Alfred exhibited. As the Danes had now become
-so intermingled with the Saxons by their long residence in England
-and frequent intermarriages, Alfred determined to expel only the
-armed forces from his dominions, allowing those peaceably disposed to
-remain in quiet possession of such lands in other parts of the island
-as they already occupied. Instead, therefore, of treating Guthrum
-with harshness and severity as a captive enemy, he told him that he
-was willing to give him his liberty, and to regard him, on certain
-conditions, as a friend and an ally, and to allow him to reign as king
-over that part of England which his countrymen already possessed. The
-conditions were that Guthrum was to go away with his forces out of
-Alfred’s kingdom under solemn oaths never to return; that he was to
-give hostages for the faithful fulfilment of these stipulations; and
-that Guthrum should become a convert to Christianity, and publicly
-avow his adhesion to the Saxon faith by being baptized in the presence
-of the leaders of both armies in the most open and solemn manner.
-These conditions were accepted, and some weeks after the surrender,
-the baptism was performed in the presence of many chieftains of both
-nations. Guthrum’s Christian name which he received at this ceremony
-was Ethelstan. King Alfred was his god-father. The various ceremonies
-connected with the baptism were protracted through several days,
-and were followed by a number of festivities and public rejoicings.
-The admission of the pagan chieftain into the Christian church did
-not mark, perhaps, any real change in his personal opinions, but it
-prepared the way for the reception of the Christian faith by his
-followers; and Alfred, in leading Guthrum to the baptismal font, was
-achieving, in the estimation of all England, France, and Rome, a far
-greater and nobler victory than when he conquered his enemies on the
-field of battle. A full and formal treaty of peace was now concluded
-between the two sovereigns; for Guthrum received the title of king,
-and was to hold a separate kingdom in the dominions assigned to him.
-Guthrum endeavored to keep this treaty faithfully, and whenever other
-parties of Danes came upon the coast of England, they found no favor or
-assistance from him against the Saxons.
-
-The generosity and nobleness of mind displayed in his treatment of
-Guthrum made a great impression on the world at that time, and has
-never ceased to throw a halo of glory around the memory of this good
-and great king. Many stories are told to illustrate the kindness of
-Alfred the Great. It is said that once, while hunting in the forest
-with a party, he heard the cries of a child, which seemed to come
-from the air above their heads. It was found, after much searching,
-that the sounds proceeded from an eagle’s nest in the top of a lofty
-tree. On climbing to the nest, it was discovered that a child had been
-carried by the eagle to its nest, and the infant was screaming with
-pain and terror. Alfred ordered the boy to be brought to his castle,
-and not being able to find the parents of the child, he adopted him
-as his own son, gave him a good education, and provided for him well
-when he grew to manhood. King Alfred manifested great interest in the
-arts of peace, notwithstanding the warlike influences and habits of his
-life. He was the ruler of a race capable of appreciating intelligence,
-order, justice, and system; and, foreseeing the future power of this
-people, his chief attention during all the years of his reign was
-devoted to their advancement in learning, setting them an example in
-his own case by pressing forward diligently in his own studies, even
-in the midst of his overwhelming cares. It was not possible in those
-days to educate the masses, as there were no books; but Alfred made
-great efforts to promote the intellectual improvement of his people,
-which was all the more remarkable at that time when all other monarchs
-were ambitious only of their own power and personal glory. King Alfred
-wrote and translated many books, which were copied and, so far as it
-was possible, circulated amongst those who could read them. These
-writings of King Alfred exerted a wide influence. They remained in
-manuscript until the art of printing was invented, when many of them
-were printed. Some of the original manuscripts may still be seen in
-various English museums. One of the greatest of King Alfred’s measures
-was the founding of the great university of Oxford. He also repaired
-the castles, which had become dilapidated in the wars. He rebuilt
-the ruined cities, organized governments for them, restored the
-monasteries, and took pains to put men of learning and piety in charge
-of them. He revised the laws of his kingdom. Through all his reign,
-his desire was to lay lasting foundations for the permanent prosperity
-of his realm. His own life was governed by fixed principles of justice
-and of duty; and his calm, patient, unselfish character gave him a wide
-influence over his people, and made him a shining example of the truths
-he endeavored to impress upon them. King Alfred invented a plan for
-marking the different hours of the day by the burning of wax candles,
-so exactly made as to size that they would each burn a certain fixed
-time. The candles were each a foot long, and would burn four hours.
-They were divided into inches by marks upon them, and each inch would
-last twenty minutes. A large number of these candles were prepared,
-and a person was appointed to keep a succession of them burning in a
-chapel, and to ring bells to designate the successive periods of time
-denoted by their burning. There was one difficulty, however, which
-interfered somewhat with their exactness, which was that the blowing
-of any slight breeze or draught would make the burning uncertain. To
-obviate this trouble, King Alfred contrived a kind of lantern made of
-sheets of horn so thin that they were almost transparent. A plate of
-horn was set in each of the four sides of a box, which was fastened
-over the candle, thus forming a sort of rude lantern. This was the
-first lantern in England, and King Alfred is generally credited with
-being their first inventor; but as Diogenes, the Greek philosopher, was
-said to have carried a lantern in the old story, the English lantern
-of King Alfred may not have been the earliest ever invented. Alfred
-the Great was very systematic about the employment of his own time.
-He was accustomed to give one-third of the twenty-four hours to sleep
-and refreshment, one-third to business, and one-third to religious
-duties. Under this last head was probably included study, writing, and
-the management of ecclesiastical affairs. At length, however, at the
-close of King Alfred’s life, a famous Northman leader, named Hastings,
-landed in England, at the head of a large force, so that Alfred’s reign
-ended as it had begun,—in desperate and protracted conflicts with
-the Danes. Hastings had made one previous invasion into England, but
-Guthrum, faithful to his promise to Alfred, repulsed him. But Guthrum
-was now dead, and so King Alfred was forced to meet this tireless and
-implacable foe again. Year after year passed, during which a succession
-of battles were fought between the two nations, now the Danes gaining
-an advantage, now the Saxons. Hastings was finally expelled from
-England in 897, and once more Alfred’s kingdom was at peace. But King
-Alfred’s life was now drawing very near its close. His children had
-now grown to manhood, and repaid his love and care by endeavoring to
-imitate their illustrious father’s example. His eldest son Edward
-was to succeed King Alfred on the English throne. A daughter named
-Ethelfleda, who was married to a prince of Mercia, was famed all over
-England for the superiority of her mind, her many accomplishments, and
-her devoted piety. Alfred the Great was fifty-two years of age when he
-died. His body was interred in the great cathedral at Winchester, and
-the kingdom passed peacefully to his son. His own dying farewell to his
-son Edward is the best memorial encomium which can be passed upon his
-life, and he most truly earned the title of Alfred the Great,—great in
-wisdom, great in power, and, best of all, great in goodness; and his
-purified spirit passed from earth with these truly great words upon his
-dying lips:—
-
-“Thou, my dear son, sit thee now beside me, and I will deliver thee
-true instructions. I feel that my hour is coming. My strength is
-gone; my countenance is wasted and pale; my days are almost ended.
-We must now part. I go to another world, and thou art left alone in
-the possession of all that I have thus far held. I pray thee, my dear
-child, to be a father to thy people. Be the children’s father and the
-widow’s friend. Comfort the poor, protect and shelter the weak, and,
-with all thy might, right that which is wrong. And, my son, govern
-_thyself_ by _law_. Then shall the Lord love thee, and God himself
-shall be thy reward. Call thou upon Him to advise thee in all thy need,
-and He shall help thee to compass all thy desires.”
-
-
-
-
-RICHARD CŒUR DE LION.
-
-A.D. 1157-1199.
-
- “Yet looks he like a king; behold his eye,
- As bright as is the eagle’s, lightens forth
- Controlling majesty.”—SHAKESPEARE.
-
-
-THE history of Richard Cœur de Lion is a history of the third crusade,
-and the most memorable one of all. Upon the side of the Mussulmans
-was Saladin, sultan of Egypt and Syria. Saladin, whose name means
-“splendor of religion,” was a noble and generous man, and though a
-Mohammedan, he often evinced a far more humane and commendable spirit
-than many of his foes, who called themselves Christians. Upon the side
-of the Mohammedans, as well as that of the Christians, this conflict
-was regarded as a holy war; for the Christians were fighting to obtain
-Jerusalem and the Holy Sepulchre, where the body of Jesus Christ was
-supposed to have lain, while the Mohammedans were just as zealously
-fighting to retain Jerusalem; and Saladin’s answer to the Christians,
-when they demanded the surrender of that city was, “Jerusalem never
-was yours, and we may not without sin give it up to you; for it is the
-place where the mysteries of our religion were accomplished; and the
-last one of my soldiers will perish before the Mussulmans renounce
-conquests made in the name of Mohammed.”
-
-[Illustration: RICHARD CŒUR DE LION.]
-
-Before the time of Richard the Lion-Hearted, Jerusalem had been
-conquered by the Christians, and they had set up in it a king. This
-was in 1099, when the crusaders elected Godfrey de Bouillon as king
-of Jerusalem. But he reigned but one year and died. In the space of
-one hundred and seventy-one years, from the coronation of Godfrey de
-Bouillon as king of Jerusalem in 1099, to the last crusade under Louis
-IX. of France, in 1270, there were seven crusades which were undertaken
-by the kings of France and England, the emperors of Germany, the king
-of Denmark, and various princes of Italy. They all failed in the end
-of accomplishing the permanent possession of the city of Jerusalem by
-the Christians; but these various crusades called forth a number of
-devout and self-sacrificing monks and bishops, and gave occasion for
-brave and valiant deeds by many knights and kings, and none were so
-brave, and none became so famous in the annals of these holy wars as
-Richard I., king of England, called by the Christians Cœur de Lion, the
-Lion-hearted, on account of his valor, and for the same reason feared
-among the Mohammedans, and called by them Malek-Rik; and so great a
-terror did this name become, that when St. Louis, more than fifty
-years after, led the French to another crusade, they heard the Saracen
-mothers scolding their children, and threatening them with punishment
-by the dreadful Malek-Rik, who had never been forgotten. The first of
-the crusades had been inspired by a zealous monk, called Peter the
-Hermit. From the earliest days of Christianity, many pious persons
-had made pilgrimages to Palestine, to visit the graves of saints and
-other places. After a time, these pilgrimages had been extended to
-Jerusalem; and that city at length, having fallen into the hands of the
-Turks, the Christian people were treated with cruelty, and many of the
-clergy were imprisoned and even killed. Peter the Hermit had been
-to Jerusalem, and having himself been an eye-witness of the cruelties
-of the Turks towards the Christians, he obtained permission of the
-Pope to go to the principal courts in Europe, and exhort all Christian
-warriors to take up arms against the infidels in the Holy Land. Peter
-the Hermit walked from court to court, barefoot and clothed in rags. He
-was listened to as a prophet, and succeeded in inspiring many knights
-and crowds of people to enlist in what they considered a sacred cause.
-The symbol of this enlistment was a cross of red stuff sewed to the
-shoulder of the cloak; hence the name crusade. France was at this time
-roused to great excitement. The barons sold and pledged their lands to
-obtain the means of joining the expedition. The Pope promised a full
-remission of sins to all who assumed the cross; and as the mass of
-the people were so ignorant in those days that the word of the Pope
-was held to be as sacred as a voice from heaven, and his blessing or
-excommunication was regarded by them as powerful enough to raise them
-to Paradise, or call down upon them everlasting destruction, thousands
-of wicked persons, whose sins were so many that it would have required
-years of penance to have gained the much-coveted absolvance from the
-Pope, eagerly seized upon this method of winning earthly glory, and,
-as they supposed, heavenly honor. It is said that a crowd of more than
-a million of persons, including beggars, women and children, soon
-pledged themselves to this crusade. Three hundred thousand of such a
-motley company started, with Peter the Hermit and Walter the Penniless
-marching at their head. Nearly the entire number fell victims to the
-fury of their assailants in the countries through which they passed.
-This company of helpless beggars, women and children, were followed
-by three hundred thousand fighting men, who had been preparing in the
-different kingdoms, mostly in France. Of this large host, only a small
-remnant under Godfrey de Bouillon, arrived at Jerusalem, and captured
-that city in 1099, and planted the standard of the cross on its walls.
-
-St. Bernard, abbot of Clairvaux, roused the people again for the
-second crusade, for it was discovered that the Turks had massacred
-the Christians in Palestine, and that Jerusalem was in danger.
-King Louis VII. of France, and the emperor Conrad III. of Germany,
-espoused the cause. Although Louis and Conrad entered the city of
-Jerusalem and determined upon the siege of Damascus, nothing permanent
-was accomplished. The siege of Damascus was abandoned, and the
-crusade-sovereigns returned to their respective kingdoms.
-
-During the forty years’ interval between the end of the second and
-the beginning of the third crusades, the relative positions of the
-West and East, Christian Europe and Mussulman Asia, remained much the
-same. But in 1187, news again reached Europe of repeated disasters to
-the Christians in Asia. Egypt had become the goal of ambition, and
-Saladin, the most illustrious as well as the most powerful of Mussulman
-sovereigns, being sultan of Egypt and Syria, had fought against a
-Christian army near Tiberias. The oriental chronicles thus describe
-the conflict: “The Christian army was surrounded by the Saracens, and
-also, ere long, by the fire, which Saladin had ordered to be set to
-the dry grass which covered the plain. The flames made their way and
-spread beneath the feet of men and horses. There the sons of Paradise
-and the children of fire settled their terrible quarrel. Arrows hurtled
-in the air like a noisy flight of sparrows, and the blood of warriors
-dripped upon the ground like rain-water. Hill, plain, and valley
-were covered with their dead; their banners were stained with dust
-and blood, their heads were laid low, their limbs scattered, their
-carcasses piled on a heap like stones.” Four days after the battle of
-Tiberias in July, 1187, Saladin took possession of St. Jean d’Acre,
-and in the following September, of Ascalon. In the same month he laid
-siege to Jerusalem. The Holy City contained at that time, it is said,
-nearly one hundred thousand Christians, who had fled for safety from
-all parts of Palestine. Saladin’s taking of Jerusalem is thus described
-by Guizot. “On approaching its walls, Saladin sent for the principal
-inhabitants, and said to them, ‘I know as well as you that Jerusalem
-is the house of God, and I will not have it assaulted if I can get it
-by peace and love. I will give you thirty thousand byzants of gold if
-you promise me Jerusalem, and you shall have liberty to go whither you
-will and do your tillage, to a distance of five miles from the city.
-And I will have you supplied with such plenty of provisions that in no
-place on earth shall they be so cheap. You shall have a truce from now
-to Whitsuntide, and when this time comes, if you see that you may have
-aid, then hold on. But if not, you shall give up the city, and I will
-have you conveyed in safety to Christian territory, yourselves and your
-substance.’ ‘We may not yield up to you a city where died our God,’
-answered the envoys, ‘and still less may we sell you.’ The siege lasted
-fourteen days. After having repulsed several assaults, the inhabitants
-saw that effectual resistance was impossible, and the commandant of
-the place, a knight, named Balian d’Ibelin, an old warrior who had
-been at the battle of Tiberias, returned to Saladin, and asked for
-the conditions back again which had been at first rejected. Saladin,
-pointing to his own banner already planted upon several parts of the
-battlements, answered, ‘It is too late, you surely see that the city
-is mine.’ ‘Very well, my lord,’ replied the knight, ‘we will ourselves
-destroy our city, and the mosque of Omar, and the stone of Jacob,
-and when it is nothing but a heap of ruins, we will sally forth with
-sword and fire in hand, and not one of us will go to Paradise without
-having sent ten Mussulmans to hell.’ Saladin understood enthusiasm and
-respected it, and to have had the destruction of Jerusalem connected
-with his name would have caused him deep displeasure. He therefore
-consented to the terms of capitulation demanded of him. The fighting
-men were permitted to retreat to Tyre or Tripolis, which cities were in
-the power of the Christians, and the simple inhabitants of Jerusalem
-had their lives preserved, and permission given them to purchase their
-freedom on certain conditions; but, as many amongst them could not find
-the means, Malek-Adhel, the sultan’s brother, and Saladin himself, paid
-the ransom of several thousands of captives. All Christians, however,
-with the exception of Greeks and Syrians, had orders to leave Jerusalem
-within four days. When the day came, all the gates were closed except
-that of David, by which the people were to go forth, and Saladin,
-seated upon a throne, saw the Christians defile before him. First came
-the patriarch, followed by the clergy carrying the sacred vessels and
-the ornaments of the church of the Holy Sepulchre. After him came
-Sibylla, queen of Jerusalem, who had remained in the city, whilst her
-husband, Guy de Lusignan, had been a prisoner at Nablous since the
-battle of Tiberias. Saladin saluted her respectfully, and spoke to her
-kindly. He had too great a soul to take pleasure in the humiliation
-of greatness.” The capture of Jerusalem again roused Europe to arms,
-but the story of this third crusade will be more fully narrated, as
-we proceed with the personal history of Richard the Lion-hearted, who
-became the chief and most illustrious figure in the annals of this
-third holy war.
-
-Eleanor, the mother of Richard Cœur de Lion, had herself participated
-in the second crusade. Eleanor’s grandfather was duke of Aquitaine, a
-rich kingdom in the south of France. His son, the father of Eleanor,
-had been killed in the first crusade, and the duke of Aquitaine
-determined to resign his kingdom in favor of his grand-daughter, and
-marry her to Prince Louis VII., then heir to the throne of France.
-This was accomplished, and King Louis VI. of France, dying soon after
-the marriage, Eleanor became queen of France, as well as duchess of
-Aquitaine. This princess had been well educated for those times,
-and was even celebrated for her learning, as she possessed the rare
-accomplishments of being able to read and write, as well as to sing
-the songs of the Troubadours, which was the fashionable music of the
-courts. King Louis VII., her husband, was a very pious man, much more
-fond of devotion than of pleasure, so he determined to go on a crusade,
-and Queen Eleanor, from a gay love of adventure, resolved to accompany
-him. Eleanor and her court ladies laid aside their feminine attire, and
-clothed themselves as Amazons, taking good care, however, to provide a
-most cumbersome amount of baggage, containing their usual rich costumes
-and delicate luxuries, which proved so great a burden in transportation
-that the king remonstrated against such a needless and troublesome
-excess of useless finery. But the ladies carried their point, and the
-crusading expedition, which should have been composed of an army
-of valiant warriors, became an immense train of women and baggage,
-requiring the constant care of the princes, barons, and knights, many
-of them reluctant participants, who had been shamed by the taunts of
-these ladies into joining an expedition which had been organized upon
-so wild and heedless a plan as to insure only disaster and failure. But
-the gay ladies exclaimed to any man who dared to express any thoughts
-of remaining at home, “We will send you our distaffs as presents. We
-have no longer any use for them, but as you are intending to stay at
-home and make women of yourselves, we will send them to you, so that
-you may occupy yourselves with spinning while we are gone.”
-
-Notwithstanding this apparent zeal which Eleanor and her court ladies
-displayed, their caprices and freaks continued to harass and interfere
-with the expedition, during the entire crusade, and Queen Eleanor so
-displeased King Louis by her gay and frivolous conduct, that a long
-and serious quarrel arose between them, and he declared that he would
-obtain a divorce from her. But his ministers tried to prevent this,
-as Eleanor possessed the rich kingdom of Aquitaine in her own right,
-which would be lost to Louis by a separation. So they returned from
-the Holy Land to Paris, still as king and queen of France. But in
-about two years after, Eleanor determined to be divorced from King
-Louis of France, so that she might marry Prince Henry Plantagenet,
-who afterwards became Henry II., of England. Prince Henry’s father
-had received the name Plantagenet from a habit he had of wearing a
-spray of broom blossom in his cap. The French name for this plant is
-_genet_, and so he was nicknamed Plantagenet, and his son Henry II.
-was the first king in that family, also called the House of Anjou.
-Although Henry II. was king of England, by his marriage with Eleanor,
-which took place only a short time after she obtained a divorce from
-King Louis of France, Henry gained the great dukedom of Aquitaine,
-and as he already possessed Normandy and Anjou, he really was lord of
-nearly half of France. He ruled England well, but he cared more for
-power than what was right, and he often indulged in such exhibitions
-of fierce rage, that he would roll on the floor and bite the rushes
-with which it was strewn. At the time of his marriage with Eleanor,
-Henry was duke of Normandy, and was only twenty years of age, while
-Eleanor was thirty-two; but she was very much in love with him, and as
-she could bring him such a rich kingdom, and furnish him men and money
-to help him secure the crown of England, which was at that time held
-by King Stephen, whom Henry declared was a usurper, he was willing to
-accept Eleanor as his wife, although she was nearly twice his own age,
-and was also the divorced wife of King Louis. Some historians place
-the blame of the divorce upon Eleanor, some upon Louis; but all unite
-in condemning her previous conduct, for she occasioned many scandalous
-remarks by her undignified, unwifely, and even culpable actions. After
-she became queen of England, however, she changed in this respect, and
-her after quarrels with Henry were occasioned by her ambitions and
-his conduct regarding a lady called the Fair Rosamond, who afterwards
-became a nun in a convent near Oxford. Some historians think that
-Henry was in reality married to Rosamond before he was persuaded to
-espouse Eleanor, in order to gain her rich possessions. Though Eleanor
-had equally wronged her former husband, Louis, she made no excuse for
-King Henry’s devotion to Rosamond, and when she discovered Henry’s
-affection for her, she ordered that she should be shut up in a convent
-out of the way. To this King Henry consented, but the jealousy of the
-queen against her rival was never abated, and added great bitterness
-to the other causes of discord between herself and King Henry, which
-at last broke out in the open rebellion of Queen Eleanor and her sons
-against the king, so that Henry would often be obliged to raise armies
-to put down the various disturbances caused by first one son, then
-another, then all together, encouraged by their mother Eleanor, who
-however seemed to have inspired more love and devotion in the hearts
-of her sons than their father. Almost all the early years of the life
-of Richard were spent in wars which were waged by different members
-of his father’s family against each other. These wars originated
-in the quarrels between King Henry and his sons, in respect to the
-family property. As Henry II. held a great many possessions which he
-had inherited through his father, grandfather, and his wife Eleanor,
-he was duke of one country, earl of a second, king of a third, and
-count of a fourth. Henry had five sons, of whom Richard was the third,
-and he was born about three years after Eleanor was crowned queen
-of England, when, upon the death of King Stephen, Henry became king
-of that country. Henry II. was a generous father, and as his sons
-became old enough, he gave them provinces of their own. But they were
-not contented with the portions allotted to them, and demanded more.
-Sometimes Henry would yield, at other times resist, when the sons would
-raise armies and rebel against their father, and then would follow the
-shocking spectacle of husband, wife, and sons, all fighting against
-each other. These wars continued for many years, the mother usually
-taking sides with her sons, until King Henry shut her up in a castle,
-in a sort of imprisonment, where he kept her confined for sixteen years.
-
-It was during the reign of Henry II. that the famous archbishop, Thomas
-à Becket, was murdered, under the following circumstances: Thomas
-à Becket had been one of Henry’s most devoted friends and intimate
-counsellors, and Henry had raised him to the office of Chancellor.
-Afterwards Henry made Thomas à Becket bishop of Canterbury, but from
-that time serious differences arose between them. The king made many
-laws, one being, that if a priest or monk was thought to have committed
-any crime, he should be tried by civil judges, like other men; whereas
-Becket, in the name of the church, maintained that the clergy should
-be tried only by the bishops. This quarrel was so serious that Becket
-was forced to leave England and take refuge with the king of France.
-After six years, a half reconciliation took place, and the archbishop
-of Canterbury returned to England. Thomas à Becket soon again incurred
-the king’s displeasure, and Henry exclaimed in anger, “Will no one rid
-me of this turbulent priest?” Whereupon four of his knights who had
-heard this remark, and thought that they would gain power over the king
-by carrying out this wish, immediately went to Canterbury, and finding
-the archbishop in the cathedral by the altar, they slew him. At first
-Henry was secretly glad, but the people and priests considered Thomas
-a martyr, and raised such an outcry of indignation, that three years
-after, King Henry went to the cathedral of Canterbury, and in order to
-show his penitence, he entered barefoot, and kneeling by the tomb of
-Thomas à Becket, he commanded every priest to strike him with a knotted
-rope upon his bare back. This he endured as an act of penance for
-causing the death of the archbishop.
-
-The first important event of Richard’s childhood was his betrothment.
-When he was about four years of age he was formally affianced to
-Alice, the child of Louis, king of France. Alice was three years of
-age. Another of King Louis’ children had been married in the same way
-to Richard’s eldest brother Henry, and the English king complained
-that the dowry of the young French princess was not sufficient, and
-this quarrel was settled by an agreement that King Louis should give
-his other daughter Alice to Richard, and with her another province.
-These infant marriages, or betrothments, were made by kings in order
-to get possession of rich territories, for the father of the husbands
-became the guardians of the provinces, and received any sum of money
-agreed upon, which they usually appropriated to their own use. This
-betrothment of Richard became the cause of future differences between
-himself and Philip, the brother of Alice, when Richard had become king
-of England, and Philip king of France. At length, in the midst of one
-of the frequent wars between the king of England and his sons, his
-eldest son Henry was taken very sick, and being at the point of death,
-he sent to his father to obtain his forgiveness, and to beg that he
-would come to see him. The king, fearing it was only some stratagem to
-get him into the power of the rebellious young prince, who had often
-broken his word, did not dare to go, but sent an archbishop to Prince
-Henry, with a ring as a token of his forgiveness. The poor prince
-who was really dying, and very penitent for his unfilial conduct,
-pressed the ring to his dying lips with frantic tears of remorse, and
-commanded his attendants to lay him upon a bed of ashes, which he had
-ordered prepared, that he might die there as a sign of his sincere
-repentance. When King Henry heard of the sad death of his eldest son,
-he was moved to tears, and releasing his wife Queen Eleanor from her
-imprisonment, he became reconciled to her for a time. But soon again
-the family dissensions arose. Prince Geoffrey, the second son of King
-Henry, was killed in a tournament, and Richard, who had now reached
-manhood, demanded that his father should give him the Princess Alice in
-marriage, and with her the lands and money intrusted to his care by the
-king of France. This King Henry refused to do. Some said, because he
-wished to keep the rich lands himself; others said, because he himself
-loved the Princess Alice, and that he was determined to seek a divorce
-from Queen Eleanor, so that he might marry the young princess. Whatever
-was his motive, King Henry refused to have Richard’s marriage with
-Alice consummated, and kept the princess shut up in a castle. Whereupon
-Richard rebelled against his father, and persuaded his younger brother
-John to espouse his cause. Of course Eleanor took sides with her sons,
-so she was again shut up in a castle by King Henry, and Richard and
-John set off for Paris and gained the support of Philip II., of France,
-who was now king, as Louis was dead. King Henry had determined to
-divide his kingdom, and as John was his favorite as well as youngest,
-he resolved to have him crowned king of England, leaving his French
-possessions to Richard. Whereupon Richard carried off his young
-brother, and with the help of Philip, raised an army to fight against
-his father. In this war King Henry, who was now old and broken-spirited
-by his many sorrows, was so far defeated that he was obliged to submit
-to negotiations for peace. While the terms were being arranged, King
-Henry fell very ill, and when the articles of treaty were brought to
-his bedside, he found that the name of his youngest son John, his
-darling, who had never rebelled against him before, now headed the
-list of the princes, barons, and nobles who had gone over to Richard’s
-side. This quite broke his heart, and he exclaimed with tears, “Is it
-possible that John, the child of my heart, he whom I have cherished
-more than all the rest, and for love of whom I have drawn down on my
-own head all these troubles, has verily betrayed me? Then,” said he,
-falling back helplessly upon the bed, “let everything go on as it will,
-I care no longer for myself, nor for anything else in the world.” The
-king grew more and more excited, until at last he died in a raving
-delirium, cursing his rebellious children with his last breath. Thus
-Richard I. became king of England when he was about thirty-two years of
-age. The sad death of his father occasioned some remorse in the heart
-of Richard, and he joined in the funeral solemnities. King Henry had
-died in Normandy, and was buried in an abbey there.
-
-[Illustration: RICHARD I]
-
-King Richard now sent at once to England, and ordered the release of
-his mother Queen Eleanor, and invested her with power to act as regent
-there, while he himself remained in Normandy to secure his French
-possessions. Queen Eleanor was regent in England for two months, and
-employed her power in a very beneficent manner. Her imprisonment and
-sorrows had no doubt disposed her to kindness towards others, and
-remorse for her past evil deeds prompted her to many acts of mercy.
-
-King Richard now arranged with King Philip of France, to go upon a
-crusade. Richard was brave, though he was not a good man. His greatest
-delight was in fighting, and as his claims to his own kingdom were now
-undisputed, he was eager to enter into a campaign in the Holy Land.
-His brother Prince John was very willing that Richard should go, and
-made no claims to any of the provinces of his father, for he hoped that
-Richard would be killed in the Holy War, and thus the rich kingdoms of
-England and Normandy would fall to him. Though Richard was brave, he
-was neither wise nor provident in the administration of his government.
-His one absorbing idea was how to gain fresh glory as a valiant knight
-in the war with the Saracens, and he levied heavy taxes upon all his
-dominions to raise the necessary funds required for the equipment of
-his army.
-
-These Holy Wars were very costly expeditions. The princes, barons, and
-knights required very expensive armor, and rich trappings for their
-horses, and ships were to be bought and equipped, arms and ammunition
-provided, and large supplies of food purchased. Though the pretense
-was religious zeal in going out to fight for the recovery of the Holy
-Sepulchre, the real motive which animated most of the participants in
-the several crusades, was love of glory and display.
-
-Upon King Richard’s arrival in England, he proceeded at once to
-Winchester, where his father had kept his treasures. Richard found here
-a large sum of money, rich plate, and precious gems of great value.
-These he placed under the care of trusty officers.
-
-The former adherents of Richard, when he was a prince rebelling against
-the lawful king his father, now supposed that they would be held
-by him in high esteem. But in this they were greatly disappointed.
-King Richard was wise enough to know that those who had aided his
-rebellions, might likewise aid others against his own supremacy. So he
-retained his father’s officers and experienced men of state.
-
-The day upon which the coronation of Richard I. was celebrated by a
-very magnificent ceremony in Westminster Abbey, has become historical
-not only on that account, but in consequence of a great massacre of
-the Jews, which resulted from a riot that broke out in Westminster
-and London immediately after the crowning of the king. The Jews had
-been persecuted by all the Christian nations of Europe, and the people
-imagined that they were serving the cause of religion in oppressing
-them, as they were considered little better than infidels and heathen.
-As Philip had banished the Jews from France, and confiscated their
-property, the Jews in England determined to send a delegation to
-conciliate Richard’s favor, and they accordingly came to Westminster
-at the time of his coronation, bearing rich presents. As Richard had
-commanded that no Jew or woman should be present at this ceremony, when
-the Jewish deputation came in and offered their presents amongst the
-rest, there was loud murmuring throughout the crowd.
-
-King Richard gladly accepted their rich gifts, but as a Jew was
-attempting to enter at the gate, a bystander cried out, “Here comes a
-Jew!” and struck him a blow. Others now assailed him, and as he was
-escaping, bruised and bleeding, the cry was raised that the Jews were
-expelled by the king’s orders, and as a riot was now raised in the
-streets, which became a bloody fight between Jews and Christians, the
-rumor went forth that the king had ordered all the Jews to be killed.
-The mob instantly attempted to carry out this supposed order, and Jews
-were murdered everywhere, in the streets, in their homes; and when they
-barricaded their dwellings, the mob set fire to them, and men, women,
-and children perished in the flames.
-
-The king and his nobles were meanwhile feasting in the great
-banqueting-hall at Westminster, and for a time took no notice of the
-disturbance. At length officers were sent to suppress the mob, but
-it was too late. The enfuriated people paid no attention to the few
-soldiers sent to quell them, and only rested from their bloody work,
-from sheer exhaustion, about two o’clock the next day.
-
-A few of the men engaged in the riot were afterwards brought to trial
-and punished, but King Richard found that so many of his chief men
-were implicated, that he let the matter drop, only issuing an edict,
-forbidding the Jews to be injured any more.
-
-King Richard now entered upon his preparations for the crusade, with
-intense zeal. His great need was money, and he seemed to think that
-the sacred cause was an excuse for most unkingly measures. Richard was
-endowed with a sort of reckless lion-like courage, which led him to
-look upon fighting as a sport, and as he had no one to fight at home,
-he espoused eagerly any pretense of a sacred cause which would give him
-the pleasure of killing as many men as he pleased, and thereby winning
-not disapprobation from the world, but loud plaudits for bravery, and
-zealous devotion to a holy enterprise. Strange delusion! That men
-should go forth to murder, rob, and devastate the land in the name
-of the meek and lowly Christ. Only ignorance and superstition could
-allow the human soul to be so infatuated with not only false, but most
-atrociously wicked, ideas, which were in entire opposition to the
-teachings of the Divine Leader whom they professed to follow.
-
-In securing money for the crusade, King Richard resorted to many very
-questionable expedients. He proceeded to sell the royal domains which
-he had inherited from his father, and in this manner disposed of
-castles, fortresses, and towns to the highest bidder. When remonstrated
-with for thus diminishing the crown property, he replied, “I would sell
-the city of London itself, if I could find a purchaser rich enough to
-buy it.”
-
-Richard also sold high offices and titles of honor; and the historians
-state that King Richard’s presence-chamber became a regular place of
-trade, where castles, titles, offices, and honors were for sale, to
-whomsoever would give the best bargain. But the most disreputable
-manner of raising money was by imposing fines as a punishment for
-crimes, and then endeavoring to fix crimes upon the wealthy, so that
-they would be obliged to pay large sums to free themselves. Lastly,
-Richard sold the nominal regency of England to two wealthy courtiers,
-one a bishop, the other an earl. Or if he did not sell it to them
-outright, he arranged that they were to receive the power, and were to
-give him a large sum of money. He, however, stipulated that his brother
-John and his mother should have their share of influence in deciding
-upon measures concerning the government.
-
-Notwithstanding Richard’s quarrels with his father, regarding his
-marriage with the Princess Alice when he became king, Richard seemed
-in no hurry to fulfil his engagement, and even determined to set it
-aside altogether, for he had met and loved a Spanish princess named
-Berengaria. But, lest this should cause a fresh quarrel with Philip,
-the brother of Alice, Richard resolved to keep his plans a secret. So
-he sent his mother Queen Eleanor to Spain to secure Berengaria for
-his wife, and Eleanor having been successful in her mission, the two
-ladies, with a train of barons and knights, set out for Italy, where
-Richard intended to meet them.
-
-Meanwhile, the two kings, Philip and Richard, had continued their
-preparations for the crusade. As Philip had no ships of his own, he
-made arrangements with the republic of Genoa to furnish him with ships,
-and so he departed for that place. Richard, having a large fleet, which
-he had sent round to Marseilles with orders to await him there, marched
-his army across France by land. So little reliance did either Philip or
-Richard place in each other, that neither of them would have thought it
-safe to leave his own dominions unless the other had been going also.
-They made a final treaty of alliance before starting, that they would
-defend the life and honor of the other upon all occasions; that neither
-would desert the other in time of danger; and that they would respect
-the dominions of each other.
-
-When King Richard reached Marseilles, he found that his fleet had not
-arrived. It had been delayed by a storm. Richard, not waiting for his
-fleet, hired ten large vessels and twenty galleys, and embarked with a
-portion of his forces, leaving orders for the remainder to follow in
-the fleet, and to meet him at Messina, in Sicily.
-
-Joanna, the sister of King Richard, had married the king of Sicily. He
-was now dead, and the throne had been seized by one Tancred, and Joanna
-had been shut up in a castle. King Richard determined to redress his
-sister’s wrongs, and after arriving at Genoa, where he found Philip,
-Richard set out on his way to Messina, stopping at Ostia, Naples, and
-Salerno, by the way. Having arrived at Messina, where Philip had also
-landed, Richard, having met his own fleet on the Italian side of the
-strait, entered the harbor with his ships and galleys fully manned and
-gayly decorated, while musicians were stationed on the decks, to blow
-trumpets and horns as the fleet sailed along the shore. The Sicilians
-were quite alarmed to behold such a formidable host of foreign
-soldiers, and his allies, the French, did not like this grand display
-any better, for Philip had arrived with disabled ships, and immediately
-began to be very jealous of the growing fame of King Richard. Philip
-determined to leave Messina as speedily as possible, and proceed on his
-way towards the Holy Land, but having attempted it, and encountered
-a severe storm, he was obliged to turn back again. As winter had now
-set in, both kings found that they must remain there until spring.
-As soon as Richard landed his troops at Messina, he formed a great
-encampment on the seashore near the town, and then sent an embassy to
-Tancred, demanding Joanna’s release. Tancred, awed by Richard’s power,
-immediately complied with this demand, and Joanna being safely out of
-the power of her enemy, Richard forthwith attacked the city of Messina,
-and having captured it, Tancred made peace with Richard upon the
-following terms:—
-
-Richard had a nephew about two years of age, named Arthur. Tancred
-had an infant daughter. So it was agreed that Arthur and this young
-daughter of Tancred should be affianced, and that Tancred should pay
-to Richard twenty thousand pieces of gold as her dowry. Richard was to
-receive this money as guardian of his nephew, and also twenty thousand
-pieces of gold besides, in full settlement of all claims of Joanna.
-
-This treaty was drawn up in due form and signed, and sent for safe
-keeping to the Pope at Rome, and Richard having received the money,
-began immediately to lavish it in costly presents to the barons and
-knights in both armies, which gave King Philip cause for suspicions,
-as he thought Richard was endeavoring to buy the allegiance of his
-troops, and soon an open quarrel occurred between the two sovereigns.
-Richard’s use of this trust money demonstrates the small regard he
-had for the just rights and claims of others. But the distrust which
-existed between Richard and Philip was no longer concealed. Tancred
-showed Richard a letter, which was said to have been written by Philip,
-in which Richard was bitterly denounced as a treacherous foe. Richard
-indignantly showed this letter to Philip, who denied having written it,
-and the two kings were soon in a hot dispute. Philip then declared that
-Richard was endeavoring to break his engagement with his sister Alice.
-Whereupon Richard retorted that he would never marry her.
-
-The matter was finally settled by a compromise. Richard promised to pay
-a large sum of money to Philip, who agreed to relinquish all claims
-on the part of Alice. So Philip sailed away in March, and Richard
-selected from his fleet a few of his most splendid galleys, and with a
-chosen company of knights and barons, proceeded to the port in Italy,
-where Berengaria was staying, under the care of Joanna, Queen Eleanor
-having returned to England; and King Richard conducted the ladies to
-Messina. It being the season of Lent, the marriage was still postponed;
-and Joanna and Berengaria were provided with a strong and well-manned
-ship, and sailed with the expedition; it being the purpose of Richard
-to land at some port, after Lent, where the marriage ceremony would
-be performed. King Richard’s fleet consisted of nearly two hundred
-vessels. There were thirteen great ships, and over fifty galleys,
-besides a large number of smaller vessels. Richard sailed at the head
-of his fleet, in a splendid galley, called the _Sea-Cutter_. This fine
-fleet sailed out of the harbor with flying banners, affording the
-Sicilians an imposing spectacle.
-
-But storms overtook this brilliant array of ships, and soon the fleet
-was dispersed. Some of the vessels were driven to Rhodes; others
-took refuge in Cyprus. Richard’s galley went to Rhodes; but the ship
-containing Berengaria and Joanna was swept onward by the gale to the
-mouth of the harbor of Limesol, the principal port of Cyprus. The king
-of Cyprus, in accordance with the custom of those times, had seized
-upon the wrecks of several vessels belonging to Richard’s fleet; and
-the commander of the ship in which the princess and queen had sailed,
-feared to land, lest some harm should come to the royal ladies.
-
-After the storm, Richard set out with his part of the fleet, to find
-the missing vessels; and having arrived before Cyprus, he found the
-galley of Berengaria and Joanna safe, but learned that the king of
-Cyprus had seized upon several of his wrecked vessels, and claimed
-them as his prize. This was a common practice at that time, and the
-king of Cyprus had acted in accordance with a customary law, which,
-though a violation of the real rights of property, gave a person the
-liberty to confiscate wrecked vessels or goods. In later times, this
-law was annulled, but the king of Cyprus had the law upon his side;
-notwithstanding, Richard immediately prepared for war, for he was
-only too glad to find some pretext for attacking and capturing the
-fair isle of Cyprus. Richard’s assault upon Limesol was successful;
-and King Richard, having signaled the galley of Joanna to advance,
-the whole army landed, and the ladies were lodged in one of the most
-magnificent of the palaces of the king of Cyprus. The daughter of the
-king of Cyprus was very beautiful, and was greatly terrified when she
-was brought into the presence of her father’s conqueror. Richard gave
-her as an attendant to Berengaria, and sent the defeated king of Cyprus
-to Tripoli, in Syria, where he was shut up in a dungeon, and secured
-with chains, which, however, in honor of his rank, were made of silver,
-overlaid with gold. But what mattered it to the poor imprisoned monarch
-that his galling chains were of costly metals, when he was shut up in a
-gloomy dungeon, and his daughter a prisoner in the hands of his enemy?
-
-This poor king died in captivity, broken-hearted, four years after.
-Now, at last, the marriage of King Richard and Berengaria was
-celebrated with royal splendor. After the marriage ceremony, there was
-a coronation, when Richard was crowned king of Cyprus, and Berengaria
-as queen of both England and Cyprus.
-
-The appearance of King Richard and Berengaria on this occasion was
-very striking. King Richard wore a rose-colored satin tunic, which was
-fastened by a jeweled belt about his waist. Over this was a mantle of
-striped silver tissue, brocaded with silver half-moons. He wore also
-a costly sword; the blade was of Damascus steel, the hilt of gold,
-and the scabbard was of silver, richly engraved. On his head was a
-scarlet bonnet, brocaded in gold, with figures of animals. He carried
-in his hand a truncheon, which was a sort of sceptre, very elaborately
-adorned. He was tall and well-formed, with yellow curls and a bright
-complexion; and when mounted upon his magnificent charger, he appeared
-a perfect model of military and manly grace. This horse was named
-Faunelle, and became quite a historical character, acquiring great
-fame by his strength and courage, and by the marvellous sagacity he
-displayed in the various battles in which he was engaged with his
-master. His trappings were very rich; the bit, stirrups, and all
-the metallic mountings of the saddle and bridle were of gold, and
-the crupper was adorned with two golden lions. The costume of Queen
-Berengaria was equally magnificent. The veil was fastened to her head
-by a royal diadem, resplendent with gold and gems, and was surmounted
-by a _fleur de lis_, with so much foliage added to it that it had the
-appearance of being a double crown, symbolizing her double queenship,
-both of England and Cyprus.
-
-The chief landing-point for expeditions of crusaders to the Holy Land
-was Acre, called also St. Jean d’Acre. It received its name from
-a military order, known as the Knights of St. John, who founded a
-monastery there for the safety and entertainment of pilgrims. This
-place was at this time in the hands of the Saracens; and Philip, the
-French king, who arrived before Richard, had in vain tried to capture
-it. King Richard, having left Cyprus, together with his bride and
-sister, proceeded on his way to join Philip at Acre; but he met with
-one adventure which is worthy of note. In sailing along, his fleet
-fell in with a ship of large size. Richard ordered his galleys to
-press on, as the ship seemed to be endeavoring to escape. As they
-came nearer, they perceived that the strange ship was filled with
-Saracens. King Richard thereupon ordered his men to board the ship and
-capture it. The Saracens, feeling that escape was hopeless, scuttled
-the ship, determined to sink with her rather than fall into the hands
-of the Christians. Then a dreadful combat ensued. Each side fought
-with ferocious energy; for although the Saracens expected to die, they
-were resolved to first wreak their fury upon their foes. The Saracens
-employed Greek fire, which was a celebrated means of warfare in those
-days. It was some kind of combustible matter, which was set on fire
-and thrown at the enemy. Nothing could extinguish it, and besides the
-great heat it produced, it threw forth dense volumes of poisonous and
-stifling gases, which soon suffocated those near by. It was thrown
-on the ends of darts and arrows, and even water did not extinguish
-it; so that the sea all around this Saracen ship was a mass of lurid
-flames. Although many of Richard’s men were killed, the Saracen ship
-was captured before it had time to sink, and the Christians, rushing
-on board, transferred to their own vessels nearly all of its valuable
-cargo. But their treatment of their Saracen foes was barbarous in the
-extreme. They killed and threw into the sea all but about thirty-five
-men out of twelve or fifteen hundred. These were saved, not from
-humanity, but in the hope of securing large sums for their ransom. King
-Richard afterwards defended this brutal conduct by declaring that they
-had found on board the Saracen ship large jars filled with poisonous
-snakes, which the infidels were about taking to Acre, to let them loose
-near the crusaders’ camp.
-
-When Richard’s fleet arrived at Acre, the crusaders encamped there were
-much encouraged; for their situation was getting very critical, and
-they had accomplished little or nothing.
-
-The crusaders were not as well disciplined as the Saracen army, which
-was united under the command of the valiant and powerful Saladin.
-Among the Christians there were constant quarrels, caused by the
-petty jealousies and hostilities of the knights and barons. There
-was one great wrangling over the title of King of Jerusalem, which,
-although it was an empty title (for the city was still in the hands
-of the Saracens), there were many claimants for; and each one of them
-intrigued incessantly to gain partisans to his side. A short time
-after Richard landed with his bride and army at Acre, fresh quarrels
-arose between the two kings; and so serious was the difference, that
-when Philip planned an assault, Richard would not assist him; and when
-Richard, likewise, made an attack, Philip refused to aid. So that
-neither assault was successful against their common foe, while large
-numbers of their own men were killed.
-
-[Illustration: RICHARD TEARING DOWN THE AUSTRIAN BANNER.]
-
-Although the allies failed to capture Acre by assault, the town was
-at length obliged to surrender to the Christians on account of the
-famine, which caused such distress that the Saracens entered into
-negotiations for surrender, which were as follows: “The city was to
-be surrendered to the allied armies, and all the arms, ammunition,
-military stores, and property of all kinds which it contained, were to
-be forfeited to the conquerors. The troops and the people of the town
-were to be allowed to go free on payment of a ransom. The ransom by
-which the besieged purchased their lives and liberty was to be made
-up as follows: The wood of the cross on which Christ was crucified,
-which was alleged to be in Saladin’s possession, was to be restored.
-Saladin was to set at liberty the Christian captives which he had
-taken in the course of the war from the various armies of crusaders,
-and which he now held as prisoners. The number of these prisoners was
-about fifteen hundred. Saladin was to pay two hundred thousand pieces
-of gold. Richard was to retain a large body of men—it was said that
-there were five thousand in all—consisting of soldiers of the garrison,
-or inhabitants of the town, as hostages for the fulfilment of these
-conditions. These men were to be kept forty days, or, if at the end of
-that time Saladin had not fulfilled the conditions of the surrender,
-they were all to be put to death.”
-
-Saladin was not within the city, but was encamped with his army upon
-the surrounding mountains; and finding that he could not aid the
-besieged inhabitants, he agreed to these overbearing terms, which King
-Philip had in vain tried to make more honorable. Although the treaty
-had been made in the names of both the kings, Richard entered the city
-as the conqueror, assigning to Philip a secondary place; and having
-taken possession, Richard established himself and Berengaria in the
-principal palace, leaving Philip to secure quarters as best he might.
-Richard also enraged the archduke of Austria, who was also one of
-the crusaders, by pulling down the banner of the duke, which he had
-ventured to place on one of the towers.
-
-Now, again, the disputes regarding the title of the King of Jerusalem
-were renewed. Two knights, Guy of Lusignan and Conrad of Montferrat,
-claimed this title, and Philip and Richard espoused opposite sides,
-Philip agreeing to help Conrad’s claims, and Richard taking part
-with Guy. This occasioned so much hard feeling that Philip, who had
-been sick, announced that he was too ill to remain longer in such an
-unhealthy climate; and leaving ten thousand French troops under the
-command of the duke of Burgundy, King Philip returned to France.
-
-We now come to the barbarous massacre of the five thousand Saracen
-prisoners, by the orders of King Richard, which shocking deed has left
-a dark blot upon the fame of Richard, even though he gloried in the
-act and considered it a proof of his zeal in the cause of Christ. The
-writers of those days praised it, and maintained that, as the Saracens
-were the enemies of God, whoever killed them did God service. How they
-could be so blinded by ignorance and superstition we cannot understand;
-and it appears very amazing that the religion of love which Jesus of
-Nazareth preached, by his words and his example, could have been so
-misunderstood by the perverted minds of men; that such a diabolical
-spirit of ferocious brutality could be esteemed as commendable worship
-of Almighty God.
-
-The time which had been agreed upon for Saladin to comply with the
-stipulations of the surrender of Acre having expired, Richard ordered
-the five thousand prisoners, which he held as hostages, to be brutally
-beheaded; and a false rumor having been raised, that Saladin had put
-to death his Christian prisoners, the soldiers of Richard were easily
-infuriated to be willing to execute this barbarous order. In the
-face of Saladin’s humane treatment of the inhabitants of Jerusalem,
-when he captured that city, Mussulman though he was, this shocking
-barbarity of the crusading army, while calling themselves Christians,
-was an atrocious crime, which no plea of supposed zeal or ignorant
-superstition can excuse.
-
-Saladin and his army were now retreating towards Jerusalem, which city
-was his chief point to defend. Richard, having repaired the walls of
-Acre, and placed a garrison to hold it, proceeded with thirty thousand
-men in pursuit of the Saracens. The recovery of the Holy Sepulchre was
-the great object of the crusaders. All their efforts were considered of
-no avail, if they failed to accomplish this important end. Richard’s
-army were to follow the sea-shore to Jaffa, which was a port nearly
-opposite Jerusalem. This band of crusaders presented a brilliant
-appearance. The knights wore costly armor, and were mounted on horses
-richly caparisoned. Some of the horses were protected like their
-riders, with armor of steel. The columns were preceded by trumpeters
-and bearers of flags and banners, with very gorgeous decorations. When
-the expedition halted at night, heralds passed through the several
-camps, to the sound of trumpets, and at a signal all the soldiers
-knelt, and the heralds exclaimed, “God save the Holy Sepulchre!” and
-all the soldiers shouted, “Amen.”
-
-Thus the Christian army advanced to Jaffa. The two armies, Christian
-and Saracen, then met on a plain near the seashore, called Azotus.
-Saladin commenced the attack upon the wing of Richard’s army, composed
-of the French troops under the command of the duke of Burgundy. They
-resisted and drove the Saracens back. Then Richard gave the signal for
-a charge, and rode forward at the head of his troops, mounted on his
-famous charger, and flourishing his heavy battle-axe. This axe was a
-ponderous weapon. Richard had ordered it made before leaving England,
-and it was so immense that few men could lift it. But as Richard Cœur
-de Lion was a man of marvellous strength, he wielded this huge weapon
-with prodigious force. When it came down upon the head of a steel-clad
-knight, on his horse, it often crushed both man and steed to the
-ground. The darts and javelins of the Mohammedans glanced off from King
-Richard’s steel armor, without inflicting any wound, while Saracen
-after Saracen was felled to the earth by the blows from his ponderous
-battle-axe.
-
-It was not long before Saladin’s army was flying in all directions,
-pursued by the crusaders. After this battle Richard established his
-army in Jaffa. In the meantime Saladin was collecting forces for a
-more vigorous resistance. Historians have condemned this inactivity
-of Richard’s army for so many weeks at Jaffa, thus enabling Saladin
-to rally his men and become more determined in his defence. During
-the time while Richard’s army was resting and feasting at Jaffa,
-King Richard and Saladin entered upon several negotiations, which
-were carried on through Saphadin, the brother of Saladin, who was
-provided with a safe conduct through the enemies’ lines. One of these
-propositions was that Richard and Saladin should cease hostilities
-and become allies, and that their difficulties should be settled by a
-marriage between Joanna, Richard’s sister, the ex-queen of Sicily, and
-Saphadin, the brother of Saladin. But this, and all other propositions,
-at length came to naught, and in November, Richard advanced with his
-army as far as Bethany, with a forlorn hope that they might find
-themselves strong enough to attack Jerusalem. But this hope was vain.
-Richard’s men were dying from sickness and famine, caused by a large
-amount of their provisions being spoiled by the fall rains which had
-now set in, and many of the discouraged soldiers deserted. These losses
-so thinned King Richard’s ranks, that he was obliged to retreat to
-Acre. While they were at Bethany, a band of crusaders had ascended a
-mountain overlooking Jerusalem. King Richard was asked to come and see
-the holy city in the distance. “No,” said he, covering his face with
-his cloak, “those who are not worthy of conquering Jerusalem should not
-look upon it.”
-
-While at Acre, Richard learned that Saladin was besieging Jaffa. The
-historian Guizot thus describes the rescue of Jaffa from the Saracens:—
-
-“When King Richard arrived at Jaffa, the crescent already shone upon
-the walls; but a priest who had cast himself into the water in front
-of the royal vessel told Richard that he could yet save the garrison,
-although the town was already in the hands of the enemy. The ship had
-not yet reached the landing-stage, and already the king was in the
-water, which reached to his shoulders, and was uttering the war-cry
-‘St. George!’ The infidels, who were then plundering the city, took
-fright, and three thousand men fled, pursued by four or five knights of
-the cross. The little corps of Christians intrenched themselves behind
-planks of wood, and tuns; ten tents held the whole of the army. Day had
-scarcely dawned, when a soldier flew to Richard’s bedside. ‘O king, we
-are dead men!’ he cried; ‘the enemy is upon us.’ The king sprang up
-from his bed, scarcely allowing himself time to buckle on his armor,
-and omitting his helmet and shield. ‘Silence!’ he said to the bearer
-of the bad news, ‘or I will kill you.’ Seventeen knights had gathered
-round Cœur de Lion, kneeling on the ground, and holding their lances;
-in their midst were some archers, accompanied by attendants who were
-recharging their arquebuses. The king was standing in the midst. The
-Saracens endeavored in vain to overawe this heroic little band; not
-one of them stirred. At length, under a shower of arrows, the knights
-sprang on their horses, and swept the plain before them. They entered
-Jaffa towards evening, and drove the Mussulmans from it. From the time
-of daybreak Richard had not ceased for a moment to deal out his blows,
-and the skin of his hand adhered to the handle of his battle-axe.”
-
-Still more graphically do the old chronicles thus describe this battle:—
-
-“Where the fight was fiercest there rode King Richard, and the Turks
-fell beneath his flashing sword. Then the galley-men, fearing for their
-lives, left the battle and took refuge in their boats, and the Turks
-thought to seize the town while the army was fighting in the field. But
-the king, taking with him but two knights and two crossbowmen, entered
-the town and dispersed the Turks who had entered, and set sentinels to
-guard it, and then, hasting to the galleys, gathered together the men,
-and encouraging them with his words, brought them back to the fight.
-And as he led them to the field, he fell upon the enemy so fiercely,
-that he cut his way all alone into the midst of the ranks, and they
-gave way before him. But they closed around him, and he was left alone,
-and at that sight our men feared greatly. But alone in the midst of his
-enemies he remained unmoved, and all as they approached him were cut
-down like corn before the sickle. And there rode against him a great
-admiral, distinguished above all the rest by his rich caparisons, and
-with bold arrogance assayed to attack him, but the king with one blow
-of his sword cut off his head and shoulder and right arm. Then the
-Turks fled in terror at the sight, and the king returned to his men,
-and lo! the king was stuck all over with javelins, like the spines of a
-hedgehog, and the trappings of his horse with arrows. The battle lasted
-that day from the rising to the setting sun, but the Turks returned to
-Saladin, and he mocked his men, and asked them where was Malek-Rik,
-whom they had promised to bring him. But one of them answered, ‘There
-is no knight on earth like Malek-Rik; nay, nor ever was from the
-beginning of the world.’”
-
-King Richard’s forces were now so weakened, that he found it would
-be hopeless to endeavor to take Jerusalem. The Archduke Leopold, of
-Austria, had left the army with his men and gone home. This was caused
-by a quarrel between himself and King Richard. Saladin having left
-Ascalon, Richard hastened to repair its fortifications. In order to
-encourage his soldiers, he himself carried stones to the workers,
-urging the archduke to do the same. “I am not the son of a mason,”
-replied the Austrian, haughtily. Whereupon, Richard, in anger, struck
-him a blow in the face, which indignity so enraged the archduke, that
-he immediately took his forces and returned to Austria.
-
-Another event occurred at this time, the blame of which some historians
-lay upon King Richard. Conrad of Montferrat, one of the claimants to
-the title of King of Jerusalem, was murdered by two emissaries, sent
-by the “Old Man of the Mountain,” who was a famous chieftain, living
-with his band of bold robbers among the mountains. The men under this
-chieftain were trained to obey without any dissent the commands given
-by their leader. A story was spread abroad that these men were hired by
-King Richard to kill Conrad. The friends of Richard declared, however,
-that it was caused by a quarrel between Conrad and the Old Man of the
-Mountain.
-
-Two incidents are related of Saladin’s generosity towards Richard,
-his foe. At one time King Richard was very sick with fever, and
-Saladin supplied him with cooling drinks and fresh fruits, thus kindly
-ministering to the comfort of his sick enemy. At another time, during
-a battle with the Saracens, Saladin beheld King Richard standing on a
-little knoll, surrounded by his knights. “Why is he on foot?” asked
-Saladin, for Richard’s famous charter had been killed that day in the
-battle. “The king of England should not fight on foot, like a common
-soldier,” exclaimed Saladin, and forthwith he sent Richard a splendid
-horse as a present. When the steed was brought to the king, one of his
-knights mounted him to try his speed. Whereupon, the intelligent animal
-immediately turned and ran with his rider to the camp of the Saracens.
-Saladin was so chagrined at this unlooked-for occurrence, and fearing
-lest Richard should imagine his kindly present had only been sent as a
-treacherous stratagem, immediately placed the Christian knight upon a
-more gentle horse, and sent with him a still handsomer charger, as a
-present to the English king, which Richard gladly received.
-
-[Illustration: “MOST HOLY LAND, FAREWELL!”]
-
-Disquieting news now reached King Richard from England. His brother
-John, aided by Philip of France, had deposed the chancellor, and
-caused himself to be made governor-general of the kingdom. Under these
-circumstances, and the hopelessness of capturing Jerusalem, King
-Richard concluded a truce with Saladin, giving up Ascalon to him, but
-keeping Jaffa, Tyre, and the fortresses along the coast, and promising
-to refrain from any hostilities during a period of three years, three
-months, three weeks, three days, and three hours. “Then I will come
-back,” said Richard, “with double the men that I now possess, and will
-reconquer Jerusalem.” Saladin answered: “that if the Holy City was
-to fall into the hands of the Christians, no one was more worthy of
-conquering it than Malek-Rik.”
-
-On the 9th of October, 1192, Richard Cœur de Lion left Palestine to
-return to his own kingdom. The queens embarked first in their vessel,
-followed soon after by Richard in his war-ship. As the shore of the
-Holy Land was receding from view, Richard gazed upon it from the deck
-of his galley; and stretching out his arms towards it, exclaimed,—
-
-“Most holy land, farewell! I commend thee to God’s keeping and care.
-May He give me life and health to return and rescue thee from the hands
-of the infidels.”
-
-A storm soon arose, and the vessels of King Richard’s fleet were
-separated. The queens arrived safely in Sicily, but King Richard was
-driven to the Island of Corfu. Here he hired three small vessels to
-take him to the head of the Adriatic Sea, and then he endeavored to
-cross through Germany by land. He assumed the garb of a merchant, lest
-his many enemies should discover him. Thus he travelled through the
-mountains of the Tyrol. But having sent a ring with a messenger to the
-governor of Goritz, seeking a passport, the governor exclaimed, “This
-ring belongs to no merchant, but only to the king of England.”
-
-Thus was King Richard discovered; and he was seized by his old enemy,
-Duke Leopold of Austria, and put into prison. Which event, coming
-to the knowledge of the emperor of Germany, he himself claimed the
-illustrious captive, saying, “A duke cannot possibly keep a king.”
-
-So King Richard was shut up in the castle of Trifels by the emperor,
-where he languished for two years. Meanwhile neither his wife nor
-mother could obtain any trace of him; and even after his brother
-John learned that Richard was imprisoned by the emperor of Germany,
-he joined King Philip of France in making propositions to the German
-emperor, promising to pay him large sums of money if he would keep the
-king of England in prison. The place of King Richard’s imprisonment
-was said to have been discovered by a celebrated troubadour named
-Blondel, who had known Richard in Palestine, and was now travelling
-through Germany. As he went along in front of the castle where Richard
-was confined, he was singing one of the troubadour songs. When he had
-finished one stanza, King Richard, who knew the song, sang the next
-verse through the bars of his prison window. Blondel recognized the
-voice, and perceiving that Richard was a prisoner, he made all speed to
-go to England and inform King Richard’s friends of his sad situation.
-It is said that the first news Berengaria received of Richard’s fate
-was by seeing a jewelled belt offered for sale in Rome. This belt
-she recognized as one which King Richard wore when he left Acre.
-But upon inquiry, she could only learn that Richard was somewhere
-in Germany. The news that King Richard Cœur de Lion was a prisoner
-in Germany roused great excitement in England and in Rome. The Pope
-excommunicated Duke Leopold for having seized Richard, and threatened
-to excommunicate the emperor if he did not release him. Finally the
-emperor agreed to set the king of England free upon the payment of a
-certain sum of money, two-thirds of which were to be received before
-the king should be released. At length, in February, 1194, about two
-years after Richard was first imprisoned, the first payment was made,
-and King Richard Cœur de Lion was allowed to go free; and he arrived in
-England in March, when the people gave him a magnificent reception. As
-soon as Richard had arranged his affairs, he determined to be crowned
-a second time as king of England, lest the two years of his captivity
-might have weakened his claims. He was accordingly recrowned with the
-greatest pomp and splendor. At the request of his mother he pardoned
-his brother John, saying, “I hope that I shall as easily forget the
-injuries he has done me as he will forget my forbearance in pardoning
-him.” But Richard treated Berengaria with great unkindness and open
-neglect, until he was suddenly seized with a severe illness, which so
-alarmed him that he called for a great number of monks and priests, and
-began to confess his sins, vowing, if God would spare his life, he
-would abandon his profligate and wicked habits, and treat his wife with
-kindness. He recovered, and he so far kept his vows as to send for his
-wife, and become, outwardly at least, reconciled to her. But the fault
-was all on his side; for poor Berengaria had given him no cause for his
-cruel treatment of her. The reign of Richard Cœur de Lion was soon to
-end, however, and the cause was one which shed neither glory nor honor
-upon his fame. A rich treasure had been found by one of his vassals,
-the viscount of Limoges. Richard at once claimed it, and the viscount
-sent him half. But Richard determined to secure the whole of it, and
-accordingly went to the castle of Chaluz, where the treasure was, and
-laid siege to the place. It was well defended, but provisions becoming
-short, the garrison wished to capitulate. “No,” said Richard, “I will
-take your place by storm, and cause you all to be hanged on the walls.”
-
-[Illustration: JOHN]
-
-While King Richard was examining the point of attack, a young archer,
-named Bertrand de Gourdon, shot an arrow at the king, and wounded him
-upon the shoulder. The town was taken and all the garrison were hung.
-King Richard’s wound, through the unskilful handling of the surgeons,
-proved to be fatal. As he was dying he sent for Gourdon. “Wretch!” said
-Richard to the archer, “what had I done to you that you should have
-attempted my life?”
-
-“You have put my father and two brothers to death,” said Bertrand, “and
-you wanted to hang me.”
-
-The dying king, at last struck with remorse for his many cruel deeds,
-said, “I forgive you,” and he ordered the chains of the archer to be
-removed, and that he should receive one hundred shillings. This humane
-command, however, was not obeyed, and Bertrand was flayed alive.
-Richard Cœur de Lion died on the 6th of April, 1199, at the age of
-forty-two, and was buried, according to his request, at the foot of
-the grave of Henry II., his father, in Fontevraud Abbey. The figures
-in stone of the father, mother, and son, who quarrelled so much while
-living, all lie now on one monument. Richard Cœur de Lion was well
-called the Lion-Hearted. His glory consisted in his reckless and brutal
-ferocity. He pretended to be the champion and defender of the cause of
-Christ, but he used the sacred name of Christianity only as a means of
-gratifying his own wild ambitions and his inhuman thirst for blood.
-Though he won the fame of a brave and valorous knight, his savage
-barbarity and reckless cruelties tarnished all the brightness of his
-glory, and brought disgrace and dishonor upon the sacred cause of true
-religion, of which he pretended to be the most zealous upholder.
-
-
-
-
-ROBERT BRUCE.
-
-1274-1329 A.D.
-
- “Scots, wha hae wi’ Wallace bled,
- Scots, whom Bruce has aften led,
- Welcome to your gory bed,
- On to victorie!”—BURNS.
-
-
-“BRUCE to the rescue! Bruce to the rescue!” was the war-cry of the
-valiant little band of Scottish chiefs who gathered under the banner of
-Robert Bruce, who was the seventh lord of Annandale, and also earl of
-Garrick.
-
-The heroic William Wallace had already endeavored to free his country
-from the yoke of bondage in which they were held by the English king,
-Edward I.
-
-Alexander III., the ninety-fifth king of Scotland, had died in 1286,
-leaving his grand-daughter Margaret, the Fair Maid of Norway, heir to
-the Scottish throne. This child-princess was betrothed to the son of
-the English king; but when quite young, as she sailed from her father’s
-castle in Norway to her future home in Scotland, she died on the voyage
-thither. Thus the crown of Scotland became the cause of dispute amongst
-thirteen noblemen, descendants of members of the royal family, who set
-up claims to the vacant throne.
-
-There were but two claimants whose pretensions were based upon
-sufficient grounds to insure any prospect of success. These were John
-Baliol and Robert Bruce, grandson and son of the two elder daughters
-of David, earl of Huntingdon, who was the younger brother of King
-William, the Lion, who was the ninety-third king of Scotland. This
-Robert Bruce was the grandfather of the hero who is the subject of this
-sketch.
-
-[Illustration: WARREN, EARL OF SURREY, GOVERNOR OF SCOTLAND UNDER
-EDWARD I.]
-
-King Edward of England, having been requested by the Scots to act as
-arbitrator amongst all these claimants, decided to give the preference
-to John Baliol, who was crowned king in November, 1292, having sworn
-fealty to Edward, king of England. Thus did the wily English sovereign
-place upon the Scottish throne a king weak enough to be used as his
-tool. And poor John Baliol soon found, to his sorrow, that he was a
-king only in name; but in reality a slave in the hands of his ambitious
-and powerful neighbor.
-
-Edward, having placed the feeble Baliol upon the throne of Scotland,
-spared him no humiliation. Every time any Scottish petitioner appealed
-to Edward, Baliol’s liege lord, regarding any decision of the king of
-Scotland which had failed to satisfy his subject, Edward would summon
-Baliol to appear at his court, to render an account of his judgment.
-This occurred four times the first year of his reign. At length Baliol
-refused to comply longer with these demands of Edward, whereupon the
-English king advanced with an army against the Scots. After a fearful
-massacre at Berwick, and the capture of several castles by the English,
-Baliol begged for peace, and was sent to the Tower in honorable
-captivity. He subsequently ended his life in his domains in Normandy.
-Robert Bruce at once claimed the crown. But Edward exclaimed, angrily,
-“Do you think that I have nothing else to do but to conquer kingdoms
-for you?”
-
-Scotland was now treated as a conquered country; and Warrene, earl of
-Surrey, was appointed governor, Hugh de Cressingham, treasurer, and
-William Ormesby, chief justicier.
-
-Robert Bruce the grandfather, and also Robert Bruce the father of
-our hero, considered it the better part of discretion to resign all
-pretensions to the throne of Scotland. They therefore swore fealty to
-King Edward.
-
-Robert de Bruce, the sixth lord of Annandale, had accompanied Edward,
-when prince of England, and Louis I. of France, to the Holy Land, where
-he acquired great renown. A romantic story is told of his courtship and
-marriage.
-
-One day this knight of the crusades was riding through the domains of
-Turnberry. As he was proceeding leisurely along through the majestic
-forests, charmed with the beauty of the sylvan scenery, watching the
-glinting sunbeams dance athwart the leaves, and play hide-and-seek
-with the shadows, in the cosey nooks where moss-banks nestled, he was
-startled by the sound of a hunting-horn; and shortly a gay cavalcade of
-lords and ladies dashed through the forest on their way to the castle
-near by. One of the ladies, Margaret, countess of Garrick, the owner of
-this castle, and hostess of this splendid retinue, being captivated by
-the lordly bearing of the handsome, unknown knight, with the freedom
-and natural courtesy of one who felt her independence upon her own
-domain, reined in her high-bred steed, whose wild spirits were curbed
-by slightest touch of her fair fingers, and, bowing to the knight
-with queenly dignity, she invited him to join her visitors, and share
-her hospitality. Robert de Bruce, knowing the high position of this
-gracious lady, and fearing to accept too eagerly such an unexpected
-honor, courteously declined the kind invitation, which he supposed had
-been offered only out of a courtly hospitality, as he had been found a
-stranger within her own domains. But the beautiful countess, moved by
-some strange attraction, which she did not stop to analyze, gaily laid
-hold of the reins of his steed, and laughingly replied:—
-
-“Ah, noble knight! no trespasser on my grounds ever escapes
-imprisonment in my castle;” and thereupon she led him away, like a
-captive knight, to her castle of Turnberry.
-
-For fifteen days he was the honored guest amidst all the festivities at
-the castle, and the first in the chase, by the side of the bewitching
-countess; and, having obtained her heart, as well as her hand, they
-were married, without the consent of the king, whose ward she was, or
-the knowledge of her relatives; in consequence of which the estates and
-castle of the young countess were seized by the sovereign, and were
-only saved to her by the payment of a large fine to the crown.
-
-The eldest son of this brave knight and beautiful countess, who had
-risked so much for love, and whose marriage was as romantic as any
-described in Scottish tales of fiction, was Robert the Bruce, our hero,
-who was afterwards King Robert I. of Scotland. He was born on the 21st
-of March, 1274. He spent his early youth at Carrick, where he was
-distinguished for his brave spirit and persevering energy.
-
-The grandfather of Robert the Bruce, Robert, lord of Annandale,
-refusing to take the oath of homage to his rival, John Baliol, when
-King Edward of England decided in his favor, gave up his Scottish
-domains in Annandale to his son, the earl of Carrick, lest he should
-hold them as Edward’s minion. This proceeding was also followed by
-the earl in 1293, in behalf of his son, Robert the Bruce, who was
-then serving the king of England. Notwithstanding the sympathy of
-young Bruce with the cause of Scotland, and his resolve to assert his
-claims to the Scottish crown, he had, during the greater part of the
-reign of his weak rival, adhered to the fortunes of Edward, deeming
-it better policy to yield himself to the uncontrollable necessity of
-circumstances, rather than risk his cause by undue haste. Sometimes
-he appeared to assert his own pretensions to the crown, and the
-independence of his country; and then, again, he yielded submission
-to the superior power of the English king, whose good-will he wished
-to keep until a favorable opportunity should offer itself of openly
-asserting his rights. Robert might have obtained the crown if he would
-have acknowledged the superior power of England, and submitted himself
-as a vassal to the English king, as Baliol had done. But he would not
-receive it on any other terms than as a free crown, which had been worn
-by his ancestors, and of right belonged to him.
-
-When John Baliol was raised to sovereign power, the family of Bruce,
-although looking upon his elevation with envy, deemed it prudent to
-conceal their dissatisfaction, and the father of young Robert, who
-possessed the earldom of Carrick, in right of the countess his wife,
-resigned to his son these possessions, who was admitted to do homage to
-Baliol, the Scottish king, and thus became earl of Carrick.
-
-When John Baliol had rebelled against Edward, king of England, young
-Bruce deemed it unsafe to rank under the banner of his natural
-sovereign, and therefore joined the side of Edward. Whereupon, the
-Scottish king, John Baliol, confiscated his estate of Annandale, as
-that of a traitor, and gave it to one of his followers, Comyn, earl of
-Buchan. Some of the English peers, suspecting the fidelity of young
-Bruce, who had now retired to the family estate in England, summoned
-him to Carlisle to do homage. He forthwith obeyed, and swore fidelity
-to the cause of Edward, and in order to show his loyalty, he assembled
-some of his followers, and overran the lands of Sir William Douglas, a
-Scottish patriot, and even carried away his wife and children. Stung
-with remorse, however, for this treacherous act, which was really
-extorted from him, young Bruce then joined the Scottish army, which
-Wallace, the brave patriot, together with the bishop of Glasgow, and
-steward of Scotland, had raised. The Scottish leaders were too much
-at variance amongst themselves to make a resolute stand. The English,
-knowing of their dissensions, sent messengers to treat with them.
-With the exception of William Wallace, they sued for peace, and threw
-down their arms without striking a blow. Bruce deemed it prudent to
-submit with his countrymen to the English king, but such had been the
-inconstancy of this nobleman, that the English demanded security for
-his future fidelity. Whereupon the bishop of Glasgow, the lord steward,
-and Alexander de Lindesay, came forward as his securities, until he
-should deliver over his daughter Marjory as an hostage for his loyalty.
-The conduct of young Bruce seems to us vacillating and unpatriotic,
-viewed from the present age; but he must be judged by the spirit of
-those troublesome times, and his after heroic deeds in his country’s
-behalf must soften a stern judgment regarding his changeable and
-uncertain conduct at this time. By the side of the staunch patriotism
-of the brave William Wallace, various acts of Robert Bruce, at this
-period of his life, are thrown into an unfavorable light, but his
-seeming treachery he regarded as actuated by a prudent policy. Whether
-he would have gained the deliverance of his country sooner, or suffered
-irretrievable defeat, had he earlier and more steadfastly espoused the
-patriotic cause, we find ourselves at a loss to determine, after a
-careful study of that conflicting epoch.
-
-[Illustration: BRUCE.
-
-ROBERTUS I. REX SCOTORUM.
-
-ANNO DOM. MCCCVI.]
-
-The history of Robert Bruce would not be complete without a brief
-account of William Wallace, which will help to give a clearer idea of
-the affairs of Scotland at that time.
-
-William Wallace was descended from an ancient family in the west of
-Scotland. Having been provoked and insulted by an English officer,
-Wallace had put him to death, and therefore was obliged to flee for
-safety to the forests. Here he collected a large band of bold men. Some
-of these were outlawed for crimes; others, on account of bad fortune
-or hatred of the English, were willing participants in this daring
-scheme. William Wallace possessed gigantic strength of body as well as
-heroic courage, and so was admirably suited to become a leader in such
-a perilous enterprise.
-
-This little band of Scottish warriors made many successful raids
-upon their English foes, until the fame of their exploits became
-so wide-spread that the English were filled with terror, and their
-enslaved countrymen were inspired with hopes of freedom from the
-galling yoke of oppression which fettered their hitherto independent
-country.
-
-Wallace now determined to strike a decisive blow against the English
-government. Warrene, the governor of Scotland, had retired to England
-on account of his health, so that the administration of Scotland was
-left in the hands of Ormesby, the justiciary, and Cressingham, who
-held the office of treasurer. Wallace formed a plan of attacking
-Ormesby, at Scone; but the justiciary being informed of such
-intentions, fled in terror to England. All the other English officers
-imitated his example. The Scots, encouraged by these events, sprang to
-arms.
-
-Many of the principal barons, including Sir William Douglas, openly
-countenanced the party of Wallace. Meanwhile, Warrene, earl of Surrey,
-collected an army of forty thousand men, in the north of England, and
-invaded Scotland. He suddenly entered Annandale, and came up with
-the enemy at Irvine, before the Scottish forces were prepared for
-battle. Many of the Scottish nobles, alarmed at this unforeseen event,
-submitted to the English, and renewed their oaths of fealty, and gave
-hostages for their fidelity, whereupon they received pardon for their
-rebellion. Others, who had not openly declared themselves, thought best
-to side with the English, and wait a better opportunity for avowing
-themselves as partisans of the Scottish cause. But Wallace persevered
-in his bold enterprise, and marched northwards and established his
-little army at Cambuskenneth. When Warrene advanced to Stirling, he
-found Wallace on the opposite banks of the Forth. Wallace had chosen
-a position near a narrow bridge which spanned the Forth, and as the
-English, with thoughtless precipitation, commenced to cross, Wallace
-attacked them before they were fully formed, and put them to rout,
-gaining a complete victory. Among the slain was Cressingham, who
-was so hated by the Scots that they flayed his dead body, and made
-saddle-girths of his skin. Warrene, finding his remaining forces much
-dismayed by this defeat, returned again to England.
-
-Wallace was now made regent, or guardian of the country, by his
-enthusiastic followers; and his brave band, not content with their past
-exploits, invaded England, and laid waste many counties, returning to
-their native land loaded with spoils, and crowned with glory.
-
-But now factions amongst the Scots themselves caused a disaster
-which deprived them of all they had gained. The Scottish nobles were
-unwilling that Wallace should be placed over them in power; and that
-patriot, to avoid jealousies and dissensions, resigned his authority
-as regent, retaining only his command over that body of warriors who
-refused to follow any other leader than the brave Wallace, under whose
-banner they had so often been led to victory.
-
-The Scottish army was now divided into three bands. The chief power
-devolved on the steward of Scotland, and Comyn of Badenoch. The third
-band was commanded by the valiant Wallace. Edward, having collected
-the entire military force of England, Wales, and Ireland, marched into
-Scotland with an army of nearly one hundred thousand men.
-
-When the two forces met in battle at Falkirk, the English archers
-chased the Scottish bowmen off the field, then shooting their arrows
-amongst the pikemen, they were thrown into confusion, and the English
-cavalry soon put the Scots to rout, with great slaughter. Some
-historians state that the loss of the Scots, upon this occasion, was
-fifty or sixty thousand men. In this general rout of the Scottish army,
-Wallace’s superior military skill and presence of mind enabled him to
-keep his band together, and retiring to the farther bank of a small
-river called the Carron, he marched along its banks protected from
-the enemy. Bruce, who was serving in the English army, recognized
-the valiant Scottish chief, and calling out to him, desired a
-conference. This being granted, he endeavored to convince Wallace of
-the helplessness of his rash enterprise, and advised him to submit. But
-the intrepid Wallace replied, that if he had hitherto acted alone as
-the champion of his country, it was because no other would assume the
-place. He exhorted Bruce to espouse the cause of his enslaved land,
-representing to him the glory of the enterprise, and hope of opposing
-successfully the power of the English. With enthusiasm he declared that
-he would prefer to give his own life, and the existence of the nation,
-when they could only be preserved by receiving the chains of a haughty
-victor.
-
-[Illustration: “BRUCE WAS NOT SLOW IN TAKING THE WARNING.”]
-
-Bruce was greatly moved by these sentiments of brave patriotism, and
-regretting his engagements to Edward, the enemy of his people, resolved
-to embrace the cause of his oppressed country.
-
-We cannot follow the brave and valiant Wallace through his after
-career, and will but note his sad and unworthy fate. He was betrayed
-into Edward’s hands by Sir John Monteith, who had been his friend.
-Edward ordered Wallace to be carried in chains to London, where he
-was tried as a rebel or traitor, though he had never sworn fealty to
-England; and he was executed on Tower Hill. This barbarous cruelty of
-the English king only inflamed the Scots to fresh rebellions; and they
-now again sprang to arms, shouting, “Bruce to the rescue!”
-
-Robert Bruce had long resolved to attempt to free his enslaved
-country. The death of William Wallace, and the memory of his patriotic
-exhortation after the battle of Falkirk, on the banks of the river
-Carron, added fresh impetus to this resolve; and his open avowal could
-be no longer delayed on account of two incidents which happened about
-this time.
-
-Bruce had ventured to disclose this resolve to John Comyn, surnamed the
-Red, a powerful nobleman and warm friend. He found Comyn apparently in
-full accord with his avowed sentiments. But that nobleman afterwards
-treacherously revealed the secret to the English king. Edward did
-not immediately seize and imprison Bruce, because he desired also to
-ensnare his three brothers, who resided in Scotland. But he placed
-spies over Bruce; and a nobleman, Gilbert de Clare, one of the lords in
-Edward’s court, but also a friend of Robert Bruce, having learned of
-the danger which threatened him, and fearing to risk his own position
-by an open warning, sent Bruce a pair of golden spurs and a purse
-of gold by his servant, with this message: “My master sent these to
-thee, and bid me say, that the receiver would have sagacity enough to
-determine quickly to what use they should be put.”
-
-Bruce was not slow in taking the warning. Evidently, some one at court
-had betrayed him! Ah, he had it! surely it could be no other than the
-Red Comyn!
-
-There is a story told, that three days previous to this event, Robert
-Bruce was praying at the altar, in a chapel where afterwards stood St.
-Martin’s church. It was midnight, and Bruce was alone. With tearful
-eyes he exclaimed,—
-
-“Yes, at the foot of this high altar, I’ll swear forthwith to fling the
-yoke from off me, in spite of hostile man and misleading fiend; knowing
-that if I put trust in, and pay obedience to, the King of kings, my
-triumph shall be sure, my victory complete!”
-
-“Amen to that!” whispered a sweet and plaintive voice in the ear of the
-kneeling earl.
-
-Bruce sprang to his feet, exclaiming, “Who art thou?” But he saw
-only a muffled figure glide swiftly behind one of the pillars. Bruce
-pursued; but the same soft voice replied:—
-
-“I am neither foe to Scotland’s cause, nor shall be to him whose it
-is to see her righted, laggard although he be in responding to the
-urgent call. Farewell to the valiant Bruce! We may meet again, yet
-nevermore in this holy place; for even three days must not elapse and
-find him loitering near the stern and subtle Edward, or it will be woe
-to Scotland and to Scotland’s mightiest lord! Let the Bruce find his
-way to the altar, upon which I place a token for his keeping and his
-use—the bugle-horn of the immortal Wallace; with which he summoned to
-his standard his faithful countrymen, and led them to victory, till he
-was overcome by treachery and death. Take this sacred bugle-horn, and
-sound the call for Scotland’s freedom!”
-
-Ere the astonished Bruce could answer, a figure shot past him, and
-was lost in the darkness. The earl, groping his way in the dim light
-to the altar, found there the precious relic promised; and he went
-forth under the starlit midnight sky, vowing to strike a blow for his
-enslaved country. Bruce needed no second warning of his danger, but the
-very night upon which he received the gilt spurs and purse of gold, he
-ordered two of his horses to be shod with reversed shoes, so that their
-course might not be traced, as snow had fallen, and the prints of the
-horses’ feet would therefore be plainly visible. Then Bruce and one
-faithful attendant, named Walter Kennedy, hastily mounted their horses,
-and rode out of London under cover of the darkness of the night.
-
-As they left the great city behind them, Walter Kennedy ventured to
-say,—
-
-“If I may be so bold, good master, where gang we on sic a night? Thou
-bidst me tell our talkative host at the inn, that Garrick’s lord had a
-love adventure on foot. But me thinkst thou art too true a knight for
-that.”
-
-“Well said, my faithful Walter!” replied Bruce. “’Tis in truth a love
-adventure, but concerns no lady fair, for my good wife is fairer to me
-than all other women. But ’tis for love of country we go forth,—to free
-our bonny Scotland. Surely that were love adventure worthy of both a
-valiant knight and loyal husband. Still it is for sake of lovely woman
-also; for my sweet wife and fair daughters are e’en now in Scotland,
-and I fear me that their liberty, if not their lives, will soon be in
-danger, as I am warned that the wily King Edward is my bitter enemy and
-treacherous spy.”
-
-“Ha! ’tis well spoken, good master!” exclaimed Kennedy, with
-enthusiasm, and lifting his Scotch bonnet from his head, he cried
-aloud, “Bruce to the rescue.”
-
-“Hist, man!” said Bruce, laying his hand upon the bridle-rein of his
-faithful and loyal retainer; “knowest thou not that these English
-forests secrete hostile ears, to whom thy wild cry wouldst betray us?
-Not till I have gathered my forces and blown the bugle-horn of the
-valiant Wallace, will it be safe to openly sound that war-cry.”
-
-The snow still fell thickly, and it was difficult to follow the right
-route through the blinding storm; but ere long the moon shone out with
-brightness, and seemed to smile upon their perilous adventure, and
-promise success.
-
-After a few days Bruce arrived at Dumfries, in Annandale, the chief
-seat of his family interests. Here he found a great number of the
-Scottish noblemen assembled, and among the rest the treacherous John
-Comyn. These noblemen were astonished at the appearance of Bruce
-amongst them, and still more when he avowed his determination to live
-or die with them in the defence of the liberty of Scotland. All the
-nobles declared their unanimous resolution to rise to arms in the cause
-of their enslaved country. Comyn alone opposed this measure. Bruce,
-already sure of his treachery, followed Comyn on the dissolution of the
-assembly, and attacked him in the cloisters of the Gray Friars, through
-which he passed, and piercing him with his sword, left him bleeding on
-the ground. As Bruce rushed into the street, pale and agitated, Sir
-Thomas Kirkpatrick, one of his friends, asked him if all was well. “I
-fear I have slain Comyn,” replied Bruce, as he hastily mounted his
-horse.
-
-“Such a matter must not be left to doubt,” exclaimed Kirkpatrick; “I’ll
-mak sicker!”—and dashing into the sanctuary, he ran his dagger into the
-heart of the dying Comyn.
-
-This deed of Bruce and his friend, which would be justly condemned
-in the present age, was at that time regarded as an act of valiant
-patriotism and commendable policy. The family of Kirkpatrick were so
-proud of the deed that they took for the crest of their arms a hand
-with a bloody dagger, and chose for their motto those words, “I’ll mak
-sicker!” meaning, “I will make sure of it.”
-
-Bruce now raised the standard of independence. Some priests and lords
-gathered round him, and boldly crowned him at Scone. On the day of the
-Annunciation, 1306, Scotland received her ninety-seventh king in the
-person of the valiant Robert Bruce; and all Scotland rang with the
-joyful war-cry, “Bruce to the rescue!”
-
-The undertaking of Bruce was one of a gigantic nature. Yet amidst all
-the seemingly insurmountable obstacles which surrounded him from
-English foes and Scottish grandees,—who were many of them in league
-against him, for the faction of Baliol and the powerful family of
-Comyn were his avowed enemies,—and though he was subjected to frequent
-perils, dangerous ambuscades and escapes, and many individual conflicts
-of daring courage, Robert Bruce persisted firmly in his patriotic
-design of restoring his enslaved country to freedom, and giving
-protection to the people who had formerly called his ancestor their
-king.
-
-Edward I. had now become aged and unwieldly, so that he could not
-readily mount on horseback. When he was informed of this daring attempt
-of Bruce to wrest from his power a kingdom which had cost him so much
-to gain and hold, he despatched a messenger to the Pope, praying him
-to issue the thunders of the Vatican against this bold traitor and
-murderer of Comyn, and that he would place under interdict all who
-should endeavor to aid him or draw a sword in defence of liberty. This
-sentence of interdict, which the Pope often issued against sovereigns
-for the most trivial offences, involved a nation in the greatest
-misery. The people were deprived of all the services of the church; no
-sacred rite was performed for them except the baptism of infants, and
-the administration of the communion to the dying.
-
-The churches were deserted, and the altars were stripped of all the
-sacred ornaments. The dead lay uninterred, for the consecrated ground
-was prohibited; and when at last the corpses must be buried, they were
-hurriedly piled up in ditches and covered over, without any church
-service to soothe the surviving mourners or hallow the last rites to
-the dead. The thunders of the Roman pontiff, however, fell powerless
-upon Robert the Bruce, for he had previously secured the alliance
-of the Scottish clergy; and as they wished to remain independent
-of the English bishops, they braved the thunders of the hierarchy,
-and persisted in celebrating divine worship, notwithstanding its
-prohibition by the head of the church.
-
-In spite of old age and sickness, King Edward began to make extensive
-preparations for marching personally against the Scots. Prince Edward,
-his son, was twenty-two years of age, and having not yet been knighted,
-the king conferred this distinction upon him and bestowed upon him
-his spurs. Whereupon the young knight then conferred the same honor
-upon two hundred and seventy young lords who were about to become his
-comrades in arms. All the company then met at a magnificent banquet.
-A golden net was placed upon the table, containing two swans, emblems
-of constancy and fidelity. Then the king, placing his hands upon their
-heads, swore to avenge the death of Comyn and to punish the rebels of
-Scotland, without sleeping for two nights in the same place, and to
-start immediately afterwards for Palestine, in order to rescue the Holy
-Sepulchre. The young men swore the same oath as the king, and then they
-started for the frontiers, the king following more slowly, as he was
-too feeble to travel except upon a litter.
-
-The earl of Pembroke had been sent by King Edward, with a small army,
-into Scotland while the king was preparing his forces. Pembroke met
-the Scots at Methven, where a battle was fought in which the Scots
-were defeated, and many of them killed and taken prisoners; these were
-afterwards put to death with great cruelty by Edward’s orders. Bruce
-retired into the mountains with five hundred men. King Edward had only
-been able to proceed as far as Carlisle; but on his dying bed he was
-cruelly ordering the Scottish prisoners to be beheaded, and still
-directing the operations of his troops. Bruce was living in the forests
-with a few faithful companions. His wife, daughter, and sister shared
-his adventuresome life.
-
-But as winter approached, the ladies were sent to the castle of
-Keldrummie, but they met with a sad fate here. The castle was stormed
-and taken by the English; Nigel Bruce, Robert’s younger brother, was
-cruelly put to death, and the queen of Scotland and her daughter, and
-also the sister of Bruce, were sent to England, where the queen was
-imprisoned, and the daughter and sister of King Robert were shut up in
-wooden cages at Berwick and Roxburgh, and were exposed to the public
-gaze.
-
-Bruce’s little band were attacked by Lord Lorn, the Red Comyn’s nephew,
-and therefore a bitter foe. Finding that his faithful followers were
-falling under the battle-axes of their enemies, King Robert sounded
-a retreat; and with marvellous bravery Robert Bruce, mounted upon
-his war-horse and clad in armor, took his position in the defile and
-defended the approach alone. At length three men, famous for their
-strength, sprang forward together upon the royal champion, who calmly
-held his long sword on guard, and whose bright eyes glittered beneath
-his helmet. One seized the bridle of the horse; but Bruce raised his
-sword, and the arm of the assailant fell helpless, his hand being
-severed. Another fastened himself on the leg of the horseman; but the
-fiery war-horse reared, and again the invincible sword split his head
-open. The third now clutched the king’s cloak; but again the sword
-dealt its fatal blow, and the three assailants soon lay dead, while the
-valiant king escaped without a wound. Robert Bruce was now obliged to
-flee, and he took refuge in the small island of Rachrin. His retreat
-was unknown to his enemies, and a large reward was offered to whoever
-would give news of “Robert Bruce, lost, strayed, or stolen.”
-
-During this time the Scottish king met with many adventures. One day,
-leaving the island of Rachrin, he sailed with his little band in some
-small boats to the isle of Arran. On landing they met a woman, of whom
-the king inquired if there had been any military arrivals.
-
-“Surely, sir,” she replied, “I can tell you of some who lately
-blockaded the English governor’s castle. They maintain themselves in
-the woods near by.”
-
-Robert Bruce, thinking that it was of brave Douglas of whom she spoke,
-blew his horn. It was answered by Sir James Douglas, who recognized
-the bugle of his sovereign, and when he hastily approached the king,
-they kissed for joy at such fortunate meeting. The small bands of King
-Robert and Douglas now crossed in boats to the opposite shore, and
-concealed themselves in a cavern, called the Cave of Colean. Learning
-that a large party of English were settled in the town of Turnberry,
-Bruce made a bold attack upon them, with three hundred men, and put
-two hundred of the English to the sword. The garrison, in the castle
-near by, were afraid to sally forth, as it was a dark night, and Bruce
-carried off the spoil, among which were the war-horses and household
-plate of the governor. Bruce now retired with his brave band to a green
-hill, called afterwards the “Weary Neuk.” Here they rested for three
-days, when they returned to the mountains to wait for reinforcements.
-It was then that King Robert learned of the sad fate of his wife,
-daughter, and sister, and the cruel death of his brother. But he
-humanely spared the life of every captive who fell into his hands,
-and did not yield to the temptation to revenge himself by their death,
-in retaliation for the wrongs he had suffered. In consequence of his
-privations and exposures, he was attacked with a severe sickness,
-and having found relief from a certain medicinal spring, when he had
-afterwards established himself upon his throne, he founded a priory of
-Dominican monks there, and ordered houses to be built around the spring
-for eight lepers, and a certain sum of money and meal was settled upon
-the lands of Fullarton, for their support. In compliment to Sir William
-Wallace, the relatives and descendants of that knight were invested
-with the right of placing the lepers upon this establishment, known
-as the “King’s Ease.” This was secured by charter, and the leper’s
-charter-stone, which was a large stone of elliptical shape, has been
-handed down to modern times.
-
-King Robert had some very narrow escapes from death. It is reported
-that at one time, Sir Ingram Umfraville bribed an inhabitant of
-Carrick, with his two sons, to kill Bruce. These peasants, knowing
-that the king was accustomed at an early hour every morning to retire
-for meditation, accompanied by a single page, who carried his bow
-and arrows, determined to select such time for the attack. As the
-assailants approached, Bruce suspecting their design, took his bow and
-arrows from his attendant, bidding him retire to a place of safety,
-saying, “If I vanquish these traitors, you will have a sufficiency of
-arms, and if I fall, you can flee for you life.”
-
-As the peasants drew near, the king discharged an arrow, which hit the
-father in the eye; upon which, the son, brandishing his battle-axe,
-rushed to the combat, but missing his blow, he stumbled and fell, and
-Robert severed his head in two at one stroke. The third peasant,
-with spear in hand, then rushed upon the king, but Bruce cut off the
-steel-head of the spear, and laid him also dead at his feet. When the
-page approached, he found the king wiping his good sword, while he
-remarked, “These would have been three gallant men had they not fallen
-victims to covetousness.”
-
-At another time, King Robert was surprised by a party of two hundred
-men with bloodhounds. Bruce was accompanied by only two men. The king
-was in a most perilous situation, but he stationed himself in a narrow
-gorge and despatched his companions in haste for succor. But before his
-band of brave Scots arrived, King Robert had slain with his dreadful
-sword, fourteen of his enemies, who were found piled up in the gorge,
-men and horses above each other.
-
-A party of English, under the command of John Lorn, now determined to
-search for the brave Bruce among the mountains of Carrick, where he
-was intrenched; and in order to track the valiant Scottish king, Lorn
-carried with him a sagacious bloodhound which belonged to Bruce. This
-bloodhound proved of great use to Lorn, for it discovered his master by
-its scent, and the English pursued him so closely that Bruce divided
-his men in small bands and dispersed them, that they might thus more
-easily flee. Still being pressed sorely by the relentless foe, Robert
-dismissed all his men, each one to look out for his own safety; and
-attended only by his foster-brother, who would not leave him, the
-brave Scottish king fled, still pursued by five of Lorn’s men, led on
-by the bloodhound who tracked his master with sure scent. Meanwhile
-the dog was outrun by the five powerful mountaineers, and the king and
-his foster-brother at last stood at bay to receive them. Bruce singled
-three of these assailants, leaving his companion to combat with two.
-As the first approached, the king cleft him through the skull with
-one blow of his weapon, and as the other two fell back for a moment,
-stunned by this unexpected disaster, Bruce sprang to the assistance of
-his foster-brother, whom he saw was in danger, and severing the head
-of one of his assailants from his body, he quickly laid his other two
-enemies dead, while the fifth was killed by his companion. When the
-king graciously thanked his faithful foster-brother for his aid, “It’s
-like you to say so,” he replied, “but you yourself slew four of the
-five.”
-
-But now the cry of the hound was heard again, for Lorn and his band
-were on the trail. The king and his companion hastily entered a small
-stream near by, to break the scent of the hound, and as the dog bounded
-up and down the banks, having lost all scent of his master, the
-foster-brother of King Robert shot him dead with an arrow, from their
-retreat in the forest. They then fled in safety from their pursuers,
-who gave up the chase. But King Robert had escaped from the bloodhound
-only to fall into other dangers. Three freebooters, pretending to be
-friends of the Scottish king, joined him and his foster-brother in
-their retreat through the forest. Bruce, suspecting these companions,
-desired them to walk at some distance before.
-
-“We seek the Scottish king,” said the strangers: “you need not mistrust
-us.”
-
-“Neither do I,” replied Robert; “but until we are better acquainted,
-you must walk thus.”
-
-When they came to a ruinous hut, where they rested for the night, the
-king ordered the strangers to remain at the other end of the room. But
-the past fatigues overcoming them, at last Bruce and his foster-brother
-fell asleep. The king was roused from his slumbers by the approach of
-the three villanous freebooters, with arms in their hands, intent on
-his assassination. Robert laid hold of his sword, and stepping heavily
-over his foster-brother, to awaken him, he rushed upon the assassins.
-After a fierce combat, in which his faithful foster-brother was killed,
-Bruce succeeded in overcoming these three villains, and left them dead
-on the spot.
-
-It was during these wanderings that Bruce was one day resting in a
-ruined hut in the forests. He was lying upon a handful of straw,
-and considering whether he should continue this strife to maintain
-his right to the Scottish throne, or if it were best to abandon an
-enterprise attended with such danger, and seeming at times almost
-hopeless, and go to the Holy Land and end his days in the wars with
-the Saracens. While thus musing, his attention was arrested by the
-movements of a spider on the roof of the hut above his head. This
-spider was trying to fix its web on the rafters, and was swinging
-itself from one eave to another. The king was amused with the patience
-and energy displayed by the tiny insect. It had tried six times to
-reach one place, and failed. Suddenly the thought struck the Scottish
-monarch, “I have fought six times against the enemies of my country.”
-He thereupon resolved that he would be guided in his future actions by
-the failure or success of this indefatigable little insect. The next
-effort of the spider was successful, and King Robert then determined
-that he would make the seventh attempt to free his country, feeling
-confident that he should yet achieve the liberty of Scotland. It is
-hence esteemed unlucky for a Bruce to kill a spider. Meantime Edward,
-the brother of Robert Bruce, and Sir James Douglas had made many
-successful raids against the English. They now joined their forces
-with those of King Robert, and they then overran Kyle, Carrick, and
-Cunningham, which places had been in the possession of the English.
-
-In 1307 Pembroke advanced against Bruce with three thousand men. But
-though the Scottish king’s band numbered but six hundred men, they
-charged so valiantly with their long Scottish spears, that Pembroke’s
-forces were completely routed, and he himself was obliged to flee for
-safety to the castle of Ayr. King Edward was so enraged by these events
-that he determined to march himself against this bold foe. But the
-English king had not proceeded three leagues from Carlisle when death
-met him. With his dying breath he ordered his remains to be carried
-with the army, and not to be interred until the enemy was conquered. He
-had previously caused his son to swear in the most solemn manner, that
-when he should die, he would boil his body in a caldron and separate
-the flesh from the bones, and having buried the former, the bones were
-to be carried with the army to inspire his men with hatred against the
-Scots, while his heart was to be taken to the Holy Land. But Edward
-II., instead of obeying his father’s dying commands, interred his
-body in Westminster; and disbanding the army, the troops returned to
-England. The death of Edward I. gave new courage to the Scots. By this
-inglorious retreat of the English king, he lost all the advantages
-which his father had so dearly purchased for him. Edward Bruce, the
-brother of Robert, one of the most chivalrous knights, had conquered
-the English in Galloway, taking, in one year, thirteen castles.
-Meanwhile, Lord Douglas had recovered his ancient estate of Douglas
-from the English and made many conquests.
-
-The north and the south being now reduced to obedience, the united
-troops of Bruce and Douglas proceeded to the west to subdue the proud
-lord of Lorn. By a series of well-contested engagements in which no
-ordinary degree of skill as a general was displayed, and the greatest
-personal courage, Bruce succeeded in wresting his much-injured
-country from the power of the English. Twice had the king of England
-attempted an expedition to reconquer Scotland, but he had returned
-without result. The authority of Bruce was rapidly being established
-throughout his country. The castles of Perth, Dunbar, and Edinburgh
-were in his hands. Many stories are told of his heroic bravery in
-these contests, but we can only stop to note the taking of Perth.
-This was a strongly fortified garrison. The fortress was enclosed by
-a lofty wall and towers, surrounded by a deep moat filled with water,
-which set at defiance the efforts of the Scots for several weeks. At
-last, King Robert made a feint of raising the siege, struck his tents,
-and departed to some distance. But one night, when least expected,
-he approached unperceived to the foot of the rampart, and walking up
-to his throat in the water, he seized a ladder and mounted to the
-wall’s parapet, where he found a Scottish maiden whom the English had
-imprisoned, and who had escaped to the top of the wall, but could get
-no farther, as the frightful moat surrounded her on all sides.
-
-“It is but now to descend by these corded steps,” whispered Bruce to
-the captive maiden, “and I’ll ferry you across this muddy water.”
-But the maiden was as brave as she was fair, and knowing that any
-delay would risk the taking of the fortress by the brave Bruce, she
-heroically answered:—
-
-“Please your Grace, no! Allow me the keeping of your dagger till you
-return with further scaling-gear and your valiant band. Thus armed,
-I’ll know how to defend myself, and I will watch these enemies till you
-return.”
-
-So King Robert, leaving the brave girl as a sentinel upon the parapet,
-quickly waded again through the murky waters of the moat, and having
-regained his band, reported his experience. Immediately fifty of his
-most daring men, selected for their great height, plunged into the dark
-waters of the moat, led by the valiant Bruce.
-
-“Saw ye ever the like of that?” exclaimed a French knight who had
-lately joined the Scottish patriots. “What shall we say to our lords,
-when so worthy a knight and noble a monarch exposeth himself to such
-great peril to win a wretched hamlet?”
-
-With this he gaily threw himself into the water, followed by the rest
-of the Scottish army. When Bruce again reached the maiden she said,
-“The late revellers are now in their slumbers; the watchword with them
-is ‘_The Lost Standard._’” The brave maiden then aided the king to
-adjust the rope ladders, by which the Scots scaled the wall, one by
-one, until a strong force stood at their side. “‘The Lost Standard’
-is the word,” said the king; “and now for the citadel!” It was,
-indeed, a _Lost Standard_ to the drowsy guards and sleeping revellers.
-The fortress was soon taken, and the captives set free. King Robert
-afterwards besieged the fortress of Stirling, when the governor, Sir
-Philip Mowbray, contrived to make his appeals for succor reach the
-English king. Edward roused himself from his natural indolence, and
-raised a large army to march against Scotland. The forces of the
-English amounted to nearly one hundred thousand men. This brilliant
-army, with banners flying and lances glistening in the sunlight,
-presented a grand array. Meanwhile, King Robert was concealed in the
-forests with an army of only forty thousand men, nearly all on foot,
-awaiting the enemy, and preparing barriers to check the onslaught
-of the English. On the morning of the 23d of June, 1313, the two
-armies met near Bannockburn. The night had been passed in prayer in
-the Scottish camp, and in feasting and drunkenness by the English.
-At daybreak the young English king was astonished at the good order
-observed in the Scottish ranks.
-
-“Do you think they will fight?” he asked of Sir Ingletram d’Umfreville.
-Just then the abbot of Inchaffray appeared before the Scottish troops,
-holding a crucifix in his hand; all bent their knees with uncovered
-heads.
-
-“They are asking for mercy,” cried King Edward.
-
-“Yes, sire,” replied Umfreville, with a bitter smile; “but of God, not
-of you, sire. These men will win the battle or die at their posts.”
-
-The sight of the vast English army might well cause the brave hearts
-of the small band of Scots to tremble; but with the intrepid Bruce at
-their head, they awaited their foes with dauntless courage. So vast
-were the English forces, that it is said the country seemed on fire by
-the brightness of the shields and burnished helmets gleaming in the
-morning light. So vast was the multitude of embroidered banners, of
-standards, of pennons, and spears; so apparently endless the crowds of
-knights, blazing in their rich-colored and gemmed surcoats; so large
-the extent of country occupied by their numerous tents,—that one might
-have thought all the warriors of the world were marching against this
-handful of valiant Scots. The English had hastened their march and
-arrived with some disorder in front of the Scottish army. King Robert
-Bruce, with a golden crown on his helmet, was riding slowly before the
-line of his troops. As the brave king thus rode along upon his favorite
-palfrey, clad in armor and carrying his battle-axe in his hand,
-encouraging his men by his calm voice and brave words, the English king
-took special note of him, and remarked, “Doubtless yonder solitary
-rider is of the foe, although he is almost as nigh to our front as to
-that of the rebels. Canst tell, Sir Knight, of what account he is, and
-wherefore this manœuvre?”
-
-“My liege,” replied Sir Giles d’Argentine, to whom King Edward had
-spoken, “he who yonder marshalleth the Scottish host was once my
-frequent associate, and is well known to me, as I clearly descry from
-the jewelled diadem which glittereth on his helmet. It is none other
-than Bruce himself.”
-
-“If it is the arch-traitor Bruce,” exclaimed Edward, “I marvel that no
-knight amongst you all is brave enough to challenge so audacious a foe.”
-
-Whereupon Sir Henry Bohun, mounted on a magnificent war-horse, came
-dashing against the Scottish monarch, whose small palfrey seemed an
-ill match for so strong and large a steed. “See! the foeman coucheth
-his lance and pusheth at full speed against his victim, who recklessly
-advanceth, and now doth take his stand motionless as a rock, awaiting
-the onset of his enemy. Breathlessly the Scots and English watch the
-two combatants. On comes the impetuous Bohun. Surely some half score
-more plunges of the superb animal that bears him will unhorse the
-hero-king, unless unwonted presence of mind, nimbleness of movement,
-and dexterity of arm shall save him from the onrush of the powerful
-horse and gleaming spear. But the gallant Bruce has risen in his
-stirrups, and as his enemy rushes upon him, the lance is driven aside
-by the sweep of his strong arm, and the battle-axe, wielded with rare
-dexterity, stops not in its swing of meteor-like speed till down it
-falls upon the helmet of his foe with such true aim and mighty force
-that the weapon shatters the helmet and fractures the skull of Sir
-Henry Bohun, whose fiery steed bears his dead body back to the English
-ranks. Bruce returned slowly to his forces, and while some of his
-friends surrounded him, reproaching him for so rashly risking his life,
-the Scottish hero laughingly answered, while looking sorrowfully at his
-notched axe, ‘See! I have spoiled my good battle-axe.’”
-
-[Illustration: “SEE! I HAVE SPOILED MY GOOD BATTLE-AXE.”]
-
-The battle was commenced by the English at the order of King Edward.
-The shock of the first charge of the English cavalry was terrible;
-and as they were received on the spears of the Scottish infantry, the
-crash was heard at a great distance, and many English knights were
-dashed from their saddles by their furious steeds, which had been
-stabbed by the invincible spears of the Scots. The centre division,
-under the gallant Randolph, stood in a steady body to receive the
-charge of the English. These compact squares of the Scottish army were
-well calculated to break the masses which were opposed to them, and
-they suffered only from the arrows of the archers. The English cavalry
-charged with the greatest impetuosity, and endeavored to pierce through
-the phalanx of the Scottish spearmen; but they received them like a
-wall of iron, while the English receded from the shock like broken
-waves which had spent their fury on the rocks. When both armies joined
-battle, the great horses of England rushed upon the Scottish lances as
-if upon a thick wood, and one mighty sound arose from the breaking of
-the lances, the shock of falling horsemen, and the shrieks of the
-dying. The knights sang their war-cries, and rushed on to the charge.
-Groom fought like squire, and squire like knight, and yet Scotland’s
-lion waved proudly over her bands, while the English banners rose and
-fell, and many of them were dyed in blood. At last the English began
-to hesitate. “They fly! they fly!” cried the Scots. Just then the camp
-followers of the Scottish army, who had been posted on an adjacent
-hill, excited by the ardor of the struggle, began to descend in a mass
-towards the field of battle. The English imagined themselves about
-to be attacked by a fresh army, and began a disorderly retreat. Upon
-which Robert Bruce charged valiantly with his reserves, and quickly
-decided the fate of the day. The earl of Pembroke seized the bridle of
-King Edward’s horse and dragged him away from the battle-field. Sir
-Giles d’Argentine accompanied his king out of danger, and then rode
-back fearlessly amidst the conflict, exclaiming, “It is not my custom
-to fly!” This brave knight was cut down by the Scots. The victory was
-complete. The fortress of Stirling surrendered immediately. The earl
-of Hereford, who had shut himself up in Bothwell castle, offered to
-capitulate, and was exchanged for the wife, daughter, and sister of the
-king of Scotland, who had been imprisoned in England for several years.
-Thus had the independence and freedom of Scotland been obtained by the
-brave Bruce and his dauntless little band of patriot warriors. The
-swords of those who fought at Bannockburn were hung up in the halls of
-their descendants, and handed down to modern times as trophies of the
-liberty and independence which they achieved. The beneficial effects
-of this signal victory secured forever the independence of Scotland;
-and when the two kingdoms were afterwards united, Scotland received
-equal rights with England, and the national church of Scotland, with
-her universities and schools, were guaranteed to the people of Scotland
-forever. This famous battle taught the Scottish nation a lesson which
-it never forgot: that a phalanx of Caledonian spears, wielded by brave
-and disciplined men on foot, was superior to all the vaunted chivalry
-of the most renowned cavaliers. In 1327 King Edward II. of England
-was dethroned, and his young son was crowned in his place. The young
-prince was but fifteen years of age. Scotland had been recovering from
-her misfortunes under the firm and wise government of Robert Bruce.
-The independence of that kingdom had been acknowledged by England. The
-crown jewels, which had been formerly seized by Edward I., had been
-returned, and the little princess Joan, who was betrothed to David, the
-young son of Robert Bruce, had been taken to Berwick, accompanied by
-the queen-dowager of England and a splendid retinue of attendants. The
-marriage was soon after celebrated with great magnificence. Englishmen
-and Scots, who for half a century had met only as foes upon the
-field of battle, were now joined in friendly courtesies through this
-marriage. King Robert’s wife Elizabeth had died before she saw this
-happy termination of the long hostilities.
-
-The Scottish king did not long survive these events. He was seized with
-a severe complaint, then supposed to have been leprosy, which at length
-proved fatal. When upon his death-bed he called around him his earls
-and barons, and commended to their care his young son David; and the
-prince was thereupon crowned king of Scotland. Robert Bruce, having
-settled the affairs of his kingdom and throne, summoned to his bedside
-his brave and faithful friend and gallant knight, Sir James Douglas,
-and entreated him to take his heart from his body after death, and
-have it embalmed, and carry it to the Holy Land, and leave it there
-in the Holy Sepulchre, in obedience to a vow he had made. “When I was
-hard beset,” said the dying king, “I vowed to God that if I should
-live to see an end of my wars and Scotland free, I would raise the
-sacred standard against the enemies of my Lord and Saviour. But as I
-cannot myself accomplish this vow, I know no knight more worthy for the
-mission of bearing the heart of King Robert of Scotland to the Holy
-Land.” To this affecting request Lord Douglas replied, with tears in
-his eyes, “Ah, most gentle and noble king! A thousand times I thank
-you for the great honor you have done me in making me the bearer of
-so great and precious a treasure. Most faithfully and willingly, to
-the best of my power, shall I obey your commands.” Then the dying king
-answered,—
-
-“Now praised be God! for I shall die in peace, since I am assured, by
-the faith you owe to your God and the order of knighthood, that the
-best and most valiant knight of my kingdom has promised to achieve for
-me that which I myself could never accomplish.”
-
-Thus died Robert Bruce, king of Scotland, in the fifty-fifth year of
-his age and the twenty-fourth of his reign. His remains were deposited
-in the church of Dumfermline, where he was enshrined under a rich
-marble monument from Paris. The censures of excommunication pronounced
-by the Pope having been removed some time before, the religious
-services at his burial were performed by many prelates and bishops.
-
-Many years afterwards his tomb was opened, and the lead in which his
-body had been wrapped was found twisted into the shape of a rude
-crown, covered with a rich cloth of gold, which had been thrown over
-it. It was ascertained that the breast-bone had been sawn asunder in
-order to fulfil his request of taking out his heart; but that proud
-form, before which the king of England had trembled on his throne, had
-crumbled into dust. Robert Bruce, king of Scotland, is one of the most
-exalted warriors to be found in those early times. The virtues of his
-character were formed, and acquired their bright polish, in the school
-of adversity. One of the early writers says of him, “If any one should
-undertake to describe his individual conflicts and personal success,
-those courageous and single-handed combats in which, by the favor of
-God and his own great strength and courage, he would often penetrate
-into the thickest of the enemy, now becoming the assailant and cutting
-down all who opposed him, at another time acting on the defensive,
-and escaping from inevitable death,—if any writer shall do this, he
-will prove, if I am not mistaken, that he had no equal in his own time
-either in knightly prowess or in strength and vigor of body.” The
-true greatness of Robert Bruce appeared in his humanity, moderation,
-and pity for the sufferings of others, which led him in the hour of
-victory to be generous to his prisoners even though he had suffered
-such bitter wrongs at the hands of his English foes. His manners were
-kingly and engaging, his disposition singularly gentle, courteous,
-and without selfishness. Yet he was high-spirited, and full of noble
-energy and enthusiasm. In person he was tall and well proportioned,
-being five feet ten inches high. His shoulders were broad, his chest
-capacious, and his limbs powerful and possessing marvellous strength.
-He possessed an open and cheerful countenance, shaded by short curled
-hair. His forehead was low, his cheek-bones strong and prominent, with
-a wound on his lower jaw. Though the expression of his face was usually
-pleasing and kindly, he could assume a look of stern, kingly dignity,
-which awed his enemies, and gained him the necessary respect due to his
-rank and commanding position as Scotland’s king, and also her bravest
-and most valiant knight. He was one of the most successful military
-leaders of the age. Well may Scotland boast of her brave Robert Bruce,
-the most famous of all her rulers, the deliverer of her enslaved
-people, the upholder of her liberty, her hero-king and most chivalrous
-knight!
-
-
-
-
-FERDINAND V. OF SPAIN.
-
-1452-1516 A.D.
-
- “Every monarch is subject to a mightier one.”—SENECA.
-
-
-FOR many years after the great Saracen invasion in the eighth century,
-Spain was divided into various small states. In the fifteenth century
-these were so united as to form four,—Castile, Aragon, Navarre, and
-the Moorish kingdom of Granada. The province of Granada was all
-that remained to the Moslems of their once vast possessions in the
-peninsula. On the 10th of March, 1452, in the little town of Sos,
-Ferdinand, son of King John of Aragon, was born. The early Spanish
-historians note with care the good omens attending this event. The sun,
-which had been obscured with clouds during the whole day, suddenly
-broke forth with unwonted splendor. A crown was also beheld in the sky,
-composed of various brilliant colors, like those of a rainbow. All
-which appearances were interpreted by the spectators as an omen that
-the child then born would be the most illustrious among men. As this
-event was also nearly contemporary with the capture of Constantinople,
-it was afterwards regarded by the Catholic Church as a providential
-provision in behalf of the religion of which Ferdinand became such a
-staunch supporter, as his zealous life might be regarded as an ample
-counterbalance to the loss of the capital of Christendom. One year
-before this time, in the palace of the king of Castile, on the 22d
-of April, 1451, a little princess had been born, and christened
-Isabella. This Spanish princess was descended, both on her father’s and
-mother’s side, from the famous John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster.
-
-[Illustration: FERDINAND OF ARAGON.]
-
-But around the cradles of these two royal babies many contentions
-arose, which we cannot stop to note. When Isabella was four years
-of age, her father died, and her half-brother Henry became king of
-Castile; and, as she had still another brother, Alfonso, there did not
-seem to be much probability that she would succeed to the throne. She
-retired with her mother to the small town of Arevalo, where she was
-educated with care, and instructed in lessons of practical piety, until
-she reached her fourteenth year.
-
-Meanwhile, the little Prince Ferdinand, in Aragon, was surrounded
-with constant contentions between his father, king of Aragon, and his
-half-brother Carlos. Joan, the mother of Ferdinand, was the second
-wife of King John. She was a proud, ambitious woman, much younger than
-her husband, and was of the blood royal of Castile, being the daughter
-of Don Frederic Henriquez, admiral of that kingdom. She hated her
-step-son Carlos, who was heir to the throne, as she regarded him as an
-obstacle to the advancement of her own child, Ferdinand. We cannot stop
-to note all the family broils occasioned by Joan’s jealousy. Prince
-Carlos seems to have been a youth of many attractions of mind and
-body, and was the idol of the people. So, when King John, influenced
-by his wife Joan, succeeded in having Carlos arrested, and placed in
-strict confinement, the entire kingdom was thrown into excitement. The
-people sprang to arms, determined to release the prince; and they were
-so threatening that King John fled with his wife to Saragossa. The
-insurrection now spread throughout Aragon, Valencia, and Navarre, and
-even into King John’s possessions in Sardinia and Sicily. At length,
-the frightened king saw the necessity of releasing his prisoner. Prince
-Carlos was received by the people with wild enthusiasm; and the king
-could only make peace with his subjects by a public acknowledgment of
-Carlos as his rightful heir and successor. But Carlos did not long
-survive this triumph. He fell sick of a fever, and died in 1461. Some
-historians hint that the prince was poisoned, to make way for the
-youthful Ferdinand, now ten years of age, and who was immediately
-declared heir to the throne. The queen-mother then took Ferdinand to
-Catalonia, to receive the homage of that province; but the Catalonian
-nobles, who were exasperated against the king on account of his
-treatment of Carlos, displayed so much hostility that the young prince
-and his mother were obliged to take refuge in the fortress of Gerona.
-Here they were at last relieved by King John. But the Catalans then
-seceded from the authority of the king of Aragon, and they presented
-the crown to the duke of Lorraine, who marched with an army of eight
-thousand men against the old king of Aragon, whose treasury was empty,
-and who had become totally blind. In this emergency, the mother of
-Ferdinand, who was a brave woman, placed herself at the head of such
-forces as she could collect; and, with her young son Ferdinand riding
-by her side, she heroically marched against the enemies of her husband,
-and attacked the duke of Lorraine with such impetuosity that she drove
-him in confusion from Gerona. In this encounter, young Ferdinand came
-near being taken captive.
-
-[Illustration: ISABELLA OF CASTILE.]
-
-Meanwhile, the Princess Isabella was nearly sacrificed to the ambition
-of her half-brother, who was king of Castile. The beautiful
-princess, who had now been brought from her retirement in Arevalo to
-her brother’s court, had many suitors for her hand. Her half-brother,
-King Henry, promised his sister in marriage to a rich but wicked old
-nobleman; and great preparations were made for the wedding. The anguish
-of the poor Princess Isabella was so great that she shut herself up in
-her apartment, praying to God, with groans and tears, that He would
-deliver her from this impending doom. Still, the wedding preparations
-went on. Meanwhile, the wicked old nobleman set out from his palace to
-claim his youthful and beautiful bride. But God had heard the prayers
-of the afflicted princess; and, as the aged bridegroom reached a small
-village, at the end of the first day’s travel, he was suddenly seized
-with an attack of quinsy, which terminated his life.
-
-The nobles of Castile now entreated Isabella to allow herself to be
-proclaimed Queen of Castile, in opposition to her brother, whom they
-all hated. Her other brother, Alfonso, who would have been heir, had
-previously died. But Isabella was too noble to seek such revenge upon
-her cruel brother; but the nobles forced the king to declare her his
-successor to the throne, and to promise that she should not be forced
-to marry against her will.
-
-The king of Portugal now desired to secure Isabella for his bride;
-and her brother threatened to imprison her unless she would yield. As
-overtures had been made by the young and handsome Prince Ferdinand of
-Aragon for the hand of the fair Isabella, and as her heart was also
-inclined towards this handsome prince, she determined, in spite of
-her brother, to accept the proffered hand of Ferdinand. The marriage
-articles were signed on the 7th of January, 1469. Isabella was aided
-by the archbishop of Toledo, who raised a regiment of dragoons, and
-carried her in triumph to Valladolid, where she was greeted by the
-people with the wildest enthusiasm. Meanwhile, her brother attempted
-to prevent Ferdinand from entering Castile to marry Isabella. As the
-father of Ferdinand was so pressed by a war with his nobles, he could
-not afford his son an armed escort sufficient to secure his safety. So
-Ferdinand resolved to go disguised as a merchant. With half a dozen
-companions, Ferdinand started upon this adventuresome expedition to
-secure his lovely bride, in spite of hostile foes. Amidst many perils
-they pressed on their way. One night, at an inn, they lost their purse,
-containing all their money. At length they were met by an escort, sent
-by Isabella for their protection. The fair princess, with her little
-court, was at Valladolid. Ferdinand, accompanied by four attendants,
-rode privately to Valladolid, where he was received by the bishop of
-Toledo, and conducted to the presence of Isabella. The young prince
-was very handsome, tall and fair, with an intelligent countenance and
-intellectual brow. He was eighteen years of age. He was well educated,
-and of temperate habits. He was graceful and courtly in manner, and
-seemed a fitting mate for the beautiful princess of nineteen, of whom
-a contemporary writer says, “She was the handsomest lady whom I ever
-beheld, and the most gracious in her manners.”
-
-[Illustration: SEGOVIA: THE ALCAZAR AND CATHEDRAL.]
-
-Isabella was highly educated for those times, and spoke the Castilian
-language with grace and purity. After a brief lover’s interview
-of two hours, Ferdinand returned to Duenas, where he had left his
-companions. Preparations were immediately made for the marriage, which
-was solemnized at the palace of one of the nobles in Valladolid,
-on the morning of the 19th of October, 1469. Ferdinand, having
-lost his slender purse by the way, was without money; and Isabella,
-being a fugitive from her brother’s court, was also without means.
-But the royal couple readily borrowed the money necessary to defray
-the expenses of the wedding. King Henry now determined to cast aside
-Isabella, and place upon the throne Joanna, the daughter of his second
-wife. This was a blow to Isabella, for now the court of Castile,
-aided by the king of France, were combined against her. Ferdinand and
-Isabella held their little court at Duenas, in humble style. In 1474,
-the brother of Isabella, Henry IV., king of Castile, died, and she was
-proclaimed queen. Isabella was at that time in Segovia. Attended by an
-imposing retinue, she rode upon a beautiful steed, whose bridle was
-held by two high officers of the crown, and she was escorted to her
-seat upon the splendid throne, which had been erected in one of the
-public squares of the city. As the people gazed with admiration upon
-their beautiful queen, a herald cried,—
-
-“Castile, Castile, for the king Don Ferdinand, and his consort Dona
-Isabella, queen proprietor of these kingdoms!”
-
-The queen took the oath of office, and then repaired to the cathedral,
-to pray at the altar. Ferdinand was at this time in Aragon, and when
-he returned he was greatly displeased with the document prepared by
-the dignitaries of Castile, in which Isabella alone was declared heir
-to the throne of Castile, but Ferdinand was associated with her in the
-performance of many acts of royalty. But, persuaded by his wife, he
-agreed to submit.
-
-Alfonso V., the king of Portugal, now invaded Castile. Ferdinand and
-Isabella raised an army and met the foe at Toro. The powerful bishop
-of Toledo, exasperated by the independence of opinion which Ferdinand
-and Isabella displayed, whom he had supposed would be pliant tools in
-his hands, joined Alfonso against them. The strife was too desperate
-to last long. There was a hand-to-hand fight along the entire line.
-At length a storm arose. A dark night came down upon the conflicting
-hosts. A deluge of rain fell, and the field was flooded with mingled
-blood and water. The Portuguese were utterly routed. Ferdinand
-displayed great humanity to his prisoners, furnishing them with food,
-clothing, and a safe return to their own country.
-
-Isabella was awaiting the issue of the battle at Tordisillas, twenty
-miles above on the river. When she received tidings of the victory, she
-ordered a procession to the Church of St. Paul, as an expression of
-her gratitude to God, and she herself walked barefoot in the garb of a
-penitent. In a few months, the entire kingdom of Castile acknowledged
-the supremacy of Ferdinand and Isabella.
-
-In 1479, the king of Aragon died, leaving the kingdoms of Aragon and
-Navarre to his son Ferdinand. Aragon, Castile, and Navarre, being thus
-united under these two illustrious monarchs, the great Spanish monarchy
-was thereby founded.
-
-Ferdinand and Isabella now commenced the enterprise of conquering
-Granada, thus expelling the Moors from their last foothold in Spain.
-Malaga, on the coast of the Mediterranean, was one of the principal
-Moorish towns. The Moors were aware of the importance of this
-position, and had strongly fortified it. The Moors were as brave as
-the Christians, and were led by famous chieftains. In April, 1487,
-Ferdinand, at the head of fifty thousand men, arrived before Malaga,
-and commenced its siege. There were continual ambuscades, and nightly
-sallies. One day, while Ferdinand was dining in his tent, which
-commanded a view of the field of conflict, he perceived a party of
-Christians, who had been sent to fortify an eminence, retreating in
-confusion, pursued by the Moors. King Ferdinand leaped upon his horse,
-not delaying for any defensive armor, rallied his men, and charged
-against the enemy. Having thrown his lance, he endeavored to draw his
-sword from its scabbard. But the sword held fast, the scabbard having
-been by some accident, indented. Just then several Moors surrounded
-him. The king would have been slain had not two brave cavaliers rushed
-to his rescue. The nobles remonstrated with the king for so risking his
-life, but Ferdinand unselfishly answered,—
-
-“I cannot stop to calculate chances, when my subjects are perilling
-their lives for my sake.”
-
-After a siege of ten days, one of the outposts of Malaga was captured
-by the Spaniards, who now pressed triumphantly forward to assault
-the city itself. Ferdinand first attempted to induce the Moors to
-capitulate, by generous offers, to the commander. But he loyally
-replied, “I am stationed here to defend the place to the last
-extremity. The Christian king cannot offer a bribe large enough to
-induce me to betray my trust.” Ferdinand then encompassed the city by
-sea and by land. Queen Isabella joined him, and her presence inspired
-the Spaniards with fresh courage. When she arrived with a brilliant
-train of ladies and cavaliers, an imposing escort was sent to meet her,
-and she was conducted to the encampment with great magnificence of
-parade, and many demonstrations of joy.
-
-The assault was now renewed more fiercely than ever. Famine at length
-caused great suffering amongst the Moors. They had consumed most of
-their ammunition, while the Spanish army was constantly re-enforced by
-new volunteers. King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella maintained strict
-religious discipline in their camp. Neither oaths nor gambling was
-allowed, and the rites of the Roman Catholic Church were performed
-with imposing ceremony. Gradually the Christians gained ground. They
-succeeded in blowing up one of the towers, thereby obtaining entrance
-into the city. The citizens of Malaga, suffering from pestilence and
-famine, had been reduced to living upon the flesh of horses, dogs, and
-cats. Everywhere the most appalling misery was seen. Many were dying
-in the streets. In view of their sufferings, Hamet Zeli, the Moorish
-commander, gave the citizens permission to make the best terms they
-could with their conqueror. Ferdinand would listen to nothing, however,
-but unconditional surrender. At length the citizens sent a deputation
-to Ferdinand, declaring that they were willing to resign to him the
-city, the fortifications, and all the property, if he would spare their
-lives, and give them their freedom. “If these terms are refused,” they
-added, “we will take the six hundred Christian captives, who are in our
-hands, and hang them like dogs on the battlements. We will then enclose
-our old men, women, and children in the fortress, set fire to the town,
-and sell our lives as dearly as possible, in the attempt to cut our way
-through our enemies. Thus if you gain a victory, it shall be such a one
-as will make the name of Malaga ring throughout the world, to ages yet
-unborn.”
-
-[Illustration: THE CATHEDRAL AND PORT OF MALAGA.]
-
-In answer, Ferdinand replied, “If a single hair of a Christian’s head
-is harmed, I will put to the sword every man, woman, and child in the
-city.”
-
-The citizens in hopeless despair, cast themselves upon the mercy of
-Ferdinand, unconditionally surrendering the city.
-
-On the 18th day of August, 1487, the Spanish army, headed by Ferdinand
-and Isabella, with great military and ecclesiastical pomp, entered
-the city, and repaired to the cathedral, where the _Te Deum_ was for
-the first time performed within its walls. The Christian captives
-were liberated from the Moorish dungeons. They presented a dreadful
-spectacle, which drew tears from all eyes. This band of sufferers, many
-of whom had languished in dark cells for fifteen years, were brought
-forth, haggard, emaciated, and heavily manacled with chains. Being
-freed from their fetters, Ferdinand and Isabella addressed to them kind
-words of sympathy, and dismissed them with rich gifts.
-
-The heroic Moorish chieftain, who had so gallantly defended the
-city, was brought loaded with chains before his conqueror. Upon
-being questioned why he had so long persisted, he replied, “I was
-commissioned to defend the place to the last extremity. Had I been
-properly supported, I would have died sooner than have surrendered.”
-
-Then came the doom of the Moors. The entire population of the city,
-amounting to about twenty thousand, were condemned to slavery. Men,
-women, and children were alike sentenced by the Christians. One-third
-were sent to Africa in exchange for Christians imprisoned there.
-Another portion were sold to the highest bidder, to procure money to
-defray the expenses of the war. The Pope at Rome received one hundred
-Moorish soldiers. The Moorish girls were renowned for their great
-beauty; fifty of the most beautiful of these were sent by Isabella as a
-gift to the Queen of Naples, and thirty to the Queen of Portugal. All
-the property of the victims was seized by the crown. Cruel as this doom
-appears to us, it was regarded at that time as mild and humane, though
-now one shudders at such unchristian barbarity. But in justice, the
-excuse must be made for Ferdinand and Isabella, that they supposed that
-thereby the Moslem Moors would be more likely to become converts to the
-Christian religion, even in slavery. It is said that Isabella was urged
-by the clergy to put all the captured Moors to death, as a warning to
-others. The city of Malaga was now re-inhabited by the Spaniards.
-
-In the next year, Ferdinand, with a force of twenty thousand men,
-marched against Granada, the capital of the Moorish kingdom. The
-Christians were driven back in confusion into their own territory.
-The year following, King Ferdinand collected an army of ninety-five
-thousand men. The cavalry was composed of the highest nobility of the
-realm. The Christians advanced upon Baza. The Moors sallied forth
-from the city to meet their foes; a fierce battle lasted for twelve
-hours, when the Moors were forced to retreat within the city walls.
-The conflict had been so severe, however, that the Spanish generals
-counselled an abandonment of the siege. Ferdinand, relying upon the
-wisdom and great mental endowments of his wife, sent dispatches to
-Jaen, where Isabella then was, asking her advice. Her reply was so
-encouraging that the siege was renewed. The summer and winter passed
-away; the Christians suffered much during the floods of rain which
-inundated their camp. The energetic queen, however, came to their
-rescue, and sent six thousand pioneers to repair the roads; and she
-even pawned the crown jewels and her own ornaments, to raise money to
-furnish her husband’s forces with supplies. The Moorish women within
-the city displayed heroism equal to that of the Christian queen. At
-length, as the Spanish troops began to despond, Ferdinand sent for
-his brave wife to come to the camp, that her presence might inspire
-them with fresh courage. An historian thus describes the coming of the
-queen:—
-
-“On the 7th of November, the queen, accompanied by her daughter
-Isabella, several ladies of honor, a choir of beautiful maidens, and
-a brilliant escort, entered the camp of Ferdinand. The inhabitants of
-Baza crowded their walls and towers to gaze upon the glittering pageant
-as it wound its way through the defiles of the mountains and emerged
-upon the plain, with gold-embroidered banners and strains of martial
-music. The Spanish cavaliers sallied forth in a body from their camp
-to receive their beloved queen and to greet her with an enthusiastic
-reception. The presence of this extraordinary woman, in whose character
-there was combined with feminine grace so much of manly self-reliance
-and energy, not only reanimated the drooping spirits of the besiegers,
-but convinced the besieged that the Spanish army would never withdraw
-until the place was surrendered. Though there was no want of food for
-the beleagured Moors, their ammunition was nearly expended, and the
-garrison was greatly reduced by sickness, wounds, and death.”
-
-Soon after the arrival of Isabella, the Moorish garrison offered to
-capitulate. Ferdinand was so anxious to secure the place, that he
-agreed to allow the army to march out with the honors of war, and the
-citizens to retire with their property at their pleasure. The fall of
-Baza secured the surrender of many other important strongholds of the
-Moslems. Granada, the capital of the Moorish kingdom, was still in the
-possession of the Moors. Ferdinand, in 1491, having raised another
-army, encamped within six miles of this city. Abdallah, the king of the
-Spanish Moors, was in personal command at Granada. The city possessed a
-population of two hundred thousand people.
-
-The situation of Granada was exceedingly picturesque. A wild, rugged
-mountain range, whose summits were crowned with snow, protected the
-city upon the south. On the north was a beautiful plain, blooming with
-flowers, and beyond, groves and vineyards reached for thirty leagues.
-But upon this lovely spot occurred scenes of blended heroism and
-revolting carnage, which have made the fall of Granada famous for all
-time.
-
-Sometimes a company of Moors, clad in armor, and mounted upon their
-fiery Arabian chargers, would ride forth from the gates, while
-bugle-blasts rang shrill upon the air, and challenge an equal number
-of Christian knights to combat. Promptly the defiance was met. All the
-citizens of Granada crowded the house-tops, battlements, and towers of
-the city, to watch the exciting conflict. Both armies rested upon their
-arms, breathlessly awaiting the issue. Again, some brave Christian
-knight would ride forth alone and challenge a Moorish cavalier to
-combat. The ladies of the two hostile courts cheered their respective
-champion with their fair presence and encouraging smiles; and never did
-knight or cavalier fight more valiantly to win the prize of victory.
-The memory of these brilliant but deadly tourneys still inspires
-the songs of the Castilians. Spanish ballads glow with thrilling
-descriptions of these knightly tourneys; and the prowess of Moslem, as
-well as Christian warriors, sheds undying glory over the conquest of
-Granada.
-
-Queen Isabella took an active part in all the military operations of
-the Spanish army. She often appeared upon the field, encased in full
-armor, mounted upon a splendid steed; and her presence always inspired
-her troops to fresh deeds of valor. Isabella occupied in the camp a
-pavilion, richly draped with silken hangings. One night, a gust of
-wind blew the fringes of one of the curtains into the flame of a lamp,
-and soon the entire pavilion was in a blaze. The conflagration spread
-to other tents, and it was only with great difficulty that the entire
-camp was preserved from destruction. The queen and her children were
-in great danger of being destroyed. In consequence of this accident,
-Ferdinand, to prevent a like occurrence, ordered a city of substantial
-houses to be built upon the spot occupied by his army. In three
-months, a large and stately city arose. The soldiers wished to call it
-Isabella, in honor of their idolized queen, but she named it Santa Fé,
-in recognition of her faith in Providence. The city still stands.
-
-The Moors were now convinced that their Spanish foes were determined to
-remain until the Crescent should give place to the Cross. The citizens
-of Granada were suffering from famine. Abdallah, therefore, surrendered
-Granada to the Christians on the second day of January, 1492.
-
-This last great act in one of the sublimest of historical dramas—the
-invasion of Spain by the Moors—was performed with the most imposing
-martial and religious rites. The Alhambra was first taken possession
-of by veteran Christian troops, including the body-guard of the king.
-Ferdinand, surrounded by a very brilliant _cortège_ glittering in
-polished armor, took his station near an Arabian mosque, now called the
-hermitage of St. Sebastian. At a short distance in the rear the queen
-Isabella took her position, accompanied by a no less splendid retinue,
-her high-born warriors proudly displaying the armorial bearings of
-their families. The immense column of the Christian army commenced
-its march up the Hill of Martyrs into the city. Abdallah, accompanied
-by fifty cavaliers, passed them, descending the hill to make the
-surrender of himself to Ferdinand. The heart-broken Moor threw himself
-from his horse, and would have seized the hand of Ferdinand to kiss it
-in token of homage, but the Christian king magnanimously spared him
-the humiliation, and threw his arms around the deposed monarch in a
-respectful and affectionate embrace. Abdallah then presented the keys
-of the Alhambra to the conqueror, saying,—
-
-“They are thine, O king, since Allah so decrees it. Use thy success
-with clemency and moderation.”
-
-[Illustration: PATIO DE LOS LEONES (COURT OF LIONS), ALHAMBRA.]
-
-He then, not waiting for the words of consolation which the king was
-about to utter, rode on to offer the same acts of submission and homage
-to Queen Isabella. In the mean time the Castilian army, winding slowly
-up the hill and around the walls, entered the city by the gate of Los
-Molinos. The large silver cross which Ferdinand had ever borne with him
-in his crusade against the Moors was now elevated upon the Alhambra,
-while the banners of the conqueror were proudly unfurled from its
-towers. “It was the signal for the whole army to fall upon its knees
-in recognition of that providence which had granted them so great a
-victory. The solemn strains of the _Te Deum_, performed by the choir of
-the royal chapel, then swelled majestically over the prostrate host.
-The Spanish grandees now gathered around Isabella, and kneeling, kissed
-her hand, in recognition of her sovereignty as queen of Granada.”
-
-Abdallah, however, did not remain as a sad witness of these scenes.
-With a small band he took his way to the mountains. From one of the
-rocky eminences he sorrowfully gazed upon the beautiful realms over
-which his ancestors had reigned for more than seven hundred years. With
-eyes filled with tears he exclaimed, “Alas! when were woes ever equal
-to mine!”
-
-Whereupon his mother cruelly replied, “You do well to weep as a woman
-for what you could not defend like a man!”
-
-Thus “The Last Sigh of the Moor,” and the cruel yet Spartan-like
-heroism of the Moorish queen-mother, have passed into the romantic
-annals of history.
-
-While Ferdinand and Isabella were at Santa Fé, Columbus arrived at
-their camp. We have not space to give here a history of Christopher
-Columbus. We can but note a few important incidents. The Atlantic Ocean
-was then unexplored. Columbus, who was employed in the construction
-of maps and charts, became convinced that countries existed upon the
-other side of the globe. He was laughed at as an enthusiast, and when
-he declared that the world was round, one of the sages of the fifteenth
-century replied, “Can any one be so foolish as to believe that the
-world is round, and that there are people on the side opposite to ours
-who walk with their heels upward and their heads hanging down, like
-flies clinging to the ceiling? that there is a part of the world where
-trees grow with their branches hanging downwards, and where it rains,
-hails, and snows upwards?”
-
-The doctrine of Columbus was not only regarded as absurd, but it was
-thought to be heretical. Columbus, fully convinced of the truth of his
-ideas, appealed first to the king of Portugal for means to fit out a
-fleet to start out on a voyage of discovery. Meeting with refusal, he
-visited the Spanish court in 1487. At this time Ferdinand and Isabella
-were with the army, encamped before Malaga. The war with the Moors
-continuing, the Spanish sovereigns declared that they could give the
-matter no attention until the conclusion of the war. Disheartened,
-Columbus was about to apply to the king of France, when the prior
-of the convent of La Rabida, at Palos, who firmly believed in the
-scheme of Columbus, and who had formerly been confessor to Isabella,
-wrote to the queen, urging that Spain might not lose so great an
-opportunity. Isabella was so much impressed by the letter of the worthy
-prior that she immediately requested that Columbus should come to
-Santa Fé, where she was then residing, as the Spanish army were still
-besieging Granada. Columbus arrived there just as the Moorish banner
-was torn down, and the flag of Spain was unfurled upon the towers of
-the Alhambra. In the midst of these rejoicings Columbus presented
-his plans. “I wish,” said he, “for a few ships and a few sailors to
-traverse between two and three thousand miles of the ocean, thus to
-point out a new and short route to India, and reveal new nations,
-majestic in wealth and power. These realms are peopled by immortal
-beings, for whom Christ has died. It is my mission to search them out,
-and to carry to them the Gospel of salvation. Wealth will also flow in
-from this discovery. With this wealth we can raise armies, and rescue
-the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem from the hands of the infidels. I
-ask only in return that I may be appointed viceroy over the realms I
-discover, and that I shall receive one-tenth of the profits which may
-accrue.”
-
-[Illustration: COLUMBUS.]
-
-The Spanish courtiers were astonished at what they deemed audacious
-demands, and persuaded the queen to refuse. Whereupon, Columbus sadly
-saddled his mule to retrace his steps, and to offer his services to the
-king of France. Isabella was troubled, as she thought over these
-offers and requests of Columbus, and she expressed to Ferdinand her
-perplexities. He replied, “The royal finances are exhausted by the war.
-We have no money in the treasury for such an enterprise.” The queen
-then enthusiastically exclaimed,—
-
-“I will undertake the enterprise for my own crown of Castile; and I
-will pledge my private jewels to raise the necessary funds.”
-
-Thus the discovery of a continent hung upon the vanity, or heroism,
-of a woman! But the character of Isabella was equal to the emergency.
-The matter was quickly settled. A courier was sent to overtake the
-disappointed Columbus, who was pursuing his weary way through the
-sand, overwhelmed with gloom. For eighteen years he had been in vain
-endeavoring to carry out his cherished plans. Joyfully he returned
-to Santa Fé, where the queen received him with great kindness, and
-assented to his demands. Columbus succeeded in obtaining three small
-vessels,—two furnished by the Spanish government, and one by Martin
-Alonzo Pinzon, a wealthy Spaniard. The total number who joined the
-expedition was one hundred and fifty.
-
-The enterprise was deemed so hazardous that it was with great
-difficulty that a crew could be obtained. This was in the fifteenth
-century. In view of the marvellous progress in knowledge, discovery,
-invention, and an enlightened Christianity, in the past four hundred
-years, in comparison with the ignorance and superstitions of preceding
-epochs, any student of history will be led most emphatically to
-exclaim, Surely the world was never so advanced in knowledge, true
-civilization, and pure religion as to-day! With all the wickedness at
-the present time, the study of history reveals the fact, that the
-world was never so good, pure, and Christian as now.
-
-On the 3d of August, 1492, the small squadron unfurled its sails for
-the momentous voyage. At the close of a week they arrived at the Canary
-Islands, which were on the frontiers of the known world. On the 6th of
-September, they again set sail.
-
-Day after day passed; but no land came in sight. Sixty-seven days had
-now passed since the Highlands of Spain had disappeared from their
-view. They had met with indications which made them hope that land
-was near. A branch of a shrub, with leaves and berries upon it, had
-been picked up; and a small piece of wood, curiously carved, had been
-found drifting upon the water. It was the 11th of October. As the sun
-went down, and the stars appeared, Columbus took his stand upon the
-poop of his vessel. About ten o’clock, he was startled by the gleam
-of what seemed to be a torch far in the distance. For a moment it
-blazed, then disappeared. Was it a meteor, or a light from the land?
-Not an eye was closed on the ships that night. At two o’clock in the
-morning, a sailor at the mast-head shouted, “Land, land, land!” The day
-dawned; and a glimpse of paradise seemed to have been unveiled before
-their enraptured gaze. A beautiful island was spread out, luxuriously
-green, and adorned with every variety of tropical vegetation. The
-boats were lowered, and manned. The banner of Spain, emblazoned with
-the cross, floated from every prow. Columbus, richly attired in a
-scarlet dress, entered his boat, and was rowed towards the shore,
-where multitudes of the natives stood, gazing, spell-bound, upon the
-strange sight. Columbus leaped upon the shore, and, falling upon his
-knees, gave thanks to God. With imposing ceremony, the banner of Spain
-was planted upon the soil; and the island was called San Salvador, in
-recognition of the protecting care of Providence. We have not space to
-note the other discoveries of Columbus upon this voyage. Continuing his
-explorations in that part of the country, he discovered the islands
-of Exuma, Yuma, and Cuba. Of Cuba, Columbus wrote, “It is the most
-beautiful island that eyes ever beheld.” During a short tour up one
-of the picturesque streams of Cuba, Columbus met with a bulbous root,
-about as large as an apple, which the natives used as food, roasting
-it in the ashes. They called it _batatas_. Columbus and his men were
-hunting for gold; but this discovery of the indispensable potato has
-proved a much richer prize to mankind. Here, also, he saw the natives
-rolling up in their hands dried leaves of a certain plant, which they
-lighted and smoked. These leaves they called tobacco. This discovery
-has proved a curse, rather than a blessing, to the world.
-
-After discovering the islands of the Nativity and Hayti, or Saint
-Domingo, Columbus determined to return to Spain, to secure a more
-efficient fleet. The return voyage was extremely tempestuous. During
-the gloomy hours of storm and danger, fearing that they should
-never see land again, Columbus wrote an account of his discoveries
-upon parchment, wrapped it in waxed cloth, and, enclosing it in a
-water-tight cask, set it adrift. A copy, similarly prepared, was kept
-upon the ship. On the 15th of March, not quite seven months and a half
-from the time of his departure, Columbus, with his little crew, entered
-the harbor of Palos. Ferdinand and Isabella were at Barcelona. They
-immediately wrote to Columbus, requesting him to repair to their court.
-His journey thither was a triumphal march. Ferdinand and Isabella
-were seated beneath a silken canopy, to receive him with the most
-imposing ceremonies of state. As a remarkable act of condescension,
-both Ferdinand and Isabella rose, upon the approach of Columbus, and
-offered him their hands to kiss. The Indians and other trophies from
-the New World which he had brought back with him, occasioned the
-greatest surprise. Then Columbus narrated to the Spanish sovereigns
-the story of his voyage. But we are obliged to give an account of
-the shame, as well as glory, of the Spanish court. Ferdinand and
-Isabella were rigid Catholics; so much so, that Ferdinand is called
-in history “Ferdinand the Catholic,” and Isabella received also the
-same title. The Inquisition, which had existed somewhat mildly before,
-was re-established by them. We cannot give the details of those
-persecutions here, which we narrate more fully when the Inquisition
-appears with greater cruelty and ferocity in the life of Philip II.
-During the reign of Ferdinand, the persecution fell mostly upon
-the Jews. Just as the Spanish sovereigns were about entering into
-engagements with Columbus to send him in search of a new world, that
-Christianity might be carried to the heathens there, the unchristian
-and cruel edict was issued for the expulsion of the Jews from Spain.
-We have not space to describe the heart-rending sufferings of this
-persecuted people.
-
-[Illustration: PRISON OF THE INQUISITION AT BARCELONA.]
-
-While at Barcelona, in 1492, Ferdinand narrowly escaped being killed
-by an assassin. King Ferdinand had not much intellectual culture; and
-Isabella was far superior to her husband in literary attainments. But
-Ferdinand was a capable man in the military and practical affairs of
-his kingdom. The children of Ferdinand and Isabella received unusual
-education for those times, and acquired rare attainments. Prince
-John, heir to their throne, was reared with the greatest care. But
-just after the marriage of the young prince to Princess Margaret,
-daughter of the Emperor Maximilian of Austria, which was celebrated
-with great magnificence, Prince John was stricken with a fever, and
-died. Thus perished their only son. Their eldest daughter, Isabella,
-who had married the king of Portugal, died soon after the death of
-her brother, Prince John. This daughter left a babe, who thus became
-heir to Portugal, Aragon, and Castile; but ere a year had passed the
-infant also sank into the grave. Their daughter Joanna was married to
-the archduke Philip, son and heir of Maximilian. This unhappy princess
-was the mother of Charles V. of Spain. But her life was clouded with
-gloom, occasioned by her husband’s neglect, which at last caused her
-insanity. The youngest daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella, Catharine
-of Aragon, afterwards had the misfortune to marry the infamous Henry
-VIII. of England. Thus, the last days of these illustrious sovereigns
-were overshadowed with heart-rending sorrows. We can barely note the
-subsequent discoveries of Columbus. Before his second voyage, while at
-Barcelona, he was invited by the grand cardinal of Spain to dine with
-him. An envious guest inquired of Columbus if he thought that there was
-no man in Spain capable of discovering the Indies, if he had not made
-the discovery. Columbus, without replying to the question, took an egg
-from the table, and asked if there was any one who could make it stand
-on one end. They all tried, but failed. Whereupon Columbus, by a slight
-blow, crushed the end of the egg, and left it standing before them,
-saying, “You see how easy it is to do a thing after some one has shown
-you how.”
-
-In his second voyage he discovered the island of Jamaica and several
-other islands. Ferdinand and Isabella received him with kindness
-upon his return; but two years passed before he could obtain another
-squadron. It was during this third voyage that complaints reached
-Isabella that Columbus was enslaving the inhabitants of Hayti. An
-officer named Bobadilla was sent to Hayti to investigate the matter.
-He was unscrupulous and envious; and, falsely using his official
-authority, he ordered Columbus to be sent back to Spain in chains.
-These outrages, inflicted upon a man so illustrious, roused indignation
-throughout the world. Ferdinand and Isabella were shocked and alarmed
-upon hearing of this outrageous treatment, and sent in the greatest
-haste to release him from his fetters, and to express their sympathy
-and regret for the indignities he had suffered. Some months after,
-Columbus started upon his fourth and last voyage. After encountering
-storms and perils, Columbus reached the continent at what is now called
-Central America, near Yucatan. Notwithstanding the importance of having
-at last touched the American continent, this voyage was a series of
-disappointments and disasters. He was detained for a year on the island
-of Jamaica, on account of the loss of his ships, which were wrecked in
-the storms. At length, two vessels arrived at the island, and Columbus
-embarked for his return to Spain. When he at last reached that country,
-he was broken down by old age, sickness, and mental suffering. Poverty
-stared him in the face. Isabella was upon her death-bed; and Ferdinand
-was heartless, and would not offer him any relief. After all his
-achievements in behalf of mankind, Columbus thus sadly writes to his
-son: “I live by borrowing. Little have I profited by twenty years of
-service, with such toils and perils, since at present I do not own a
-roof in Spain. If I desire to eat or sleep, I have no resort but
-an inn, and for the most times have not wherewithal to pay my bill.”
-In the midst of such sorrow and poverty, the heroic Columbus passed
-his last days on earth. He was buried in the Convent of St. Francisco,
-at Seville. Thirty years afterwards, his remains were removed to St.
-Domingo, on the island of Hayti. Upon the cession of the island to the
-French, in 1795, they were transferred by the Spanish authorities to
-the Cathedral of Havana, in Cuba.
-
-[Illustration: TOMB OF FERDINAND AND ISABELLA IN THE CATHEDRAL OF
-GRANADA.]
-
-Queen Isabella was now broken in health, from her many domestic
-sorrows. She died in November, 1504. The last years of Ferdinand afford
-a sad contrast to his early life and brilliant manhood. As the death of
-Queen Isabella took from Ferdinand the crown of Castile, Philip, the
-husband of the poor crazy Joanna, daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella,
-seized upon the throne of Castile. A bitter family quarrel ensued.
-In order to secure the help of France, Ferdinand, though it was only
-eleven months after the death of his deeply loved wife, was married to
-the princess Germaine, a gay and frivolous girl of eighteen, daughter
-of one of the sisters of Louis XII.
-
-“It seemed hard,” says one writer, “that these nuptials should take
-place so soon, and that, too, in Isabella’s own kingdom of Castile,
-where she had lived without peer, and where her ashes are still held in
-as much veneration as she enjoyed while living.” The marriage ceremony
-took place at Duenas, where, thirty-six years before, he had pledged
-his faith to Isabella. In 1513 the health of Ferdinand began to fail.
-Dropsy and partial paralysis made his life a torment. Hoping to gain
-relief, he travelled southward; but, having reached the small village
-of Madrigalejo, he was unable to proceed farther. On the 22d of
-January, 1516, in the sixty-fourth year of his age, Ferdinand breathed
-his last. He died in a small room in an obscure village. “In so
-wretched a tenement did the lord of so many lands close his eyes upon
-the world.” Thus ended the lives of Ferdinand and Isabella, shrouded
-with gloom and disappointment.
-
- “A crown! What is it?
- It is to bear the miseries of a people,
- To hear their murmurs, feel their discontents,
- And sink beneath a load of splendid care.”
-
-[Illustration: PHILIP. II.
-
-_King of_
-
-SPAIN.]
-
-
-
-
-PHILIP II. OF SPAIN.
-
-1527-1598 A.D.
-
- “Princes who would their people should do well,
- Must at themselves begin, as at the head;
- For men, by their example, pattern out
- Their imitations and regard of laws:
- A virtuous court a world to virtue draws.”—BEN JONSON.
-
-
-CHARLES V. of Spain, the father of Philip II., was the grandson of
-Ferdinand and Isabella. Through his father he inherited the Netherlands
-and part of Burgundy, and at the age of nineteen became emperor of
-Germany. He had received the throne of Spain when sixteen years of age.
-When his son Philip had attained sufficient age to assume the throne,
-Charles V. abdicated in his favor, and retired to a convent, where he
-died in 1558 in the fifty-ninth year of his age. Philip II., his son,
-was born at Valladolid in 1527. His mother, Isabella, was the daughter
-of Emanuel, king of Portugal. Philip was but twelve years old at the
-time of his mother’s death. In 1543 Philip married Mary, daughter of
-the king of Portugal. Both bride and bridegroom were eighteen years of
-age. Mary died in a short time, leaving an infant son named Don Carlos.
-Catharine of Aragon, the youngest daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella,
-married King Henry VIII. of England. Their daughter Mary became the
-second wife of King Philip II. of Spain. She was eleven years older
-than Philip, and was unattractive in person and a bigot in religion.
-Her cruelty in persecuting those whom she regarded as heretics has
-given her in history the name of “Bloody Mary.”
-
-[Illustration: QUEEN MARY PLIGHTING HER TROTH TO PHILIP.]
-
-The marriage contract was signed before either of them had seen each
-other. As the son of an emperor, Philip set out in royal state to
-obtain his bride. The marriage ceremony was performed in the cathedral
-at Winchester. Philip was dressed in a suit of white satin, the gift
-of Mary. It was richly decorated with golden embroidery, and encrusted
-with precious stones. Mary’s wedding dress was also white satin
-embroidered with gold. It was thickly studded and fringed with costly
-jewels.
-
-As Mary was at this time queen of England, her marriage was celebrated
-with the greatest magnificence. The pompous rites of the wedding
-ceremony occupied four hours, during which time Philip and Mary were
-seated upon a throne draped with a royal canopy. The vast edifice was
-thronged with the nobility of England, Flanders, and Spain. After a
-few days, devoted to public festivities in Winchester, Philip and
-Mary went to London, and were received by the people and court with
-great demonstrations of rejoicing. Her father, King Henry VIII., had
-quarrelled with the Pope at Rome, but Mary and Philip were zealous
-Catholics, and desired to re-establish the relations of the English
-Church with Rome. Parliament met at Whitehall. Mary, the queen of
-England, sat with Philip under a canopy. By her side sat the Pope’s
-legate. A petition was presented by the chancellor of the realm,
-praying for reconciliation with the Papal See. The whole assembly knelt
-before the Pope’s legate, who pronounced upon them absolution and a
-benediction. Then began the fires of persecution. Many who would not
-consent to become Catholics were burned at the stake.
-
-Philip, who had now wearied of his elderly and unattractive wife, and
-also of being regarded as only the husband of the queen, was rejoiced
-at the summons of his father, Charles V., who desired him to return to
-Spain to receive the kingdom, that Charles might retire into convent
-life. By the abdication of Charles V., Philip II. became one of the
-most powerful monarchs in the world. He was king of united Spain; he
-was also king of Naples and Sicily, and duke of Milan; he was sovereign
-of the Low Countries; and as husband of the queen of England, who was
-devotedly attached to him, he had great influence in the affairs of
-that nation. The Cape Verde Islands and the Canaries were under his
-sway. A large portion of the Mediterranean coast in Africa was under
-his dominion; also the Philippine and Spice Islands, in Asia. He
-inherited those islands which Columbus had conferred upon Spain in the
-West Indies, and also the vast realms of Mexico and Peru.
-
-Such was the immense power now placed in the hands of this young prince
-not yet thirty years of age. Philip II. established his court at
-Madrid, and from his palace there sent forth his edicts over his wide
-domains. In 1558 Queen Mary of England died, being succeeded by her
-half-sister Elizabeth.
-
-Philip’s only regret for his wife was, no doubt, the loss of his hold
-upon the English crown. Before a year had elapsed he was married to the
-daughter of the king of France. This young princess, Elizabeth,—called
-in Spain, Isabella,—was only fourteen years of age, and had been
-previously betrothed to the son of Philip, Don Carlos, who was of the
-same age.
-
-The death of this young prince a few years afterwards, under very
-suspicious circumstances, caused many to think that he had been
-poisoned by the command of his father, who had imprisoned the prince at
-the time. Don Carlos and his father had frequent quarrels, and at last
-Carlos was said to have confessed to a priest that he desired to kill
-his father, and he asked absolution, which the priest refused to grant.
-The king was informed of all this. The young prince was thereupon
-imprisoned, with a strong guard to watch him, and he was reported to be
-mad. In the course of a few months Don Carlos died.
-
-Two stories regarding that event were told. Some historians consider
-Philip innocent of any attempt upon the life of his son, but others
-state that the physician of the prince was informed that it was very
-desirable that the death of Carlos should appear to result from natural
-causes; and that medicine was administered to the unsuspecting patient
-in such doses as slowly to accomplish the desired end. Philip II. was
-a fanatic in religion, and the terrible persecution of the Protestants
-during his reign has filled the world with horror, as the shocking
-stories have been told.
-
-Philip had not forgotten his father’s command to punish heretics
-with the utmost rigor. The Reformation had been silently and rapidly
-advancing in Spain. Now the terrible persecutions of the Inquisition
-were turned against this heroic little band of fearless Christians by
-those professing to worship the same merciful God, and to be followers
-of the same loving and sinless Christ. How such awful crimes could
-have been perpetrated in the sacred name of religion seems at the
-present day incomprehensible, and we shudder at the recital of such
-savage barbarity, more especially when committed by the enlightened and
-civilized nations of the world less than four centuries ago.
-
-The bigoted Philip issued an edict “that all who bought, sold, or read
-prohibited works were to be burned alive.” Every person suspected of
-heresy was arrested and thrown into prison. In Seville alone, eight
-hundred were arrested in one day. The accused were then dragged from
-their dungeons and subjected to the horrors of the most merciless
-tortures to induce them to give up their Protestant faith; and these
-shocking deeds were performed in the name of religion. The awful
-details of those barbarous crimes are too horrible to relate. What must
-the reality have been to the poor victims of this inhuman persecution!
-
-The first act of burning, under the decrees of the Pope, Philip II.,
-and the Spanish inquisitor-general, Valdés, took place in May, 1559, at
-Valladolid. This terrible ceremony was called _auto de fé_, or act of
-faith; and so common did they at length become, that Catholics would
-engage to meet each other at the _“auto de fé,”_ as in modern times
-appointments are made to meet at the theatre, opera, or other place of
-public gathering. One of the historians thus describes the second _auto
-de fé_ in Valladolid, in October, 1559: “The Pope wished to invest the
-scene with all the terrors of the Day of Judgment. That he might draw
-an immense crowd, an indulgence of forty days was granted to all who
-should be present at the spectacle.
-
-“The tragedy was enacted in the great square of the city. At one end of
-the square a large platform was erected, richly carpeted and decorated,
-where seats were arranged for the inquisitors. A royal gallery was
-constructed for the king and his court. Two hundred thousand spectators
-surrounded the arena. At six o’clock in the morning all the bells
-of the city began to toll the funeral knell. A solemn procession
-emerged from the dismal fortress of the Inquisition. A body of troops
-led the van. Then came the condemned. There were two classes: the
-first consisting of those who were to be punished with confiscation
-and imprisonment; and the second, of those who were to suffer death.
-The latter were covered with a loose gown of yellow cloth, and wore
-upon the head a paper cap of conical form. Both the gown and cap
-were covered with pictures of flames fanned and fed by demons. Two
-priests were by the side of each one of the victims, urging him to
-abjure his errors. Those who were merely to endure loss of property
-and to be thrown into the dungeons of the Inquisition were clothed
-in garments of black. A vast concourse of dignitaries of state, and
-of the common people, closed the procession. The fanaticism of the
-times was such, that probably but few of the people had any sympathy
-with the sufferers. The ceremonies were opened with a sermon by the
-bishop of Zamora. Then the whole assembled multitude took an oath, upon
-their knees, to defend the Inquisition and the purity of the Catholic
-faith, and to inform against any one who should swerve from the faith.
-Then those who, to escape the flames, had expressed penitence for
-their errors, after a very solemn recantation, were absolved from
-death. But heresy was too serious a crime to be _forgiven_, even upon
-penitence. All were doomed to the confiscation of property, and to
-imprisonment—some for life—in the dungeons of the Inquisition. Their
-names were branded with infamy, and in many cases their immediate
-descendants were rendered ineligible to any public office. These first
-received their doom, and under a strong guard were conveyed back to
-prison.
-
-“And now all eyes were turned to the little band of thirty, who, in
-the garb of ignominy, and with ropes around their necks, were waiting
-their sentence. Many of these were men illustrious for rank, and still
-more renowned for talents and virtues. Their countenances were wan
-and wasted, their frames emaciated, and many of them were distorted
-by the cruel ministry of the rack. Those who were willing to make
-confession were allowed the privilege of being strangled before their
-bodies were exposed to the torture of the fire. After being strangled
-by the _garrote_, their bodies were thrown into the flames. Enfeebled
-by suffering, all but two of them thus purchased exemption from being
-burned alive.
-
-“One of these, Don Carlos de Seso, was a Florentine noble. He had
-married a Spanish lady of high rank, and had taken up his residence
-in Spain, where he had adopted the principles of the Reformation.
-For fifteen months, with unshaken constancy, he had suffered in the
-dungeons of the Inquisition. When sentence of death at the stake was
-pronounced upon him, he called for pen and paper in his cell. His
-judges supposed that he intended to make confession. Instead of that he
-wrote a very eloquent document, avowing his unshaken trust in the great
-truths of the Reformation. De Seso had stood very high in the regards
-of Philip’s father, Charles V. As he was passing before the royal
-gallery to be chained to the stake, he looked up to Philip, and said,
-‘Is it thus that you allow your innocent subjects to be persecuted?’
-The king replied, ‘If it were my own son, I would fetch the wood to
-burn him, were he such a wretch as thou art.’
-
-“He was chained to the stake. As the flames slowly enveloped him in
-their fiery wreaths, he called upon the soldiers to heap up the fagots,
-that his agonies might sooner terminate. Soon life was extinct, and
-the soul of the noble martyr was borne on angel wings to heaven. The
-fellow-sufferer of De Seso was Domingo de Rexas, son of the marquis of
-Posa. Five of this noble family, including the eldest son, had been
-victims of the Inquisition. De Rexas had been a Dominican monk. In
-accordance with usage, he retained his sacerdotal habit until he stood
-before the stake. Then in the midst of the jeers of the populace his
-garments were one by one removed, and the vestments of the condemned,
-with their hideous picturings, were placed upon him. He attempted to
-address the spectators. Philip angrily ordered him to be gagged. A
-piece of cleft wood was thrust into his mouth, causing great pain.
-He was thus led to the stake and burned alive. The cruel exhibition
-occupied from six o’clock in the morning until two o’clock in the
-afternoon.”
-
-Such were some of the shocking and barbarous scenes connected with the
-notorious Spanish Inquisition. This persecution raged year after year.
-So fiercely did these fires of persecution burn throughout all Spain,
-that nearly all traces of the Protestant religion were eradicated from
-the kingdom. The Spaniards degenerated into semi-barbarism. Education
-was discouraged, all human rights were trampled upon, and Spain became
-one of the most debased, impoverished, and miserable nations in Europe.
-Thus had religious fanaticism turned this fair province of Philip’s
-into a desert. In regard to the blame which rests upon Philip II., for
-this deplorable state of things, his own words will answer. He wrote to
-his sister, whom he had appointed his regent in the Netherlands, thus:—
-
-“I have never had any object in view than the good of my subjects! In
-all that I have done I have trod in the footsteps of my father, under
-whom the people of the Netherlands must admit that they lived contented
-and happy. As to the Inquisition, whatever people may say of it, I
-have never attempted anything new. With regard to the edicts, I have
-been always resolved to live and die in the Catholic faith. I could not
-be content to have my subjects do otherwise. Yet I see not how this
-can be compassed without punishing the transgressors. God knows how
-willingly I would avoid shedding a drop of Christian blood; but I would
-rather lose a hundred thousand lives, if I had so many, than allow a
-single change in matters of religion.”
-
-In the Netherlands persecutions and rebellions caused constant strife.
-Scarcely forty years had elapsed since Luther had publicly burned
-the papal bull at Wittenburg. Since that time his doctrines had been
-received in Denmark and Sweden. In England, under Queen Elizabeth,
-Protestantism had become the established religion of the state. The
-Reformation had reached the hills and valleys of Scotland, and tens
-of thousands had gathered to hear the preaching of Knox. The Low
-Countries, or Netherlands, which now constitute Holland and Belgium,
-were the “debatable land,” on which the various sects of reformers,
-the Lutherans, the Calvinists, and the English Protestants, contended
-for mastery over the Roman Catholic Church. Calvinism was embraced by
-some of the cantons of Switzerland, and had also spread widely through
-France, where the adherents to the Protestant faith were known as the
-Huguenots. The cry of the Reformation had passed the Alps, and was
-heard even under the walls of the Vatican, and had crossed the Pyrenees.
-
-The king of Navarre declared himself a Protestant, and the spirit of
-the Reformation, as we have related, had also secretly spread into
-Spain. But there already the terrible Inquisition, with Philip II.
-at its head, had crushed out Protestantism from Spain. It was not to
-be expected that Philip, having exterminated heresy in one part of
-his dominions, would tolerate its existence in any other, least of
-all in so important a country as the Netherlands. So the persecutions
-commenced there. During the latter part of the fifteenth century, and
-the beginning of the sixteenth, the pontifical throne had been filled
-by a succession of popes, notorious for their religious indifference,
-and the carelessness and profligacy of their lives. This was one of
-the prominent causes of the Reformation. But before the close of the
-sixteenth century, a line of popes had arisen, of stern and austere
-natures, without a touch of sympathy for the joys and sorrows of
-mankind, and entirely devoted to the work of regaining the lost powers
-of the Roman Catholic Church. Pope Pius the Fifth was such a pontiff.
-He wrote to Philip, urging him not to falter in the good cause, and
-to allow no harm to the Catholic faith, but to march against his
-rebellious vassals at the head of his army, and wash out the stain of
-heresy in the blood of the heretic. To him Philip replied: that the
-Pope might rest assured that the king would consent to nothing that
-could prejudice the service of God, or the interests of religion. He
-deprecated force, as that would involve the ruin of the country. Still
-he would march in person, without regard to his own peril, and employ
-force, though it should cost the ruin of the provinces; but he would
-bring his vassals to submission. “For he would sooner lose a hundred
-lives, and every rood of empire, than reign a lord over heretics.”
-
-With such a pope, and such a king, no wonder that the Inquisition
-flourished.
-
-The situation of the Netherlands was such that the various opinions
-of the surrounding nations were easily transferred to their shores.
-On the south were the Lutherans of Germany; on the west, the French
-Huguenots; while by the ocean, they held communication with England and
-the nations of the Baltic. The soldier quartered on their territory,
-the seaman who visited their shores, the trader who trafficked in their
-towns, brought with them different forms of the “_New Religion_.” As
-most of the people were able to read, books from France and Germany
-were circulated amongst them. Philip II. understood the importance of
-his position. His whole life proves that he felt it to be his especial
-mission to restore the tottering fortunes of Catholicism, and stay the
-torrent which was sweeping away the Roman Catholic faith. Philip had
-made his half-sister, Margaret, regent in the Netherlands.
-
-In order to a clearer understanding of the revolt in the Netherlands,
-a brief sketch of William, prince of Orange, will be necessary. He
-was descended from ancestors who had given an emperor to Germany;
-William’s parents were both Lutherans, and he was educated in that
-faith. But Charles V. obtained the consent of his parents to remove him
-to Brussels, when in his twelfth year, and he was brought up in the
-family of the Emperor’s sister. In this household, the young prince was
-instructed in the Catholic faith. When fifteen years of age, William
-became the page of Charles V. On the abdication of that monarch, he
-commended William to Philip II., who at first received the prince of
-Orange with much favor. William married for his second wife, Anne, the
-daughter of Maurice, the great Lutheran champion; and though he did
-not openly espouse the cause, but continued in the service of Philip,
-a writer of the times says of him: “The prince of Orange passed for
-a Catholic among Catholics, and a Lutheran among Lutherans.” But this
-portrait of him was by an unfriendly hand, and a truer declaration is
-that of Prescott, “that he possessed a spirit of toleration, the more
-honorable that in that day it was so rare. He condemned the Calvinists
-as restless and seditious, and the Catholics for their bigoted
-attachment to a dogma. Persecution, in matters of faith, he totally
-condemned, for freedom of judgment in such matters he regarded as the
-inalienable right of man. These conclusions, at which the world, after
-an incalculable amount of human suffering, has been three centuries in
-arriving, must be allowed to reflect great credit on the character of
-William, prince of Orange.”
-
-There was now formed in the Netherlands a league called “The Gueux.”
-Some of this party of confederates demanded entire liberty of
-conscience; others would not have stopped short of a revolution, that
-would enable the country to shake off the Spanish yoke. Though this
-party was a political rather than a religious organization, they joined
-hands with the Lutherans and Calvinists, and became, for a time, a
-great aid to the Reformation. The origin of their name, which became
-the fanatical war-cry of the insurgents, happened thus: Two or three
-hundred of these confederates went to Brussels, to petition Margaret,
-the regent, to mediate with Philip in their behalf, that they should
-have more political liberty, and be freed from the edicts and the
-Inquisition. During the week spent by the league in Brussels, a banquet
-was given, where three hundred of the confederates were present. During
-the repast, Brederode, one of their number, described the manner in
-which their petition had been received by the regent. “She seemed at
-first disconcerted,” he said, “by the number of the confederates, but
-was reassured by Barlaimont, who told her that ‘they were nothing but a
-crowd of beggars.’”
-
-Some of the company were much incensed at this treatment, but
-Brederode, taking it good-humoredly, said, “that he and his friends
-had no objection to the name, since they were ready at any time to
-become beggars for the service of their king and country.” This witty
-sally was received by the company with great applause, who shouted,
-“_Vivent les Gueux!_”—“long live the beggars!” Brederode, finding the
-jest took so well, left the room, and soon returned with a beggar’s
-wallet and a wooden bowl, such as were used by the mendicant fraternity
-in the Netherlands. Then pledging the company in a bumper, he swore
-to devote his life and fortune to the cause. The wallet and the bowl
-went round the table, and as each of the merry guests drank, the shout
-arose, “_Vivent les Gueux!_” In every language in which the history of
-these acts has been recorded, the French term, Gueux, is employed to
-designate this party of malcontents in the Netherlands.
-
-The league now adopted the dress and symbols of mendicants. They
-affected their garments as a substitute for their family liveries,
-dressing their retainers in the ash-gray habiliments of the begging
-friars. Wooden bowls, spoons, and knives became in great request,
-though they were richly inlaid with silver, according to the wealth
-of the possessor. Pilgrims’ staffs were carried, elaborately carved.
-Medals resembling those stuck by the beggars in their bonnets were
-worn as a badge. The “Gueux penny,” as it was called, a gold or silver
-coin, was hung from the neck, bearing on one side the effigy of Philip,
-with the inscription, “_Fideles au roi_,” and on the other, two
-hands grasping a beggar’s wallet, and the words, “_jusques a porter
-la besace_,”—“Faithful to the king, even to carrying the wallet.” The
-war-cry of “_Vivent les Gueux_” soon resounded through the Netherlands.
-
-[Illustration: DESTROYING STATUES, ETC., IN THE CATHEDRAL AT ANTWERP.]
-
-Philip paid little or no attention to the frequent appeals of Margaret,
-his regent, that he should come to some concessions which should
-satisfy the people and bring the rebellion to an end. But while Philip
-was procrastinating, the Iconoclasts rose in fury, and inspired by a
-false zeal, committed many terrible, sacrilegious outrages, which cast
-dishonor upon the upholders of the Reformation. These Iconoclasts,
-or image-breakers, were simply armed mobs of ignorant people, who
-imagined they were doing a service to God by breaking into the Catholic
-churches, and ruthlessly destroying everything they could lay their
-hands on. Prescott thus describes the destruction caused by this band
-of rioters in Antwerp:—
-
-“When the rest of the congregation had withdrawn, after vespers, the
-mob rushed forward, as by a common impulse, broke open the doors of the
-chapel, and dragged forth the image of the Virgin. Some called on her
-to cry, ‘_Vivent les Gueux!_’ while others tore off her embroidered
-robes and rolled the dumb idol in the dust, amidst the shouts of the
-spectators.
-
-“This was the signal for havoc. The rioters dispersed in all directions
-on the work of destruction. High above the great altar was an image of
-the Saviour, curiously carved in wood, and placed between the effigies
-of the two thieves crucified with him. The mob contrived to get a rope
-round the neck of the statue of Christ, and dragged it to the ground.
-They then fell upon it with hatchets and hammers, and it was soon
-broken into a hundred fragments. The two thieves, it was remarked, were
-spared, as if to preside over the work of rapine below.
-
-“Their fury now turned against the other statues, which were quickly
-overthrown from their pedestals. The paintings that lined the walls of
-the cathedral were cut into shreds. Many of these were the choicest
-specimens of Flemish art, even then, in its dawn, giving promise of
-the glorious day which was to shed a lustre over the land. But the
-pride of the cathedral and of Antwerp was the great organ, renowned
-throughout the Netherlands, not more for its dimensions than its
-perfect workmanship. With their ladders the rioters scaled the lofty
-fabric, and with their implements soon converted it, like all else they
-laid their hands on, into a heap of rubbish.
-
-“The ruin was now universal. Nothing beautiful, nothing holy, was
-spared. The altars—and there were no less than seventy in the vast
-edifice—were overthrown one after another, their richly embroidered
-coverings rudely rent away, their gold and silver vessels appropriated
-by the plunderers. The sacramental bread was trodden under foot, the
-wine was quaffed by the miscreants, in golden chalices, to the health
-of one another, or of the Gueux, and the holy oil was profanely used to
-anoint their shoes and sandals. The sculptured tracery on the walls,
-the costly offerings that enriched the shrines, the screens of gilded
-bronze, the delicately carved woodwork of the pulpit, the marble and
-alabaster ornaments, all went down under the fierce blows of the
-Iconoclasts. The pavement was strewed with the ruined splendors of a
-church, which in size and magnificence was perhaps second only to St.
-Peter’s among the churches of Christendom.
-
-“As the light of day faded, the assailants supplied its place with
-such light as they could obtain from the candles which they snatched
-from the altars. It was midnight before the work of destruction was
-completed. The whole number engaged in this work is said not to have
-exceeded a hundred, men, women, and boys.
-
-“When their task was completed, they sallied forth in a body from the
-doors of the cathedral, roaring out the fanatical war-cry of “_Vivent
-les Gueux!_” Flushed with success, and joined on the way by stragglers
-like themselves, they burst open the doors of one church after another,
-and by the time morning broke, the principal temples in the city had
-been dealt with in the same ruthless manner as the cathedral.
-
-“No attempt, all this time, was made to stop these proceedings, on
-the part of the magistrates or citizens. As they beheld from their
-windows the bodies of armed men hurrying to and fro, by the gleam of
-their torches, and listened to the sound of violence in the distance,
-they seem to have been struck with a panic. The Catholics remained
-within doors, fearing a general uprising of the Protestants. The
-Protestants feared to move abroad, lest they should be confounded
-with the rioters. For three days these dismal scenes continued....
-The fate of Antwerp had its effect on the country. The flames of
-fanaticism, burning fiercer than ever, quickly spread over the northern
-as they had done over the western provinces.... In Holland, Utrecht,
-Friesland,—everywhere in short, with a few exceptions on the southern
-borders,—mobs rose against the churches.”
-
-Cathedrals, chapels, monasteries, and nunneries, and even hospitals,
-were destroyed by these ignorant fanatics. The great library of
-Vicogne, one of the noblest collections in the Netherlands, perished
-in the flames kindled by the mob. Four hundred churches were sacked
-by the insurgents in Flanders alone. The damage to the cathedral at
-Antwerp was said to amount to four hundred thousand ducats. The whole
-work of this terrible devastation, occupied less than a fortnight.
-This wholesale destruction, perpetrated by the Iconoclasts, cannot be
-estimated. It is a melancholy fact that they pretended to be actuated
-by a zeal for the Reformation, thus dishonoring the great and glorious
-cause, by their ignorant fanaticism. An irreparable loss was occasioned
-by the destruction of manuscripts, statuary, and paintings. But the
-misguided Iconoclasts, ruthless as was their terrible destruction of
-magnificent cathedrals and priceless gems of art, must in justice have
-this excuse offered in their behalf, that they had been enfuriated by
-the infamous Inquisition which had turned Spain into one great _auto
-de fé_ of burning martyrs, and which threatened, through the bigotry
-of Philip II., to invade their own land with its fiendish cruelties.
-Compared with the Inquisition, with its scarlet hands reeking with the
-life-blood of its tortured victims, the retaliation of the Iconoclasts
-is scarcely to be wondered at.
-
-The tidings of the tumult in the Netherlands was received by Philip
-with the greatest indignation, and he exclaimed: “It shall cost them
-dear; by the soul of my father, I swear it, it shall cost them dear!”
-
-These troubles in the Netherlands caused a change in the mind of
-William, prince of Orange. He saw the workings of Catholicism under a
-fearful aspect. He beheld his countrymen dragged from their firesides,
-driven into exile, thrown into dungeons, burned at the stake; and all
-this for no other cause than because they dared to dissent from the
-dogmas of the Romish Church. His parents had been Lutherans, his wife
-also was a Protestant, and William of Orange embraced the doctrines of
-the Reformation. We cannot follow his career. After quelling a mob at
-Antwerp, which threatened to destroy the city, realizing that he could
-place no reliance upon Philip, or Margaret his regent, and as they now
-looked upon him with suspicion, William of Orange determined to retire
-to his estates in Germany. He there occupied himself with studying the
-Lutheran doctrine, and making himself acquainted with the principles
-of the glorious Reformation of which he was one day to become the
-champion. The regency of Margaret continued in the Netherlands from
-1559 to 1567; and in the last years she succeeded in putting down
-the revolt. Philip, through his regent, and the aid of the Pope, had
-now, by several successful contests in the Netherlands, quelled the
-rebellion, and the party of reform had disappeared, and its worship
-was everywhere proscribed. On its ruins the Catholic party had risen
-in greater splendor than ever. Margaret now resigned the regency, and
-the duke of Alva was appointed in her place. He created a new tribunal,
-which is known in history by the terrible name it received from the
-people, as the “Council of Blood.”
-
-[Illustration: PHILIP II., KING OF SPAIN.]
-
-In order to justify his cruel proceedings against the Netherlands,
-Philip now submitted the case to the Inquisition at Madrid, and that
-ghostly tribunal came to the following decision: “All who had been
-guilty of heresy, apostasy, or sedition, and all, moreover, who, though
-professing themselves good Catholics, had offered no resistance to
-these, were, with the exception of a few specified individuals, thereby
-convicted of treason in the highest degree.” This sweeping judgment
-was followed by a royal edict, dated on the same day, in which, after
-reciting the language of the Inquisition, the whole nation, with
-the exception above stated, was sentenced, without distinction of
-sex or age, to the penalties of treason,—death and confiscation of
-property; and this, the decree went on to say, “without any hope of
-grace whatever, that it might serve for an example and a warning to all
-future time!”
-
-Then followed the awful work of the “Council of Blood.” Men, women, and
-children were dragged to the gallows. Blood ran through the streets
-of the cities like a red river. The poor martyrs were tortured with
-horrible contrivances even at the scaffold, that their dying cries
-might cause merriment for their fiendish foes.
-
-And thus Philip II. vindicates his conduct during this reign of terror:
-“What I have done has been for the repose of the provinces, and for
-the defence of the Catholic faith. If I had respected justice less,
-I should have despatched the whole business in a single day. No one
-acquainted with the state of affairs, will find reason to censure my
-severity. Nor would I do otherwise than I have done, though I should
-risk the sovereignty of the Netherlands,—no, though the world should
-fall in ruins around me!”
-
-The young Queen Isabella having died, Philip II. married for his fourth
-wife, Anne of Austria, who had also been affianced to his son Carlos.
-Then came the rebellions of the Moriscoes, who were the descendants of
-the Moors in southern Spain. In 1569, the Moriscoes rose in a general
-insurrection against the Christians. Many a Moor had perished in the
-flames of the Inquisition, and they now retaliated with bloodthirsty
-ferocity. The horrors which ensued cannot be described. Before these
-Moors had been goaded by the cruel edicts of Philip, they had been kind
-neighbors. The cruelties committed by the Spanish troops sent against
-the Moors, were as shocking as the deeds of the barbarians. The Spanish
-army, before entering into a battle, knelt in prayer, invoking God’s
-blessing; and after a victory, reeking with the blood of their victims,
-they marched, under the banner of the cross, to the cathedrals, and
-chanted the _Te Deum_. Thus was religion turned into a mockery of a
-merciful God, and a cloak for the vilest of crimes.
-
-Philip brought his fourth bride, Anne of Austria, to the magnificent
-palace or monastery of the Escurial. She lived ten years. Her children
-all died in infancy, except one son, who lived to succeed his father on
-the throne as Philip III. Spain was now rapidly on the decline. Civil
-war, persecution, banishment and emigration, were fast depopulating the
-country. The population diminished from ten to six millions.
-
-As Queen Elizabeth of England had warmly espoused the Protestant cause,
-there was enmity between that nation and Spain. In 1558, Philip II.,
-of Spain, who had been for three years preparing the famous Spanish
-Armada, ordered the fleet to sail against England. This splendid armada
-set sail from Lisbon with high hopes. But next day they met with a
-violent storm, which scattered some of the ships, and sunk others, and
-forced the rest to take shelter in the Groine. After the damages had
-been repaired, the armada again set forth. The fleet consisted of one
-hundred and thirty vessels, and many of them were of greater size than
-had ever before been employed in Europe. The plan of the king of Spain
-was, that the fleet should sail to the coast opposite to Dunkirk and
-Newport, and having joined the fleet of the duke of Parma, should make
-sail to the Thames, and having landed the whole Spanish army, complete
-at one blow the conquest of England. The armada reached Calais. Here
-the English admiral practised a stratagem upon the Spaniards. He took
-eight of his smaller vessels and filled them with combustibles, and
-setting them on fire, sent them amongst the Spanish fleet. In the
-confusion caused by this incident, the English fell upon the Spanish,
-and captured or destroyed twelve of their ships. The Spanish admiral
-thereupon started to return home. A violent tempest overtook the armada
-after it passed the Orkneys. The ships were driven upon the western
-isles of Scotland, and coast of Ireland, and were miserably wrecked.
-Thus was the famous Spanish armada destroyed. It was almost a death
-blow to the Spanish monarchy. At length Philip II., with a bankrupt
-treasury, while his mind was filled with gloom and his body tortured
-with a loathsome and terrible disease, died on the 13th of September,
-1598. In view of his great opportunities, vast power, and the hopeful
-promise of his early career, and the miserable ending of his wrecked
-life, brought upon himself by his barbarous cruelties and religious
-bigotry and superstitions, we are reminded of the saying quoted at the
-commencement of the sketch, and are more fully convinced that no people
-can be prosperous unless their rulers are humane and virtuous. In the
-light of such shocking events as we have just been describing, and of
-such barbarous deeds performed in the name of religion, it seems to be
-an indisputable fact that the world has surely made vast progress in an
-enlightened civilization and in true Christianity.
-
-
-
-
-GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS.
-
-1594-1632 A.D.
-
- “Ay, every inch a king!”—SHAKESPEARE.
-
-
-THE oldest account of the nations of Europe in the far north is that
-given by Pytheas, who lived three hundred and fifty years before
-the Christian Era. His voyages carried him to the shores of Britain
-and Scandinavia. The Goths were the most ancient inhabitants of
-Scandinavia, occupying the south, and were earlier in Sweden than the
-Sueones. These two tribes were at war for many years, but finally
-united and formed the Swedish nation. During twelve centuries after
-the visit of Pytheas to northern countries, nothing was known of the
-Scandinavian people in their own homes, although wild tribes from
-the north overran southern Europe, and were known as the Cimbri,
-Teutons, Germans, and Goths. But in the time of Alfred the Great, two
-travellers from Scandinavia visited the court of the English king.
-From the account they gave of their travels, King Alfred wrote a brief
-history and made a chart of modern Europe. In this book Scandinavia was
-described.
-
-[Illustration: GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS.]
-
-Of the three Scandinavian countries, Sweden did not become known to
-the nations of southern Europe as soon as Denmark and Norway. Like the
-Danes, the Swedes traced the descent of their early kings back to Odin.
-Olaf was the first Christian king of Sweden, and received Christian
-baptism about the year 1000 A.D.
-
-The son and successor of Charlemagne, Louis le Débonnaire, took an
-ardent interest in sending Christian missionaries to the pagans of the
-north. The union of the kingdoms of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway was
-consummated in 1387. In 1523 the union with Denmark was dissolved, and
-Gustavus Vasa was proclaimed king of Sweden. This king was one of the
-ablest of the monarchs of the sixteenth century. He was the grandfather
-of Gustavus Adolphus. Charles IX., the father of Adolphus, came to the
-throne of Sweden in 1604. During the reigns of the elder brothers of
-Charles, there had been constant conflicts with Denmark. Charles IX.
-died in 1611, leaving an unfinished war with Denmark to be completed by
-his illustrious son, Gustavus Adolphus, then seventeen years of age.
-His father, Charles, had entered into friendly alliances with all the
-principal Protestant powers, and for the first time Sweden had been
-brought into important political relations with the more influential
-European nations. Gustavus Adolphus was born at the royal palace in
-Stockholm, Dec. 9, 1594. His mother, Christine, was the daughter of
-Adolphus, duke of Schleswig-Holstein, and grand-daughter of Frederic
-I., king of Denmark.
-
-Tycho Brahe, the famous astronomer, had announced, when a comet
-appeared in 1572, that there would spring up in Finland a prince
-destined to accomplish great changes in Germany, and deliver the
-Protestant people from the oppression of the popes. His countrymen
-applied to Gustavus this prediction of the Danish astronomer. Gustavus
-possessed a vigorous constitution, which was rendered robust by his
-childish experiences and manner of life. His early years were passed in
-the midst of constant wars between Sweden and Denmark. This account is
-given of the education and boyhood of Gustavus Adolphus:—
-
-“To be the tutor of the prince was appointed Master John Skytte, and
-Otto von Mörner his chamberlain. The last named was marshall of the
-court of Charles IX., and born of noble parents in Brandenburg. He had
-acquired extensive learning and distinguished manners in the numerous
-countries in which he had travelled. John Skytte, after having employed
-nine years in visiting foreign lands, had become one of the secretaries
-of the king’s government. Gustavus received all the instructions
-necessary to a prince destined to reign. Skytte directed him in the
-study of Latin, of history, and of the laws of his country.
-
-“As Charles was a strict ruler and martial prince, and as Christine
-had, besides her beauty, the soul proud and courageous, the education
-of the prince was free from softness. He was habituated to labor. At
-times in his early youth, particularly after he had arrived at his
-tenth year, he was more and more allowed by his father to attend the
-deliberations of the Council. He was habituated also to be present at
-the audiences of the foreign embassies, and was finally directed by
-his royal father to answer these foreign dignitaries in order thus to
-accustom him to weighty affairs and their treatment.
-
-“As it was a period of warlike turmoils, there was much resort to
-the king’s court, especially by officers,—not only Swedes, but also
-Germans, French, English, Scots, Netherlanders, and some Italians and
-Spaniards,—who, after the twelve years’ truce then just concluded
-between Spain and Holland, sought their fortune in Sweden. These
-often waited upon the young prince by the will and order of the king.
-Their conversation relating to the wars waged by other nations,
-battles, sieges, and discipline, both by sea and land as well as
-ships and navigation, did so arouse and stimulate the mind of the
-young prince, by nature already thus inclined, that he spent almost
-every day in putting questions concerning what had happened at one
-place and another in the wars. Besides, he acquired in his youthful
-years no little insight into the science of war, especially into the
-mode and means,—how a regular war, well directed and suited to the
-circumstances of Sweden, should be carried on, having the character and
-rules of Maurice, prince of Orange, as a pattern before his eyes. By
-the intercourse and converse of these officers, in which each told the
-most glorious acts of his own nation, the young prince was enkindled to
-act like others, and if possible, to excel them. In his early years he
-gained also a complete and ready knowledge of many foreign languages;
-so that he spoke Latin, German, Dutch, French, and Italian as purely
-as a native, and besides had some knowledge of the Russian and Polish
-tongues. When he was of the age of sixteen years, his father made
-him grand duke of Finland, and duke of Esthonia and Westmanland, and
-presently bestowed upon him the town of Vesteras, with the principal
-portion of Westmanland, over which was placed John Skytte to be
-governor.”
-
-It is also stated that Gustavus knew Greek, and read Xenophon in that
-tongue, of whom he said “that he knew of no writer better than he for a
-true military historian.”
-
-For some years after Gustavus ascended the throne, he is said to have
-devoted an hour each day to reading, preferring to all others the works
-of Grotius, especially his treatise on “War and Peace.”
-
-Young Gustavus possessed great courage, to which was joined striking
-benignity of character which he did not inherit from his parents.
-King Charles was stern and somewhat heartless, and he was persuaded
-by his wife, the mother of Adolphus, to great acts of cruelty towards
-the victims of his civil wars, which obscured his nobler qualities.
-The mother of Gustavus, though possessed of a strong and positive
-character, was too tyrannical to be attractive, and too unrelenting
-to exert a loving influence in her household, and the severity of
-both husband and wife came often in collision. Adolphus was the only
-member of the royal family who dared attempt to pacify his father when
-he was angry. Though Gustavus inherited the strong characteristics of
-his parents, and possessed his father’s failing of a quick temper,
-his nature was so sympathetic and unselfish that his winning manners
-attracted the hearts of all as much as the unrelenting sternness of his
-parents repelled. Their sternness became in the household only exacting
-selfishness; whereas all the severity of his character manifested
-itself only in unflinching allegiance to the right and true, and the
-steadfast upholding of high and noble principles of state or religion.
-Gustavus was scarcely fifteen years of age when he requested to be
-placed in command of troops in the war against Russia. But his father,
-deeming him too young, refused. When he was seventeen years of age, war
-having been declared with Denmark, young Gustavus was pronounced in
-the Diet—as the assembly of the Swedish nobles was called—fit to bear
-the sword, and he was, according to ancient custom, invested with this
-dignity with most splendid ceremony.
-
-In this expedition young Gustavus endured his first trial of warfare,
-being present at all the remarkable encounters, holding chief command
-in most of them. For during this war King Charles died, and the
-command was left to Gustavus, then seventeen years of age. In the first
-month of his eighteenth year, he received the crown in the presence
-of all the representatives of the estates of Sweden, at the Diet of
-Nyköping. He took the title of his father,—king-elect and hereditary
-prince of Sweden, of the Goths, and of the Wends. Since the death of
-Gustavus Vasa, his grandfather, a period of more than fifty years,
-Sweden had not enjoyed a single year of peace.
-
-When Gustavus Adolphus ascended the Swedish throne, in 1611, being then
-in his eighteenth year, he found an exhausted treasury, an alienated
-nobility, and not undisputed succession, and, with all this, no less
-than three wars upon his hands,—one with Denmark then raging,—also
-the seeds of two other wars, with Russia and with Poland, which soon
-after burst forth. The first fifteen years of his reign were occupied
-in bringing these wars to a conclusion; and in these struggles he
-won an experience which afterwards proved of great service in making
-him illustrious upon a more conspicuous battle-field. We have not
-space to describe at length the wars between Sweden and Denmark, nor
-her conflicts with Russia and Poland, but must pass on to the more
-important period of the history of Gustavus Adolphus, which gives him
-a place in the foremost ranks of leadership, and places his name with
-Napoleon I., Alexander the Great, Julius Cæsar, and Charlemagne. It was
-not so much what he himself personally accomplished,—though that was
-much, for death met him long before the glorious end was reached,—but
-it was on account of the vast and momentous train of circumstances he
-set in motion, because he stood forth, the only man capable of taking
-the helm of the great ship of the Reformation, which, but for him,
-aided by the almighty ruling of an Omniscient Providence, seemed to
-the finite vision of mankind doomed to destruction. It was not as a
-conqueror of vast empires, like Alexander, Julius Cæsar, and Napoleon,
-that Gustavus Adolphus is illustrious; but it is because, through the
-providence of God, he was made the instrument in helping to achieve
-the more important conquest of gaining spiritual liberty of soul
-from the bondage of bigotry and superstition. As the champion of the
-Reformation, the name of Gustavus Adolphus must be placed amongst the
-foremost of the famous rulers of the world.
-
-[Illustration: GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS, FROM A PICTURE BY VAN DYCK.]
-
-Gustavus was now thirty-four years of age. He had prosecuted wars with
-Denmark, Russia, and Poland, and secured advantageous terms of peace
-with these nations. Before he had reached his twentieth year, he had
-driven back the invaders of his country, and gained independence for
-Sweden. In four years more, his victories over his eastern enemies
-enabled him to declare, “Russia cannot now, without our consent, launch
-a single boat on the Baltic.”
-
-For twelve years Gustavus had watched the bloody strife between
-the defenders of the Reformed Faith in Germany and the powers of
-the Catholic league of the Empire and of Spain. What Philip II. of
-Spain was to the Catholics as a leader and upholder of the infamous
-Inquisition, such a power did Gustavus Adolphus become, in behalf of
-the Protestants, as a leader and defender of the Reformation. Holland,
-England, and France had earnestly pressed him to conclude the Polish
-wars; for the eyes of the suffering adherents of the Reformed Faith in
-Germany were turned in hope toward the youthful king of Sweden as their
-deliverer. In setting out upon this distant enterprise, Gustavus
-Adolphus encountered the gravest obstacles, which he himself did not
-fail to realize; for when his resolution was fully formed, and the
-consent of his Estates obtained, he exclaimed, “For me there remains
-henceforth no more rest but the eternal.”
-
-Though he left Sweden full of hope and courage, it was with the sure
-presentiment that he would never return. Gustavus had married Marie
-Eleonore, daughter of the elector of Brandenburg; and at the time
-of his German expedition left a little daughter behind him, only
-four years of age, who was sole heir to the Swedish throne. Gustavus
-Adolphus was one of the most skilful commanders of his age. Napoleon I.
-was wont to set him among the eight greatest generals whom the world
-has ever seen, placing him in the same rank with Alexander the Great,
-Hannibal, Julius Cæsar, in the ancient world, with Turenne, Prince
-Eugene, Frederic the Great, and himself, in the modern.
-
-Before his time, the only artillery brought into the open field
-consisted of huge, heavy guns, slowly dragged along by twelve, sixteen,
-or twenty horses or oxen, which, once placed, could only remain in one
-position, even though the entire battle had shifted elsewhere. Gustavus
-was the first who introduced flying artillery, capable of being rapidly
-transferred from one part of the field to another. At a siege, this
-valiant Swedish king would in the same day “be at once generalissimo,
-chief engineer to lay out the lines, pioneer, spade in hand and in
-his shirt digging in the trenches, and leader of a storming party to
-dislodge the foe from some annoying outwork. If a party of the enemy’s
-cavalry were to be surprised in a night attack, he would himself
-undertake the surprise. He, indeed, carried this quite too far, obeying
-overmuch the instinct and impulses of his own courageous heart. And
-yet there was also a true humility in it all,—a feeling that no man
-ought to look at himself as indispensable. ‘God is immortal,’ he was
-wont to reply, when remonstrated with on this matter, and reminded of
-the fearful chasm, not to be filled by any other, which his death would
-assuredly leave.” Richelieu said of him, “The king of Sweden is a new
-sun which has just risen, young, but of vast renown. The ill-treated or
-banished princes of Germany in their misfortunes have turned their eyes
-towards him as the mariner does to the polar star.”
-
-Gustavus was admitted by the ablest statesmen of Europe to be the
-ablest general of his time. He was familiar with the military tactics
-of ancient and modern times, and he devised a more effective system of
-warfare than his predecessors had known. In answer to the question, Why
-did Gustavus Adolphus enter into the religious contests of Germany,
-and assume the commanding place he filled in that terrible struggle
-known as the “Thirty Years’ War”? an able writer gives thus briefly the
-reason:—
-
-“First, a deep and genuine sympathy with his co-religionists in
-Germany, and with their sufferings, joined to a conviction that he was
-called of God to assist them in this hour of their utmost need.
-
-“Secondly, a sense of the most real danger which threatened his own
-kingdom, if the entire liberties, political and religious, of northern
-Germany were trodden out, and the free cities of the German Ocean,
-Stralsund and the rest, falling into the hands of the emperor, became
-hostile outposts from which to assail him. He felt that he was only
-going to meet a war which, if he tarried at home, would sooner or later
-inevitably come to seek him there.
-
-“And, lastly, there was working in his mind, no doubt, a desire to
-give to Sweden a more forward place in the world, with a consciousness
-of mighty powers in himself, which craved a wider sphere for their
-exercise.”
-
-In answer to John Skytte, who remarked that war put his monarchy at
-stake, he responded: “All monarchies have passed from one family to
-another. That which constitutes a monarchy is not men, it is the law.”
-
-At length, in 1630, Gustavus landed on the island of Usedom, at the
-mouth of the Oder.
-
-“So we have got another kingling on our hands,” the emperor exclaimed
-in scorn, when the news reached Vienna. Little did the enemies of the
-Reformation then imagine what a terrible and irresistible foe this
-despised “kingling” would prove to be. The army of Gustavus consisted
-of only fifteen thousand men; but, if his army was small, the material
-was indeed valuable. Gustavus said of his staff of officers, “All these
-are captains, and fit to command armies.” And when his early death left
-them without a leader, these same officers led the Swedish armies so
-successfully that, even after France had become her ally, Sweden was
-not obscured, but still held a prominent place in the mighty contest.
-Gustavus had determined not to hazard a battle until he was joined
-by German allies. As soon as they landed on the island of Usedom,
-Gustavus, having leaped first upon the shore, at once fell upon his
-knees, and sought the aid and blessing of God; and then the working and
-the praying went hand in hand. He was the first to seize a spade; and,
-as the troops landed, one half were employed in raising intrenchments,
-while the other half stood in battle array, to repel any attacks of
-the enemy. It was a long time before any German ally appeared; for,
-though gallant little Hesse Cassel boldly announced its allegiance,
-it was a power too small and too distant to count for much. The two
-most powerful of the German Protestant princes were his brother-in-law,
-the elector of Brandenburg, and the elector of Saxony. John George of
-Saxony was a great hunter, having killed with his own hand or seen
-killed 113,629 wild animals. He was, however, such a great drunkard
-that he was called the Beer King. But this bold Nimrod, who could fight
-wild animals so courageously, was too cowardly to come forward against
-the enemies of his country, and only joined Gustavus when the terrors
-of the Catholic league forced him to seek safety in such an alliance.
-
-As to the brother-in-law of Gustavus, little was to be obtained from
-him. He was so vacillating in character and in politics that Carlyle
-says of him, “Poor man, it was his fate to stand in the range of these
-huge collisions, when the Titans were hurling rocks at one another, and
-he hoped by dexterous skipping to escape share of the game.”
-
-The arrival of Gustavus Adolphus in Germany was at first looked upon
-with indifference by the imperial court. The emperor Ferdinand said
-carelessly, “We have another little enemy before us.” At Vienna they
-made sport of Gustavus and of his pretensions to require himself
-to be called “Your majesty,” like the other kings of Europe. “The
-snow-king will melt as he approaches the southern sun,” they exclaimed
-derisively. But the valiant Swedes worked on at their fortifications
-at Pomerania, indifferent to the sneers of their foes, inspired by the
-example of their loved leader, whose watchword was, “to pray often to
-God with all your heart is almost to conquer.” In a short time, the
-army was enclosed in an intrenched camp, defended by cannon. The king
-of Sweden then addressed these stirring words to his soldiers:—
-
-“It is as much on your account as for your religious brethren in
-Germany that I have undertaken this war. You will there gather
-imperishable glory. You have nothing to fear from the enemy; they are
-the same whom you have already conquered in Prussia. Your bravery has
-imposed on Poland an armistice of six years; if you continue to fight
-as valiantly, I hope to obtain an honorable peace for your country and
-guaranties of security for the German Protestants. Old soldiers, it is
-not of yesterday you have known war; for you have shared with me all
-the chances of fortune. You must not lose courage if you experience
-some wants. I will conduct you to an enemy who has enriched himself at
-the expense of that unhappy country. It is only with the enemy you can
-find money, abundance, and all which you desire.”
-
-Thus did Gustavus appeal to their courage, their patriotism, their
-religious enthusiasm, and their personal necessities, and inspire his
-soldiers with irresistible valor.
-
-The severe discipline of the Swedish troops excited not less admiration
-than the personal virtue of their king. Richelieu, in his memoirs,
-says, “As to the king of Sweden personally, there was seen in his
-actions but an inexorable severity towards the least excess of his
-soldiers, an extraordinary mildness towards the people, and an exact
-justice on all occasions.”
-
-It was at the time of the landing of the Swedes that the noted general
-Wallenstein had fallen into disgrace with the German emperor, and had
-been discharged from the imperial service. His place was filled by
-Tilly, a military chieftain of high renown. Tilly had made himself
-the terror of the Protestants by his bigoted zeal for the Catholic
-religion and his fierce spirit of persecution towards the Reformed
-Faith; but his military insight made him just enough to thus generously
-describe his famous antagonist:—
-
-“The king of Sweden is an enemy both prudent and brave, inured to war,
-and in the flower of his age. His plans are excellent, his resources
-considerable, his subjects enthusiastically attached to him. His
-army,—composed of Swedes, Germans, Livonians, Finlanders, Scots, and
-English,—by its devoted obedience to their leader, is blended into one
-nation. He is a gamester, in playing with whom not to have lost is to
-have won a great deal.”
-
-Gustavus was beginning to make a strong position in northern Germany,
-when he received an envoy from the elector of Brandenburg, urging him
-to consent to an armistice, the elector offering himself as a mediator
-between the Swedish king and the Catholic league. Gustavus thus
-answered this weak and cowardly advice of the elector:—
-
-“I have listened to the arguments by which my lord and brother-in-law
-would seek to dissuade me from the war, but could well have expected
-another communication from him; namely, that God having helped me thus
-far, and come, as I am, into this land for no other end than to deliver
-its poor and oppressed estates and people from the horrible tyranny of
-the thieves and robbers who have plagued it so long, above all, to free
-his highness from like tribulation, he would rather have joined himself
-with me, and thus not failed to seize the opportunity which God has
-wonderfully vouchsafed him. Or does not his highness yet know that the
-intention of the emperor and of the league is this,—not to cease till
-the evangelical religion is quite rooted out of the empire, and that
-he himself has nothing else to look forward to than to be compelled
-either to deny his faith or to forsake his land? For God’s sake, let
-him bethink himself a little, and for once grasp manly counsels. For
-myself, I cannot go back.... I seek in this work not mine own things,
-no profit at all except the safety of my kingdom; else have I nothing
-from it but expense, weariness, toil, and danger of life and limb....
-For this, I say plainly beforehand, I will hear and know nothing of
-neutrality; his highness must be friend or foe. When I come to his
-borders, he must declare himself hot or cold. The battle is one between
-God and the devil. Will his highness hold with God, let him stand on my
-side; if he prefer to hold with the devil, then he must fight with me.”
-
-The elector of Brandenburg still vacillating, the king of Sweden was
-as good as his word, and advanced with his army, with loaded cannon
-and matches burning, to the gates of Berlin. Whereupon, the treaty of
-alliance was quickly signed by the elector of Brandenburg; and not long
-after, the outrages of the imperial commander obliged the elector of
-Saxony also to join the Swedish king. During the first year in Germany,
-the Swedes had captured Greiffenhagen and Gartz; and soon after New
-Brandenburg, Loitz, Malchin, and Demmin were in their power. We have no
-space to note the particulars regarding these important conquests, and
-can only mention the taking of Demmin. The Imperialists had placed the
-garrison here under the command of Duke Savelli, who had been ordered
-to defend the place three weeks, when Tilly had promised to come to his
-aid. Among the Imperialists was Del Ponte, a man who had been deep in a
-conspiracy to assassinate the king of Sweden, which had come near being
-successful. As Del Ponte feared the vengeance of the king whose life
-he had thus sought, he left the fortress secretly, leaving his baggage
-and wealth behind him. Savelli offered to capitulate, on condition that
-he might pass out with arms and baggage. As Gustavus was now on the eve
-of meeting Tilly, he did not think best to prolong the siege, and so
-agreed to the proposal of Savelli. The entire garrison passed out with
-ensigns flying, followed by the baggage train. As Savelli, brilliantly
-and carefully dressed, passed the Swedish king, Gustavus addressed
-him: “Tell the emperor I make war for civil and religious liberty. As
-to you, duke, I thank you for having taken the trouble to quit the
-splendid feasts of Rome to combat against me, for your person seems to
-me more in its place at courts than in the camps.” After the Italian
-general passed, Gustavus remarked to his officers, “That man reckons
-much on the good nature of the emperor; if he was in my service, he
-would lose his head for his cowardice.”
-
-As the baggage of the treacherous Del Ponte was noticed in the train,
-some of the Swedish officers suggested that it would be well to retain
-what belonged to that traitor, to which Gustavus responded, “I have
-given my word, and no one shall have the right to reproach me for
-having broken it.” As to the energy and bravery of Gustavus, one of
-his Scotch officers thus testifies: “I serve with great pleasure such
-a general, and I could find with difficulty a similar man who was
-accustomed to be the first and the last where there is danger; who
-gained the love of his officers by the part he took in their troubles
-and fatigues; who knew so well how to trace the rules of conduct for
-his warriors according to times and circumstances; who cared for their
-health, their honor; who was always ready to aid them; who divined
-the projects and knew the resources of his enemies, their plans,
-their forces, their discipline, likewise the nature and position of
-the places they occupied. He never hesitated to execute what he had
-ordered. He arrested an officer who, while the fortifications of Settin
-were being repaired, stated that the earth was frozen. In affairs which
-had relation to the needs of the war, he did not admit of excuses. The
-lack of good charts and the great importance he attached to knowledge
-of the ground, caused him to go _en reconnaissance_ in person, and
-expose himself very near to danger, for he was short-sighted.”
-
-At the siege of Demmin he had gone to reconnoitre, and held a spy-glass
-in hand, when he plunged half-leg deep in the marsh, in consequence
-of the breaking of the ice. The officer nearest to him prepared to
-come to his aid. Gustavus made a sign to him to remain tranquil, so
-as not to draw the attention of the enemy who, not less, directed his
-fire upon him. The king raised himself up in the midst of a shower
-of projectiles, and went to dry himself at the bivouac fire of the
-officer, who reproached him for having thus exposed his precious life.
-The king listened to the officer with kindness and acknowledged his
-imprudence, but added, “It is my nature not to believe well done except
-what I do myself; it is also necessary that I see everything by my own
-eyes.” Gustavus now advanced boldly into the heart of Germany, and met
-the forces of the Catholic League on the plains of Leipsic. As the
-Swedes drew up in line of battle, Gustavus rode from point to point,
-encouraging his soldiers, telling them “not to fire until they saw the
-white of the enemies’ eyes.”
-
-Then the Swedish king rode to the centre of his line, halted, removed
-his cap with one hand and lowered his sword with the other. His
-example was followed by all near him. Gustavus then offered this brief
-prayer in a powerful voice, which enabled him to be heard by a large
-number of his army:—
-
-“Good God, thou who holdest in thy hand victory and defeat, turn thy
-merciful face to us thy servants. We have come far, we have left our
-peaceful homes to combat in this country for liberty, for the truth,
-and for thy gospel. Glorify thy holy name in granting us victory.”
-
-Then the Swedish king sent a trumpeter to challenge Tilly and his army.
-The battle ensued, in which Gustavus defeated Tilly, the victor on
-more than twenty battle-fields. The king of Sweden so shattered and
-scattered the Catholic army in this conflict, that for a while all
-Germany was open to him. Gustavus was now everywhere hailed by the
-down-trodden Protestants of Germany, whose worship he re-established,
-and whose churches he restored to them, as their saviour and deliverer.
-The very excess of their gratitude would sometimes make him afraid.
-Only three days before his death he said to his chaplain, “They make a
-god of me; God will punish me for this.”
-
-The appearance of Gustavus at this time is thus described: “He was one
-‘framed in the prodigality of nature.’ His look proclaimed the hero,
-and at the same time, the genuine child of the North. A head taller
-than men of the ordinary stature, yet all his limbs were perfectly
-proportioned.” Majesty and courage shone out from his clear gray eyes;
-while, at the same time, an air of mildness and _bonhommie_ tempered
-the earnestness of his glance. He had the curved eagle nose of Cæsar,
-of Napoleon, of Wellington, of Napier,—the conqueror’s nose as we may
-call it. His skin was fair, his hair blonde, almost gold-colored, so
-that the Italians were wont to call him, _Re d’oro_ or the Gold-king.
-In latter years he was somewhat inclined to corpulence, though not so
-much as to detract from the majesty of his appearance. This made it,
-however, not easy to find a horse which was equal to his weight.
-
-Gustavus now carried his victorious arms to the banks of the Rhine,
-where there still stands, not far from Mayence, what is known as the
-Swedish column. On the banks of the Lech he again met Tilly, who
-would have barred the way. Some of the officers in the Swedish army
-counselled that the king should not meet Tilly, but should march to
-Bohemia.
-
-The Lech was deep and rapid, and to cross it in the face of an enemy
-was very hazardous. In case of failure the entire Swedish army would
-be lost. But Gustavus exclaimed, “What! have we crossed the Baltic,
-the Oder, the Elbe, and the Rhine, to stop stupefied before this mere
-stream, the Lech? Remember that the undertakings the most difficult are
-often those which succeed best, because the adverse party regard them
-as impossible.”
-
-Gustavus threw over the Lech a bridge under the crossfire of
-seventy-two pieces of cannon. The king stimulated his troops by his own
-example, making with his own hand more than sixty cannon discharges.
-The enemy did their utmost to destroy the works, and Tilly was
-undaunted in his exertions to encourage his men, until he was mortally
-wounded by a cannon-ball, and victory soon was on the side of the
-heroic Swedes.
-
-This crossing of the Lech in the face of an enemy is esteemed the most
-signal military exploit of Gustavus. The emperor was now forced to
-recall Wallenstein to lead the hard-pressed Imperialists against this
-invincible Swedish king.
-
-But with the battle of Lützen, where the Swedes encountered the
-Imperialists under Wallenstein, we come also to the lamentable but
-heroic death of Gustavus Adolphus. We cannot recount the further
-conflicts of the Thirty Years’ War.
-
-The work of Gustavus Adolphus in Germany was continued by his able
-generals and allies, until at length the treaty, concluded at
-Westphalia in 1648, gave security and permanence to the work which the
-king of Sweden and his brave soldiers had in a large degree achieved
-before his death. A wound which Gustavus had received in his Polish
-wars, made the wearing of armor very painful to him, and upon the
-morning of the day upon which the battle of Lützen was fought, when his
-armor was brought to him, he declined to put it on, saying, “God is my
-armor.”
-
-His death is thus described. Learning that the centre of the Swedish
-lines were wavering, Gustavus hastened thither. “Arriving at the
-wavering centre, he cried to his troops, ‘Follow me, my brave boys!’
-and his horse at a bound bore him across the ditch. Only a few of his
-cavaliers followed him, their steeds not being equal to his. Owing to
-his impetuosity, perhaps also to his nearsightedness and the increasing
-fog, he did not perceive to what extent he was in advance, and became
-separated from the troops he was so bravely leading. An imperial
-corporal, noticing that the Swedes made way for an advancing cavalier,
-pointed him out to a musketeer, saying, he must be a personage of high
-rank, and urged him to fire on him. The musketeer took aim, his ball
-broke the left arm of the king, causing the bone to protrude, and the
-blood to run freely. ‘The king bleeds!’ cried the Swedes near him. ‘It
-is nothing; march forward my boys!’ responded the wounded hero, seeking
-to calm their disquietude by assuming a smiling countenance. But soon
-overcome by pain and loss of blood, he requested Duke Lauenburg, in
-French, to lead him out of the tumult without being observed, which was
-sought to be done by making a _détour_, so as to conceal the king’s
-withdrawal from his brave Smolanders he was leading to the charge.
-Scarcely had they made a few steps, when one of the imperial regiment
-of cuirassiers encountered them, preceded by Lieut.-Col. Falkenberg,
-who, recognizing the king, fired a pistol shot, hitting him in the
-back. ‘Brother,’ said he to Lauenburg, with a dying voice; ‘I have
-enough. Look to your own life.’ Falkenberg was immediately slain by
-the equerry of the duke of Lauenburg. At the same moment the king fell
-from his horse, struck by several more balls, and was dragged some
-distance by the stirrups. The duke of Lauenburg fled. Of the king’s
-two orderlies, one lay dead and the other wounded. Of his attendants,
-only a German page, named Leubelfing, remained by him. The king having
-fallen from his horse, the page jumped from his own, and offered it to
-the dying hero. The king stretched out his hands, but the young man
-had not strength sufficient to lift him from the ground. Meanwhile
-the imperial cuirassiers hastened forward, and demanded the name of
-the wounded officer. The loyal page would not reveal it, and received
-wounds from which he died soon after. But the dying Gustavus bravely
-answered, ‘I am the king of Sweden.’ Whereupon his cruel enemies shot
-a ball through his head, and thrust their swords through his bleeding
-body. His hat, blackened with the powder and pierced with the ball,
-is still to be seen in the arsenal at Vienna; his bloody buff coat as
-well. More is not known of the final agony, except that, when the tide
-of battle had a little ebbed, the body of the hero-king was found with
-the face to the ground, despoiled and stripped to the shirt, trodden
-under the hoofs of horses, trampled in the mire, and disfigured with
-all these wounds.”
-
-[Illustration: DEATH OF GUSTAVUS AND HIS PAGE.]
-
-Such was the end of the imposing and kingly bodily presence; but this
-was not the end of the accomplishment of that heroic soul. When the
-horse of the fallen Gustavus, with its empty saddle covered with blood,
-came running amongst the Swedish troops, they knew what had happened
-to their king. Duke Bernhard, riding through the ranks, exclaimed,
-“Swedes, Finlanders, and Germans! your defender, the defender of
-our liberty, is dead. Life is nothing to me if I do not draw bloody
-vengeance from this misfortune. Whoever wishes to prove he loved the
-king, has only to follow me to avenge his death.” The whole Swedish
-army, fired by a common enthusiasm nerved by desperation, advanced
-to the attack, and so valiantly did they fight, that their gallant
-charge completed the victory of Lützen. Thus died the “Gold-king of
-the North”; but his dying hours were gilded by the sunset glories of
-immortal fame, and the “Snow-king,” of Sweden, leaves a name as pure
-and glistening as the starry snow-flakes.
-
-“Great men, far more than any Alps or coliseums, are the true
-world-wonders, which it concerns us to behold clearly, and imprint
-forever on our remembrance. Great men are the fire-pillars in this
-dark pilgrimage of mankind; they stand as heavenly signs, ever-living
-witnesses of what has been,—prophetic witnesses of what may still
-be; the revealed embodied possibilities of human nature, which
-greatness he who has never with his whole heart passionately loved and
-reverenced, is himself forever doomed to be little.”
-
-
-
-
-LOUIS XIV. OF FRANCE.
-
-1638-1715 A.D.
-
- “To do what one pleases with impunity,
- That is to be King.”—SALLUST.
-
-
-THE reign of Louis XIV., whether regarded politically, socially, or
-morally, was undoubtedly the most striking which France has ever
-known. The splendor of his court, the successes of his armies, and the
-illustrious names that embellished the century over which he ruled,
-drew the attention of all Europe to the person of the monarch who,
-every inch a king, assumed the authority and power of regality as well
-as its mere visible attributes. All Europe looked to France, all France
-to Paris, all Paris to Versailles, all Versailles to Louis XIV.
-
-[Illustration: LOUIS XIV.]
-
-The centre of all attraction, he, like the eagle, embraced the whole
-glory of the orb upon which he gazed; and seated firmly upon the throne
-of France, ruling by the “right divine,” he ushered in the golden age
-of literature, himself the theme and gaze and wonder of a dazzled world.
-
-The morning of the 5th of September, 1638, dawned bright and clear. In
-the forest of St. Germain, the birds sang merrily in the trees, and the
-timid deer sought shelter in the deepest shade, all unconscious that
-ere the setting of the sun a royal prince would look upon it for the
-first time.
-
-The park and palace were filled with an eager and excited throng;
-earls, princes, dukes, and bishops anxiously awaited the announcement
-that an heir was born to the crown of France. In the grand salon
-of Henry IV., King Louis XIII., the Duke d’Orleans, the bishops of
-Lisieux, Meaux, and Beauvais, impatiently awaited the long-expected
-tidings. And now the folding-doors are thrown back, and the king is
-greeted with the welcome intelligence that he is the father of a
-_dauphin_. Tenderly he takes the child, and stepping upon the balcony,
-exhibits him to the crowd, exclaiming joyfully, “A son, gentlemen! a
-son!” and park and palace re-echo with the shouts of “_Vive le Roi!_”
-“_Vive le Dauphin!_”
-
-Thus this baby prince, when first he saw the light, was greeted by
-the homage of a court—an homage which, during a life of seventy-seven
-years, he ever exacted and received, until as Louis XIV., the _Grand
-Monarque_, in obedience to Him who is King of kings and Lord of lords,
-he laid aside his sceptre and his crown, and slept with his fathers
-in the royal vaults of St. Denis. The birth of the dauphin afforded
-Louis XIII. such delight that for a time he threw aside his melancholy
-manner; but his health, never robust, failed rapidly, and on the 20th
-of April, 1643, feeling that his end could not be far distant, he
-declared the regency of the queen, and desired the christening of the
-dauphin. It accordingly took place on the following day with much pomp
-in the chapel at St. Germain. The king desired he should be called
-Louis, and after the ceremony, when the little prince was carried to
-his bedside in order to ascertain if his wishes had been fulfilled, he
-demanded, “What is your name, my child?” And the little dauphin replied
-promptly, “I am Louis XIV.”
-
-“Not yet, my son, not yet!” said the dying king; “but I pray to God
-that it may soon be so.”
-
-From this time his health failed rapidly, and on the 14th of May, 1643,
-he expired, having reigned thirty-three years.
-
-The little dauphin early displayed that haughtiness and self-will which
-were to be the ruling principles of his life. His education had been
-grossly neglected, and through this came many of his after faults; and
-though he excelled in every punctilio of court etiquette, and was the
-very essence of politeness, yet in other things he was far behind the
-other youths of his age. This was exactly as Cardinal Mazarin intended
-that it should be, that by thus dwarfing the intellect of the king, he
-might the longer grasp the reins of government. The wily cardinal fully
-understood the character of the young prince with whom he had to deal,
-and upon one occasion, when some one remonstrated with him concerning
-the course he had adopted toward the king, he replied, “Ah, you do not
-know His Majesty! he has the stuff in him to make four kings and an
-honest man.”
-
-The hatred and dislike of Louis for the cardinal increased day by
-day. The state affected by him jarred upon his natural haughtiness,
-and, boy as he was, it was impossible that he could contrast the
-extreme magnificence of his mother’s minister with his own neglected
-condition without feeling how insultingly the cardinal had profited by
-his weakness and want of power. On one occasion at Compiègne, as the
-cardinal was passing with a numerous suite along the terrace, the king
-turned away, saying contemptuously, without any attempt to lower his
-voice, “There is the Grand Turk going by.”
-
-A few days afterwards, as he was traversing a passage in which he
-perceived one of the cardinal’s household named Bois Fermé, he turned
-to M. de Nyert, who was following him, and observed, “So the cardinal
-is with mamma again, for I see Bois Fermé in the passage. Does he
-always wait there?”
-
-“Yes, sire,” replied Nyert; “but in addition to Bois Fermé there is
-another gentleman upon the stairs and two in the corridor.”
-
-“There is one at every stride, then,” said the young; king dryly.
-
-But the boy-king was not the only one who found the arrogance of the
-haughty cardinal unbearable. There had gradually sprung up a deadly
-feud between the court and Mazarin on one side, and the Parliament on
-the other.
-
-The people of Paris were in sympathy with the Parliament; and nobles,
-even of royal blood, out of enmity to Mazarin, joined the popular cause.
-
-Thus commenced the famous civil war of the Fronde; for as the cardinal
-contemptuously remarked, “The Parliament are like school-boys _fronding
-in the Paris ditches_,” and the Parliament of Paris accepted the title,
-and adopted the _Fronde_, or sling, as the emblem of their party. There
-were riots in Paris, and affairs grew threatening. Mazarin and the
-court party were alarmed and fled to St. Germain.
-
-Thus there were two rival courts in France,—the one at St. Germain,
-where all was want and destitution; the other at the Hotel de Ville in
-Paris, where all was splendor, abundance, and festive enjoyment. The
-court and Mazarin soon tired of the life at St. Germain, and the king;
-sent a herald to the Parliament. The Parliament refused to receive
-the herald, but sent a deputation to the king, and at last, after a
-lengthy conference, a not very satisfactory compromise was agreed upon,
-and on the 5th of April, 1650, the royal fugitives returned to Paris.
-
-“Thus ended the first act of the most singular, bootless, and we are
-almost tempted to add, burlesque war, which in all probability, Europe
-ever witnessed. Through its whole duration society appeared to have
-been smitten with some moral hallucination. Kings and cardinals slept
-on mattresses; princesses and duchesses on straw; market-women embraced
-princes; prelates governed armies; court-ladies led the mob, and the
-mob in its turn ruled the city.”
-
-On the 5th of September, 1651, the minority of the dauphin ceased, he
-had now entered upon his fourteenth year, and, immature boy as he was,
-he was declared to be the absolute monarch of France. On the seventh of
-the month, the king held his bed of justice. The ceremony was attended
-with all the pomp the wealth of the empire could furnish. The young
-king left the Palais Royal attended by a numerous and splendid retinue.
-Observed of all observers, “handsome as Adonis, august in majesty, the
-pride and joy of humanity,” he sat his splendid steed; and when the
-horse, frightened by the long and enthusiastically prolonged cries of,
-“_Vive le Roi!_” reared and plunged with terror, Louis managed him with
-a skill and address which called forth the admiration of all beholders.
-After attending mass, the young king took his seat in the Parliament.
-Here the boy of thirteen, covering his head while all the notabilities
-of France stood before him with heads uncovered, repeated the following
-words:—
-
-“Gentlemen, I have attended my Parliament in order to inform you
-that, according to the law of my kingdom, I shall myself assume its
-government. I trust that by the goodness of God it will be with piety
-and justice.”
-
-The chancellor then made a long address, after which the oath of
-allegiance was taken by all the civil and ecclesiastical notabilities.
-The royal procession then returned to the gates of the Palais Royal.
-Thus, a stripling, who had just completed his thirteenth year, was
-accepted by the nobles and by the populace as the absolute and
-untrammelled sovereign of France. “He held in his hands, virtually,
-unrestrained by constitution or court, their liberties, their fortunes,
-and their lives.” Two years later, in 1653, the coronation of the king
-took place at Rheims. France at this time was at war with Spain, and,
-immediately after the coronation, the king, then sixteen years of
-age, set out from Rheims to place himself at the head of the army. He
-went to Stenay, on the northeastern frontier of France. This ancient
-city, protected by strong fortifications, was held by the Prince de
-Condé. The royal troops were besieging it. There were marches and
-counter-marches, battles and skirmishes. The young king displayed
-intrepidity which secured for him the admiration of the soldiers.
-Turenne and Fabert fought the battles and gained the victories. Stenay
-was soon taken, and the army of the Prince de Condé driven from all
-its positions. “There is nothing so successful as success;” and the
-young king, a hero and a conqueror, returned to Paris to enjoy the
-congratulation of the populace, and to offer public thanksgiving in the
-cathedral of Nôtre Dame. Though the king was nominally the absolute
-ruler of France, still there was the influence of his mother, Anne of
-Austria, which up to this time had exerted over him a great control;
-but this was soon to end.
-
-Henrietta Maria, the widowed queen of the unfortunate Charles I.,
-was then residing at the French court. Her daughter Henrietta, as
-grand-daughter of Henry IV. and daughter of Charles I., was entitled,
-through the purity of her royal blood, to the highest consideration at
-the court. When, then, at a ball given for these unfortunate guests,
-the music summoned the dancers upon the floor, and the king, in total
-disregard of his young and royal cousin, advanced, according to his
-custom, to lead out the Duchesse de Mercœur, the queen was shocked at
-so gross a breach of etiquette, and, rising hastily, she withdrew his
-hand from that of the duchess, and said in a low voice, “You should
-dance first, my son, with the princess of England.”
-
-Louis replied sullenly, “I am not fond of little girls.”
-
-[Illustration: ANNE OF AUSTRIA AND CARDINAL MAZARIN.]
-
-Both Henrietta and her daughter overheard this discourteous remark.
-The English queen hastened to Anne of Austria, and entreated her not
-to attempt to constrain the wishes of his majesty. The position was
-exceedingly awkward for all parties; but the proud spirit of Anne of
-Austria was aroused. Resuming her maternal authority, she declared
-that if her niece, the princess of England, remained a spectator at
-the ball, her son should do the same. Thus constrained, the king very
-ungraciously led out the English princess upon the floor. After the
-departure of the guests, the mother and son had their first serious
-quarrel. Severely Anne of Austria rebuked the king for his shameful
-and uncourteous conduct. Louis faced his mother haughtily. “Madam, who
-is lord of France, Louis the king or Anne of Austria? Too long,” he
-said, “I have been guided by your leading strings. Henceforth, I will
-be my own master; and do not you, madam, trouble yourself to criticise
-or correct me. I am the king.” And this was no idle boast; for from
-that tearful evening of the queen’s ball to the day of his death,
-sixty-one years after, Louis of Bourbon, called The Great, ruled as
-absolute lord over his kingdom of France; and the boy who could say so
-defiantly, “Henceforth, I will be my own master,” was fully equal to
-that other famous declaration of arrogant authority, made years after
-in the full tide of his power, “_I am the state!_”
-
-But Anne of Austria was not the only one destined to feel the imperious
-will of the young sovereign. The Parliament of Paris refused to
-register certain decrees of the king. Louis heard of it while preparing
-to hunt in the woods of Vincennes. He leaped upon his horse, and
-galloped to Paris. At half-past nine o’clock in the morning, the king
-entered the Chamber of Deputies, in full hunting dress. He heard mass,
-and, whip in hand, addressed the body: “Gentlemen of the Parliament, it
-is my will that in future my edicts be _registered_, and not discussed.
-Should the contrary occur, I shall return, and enforce obedience.”
-
-The trumpet sounded, and the king and his courtiers galloped back to
-the forest of Vincennes. The decrees were registered. Parliament had
-ventured to try its strength against Cardinal Mazarin, but did not dare
-to disobey its king.
-
-The marriage of the king was a matter of much importance, and was much
-talked of. The aspirants for his hand and the throne of France were
-numberless. Maria Theresa, the daughter of the king of Spain, was very
-beautiful. Spain and France were then engaged in petty and vexatious
-hostilities, and a matrimonial alliance would secure friendship.
-
-So negotiations were begun; and on the 10th of June, 1660, Louis,
-then in the twenty-second year of his age, was joined in marriage,
-at the Isle of Pheasants, to Maria Theresa, infanta of Spain. On the
-26th of August, the king and his young bride made their public entry
-into Paris. Triumphal arches spanned the thoroughfares, garlands of
-flowers and hangings of tapestry covered the fronts of the houses,
-and sweet-scented herbs strewed the pavements, upon which passed an
-apparently interminable procession of carriages, horsemen, and footmen;
-and in the midst of the clangor of trumpets, the boom of cannon, and
-the shouts and acclamations of the multitude, came the chariot of the
-young queen, who, radiant and sparkling with brilliant gems, beheld
-from her lofty height all Paris striving to do her honor. By her side
-rode the king. His garments, of velvet richly embroidered with gold,
-and covered with jewels, had been prepared at an expense of over a
-million of dollars. The gorgeousness of this gala day lived long in
-the minds of the splendor-loving Parisians. For succeeding weeks and
-months, the court luxuriated in one continued round of gayety. “There
-was a sound of revelry by night” in the _salons_ of the Louvre and
-the Tuileries, while lords and ladies trod the floors in the mazy
-evolutions of the dance. And yet, to maintain all this state, all this
-splendor, all this reckless extravagance, thousands of the peasantry
-of France were compelled to live in mud hovels, to wear the coarsest
-garb, to eat the plainest food, while their wives and daughters toiled
-barefoot in the fields.
-
-The Cardinal Mazarin was old and dying. For eighteen years he had
-been virtually monarch of France. Avaricious and penurious to the
-last degree, he had amassed enormous wealth. Cursed by the peasantry
-whom he had ground to the earth, hated by the king whom he had tried
-to rule, despised by the court which he had attempted to humble, on
-the 9th of March, 1661, at his Chateau Mazarin, the cardinal breathed
-his last. From that moment until the day of his death, Louis XIV.
-sat all-powerful upon his throne. And when the president of the
-Ecclesiastical Assembly inquired of the king to whom he must hereafter
-address himself on questions of public business, the emphatic and
-laconic response was, “_To myself_.”
-
-M. Fouquet, the Minister of the Treasury, was rolling in ill-gotten
-wealth. His palace of Vaux le Vicomte, upon which he had expended
-fifteen millions of francs, eclipsed in splendor the royal palaces of
-the Tuileries and Fontainebleau. The king disliked him. He knew he was
-robbing the treasury, and it was more than his self-love could endure,
-that a subject should live in state surpassing that of his sovereign.
-Fouquet most imprudently invited the king and all the court to a fête
-at the chateau. No step could have been more ill-advised; for the
-king was little likely to forget, as he looked upon the splendors of
-Vaux le Vicomte, by which St. Germain and Fontainebleau were utterly
-eclipsed, that its owner had derived all his wealth from the public
-coffers; and at a time, too, when he was himself in need of the funds
-here lavished with such reckless profusion. Every one in France, who
-bore a distinguished name, was bidden to the princely festival, which
-was destined to be commemorated by La Fontaine and by Benserade, by
-Pelisson and by Molière. Fouquet met the king at the gates of the
-chateau, and conducted him to the park. Here, notwithstanding all he
-had heard of the splendors of Vaux le Vicomte, the king was unprepared
-for the scene of magnificence which burst upon his view. The play
-of the fountains, the beauty of the park, and the splendor of the
-chateau were long remembered by the guests at this princely festival.
-But to Louis XIV. it was gall and wormwood; and when he took leave
-of his obsequious host, he remarked bitterly: “I shall never again,
-sir, venture to invite you to visit me. You would find yourself
-inconvenienced.”
-
-[Illustration: LOUIS XIV. TAKING LEAVE OF FOUQUET.]
-
-Fouquet felt the keen rebuke, and turned pale. The king and his
-courtiers returned to Paris, but in the mind of Louis XIV. there loomed
-up distant visions of the palaces of Versailles and the great hydraulic
-machine at Marly. On the 8th of January, 1666, Anne of Austria died.
-It was a gloomy winter’s night when the remains of her who had been
-both queen and regent of France were borne to their last resting-place
-in the vaults of St. Denis. In his previous campaigns, Louis had taken
-Flanders in three months, and Franche-Comté in three weeks. Alarmed
-by these rapid conquests, Holland, Switzerland, and England entered
-into an alliance to resist further encroachments, should they be
-attempted. That such a feeble state as Holland should think of limiting
-his conquests, aroused the anger of the _Grand Monarque_. Armies were
-mustered, munitions of war got together, and ships prepared; and on the
-12th of June, 1672, at the head of an army of one hundred and thirty
-thousand men, Louis crossed the Rhine, and made his triumphal entry
-into the city of Utrecht. Then, indeed, Holland trembled; Amsterdam
-trembled; Louis was at the gates. But, rising in the frenzy of despair,
-they pierced the dikes, which alone protected the country from the
-sea. In rushed the flood, and Amsterdam rose like a mighty fortress in
-the midst of the waves, surrounded by ships of war, which found depth
-to float where ships never floated before. Thus suddenly Louis XIV.
-found himself checked in his proud career. Chagrined at seeing his
-conquest at an end, he left his army under the command of Turenne, and
-returned to his palaces in France.
-
-Louis XIV. had never recovered from the mortification he had
-experienced at the fête at Vaux. He resolved to rear a palace so
-magnificent that no subject, whatever might be his resources, could
-approach it; so magnificent that, like the pyramids of Egypt, it should
-be a lasting monument of the splendor of his reign. In 1664, Louis
-selected Versailles as the site for this stupendous pile of marble,
-which, reared at a cost of thousands of lives, and two hundred millions
-of money, decorated by the genius of Le Notre, of Mansard, and Le Brun,
-twenty-five years after its commencement, was ready to receive its
-royal occupants; and, resting proudly upon its foundations, presented
-to admiring Europe the noblest monument of the reign of Louis XIV. The
-splendors of the fêtes which attended the completion of this palace
-transformed it into a scene of enchantment, and filled all Europe with
-wonder.
-
-The most magnificent room in the palace, the Gallerie des Glaces,
-called the Grand Gallery of Louis XIV., is two hundred and forty-two
-feet long, thirty-five feet broad, and forty-three feet high. Germany,
-Holland, Spain, Rome even, bend the knee in the twenty-seven paintings
-which ornament this grand gallery. But to whom do they bow? Is it to
-France? No; it is to Louis XIV.
-
-“Louis XIV. and his palace not only afforded conversation for Europe,
-but their fame penetrated the remote corners of Asia. The emperor
-of Siam sent him an embassy. Three o’pras, high dignitaries of the
-empire, eight mandarins, and a crowd of servitors landed at Brest,
-charged with magnificent presents and a letter from the emperor.
-Arrived at Versailles, they were fêted with unheard-of splendor. The
-day of their public audience, the fountains played in the gardens;
-flowers were strewn in the paths; the sumptuous Gobelin carpets were
-paraded, as well as the richest works of the goldsmith. The _cortège_
-of ambassadors was received with the most refined forms of etiquette,
-and led through apartments filled with the court, glittering in
-diamonds and embroidery, and at length reached the end of the grand
-gallery, where Louis XIV., clad in a costume that cost twelve millions,
-stood on a throne of silver placed on an estrade elevated nine steps
-above the floor, and covered with Gobelin carpets and costly vases.
-There the Siamese prostrated themselves three times, with hands
-clasped, before the Majesty of the West, and then lifted their eyes to
-him.”
-
-Louis spent millions on Versailles, millions on his pleasures, millions
-on his pomps, millions in his wars; he lavished gold on his favorites,
-his generals, and his lackeys. And all ended in national bankruptcy.
-
-Let us, then, in imagination look upon the grand _gallerie_ of Louis
-XIV. during one of those gorgeous fêtes which attracted the attention
-of all Europe. Before us is the grand _salon_, with its glittering
-candelabra and thousand brilliant lights, reflected in prismatic rays
-from the costly mirrors which line the walls. Under foot, a pavement
-of variegated marble, shining and polished as a floor of glass; and
-overhead the gorgeous frescoes of Le Brun, setting forth in glowing
-colors the great achievements of the _Grand Monarque_. The highest
-nobility of the realm, the _grande noblesse_ of France, throng this
-splendid gallery.
-
-The costly costumes of the cavaliers and the gorgeous robes of the
-_Grande Dames_, the waving plumes and flashing jewels, all conspire
-to render the scene of marvellous magnificence. And now, as the
-impatient throng turn their gaze in the direction of the Salon of
-War, in expectation of the approach of royalty, the folding-doors are
-thrown back, and the stentorian voice of the usher resounds throughout
-the gallery: “His Majesty the King!” and upon the threshold, in a
-costume resplendent with sparkling gems, stands Louis XIV., the _Grand
-Monarque_. As a _parterre_ of blooming flowers bends low before a
-rushing gust of wind, so bow these titled lords and ladies before his
-piercing glance; while Louis, full conscious of his kingly majesty,
-walks slowly, and with measured step, all down the long and glittering
-lines, pausing ever and anon to address those whose rank entitles them
-to this inestimable boon.
-
-“It was not only on festive occasions that Versailles wore an air of
-grand gala. It was its habitual aspect. At Vaux, nature had contributed
-quite as much as art, to the marvellous beauty of the scene. At
-Versailles, she had done nothing, and Louis’ pleasure was the greater,
-in that he considered it the unrivalled creation of his own genius.
-Versailles, with its palace, its gardens, its fountains, its statues,
-and water-works, Trianon, and appendages, was a work of art to gaze
-upon with wonder. Let us ascend; for, in whatever place you may be,
-it is necessary to mount, to reach this palace; at whatever point you
-may stand to look at it, you see its roofs, apparently touching the
-clouds. It crowns the hill like a diadem. If you come from Paris, it
-rises above the town, which lies prostrate at the feet of its majesty;
-if you approach from the park, it lifts itself above the gigantic
-trees, above the terraces which pile themselves up towards it, above
-the jets of water which surround it; the groves seem to support it upon
-their tall heads, and the whole forest serves as its footstool. Let
-us ascend, for the doors are open; people are going and coming. The
-ladies smile, the mirrors reflect them, the chandeliers light them, the
-ceilings throw their golden coloring upon them. The courtiers stare in
-the midst of the riches of this magnificent dwelling; but, amid all
-this stir, all these surprises, all these wonders, only one man is
-calm,—this man Louis XIV.
-
-“He feels as much at ease in this palace as in a vestment made for him;
-and, contemplating the work to which his pride gave birth, he exclaims,
-in the fulness of his satisfaction, ‘Versailles is myself!’
-
-“Yet, upon a bright spring day, or soft summer evening, when Louis,
-disposed for one of those long promenades he was accustomed to take
-sometimes twice a day, descended to the gardens from the grand terrace
-of the palace, followed by his numerous court, the _coup d’œil_ from
-a distance must have been charmingly effective. And, when enlivened
-by sauntering, chatting, flirting, laughing groups of picturesquely
-dressed ladies and gentlemen of the court,—a numerous retinue of
-lackeys following, no less resplendent in dress than their masters,—the
-admirable fitness of the gardens and grounds of Versailles for the
-purpose which Louis, no doubt, had in his mind when the designs were
-approved, must have been very striking. In the centre of this throng
-of feathers and swords, satins and laces, flashing jewels, fans and
-masks, solemnly paced the magnificent Louis, with the air of lord of
-the universe, monarch of all he surveyed, and of all who surveyed him;
-for his courtiers lived only in the light of his countenance. Yet the
-countenance of this god was grandly cold, serene, and unchangeable, as
-that of any of the marble deities that presided over his fountains.
-It was no mean advantage to him that nature had kindly exalted him,
-at least, three inches above almost every other man of his court. The
-French were not generally a fine race of men; but the dress of the
-period—the high heels, the wig, the lofty plume, and the looped-up,
-broad-brimmed hat—gave to the _grandees_ an appearance of height,
-which, as a rule, they had not. And above them all towered their king,
-like Jupiter, in Olympus, in the midst of the inferior gods, or as the
-sun, with lesser lights revolving around him, and shining only in the
-refulgence of his rays.
-
-“Red-heeled boots, slashed doublets, and flowing wigs, cordeliers
-of pearls, Moorish fans, masques, patches and paint, monumental
-head-dresses, and the thousand other items indispensable to the toilets
-of the lords and ladies of the Louis XIV. period, have a charmingly
-picturesque effect, seen through the long vista of two centuries,
-and heightened by the glamour of _la grande politesse, et la grande
-galanterie_ of the _Grand Monarque_ and his court. Life seems to have
-been with them, one long fancy-dress ball, a never-ending carnival, a
-perpetual whirl, an endless succession of fêtes and carousals.”
-
-Louis XIV. now found nearly all Europe in arms against him. He sent
-twenty thousand men, under Marshal Turenne, to encounter the forces of
-the emperor of Germany; and forty thousand, under the Prince de Condé,
-to assail William, prince of Orange. In his defence of the frontiers
-of the Rhine, Turenne acquired a reputation which has made his name
-famous in military annals. With twenty thousand men, he defeated and
-dispersed the Imperial army of seventy thousand; and it adds not a
-little to his celebrity, that, following his own judgment, he achieved
-the victory in direct opposition to the orders from the minister of
-war. A merciless warrior, he allowed no consideration of humanity to
-interfere with his military operations. He laid in ashes the beautiful
-country of the Palatinate, embracing, on both sides of the Rhine,
-about sixteen hundred square miles, and having a population of over
-three hundred thousand souls, in order that the armies of his enemies
-might be deprived of sustenance; while the wail of widows and orphans
-rose over the smouldering ruins of their dwellings, over the bleak and
-barren fields.
-
-[Illustration: DEATH OF TURENNE.]
-
-On the 27th of June, 1675, a cannon ball struck Turenne, and closed,
-in an instant, his earthly career. Few men have ever lived who have
-caused such wide-spread misery. For two years the war continued, with
-sometimes varying success, but with unvarying blood and misery. At
-last, on the 14th of August, 1678, peace, the peace of Nimegeun, was
-made. Louis XIV. dictated the terms.
-
-Now, at the height of his grandeur, having enlarged his dominions
-by the addition of Franche-Comté, Dunkirk, and half of Flanders,
-worshipped by his courtiers as a demi-god, the court of France
-conferred upon him, with imposing solemnities, the title of _Louis le
-Grand_. In 1685, the Queen, Maria Theresa, breathed her last. Amiable,
-unselfish, warm-hearted, from the time of her marriage she devoted
-herself to the promotion of her husband’s happiness. His neglect caused
-her to shed many tears. The king could not be insensible to her many
-virtues, and perhaps remorse, mingled with the emotions which compelled
-him to weep bitterly over her death, caused him to exclaim, as he
-gazed upon the lifeless remains, “Kind and forbearing friend, this is
-the first sorrow you have caused me throughout twenty years.” For ten
-days the royal corpse lay in state at Versailles, and perpetual masses
-were performed for the soul of the departed. On the day of the funeral,
-the king, in the insane endeavor to obliterate from his mind all
-thoughts of death and burial, ordered out the hounds, and plunged into
-the excitement of the chase. His horse pitched the monarch over his
-head into a ditch of stagnant water, dislocating one of his shoulders.
-
-In 1685, also died Jean Baptiste Colbert, the king’s minister of
-finance. As superintendent of buildings, arts, and manufactures, he had
-enlarged the Tuileries and the Louvre, completed gorgeous Versailles,
-reared the magnificent edifice of the Invalides, and founded the
-Gobelins. As minister of finance, he had furnished the king with the
-money he needed for his expensive wars and luxurious indulgence. Now
-old, forgotten, exhausted by incessant labor, he was on his dying bed.
-The heavy taxes he had imposed upon the people rendered him unpopular.
-The curses and imprecations of a starving peasantry rose around his
-dying couch. The king condescended in courtesy to send a messenger
-inquiring after the condition of his minister, but the dying sufferer
-turned away his face, saying, “I will not hear that man spoken of
-again. If for God I had done what I have for him, I should have been
-saved ten times over. What my fate now may be, I know not.”
-
-And so worn out by toil, anxiety, and grief, he died. On the following
-day, without any marks of honor, his remains were conveyed to the
-church of St. Eustache.
-
-Genoa had offended the king by giving assistance to the Algerines.
-He seized, by a _lettre de cachet_, the Genoese ambassador, and
-plunging him into one of the dungeons of the Bastile, sent a fleet of
-fifty vessels to chastise those who had offended him, with terrible
-severity. On the 19th of May, 1684, the ships entered the harbor of
-Genoa, and immediately opened upon the city a terrific fire, so that
-in a few hours, a large portion of those marble edifices, which had
-given to the city the name of “Genoa the Superb,” were crumbled into
-powder. The city was threatened with total destruction, and in terror
-the authorities implored the clemency of the conqueror. Haughtily the
-_Grand Monarque_ demanded that the doge of Genoa, and four of his
-principal ministers, should repair to the palace of Versailles, and
-humbly implore his pardon. Utterly powerless, the doge was compelled to
-submit to these humiliating terms.
-
-[Illustration: JEAN BAPTISTE COLBERT.]
-
-On the 15th of May, 1685, Louis ordered his throne to be placed at the
-end of the grand gallery, by the side of the “Salon of Peace.” The doge
-entered with four senators Genoa had sent to accompany him. He was
-dressed in red velvet, with a cap of the same. In order to preserve
-all the dignity his misfortune allowed him, the doge remained covered
-until he entered the presence of the king. The king allowed the princes
-to remain covered during the audience. The doge discharged his sad
-mission with a firmness that created astonishment. His bearing was more
-impressive than his discourse. A few days after he attended the levee,
-dined with the king, was shown the park and all the fountains, and
-was present at a ball given in the grand apartment. Afterwards he had
-his audience of leave-taking, and when one of the senators asked him
-what surprised him most at Versailles, he replied with an air of more
-chagrin than usual, “At seeing myself there.” The doge and senators
-did not stay long in France. They saw in haste the wonders shown them,
-and then returned to Genoa. Arrived at home, they talked over the
-things they had seen. One senator spoke of the dazzling spectacles,
-the vast apartments, the sumptuous ornaments; and said no mind was
-powerful enough to carry away the remembrance of all the riches of
-the palace, its paintings, its statues, its tapestry, its ceilings,
-its gold, and its marble. The doge replied, there was more than its
-exterior magnificence, and luxury of its interior; that the palace was
-the whole French monarchy. You read the origin of the monarchy in the
-chateau built by Louis XIII. The architects wished to pull it down; the
-king replied, that, if it would not last, they must take it down, but
-reconstruct it on its first plan. He wished the work of his father to
-remain, to contrast with the edifice he was going to erect. One part
-of the building only projects immensely in the long outline, that is
-where the master dwells. The king walks alone in the first rank, the
-courtiers follow, and support the train of the royal mantle. If you
-mount by the grand staircase, you find a suite of immense _salons_,
-covered with beautiful paintings. The Salon of Plenty, then Venus, then
-Diana, then Mars, then Mercury, and then Apollo. Of what use are they?
-The master does not inhabit them. But go on farther, pass through empty
-galleries, you will at length find his apartments. All this suite of
-magnificent _salons_, all these galleries, serve as an ante-chamber
-only to the place in which he dwells. Mars and Apollo, gods formerly,
-are nothing now but lackeys to the king of France.
-
-In the year 1598, King Henry IV., feeling the need of the support of
-the Protestants to protect his kingdom from the perils by which it was
-surrounded, and having himself been educated a Protestant, had granted
-to the Protestants the world-renowned edict of Nantes. By this edict,
-Protestants were allowed liberty of conscience; were permitted, in
-certain designated places, to hold public worship; were declared to be
-eligible to offices of state, and in certain places, were allowed to
-publish books. Louis XIV. was a Catholic, a bigoted Catholic; hoping
-in some measure to atone for his sins, by his supreme devotion to the
-interests of the church, and while assuring the Protestant powers
-of Europe that he would continue to respect the edict of Nantes, he
-commenced issuing a series of ordinances in direct opposition to that
-contract. In 1680 he excluded Protestants from all public offices,
-whatsoever. A Protestant could not be employed as a physician, lawyer,
-apothecary, bookseller, printer, or even as a nurse.
-
-[Illustration: REVOCATION OF THE EDICT OF NANTES.]
-
-In some parts of the kingdom, the Protestants composed nearly the
-entire population. Here it was impossible to enforce the atrocious
-decree. Riots and bloodshed followed. Affairs went from bad to worse,
-and on the 18th of October, 1685, the king, yielding to the wishes
-of his confessor and other high dignitaries of the Church, signed
-the _Revocation of the Edict of Nantes_. In this act of revocation,
-it was declared that, “the exercise of the Protestant worship should
-nowhere be tolerated in the realm of France. All Protestant pastors
-were ordered to leave the kingdom within fifteen days, under pain of
-being sent to the galleys. Parents were forbidden to instruct their
-children in the Protestant religion. Every child in the kingdom was
-to be baptized and educated by a Catholic priest. All Protestants who
-had left France, were ordered to return within four months, under
-penalty of confiscation of their possessions. Any Protestant man
-or woman who should attempt to emigrate, incurred the penalty of
-imprisonment for life.”
-
-This infamous ordinance caused an amount of misery which can never be
-gauged, and inflicted upon the prosperity of France the most terrible
-blow it had ever received. Only one year after the revocation, Marshal
-Vauban wrote, “France has lost one hundred thousand inhabitants, sixty
-millions of coined money, nine thousand sailors, twelve thousand
-disciplined soldiers, six hundred officers, and her most flourishing
-manufactures.”
-
-The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes was the great blot upon the reign
-of Louis XIV. From that hour the fortunes of the _Grand Monarque_ began
-manifestly to decline.
-
-Louvois, minister of war, had for a long time been all-powerful at
-court. Through his influence, the king had been induced to revoke the
-Edict of Nantes, and to order the utter devastation of the Palatinate.
-But that influence was upon the wane. The king had become weary of his
-haughty assumptions, and the conflagration of the Palatinate had raised
-a cry of indignation that even he could not fail to hear. Treves had
-escaped the flames. Louvois solicited an order to burn it. The king
-refused. Louvois insolently gave the order himself, and entering the
-royal presence, exclaimed calmly, “Sire, I have commanded the burning
-of Treves, in order that I might spare your Majesty the pain of issuing
-such an edict.”
-
-Louis was furious; and springing up, with flashing eyes, forgetful
-of all the restraints of etiquette, he seized the tongs from the
-fireplace, and would have broken the head of his minister, had not
-Madame de Maintenon rushed between them. The king despatched a
-messenger to countermand the order, and declared that if but a single
-house were burned, the head of the minister should be the forfeit.
-Treves was saved.
-
-On one occasion, when Louis XIV. went to examine the progress of the
-building of the Trianon, accompanied by Louvois, he remarked that a
-particular window was out of proportion, and did not harmonize with the
-rest; but the minister, jealous of his dignity as controller of the
-royal works, would not admit the objection, but maintained that it was
-similar to the others.
-
-The king desired Le Notre to declare his opinion as to the size of the
-disputed window. Le Notre, fearful of offending either the monarch or
-his minister, endeavored to give an evasive answer. Upon which, Louis
-commanded him to measure it carefully, and he was reluctantly compelled
-to obey. The result of the trial proved that the king was right, the
-window was too small; and the monarch had no sooner ascertained the
-fact, than he turned angrily to his minister, exclaiming, “M. Louvois,
-I am weary of your obstinacy. It is fortunate that I myself have
-superintended the work of building, or the façade would have been
-ruined.”
-
-As this scene had taken place not only in the presence of the workmen,
-but of all the courtiers who followed the king upon his promenade,
-Louvois was stung to the quick; and on entering his own house, he
-exclaimed furiously, “I am lost if I do not find some occupation for a
-man who can interest himself in such trifles. There is nothing but a
-war which can divert him from his building, and war he shall have. I
-will soon make him abandon his trowel.”
-
-He kept his word: and Europe was once more plunged into a general war,
-because a window had been made a few inches too narrow, and a king had
-convicted a minister of error.
-
-In 1691, the French were besieging Mons. The haughty minister,
-unintimidated even by the menace of the tongs, ventured to countermand
-an order which the king had issued. The lowering brow of the monarch
-convinced him that his ministerial reign was soon to close. The health
-of the minister began rapidly to fail. A few subsequent interviews
-with the king satisfied him that his disgrace and ruin were decided
-upon; and about the middle of June, meeting the monarch in his
-council-chamber, although he was unusually complaisant, Louvois so
-thoroughly understood him, that he retired to his residence in utter
-despair. He ordered that his son, the Marquis de Barbesieux, might be
-requested to follow him to his chamber. In five minutes the summons was
-obeyed, but it was too late; for when the marquis entered the room, his
-father had already expired. Louvois had judged rightly, for the king
-had already drawn up the _lettre de cachet_ which was to consign him to
-the _oubliettes_ of the Bastile.
-
-“Civil war was now also desolating unhappy France. The Protestants,
-bereft of their children, robbed of their property, driven from their
-homes, dragged to the gallows, plunged into dungeons, broken upon the
-wheel, hanged upon scaffolds, rose in several places in insurrectionary
-bands; and the man who was thus crushing beneath the iron heel of his
-armies the quivering hearts of the Palatinate, and who was drenching
-his own realms with tears and blood, was clothed in purple, and
-faring sumptuously, and reclining upon the silken sofas of Marly and
-Versailles.”
-
-On the 1st of November, 1700, Charles II. of Spain died, having no
-heirs. Urged by the Pope, he left the throne to the children of the
-dauphin of France. As the duke de Bourgoyne was direct heir to the
-throne of France, the dauphin’s second son, the duke d’Anjou, was
-proclaimed king of Spain, under the title of Philip V. On the 14th of
-the month, Louis XIV. summoned the Spanish ambassador to an audience at
-Versailles. The king presented his grandson to the minister, saying,
-“This, sir, is the duke d’Anjou, whom you may salute as your king.”
-Then, contrary to his custom, he ordered the folding doors of his
-cabinet to be thrown back, and the crowd of courtiers assembled in the
-grand gallery poured into the apartment.
-
-The Spanish ambassador dropped upon his knee before the young prince
-with expressions of profound homage; while the king, embracing the neck
-of his grandson with his left arm, and pointing to him with his right
-hand, presented him to the assembled court, exclaiming, “Gentlemen,
-this is the king of Spain. His birth calls him to the crown. The late
-king has recognized his right by his will. All the nation desires his
-succession, and has entreated it at my hands. It is the will of heaven,
-to which I conform with satisfaction.”
-
-To his grandson he added, “Be a good Spaniard, but never forget that
-you were born a Frenchman. Carefully maintain the union of the two
-nations. Thus only can you render them both happy.”
-
-Preparations were immediately made for the departure of the boy-king to
-take possession of the Spanish throne. The _Grand Monarque_ regarded
-it as a signal stroke of policy, and a great victory on his part, that
-notwithstanding the remonstrances of other nations, he had placed a
-French Bourbon prince upon the throne of Spain. He saw the domain of
-France extending far southward to the Straits of Gibraltar.
-
-“Henceforth,” exclaimed Louis XIV., exultingly, “there are no more
-Pyrenees!”
-
-Louis XIV. reigned everywhere,—over his people, over his age, often
-over Europe,—but nowhere did he reign so completely as over his
-court. Never were the wishes, the defects, and the vices of a man so
-completely a law to other men, as at the court of Louis XIV. during
-the whole period of his long life. When near to him in the palace at
-Versailles, men lived, hoped, trembled, everywhere else in France, even
-at Paris, men vegetated. The existence of the nobles was concentrated
-in the court about the person of the king; and so abject was their
-submission, that Louis XIV. looked on all sides for a great lord, and
-found about him only courtiers.
-
-When the king learned that certain of the nobility affected to despise
-the plebian genius of the great dramatist, Molière, he invited the
-comedian to his table; and when at the _grande entrée_ the nobles
-thronged the apartment, he turned to them haughtily, exclaiming,
-“Gentlemen of the court, you see me breakfasting with Molière, whom my
-nobles do not consider worthy of their notice.” It was enough. From
-that moment the great dramatist found all the nobility of France at his
-feet.
-
-Never did man give with better grace than Louis XIV., or augment so
-much in this way the price of his benefits. Never did man sell to
-better profit his words, even his smiles,—nay, his looks.
-
-Never did disobliging words escape him; and if he had to blame, to
-reprimand, or correct, which was very rare, it was nearly always with
-goodness, never with anger or severity. Never was man so naturally
-polite, or of a politeness so measured, so graduated, so adapted,
-to person, time, and place. Towards women his politeness was without
-parallel. Never did he pass the humblest petticoat without raising
-his hat. For ladies he took his hat off completely, but to a greater
-or less extent; for titled people half off, holding it in his hand,
-or against his ear, some instants. He took it off for the princes of
-the blood as for the ladies. If he accosted ladies, he did not cover
-himself until he had quitted them. His reverences, more or less marked,
-but always light, were incomparable for their grace and manner. As,
-after the battle of Seneff, fought Aug. 11, 1674, against William of
-Orange, Monsieur le Prince, le Grand Condé, was walking slowly, from
-the effects of gout, up the grand staircase at Versailles, he exclaimed
-to the king, who awaited him upon the landing above, “Sire, I crave
-your majesty’s pardon, if I keep you waiting;” to which Louis replied,
-“Do not hurry, my cousin; no one could move more quickly who was so
-loaded with laurels as you are.” It was the language of the court;
-and again, when in May, 1706, Marshal Villeroi returned worsted at
-the battle of Ramillies, in his encounter with Marlborough and Prince
-Eugene, the _Grand Monarque_ gave utterance to one of those delicate
-remarks he knew so well how to make, and which sounded almost like
-a compliment: “Ah, Monsieur le Marshal,” exclaimed the king, when
-he presented himself at Versailles, “at our age one is no longer
-fortunate.”
-
-“The king loved air and exercise very much, as long as he could make
-use of them. He had excelled at dancing, at tennis, and at mall.
-On horseback he was admirable, even at a late age. He liked to see
-everything done with grace and address. To acquit yourself well or ill
-before him was a merit or a fault. He was very fond of shooting, and
-there was not a better or more graceful shot than he. He was very fond,
-also, of stag-hunting, but in a _caléche_, since he broke his arm while
-hunting at Fontainebleau, immediately after the death of the Queen.
-He rode alone in a species of “box,” drawn by four little horses,
-and drove himself with an accuracy and address unknown to the best
-coachmen. He liked splendor, magnificence, and profusion in everything;
-you pleased him if you shone through the brilliancy of your houses,
-your clothes, your table, and your equipages. As for the king himself,
-nobody ever approached his magnificence.”
-
-Old age had crept fast upon Louis XIV. For seventy-two years he had
-proudly sat upon the throne of his ancestors; but the time was near
-at hand when he must lay aside his sceptre and his crown. Still the
-more deeply he became conscious of his physical weakness, the more
-determined and extraordinary were his efforts to preserve intact the
-interests of the state.
-
-Richard, in his war-tent on the bloody field of Bosworth, never
-contemplated a train of more appalling shadows than those evoked by the
-memory of Louis XIV., as he sat, supported by cushions and pillowed
-upon velvet, in his sumptuous apartment. Maria Theresa, the Queen;
-the grand-dauphin; his son, the duke de Bourgoyne; and last of all,
-the duke de Berri, the sole prop to that throne which must soon be
-empty, dead, all dead, save a frail infant,—such were the thoughts that
-crowded upon his last reveries; and well might the poor old man in his
-solitary moments bend down that proud head which had no longer strength
-to bear a crown, and laying aside the arrogance of those years in which
-he had assumed the bearing of a demi-god, confess to his own heart that
-he was but human.
-
-On the third of May, 1715, the king rose at an early hour, to witness
-an eclipse of the sun. Strange coincidence that he, who had taken for
-his emblem a rising sun, should witness the eclipse of that brilliant
-orb, while he himself was sinking toward the grave. In the evening he
-retired early, complaining of extreme fatigue. The advanced age of the
-king and his many infirmities rendered even a slight indisposition
-alarming. The report spread rapidly that the king was dangerously
-sick. The foreign ambassadors promptly despatched the news to their
-respective courts,—a circumstance which soon reached the ears of the
-monarch, who, indignant at such indecent precipitancy, and to prove,
-not only to the court, but to all Europe, that he was still every inch
-a king, commanded that preparations should forthwith be commenced for
-a grand review of the household troops at Marly. On the twentieth of
-June this magnificent exhibition took place, when for the last time
-the troops of gendarmes and light-horse, in their splendid uniforms,
-defiled before the terrace of Marly; which they had no sooner done,
-than the monarch appeared at the principal entrance of the palace,
-habited in the costume of his earlier years; and, descending the marble
-steps, mounted his horse, and for four long hours sat proudly in his
-saddle, under the eyes of those foreign envoys who had announced his
-approaching death to their sovereigns. It was the expiring effort of
-his pride. During the whole of the last year of his life, it had been
-the study of Louis XIV. to deceive himself, and, above all, to deceive
-others, as to the extent of the physical debility induced by his great
-age. He rose at a late hour, in order to curtail the fatigues of the
-day; received his ministers, and even dined, in his bed; and once,
-having prevailed upon himself to leave it, passed several hours in
-succession in his cushioned chair. In vain his physician urged upon
-him the necessity of exercise, in order to counteract his tendency
-to revery and somnolency; the swollen state of his feet and ankles
-rendered it impossible for him to rise from his chair without severe
-pain, and he never attempted to do so until all his attendants had
-left the room, lest they should perceive the state of weakness to
-which he was reduced. Great, therefore, had been the effort we have
-described, when the monarch had for a time conquered the man, and where
-pride had supplied the place of strength. The only exercise which
-he ultimately consented to take was in the magnificent gardens of
-Versailles, where he was wheeled through the stately avenues, which he
-had himself planted, in a bath-chair; a prey to pain, which was visibly
-depicted upon his countenance, but which he supported with cold and
-silent dignity, too haughty to complain. The king grew daily worse.
-The disease was mortal, and he felt he was beyond the power of human
-aid. Bitterly Louis XIV. upon his death-bed expiated the faults and
-excesses of his past life. He wept over the profligacy of his youth,
-deplored the madness of his ambition, by which he had brought mourning
-into every corner of his kingdom. On the twenty-sixth of August, the
-king commanded all the great dignitaries and officers of the household
-to meet in his apartment, and addressed them in a firm voice, saying,
-“Gentlemen, I die in the faith and obedience of the Church. I desire
-your pardon for the bad example which I have set you. I have greatly to
-thank you for the manner in which you have served me, and request from
-you the same zeal and the same fidelity toward the dauphin. Farewell,
-gentlemen; I feel that this parting has affected not only myself, but
-you also. Forgive me. I trust that you will sometimes think of me when
-I am gone.”
-
-How sad the scene! “The gray-haired king, half-sitting, half-lying,
-in his gorgeous bed, whose velvet hangings, looped back with their
-heavy ropes and tassels of gold, were the laborious offering of the
-pupils of St. Cyr; the groups of princes in their gorgeous costumes,
-dispersed over the vast apartment; the gilded cornices, the priceless,
-the tapestried hangings, the richly-carpeted floor, the waste of luxury
-on every side, the pride of man’s intellect and of man’s strength; and
-in the midst, decay and death, a palsied hand and a dimmed eye.” For
-a few moments there was unbroken silence. The king then requested his
-great-grandchild, who was to be his successor, to be brought to him.
-A cushion was placed at the bedside, and the little prince, clinging
-to the hand of his governess, knelt upon it. Louis XIV. gazed for a
-moment upon him with mingled anxiety and tenderness, and then said
-impressively, “My child, you are about to become a great king; do
-not imitate me, either in my taste for building, or in my love of
-war. Endeavor, on the contrary, to live in peace with the neighboring
-nations; render to God all that you owe him, and cause his name to be
-honored by your subjects. Strive to relieve the burdens of your people,
-in which I have been unfortunate enough to fail; and never forget the
-gratitude that you owe to Madame de Ventadour.”
-
-Louis XV. caused these last words, addressed to him by his grandfather,
-to be inscribed on vellum, and attached to the head-cloth of his bed.
-Words to which his life for fifty years was but a hollow mockery. The
-following days were ones of agony to the expiring king. His intervals
-of consciousness were rare and brief. Mortification extended rapidly,
-and toward midday, on the 31st of August, his condition became so
-much exasperated that it was found necessary to perform the service
-for the dying without further delay. The mournful ceremony aroused
-him from his lethargy, and his voice was heard, audibly and clearly,
-mingled with those of the priests. At the termination of the prayers,
-he recognized the Cardinal de Rohan, and said calmly, “These are the
-last favors of the Church.” He then repeated several times, “_Nunc et
-in hora mortis_”; and finally he exclaimed, with earnest fervor, “O,
-my God, come to my aid, and hasten to help me!” He never spoke again;
-his head fell back upon the pillow, one long-drawn sigh, and all was
-over. The spirit of Louis XIV. had passed the earthly veil, and entered
-the vast unknown. An immense concourse had assembled in the marble
-court at Versailles, anticipating the announcement of his death. The
-moment he breathed his last, the captain of the body-guard approached
-the great balcony, threw open the massive windows, and, looking down
-upon the multitude below, raised his truncheon above his head, broke it
-in the centre, and, throwing the fragments down into the court-yard,
-he cried sadly, “The king is dead!” Then, instantly seizing another
-staff from the hands of an attendant, he waved it joyfully above his
-head, and shouted triumphantly, “Long live the king, Louis XV.!” And
-a multitudinous echo from the depths of the lately-deserted apartment
-answered as buoyantly, “Long live the king!”
-
-Thus, on the 1st of September, 1715, in his palace, at Versailles, died
-“one of the world’s most powerful monarchs, Louis of Bourbon, Louis
-the Great, Louis the God-given, Louis the _Grand Monarque_, Louis the
-worn-out, unloving, and unloved old man, of magnificent Versailles.”
-And when Massillon, called to preach the funeral sermon of Louis XIV.,
-as he looked upon the magnificent draperies and insignia of royalty
-around him, and thought of the title the deceased king had borne during
-his life, he began his discourse, with the simple and striking words,
-which amazed the pleasure-loving courtiers of Versailles, “God alone is
-great, my brothers.” And now, after two hundred years have rolled away,
-at this present time, in this nineteenth century, after the scaffold of
-Louis XVI., after the downfall of Napoleon, after the exile of Charles
-X., after the flight of Louis Philippe, after the French Revolution,—in
-a word, that is to say, after this renewal, complete, absolute,
-prodigious, of principles, opinions, situations, influences, and facts;
-standing upon the terrace of magnificent Versailles, and looking upon
-those scenes, where, for so many years, he was the central light and
-figure,—we bid a last adieu to Louis XIV., the _Grand Monarque_,
-greatest of all the Bourbons.
-
-
-
-
-PETER THE GREAT.
-
-A.D. 1672-1725.
-
- “No true and permanent fame can be founded, except in labors
- which promote the happiness of mankind.”
- CHARLES SUMNER.
-
-
-ONE thousand years ago, Russia was inhabited by disunited, Slavonic
-tribes, who were frequently at war with each other. Then Scandinavian
-tribes were called in, and the Russian nation grew from the two centres
-of Novgorod and Kíef. Christianity was introduced from Constantinople.
-Trade had been commenced with the west of Europe, when the whole
-country was over-run by the Mongols and Tartars, and the people were
-obliged to submit to their yoke. The country had been divided into
-various Russian states, which were not ruled directly by the Mongols,
-but became vassals. These states were each governed by its own prince,
-who were all subject to Tartary. One state after another was at length
-swallowed up by the Grand Duchy of Moscow, and the autocracy was
-established; which, after freeing Russia from the Mongol yoke, reached
-its highest development, under Iván the Terrible, in 1533. The death of
-Iván gave a blow to autocracy, and brought the nobility into power. In
-1598, nearly the whole of the Russian people were reduced to serfdom,
-which was an institution then first legally established. Then came a
-period, called the Troublous Time, when pretender vied with pretender,
-and the son of the king of Poland was crowned Czar of Moscow. Finally,
-the Poles were turned out, and young Michael Románof was elected Czar.
-Then followed continual wars with Poland and Sweden. In the reign of
-Alexis, in 1645-76, an arbitrary government was formed. Henceforth,
-the Czar managed all matters, both great and small, according to his
-own will and pleasure. The Czar Alexis was of a gentle and amiable
-nature, and was called by his subjects, “The most Debonnair.” But his
-good qualities, in the end, rendered him one of the worst sovereigns
-of Russia; for he was entirely in the hands of wicked men, who, as
-his favorites, exercised all the power, and, in reality, governed the
-country.
-
-[Illustration: PIERRE I.]
-
-Then arose the dissent in the Russian Church. The Patriarch, Nikon,
-undertook the correction of all the printed and manuscript copies
-of the liturgy; and by a decree of an Ecclesiastical Council, the
-corrected books were ordered to be the only ones used, and the command
-was given that all others should be destroyed. This measure excited
-the greatest hostility. It seems strange that passions should be
-roused, and people be found willing to suffer martyrdom, for such
-seemingly unimportant questions,—as to whether the name of Jesus should
-be pronounced, “Isus,” or “Yisus”; whether, in a certain portion of
-the morning service, the word “Hallelujah” should be repeated twice
-or thrice; and whether the sign of the cross should be made with the
-two fore-fingers extended, or with the fore-fingers and the thumb,
-as denoting the Trinity. But such was the case; and so great was the
-commotion, that arms were resorted to by the Court, at Moscow, to
-enforce these innovations; and some of the most obstinate opposers
-were even executed. In the east of Russia, the inhabitants of whole
-villages shut themselves up in their houses, and setting fire to them,
-perished in the flames, rather than accept a new, and what they called
-a diabolical, religion. The government was at length successful,
-however, and revised service-books were introduced into the churches.
-
-At the present day, nearly one-half of the Russians belong in spirit,
-if not openly, to the Dissenters; and the reconciliation between
-them and the official church has only been accomplished by relaxing
-the rigor of the laws of persecution. During the reign of Alexis,
-the father of Peter the Great, much importance was attached to the
-length and fulness of the Czar’s title. An accidental omission of a
-single word or letter from this long and cumbrous official title was
-considered an act of personal disrespect to the prince, almost equal
-to high treason, and was punished far more severely than many terrible
-crimes. The shortest title of the Czar that could possibly be used,
-and which it was necessary to repeat every time that the Czar’s name
-was mentioned in document, petition, or discourse, was “The Great Lord
-Czar and Grand Duke Alexis Micháilovitch, of all Great and Little and
-White Russia Autocrat.” The complete title contained one hundred and
-twenty-three words, which we have not space to give. Alexis, having
-lost his first wife, in 1669, married for his second wife Natalia
-Narýshkin, who was a ward of Matvéief, the chief minister of the Czar.
-Their meeting was in this manner: One evening, when the Czar was at
-Matvéief’s house, the wife and pretty ward of the prime minister came
-into the room, bringing the usual refreshments of cups of _vodka_,
-the caviare, and smoked fish, which are eaten by the Russians before
-dinner or supper. The widowed Czar was struck by the pretty face of
-the tall, shapely, black-eyed girl, and, on going away, said to
-Matvéief that he would find a bridegroom for his pretty ward. It was
-the custom, when the Czar was in want of a bride, for all the Russian
-maidens, of suitable position and beauty, to assemble at the palace
-on a certain day, that a bride might be chosen from their number for
-the prince. Word was now sent to Natalia Narýshkin to appear with the
-other maidens, and it was soon reported that she was the chosen bride.
-The daughters of the Czar objected to so young a step-mother; but, in
-spite of opposition, both political and from his family, Alexis was
-married to Natalia, on the 1st of February, 1671. The Czar had several
-daughters of his first wife still living, and two sons, Theodore,
-who was very infirm and sickly, and John, or Iván, who was almost
-blind, and had a defect of speech, and was nearly an idiot. But his
-favorite child was Peter, the son of his second wife, Natalia, who
-was born June 9, 1672. The birth of Peter was hailed with great joy,
-and Alexis ordered a most splendid ceremonial in honor of the event.
-Then came the christening. The ceremony was performed at the Cathedral
-of the Annunciation; and the infant Peter was borne to the church in
-a cradle placed on wheels, while the priest most venerated for his
-sanctity sprinkled the path with holy water. The next day after the
-christening the feast occurred. The expense and account books, which
-have been preserved, show that on this occasion the tables were loaded
-with large pieces of sugar-work, representing eagles, swans, and other
-birds, larger than life; also representations of the Muscovite arms
-and a model of the Krémlin, the palace of the Czar, and also a large
-fortress with cannon. One of the first ceremonies after the birth of a
-Russian prince was what was called “taking his measure.” The measure
-of Peter was taken on the third day after his birth, and was performed
-in this manner: a board of either cypress or linden-wood was cut the
-exact length and breadth of the child, which in his case was nineteen
-and a quarter inches long and five and a quarter inches broad. Upon
-this board a picture, representing the Holy Trinity, together with
-the Apostle Peter, was painted by a famous artist. This birth-measure
-of Peter was carefully preserved, and now hangs over his tomb in the
-Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul, in the fortress at St. Petersburg.
-A nurse and governess were then selected for the infant Peter; and
-he had a special staff of dwarfs who should be his companions and
-servants. The infant prince had his own apartments, some of which were
-hung with leather, stamped with silver, and others with fine red cloth;
-while the furniture was covered with crimson, embroidered with blue and
-yellow, and the walls and ceilings were decorated with paintings.
-
-The curious books of accounts enumerate some of the articles ordered
-for him in the first years of his childhood. Among them were “cradles
-covered with gold-embroidered Turkish velvet; sheets and pillows
-of white silk; coverlets of gold and silver stuffs; coats, caps,
-stockings, and shoes of velvet, silk, and satin, embroidered with
-gold and pearls; buttons and tassels of pearls and emeralds; a chest
-for his clothes, covered with dark blue velvet, ornamented with
-mother-of-pearl; and a miniature carriage, drawn by ponies, in which
-he was taken out to drive. Among his toys were musical instruments
-of various kinds, and all sorts of military equipments.” Peter grew
-rapidly. He was able to walk when six months old. Being the pet of his
-parents, he accompanied them in all their excursions and visits. When
-he was three years of age, he was presented with a small carriage
-drawn by four ponies, in which he was driven by the court dwarfs, and
-he began to take part in the public processions of the court. One scene
-is thus described: “Immediately after the carriage of the Czar, there
-appeared from another gate of the palace the carriage of the Czarina.
-In front went the chamberlains with two hundred runners, after which
-twelve large snow-white horses, covered with silk housings, drew the
-Czarina. Then followed the small carriage of the youngest prince, all
-glittering with gold, drawn by four dwarf ponies. At the side of it
-rode four dwarfs on ponies, and another one behind.” The presentation
-of Peter at court is thus described:—
-
-“The door on one side suddenly opened, and Peter, three years old, a
-curly-headed boy, was seen for a moment, holding his mother’s hand, and
-looking at the reception.”
-
-[Illustration: THE KRÉMLIN OF MOSCOW.]
-
-At this time, there were a dozen princesses living at the palace,—the
-sisters and the aunts and the six daughters of the Czar Alexis. All
-were unmarried. They were forbidden to marry any below their own rank;
-and since the Tartar invasion, only two attempts had been made to
-marry a Russian princess to a foreigner. None of these princesses,
-except Sophia, who had shared the lessons of her brother Theodore, had
-more than the rudiments of an education. Most of the princesses were
-disposed of by placing them in convents. Natalia, the mother of Peter,
-having been brought up by a Scotchwoman, had seen more of society than
-the other royal ladies; and she was allowed a greater degree of freedom
-than had been vouchsafed to her predecessors, who had been rigidly
-secluded within their own apartments.
-
-In 1676, the Czar Alexis died, and the throne descended to his
-eldest son, Theodore. It was the custom in Russia for the relations of
-the Czar’s wife to have great power at court; and when Theodore came to
-the throne, the Miloslávsky family, who were his mother’s relations,
-assumed great power, while the family of Peter’s mother, the Czarina
-Natalia, lost their influence for the time.
-
-Both Theodore and Iván were feeble and sickly children, while Peter was
-strong and robust. But the law of descent was inexorable, and on the
-death of Alexis, Theodore became Czar. As he was only fourteen years
-of age, the administration of the government was left to the ministers
-of state. Now his sister, the Princess Sophia, who was very ambitious,
-formed schemes for getting the power into her own hands. She therefore
-so devoted herself to the care of Theodore, who was sick most of the
-time, that she gained complete ascendency over him; and she met all the
-courtiers, who came to visit the sick Czar, with such affable manners,
-and showed such intelligence, that she won a strong party of the
-nobles over to her support. There was in Russia, at this time, a very
-powerful body of troops, which had been organized by the emperors as
-an imperial guard. These troops were called the Streltsi. The Princess
-Sophia paid great attention to the officers of these guards, and thus
-gained their good-will. Theodore soon after died, and named Peter as
-his successor, passing over his brother Iván, as his many infirmities
-rendered it impossible for him to reign. It is probable that it was
-through the influence of some of the nobles who were opposed to Sophia,
-that Theodore was induced to name Peter as his successor. Peter,
-although but ten years of age, was proclaimed emperor by the nobles,
-immediately after Theodore’s death. Sophia now determined to resist
-the transfer of the supreme power to Peter. She secretly engaged the
-Streltsi, or guards, on her side. She caused a report to be spread,
-that the late emperor had been poisoned, and that the Narýshkins had
-murdered the Czarewitz Iván, and that the Narýshkins wished to kill all
-the royal family. Thus were the relations of the Czarina Natalia, the
-mother of Peter, accused of desiring the death of all the children of
-the first wife of Alexis, that Peter might gain the throne. Such was
-the falsehood that the Princess Sophia is said to have originated in
-order to secure the power. The cry then arose, “To arms! Punish the
-traitors! To the Krémlin! Save the Czar!” A general alarm was sounded.
-The Streltsi, fully armed, advanced from all sides towards the Krémlin,
-and surrounded the palace, demanding the Czarewitz Iván. The Czarina
-Natalia was advised to go out on the red staircase with the Czar Peter
-and the Czarewitz Iván, that the Streltsi might be convinced of the
-falsity of the rumor. Trembling with terror, Natalia took by the hand
-her son and stepson, and accompanied by the nobles, went out upon the
-red staircase. “Here is the Czar Peter and the Czarewitz Iván!” cried
-the nobles, to the mob below. “There are no traitors in the royal
-family!” The Streltsi placed ladders against the rails, and some of
-them climbed up to the platform where the little Czar stood. Peter
-looked at them without blanching, or showing any signs of fear. But
-even this did not quiet the disturbance, and the Streltsi burst into
-the palace. Natalia took Peter and fled for safety to the monastery of
-the Trinity. The soldiers pursued her even into the sanctuary, and to
-the foot of the altar; but there the sacredness of the spot arrested
-their vengeance, and they left their victims with sullen oaths. In
-the meantime, the commotion in the city continued for several days,
-and the brother of the Empress Natalia, and others of her friends,
-were slain. At last a compromise was effected, and it was agreed that
-Iván should be proclaimed Czar in conjunction with his brother Peter,
-and that the Princess Sophia should be regent. Sophia, knowing that
-Iván, the poor idiot, would be but a tool in her hands, endeavored in
-every way possible to prevent her half-brother Peter from becoming so
-intelligent and energetic that he would take the power away from her.
-She therefore caused his teacher to be dismissed, and commenced to
-carry out her plan to ruin the bright and talented boy, by taking away
-from him all restraint, and indulging him in every pleasure and whim.
-Peter was now established in a household of his own, at a palace in
-a small village some distance from Moscow, and Sophia selected fifty
-boys to live with him as playmates. These boys were provided with every
-possible means of indulgence, subject to little restraint. It was the
-intention of Sophia that they should do just as they chose, so that
-they would all grow up idle, vicious, and good-for-nothing; and she had
-also the hope that Peter might so impair his health as to bring him to
-an early grave.
-
-[Illustration: PETER SAVED FROM SLAUGHTER BY HIS MOTHER.]
-
-But Peter had already been too well instructed, or possessed too much
-native good sense, to fall into this snare, and instead of giving up
-his studies, he even contrived to turn his companions into scholars
-also. He organized a kind of military school, where they practised the
-evolutions and discipline necessary in a camp. He caused himself to be
-taught to drum, so that he could execute all the signals used in camp
-and on the battle-field. He studied fortification, and set the boys
-to work with him to construct a battery in a regular and scientific
-manner. He learned the use of tools, and the wheelbarrow he used in
-making the fortification was one he made himself.
-
-As he grew older, he continued to introduce higher branches of military
-art into the school, and he adopted the uniforms and equipments for
-the pupils, such as were used in the military schools of other nations
-of Europe. The result was, that when he was eighteen years of age, and
-the time came for him to leave the place, the institution had become
-a well-organized and well-appointed military school, and it continued
-in successful operation for a long time afterwards. So this wicked
-plan of the ambitious Sophia had completely failed. The energy and
-talent that Peter had displayed caused many of the leading nobles to
-attach themselves to his cause, by which means he was finally enabled
-to depose Sophia from her regency, and to take the power into his own
-hands. But before this took place, we must note a still more wicked and
-evil design of the ambitious princess.
-
-The party of nobles who now espoused Peter’s cause thought it
-expedient that he should marry, and the councillors accordingly chose
-for his wife, Eudoxia Lopúkhin, a young lady of noble birth. The
-Princess Sophia did all in her power to prevent this match, but she
-was unsuccessful, and the marriage took place in February, 1689. It
-was thought that a good stay-at-home wife would be likely to keep
-him from taking his long excursions for military manœuvres, and for
-ship-building, of which he was so fond. But he had scarcely been
-married two months before he started off again for his boat-building on
-Lake Plestchéief. Here he immediately set to work with his carpenters
-to complete the boats, and he wrote to his mother as follows:—
-
-“To my most beloved and, while bodily life endures, my dearest little
-mother, Lady Tsaritsa and Grand Duchess Natalia Kirílovna. Thy little
-son, now here at work. Petrúshka, I ask thy blessing, and desire to
-hear about thy health; and we, through thy prayers, are all well, and
-the lake is all got clear from the ice to-day, and all the boats,
-except the big ship, are finished, only we are waiting for ropes; and
-therefore I beg your kindness that these ropes, seven hundred fathoms
-long, be sent from the artillery department without delaying, for the
-work is waiting for them, and our sojourn here is being prolonged.”
-
-And again he writes:—
-
-“Hey! I wish to hear about thy health, and beg thy blessing. We are all
-well, and about the boats, I say again that they are mighty good, and
-Tíkhon Nikítitch will tell you about all this himself. Thy unworthy
-Petrus.”
-
-Peter with his young wife resided in a country palace a few miles
-from Moscow. This place was called Obrogensko. Meanwhile, the Russian
-government had been engaged in the Crimean War.
-
-The Poles, having become involved in a war with the Turks, proposed
-to the Russians, or Muscovites as they were often called, that they
-should aid them in an attempt to conquer the Crimea. In this war
-occurred the incident relating to the famous Mazeppa, whose frightful
-ride through the tangled thickets of a wild country, bound naked to an
-untamed horse, was so graphically described by the poet Byron. Mazeppa
-was a Polish gentleman, and having offended a Polish nobleman, he was
-thus cruelly punished by his enemy. Some Cossack peasants rescued the
-poor Mazeppa from his terrible position, and he afterwards became a
-chieftain amongst them. He distinguished himself in these campaigns
-in the Crimean war, fought by the Muscovites against the Turks and
-Tartars during the regency of the Princess Sophia. This war was not
-successful, and Prince Golítsyn, who led the Russian forces, was
-obliged to retreat; but fearing to have the state of the case known,
-he sent word to Moscow that he had been successful, and was received
-by Sophia upon his return with great honors. But the young Peter, who
-had been studying military tactics, was so displeased and disgusted
-with the military operations of Golítsyn that, when that general was
-received by Sophia at Moscow with great state, the rewards could not
-then be read, as Peter had refused to sign them. He, however, was
-afterwards persuaded to grant them. But this unfortunate campaign
-of Golítsyn’s was the turning point in the struggle between the
-aristocratic party which espoused the side of Peter, and the government
-of Sophia. Now there was formed a dark and wicked plot, and some
-historians accuse Sophia of being a party to it, if she did not even
-propose it. This was the assassination of the young Czar Peter.
-
-The commander of the Streltsi selected a band of six hundred of the
-imperial guards to go with him to Obrogensko. Their plan was to seize
-Peter at night while in his bed. This plot was, however, frustrated
-by two of the soldiers who revealed it to Peter. He could not at
-first believe that Sophia would resort to such a terrible crime, and
-messengers were sent to the city to learn the truth of the matter.
-These messengers met the imperial guards when they had gone half-way to
-Moscow; and, concealing themselves by the wayside until the troops had
-passed, they hastened back by a shorter route to inform Peter of his
-impending danger. Peter had just time to flee with his wife and mother
-to the monastery of the Trinity, when the Streltsi reached his palace,
-and sought him in vain. They returned, discomfited and alarmed, to
-the Princess Sophia, and reported that Peter had escaped. From his
-retreat in the monastery, Peter sent a message to Sophia, charging her
-with having sent the imperial guards to take his life. The princess,
-greatly alarmed, denied her guilt. The excitement increased. The
-leading nobles flocked to the monastery to declare their adherence to
-Peter. Sophia endeavored to keep the Streltsi upon her side, but they
-at last went over to Peter, and he demanded that the leader of the band
-who attempted his assassination should be delivered into his hands.
-This Sophia was obliged to do; and the man was put to the torture,
-and revealed the plot. He said that the design had been to kill Peter
-himself, his mother, and several other near relations. The Princess
-Sophia was accused of being the originator of the plot, and many other
-persons were also implicated, including Prince Golítsyn, the commander
-of the Russian forces in the Crimean War. The leader of the band of
-guards who thus attempted the life of Peter was beheaded, Prince
-Golítsyn and his family were banished to Siberia, and many others
-implicated were put to death, imprisoned for life, or banished. Thus
-ended this conspiracy against the young Czar Peter. The Princess Sophia
-was shut up in a convent, where she was imprisoned for fifteen years,
-when she died. Iván, the brother-Czar with Peter, was too feeble and
-inefficient to take any part in the government, and he died about seven
-years after this time. The aristocratic party now filled the offices of
-state, and administered the government.
-
-As Peter was yet so young, he left everything in the hands of his
-counsellors, and for several years took merely a formal part in
-the administration. He employed himself in military exercises and
-boat-building, and in the indulgence of his mechanical tastes. As
-Peter grew older, and took more direction of the affairs of the
-government, he made choice of two very able men, whom he afterwards
-raised to positions of great honor. The name of one of these statesmen
-was Le Fort, and the other was Menshikóf. Le Fort was the son of a
-merchant of Geneva. He had from childhood evinced a strong desire
-to be a soldier; but his father preferred that he should become a
-merchant, and he was taken into the counting-house of one of the great
-merchants of Amsterdam. This merchant was constantly sending vessels
-to different parts of the world, and Le Fort was sent in charge of
-the cargo of one vessel to Copenhagen. At this time, an ambassador
-was to be sent from Denmark to Russia; and, as Le Fort knew something
-of the Russian language, he secured the place of interpreter in the
-suite of the ambassador, and went with him to Moscow. On one occasion,
-when the Czar Peter was dining at the house of the ambassador, he
-noticed Le Fort, and observed that he spoke the Russian language
-remarkably for a foreigner. He was at once interested in him, and
-soon secured Le Fort as his own interpreter, as he found that he
-also spoke other languages. Le Fort became a great favorite of the
-emperor’s, and continued in his service until his death. The first
-improvement which Le Fort introduced into Russia related to the dress
-and equipment of the troops. The imperial guards had been accustomed
-to wear an old-fashioned Russian uniform, consisting of a long outer
-coat or gown, which much impeded their movements. In conversing with
-the Czar, Le Fort suggested that the dress of the soldiers of the
-western nations was more convenient for military use. Peter at once
-desired to see it; and Le Fort immediately repaired to the tailor of
-the Danish ambassador, and ordered him to make two military suits in
-the style worn by the royal guards at Copenhagen, one for an officer
-and the other for a soldier in the ranks. Peter was so pleased with
-these suits, when they were shown to him, that he said he should like
-to have a company of guards dressed and equipped in that manner, and
-drilled according to the western style. Le Fort undertook the task of
-organizing and equipping such a band. When this company was completed,
-and clothed in the new uniform, and had been properly drilled, Le Fort
-placed himself at their head, and marched them, with drums beating and
-colors flying, before the palace gates. The Czar came to the window
-to see them pass, and was so pleased that he said he would join the
-company himself. He accordingly ordered a dress to be made for his
-own use, and he took his place in the ranks, and drilled as a common
-soldier. From this beginning, the entire imperial army was reformed.
-The Czar now proposed to Le Fort to make arrangements for bringing into
-the country a great number of mechanics and artisans from Denmark,
-Germany, France, and other European countries, in order that their
-improved methods might be introduced into Russia. To accomplish this
-end, the tariff of duties on the products and manufactures of foreign
-countries was greatly reduced. This increased the importation of goods
-from foreign countries, and promoted the intercourse of the Russians
-with foreign merchants, manufacturers, and artisans, and accustomed the
-people to a better style of living by improving their dress, furniture,
-and equipages. Also, the new system greatly increased the revenues of
-the empire. Among other reforms instituted by Peter, was that of the
-dress of his people. The Russians had been accustomed to wear long
-gowns, similar to those worn now in Oriental countries. As this costume
-was inconvenient for soldiers, workmen, and artisans, Peter required it
-to be changed. This description is given of one strange style of dress
-among the ancient Russian ladies:—
-
-“They wore a sort of dress, of which the sleeves were ten or twelve
-yards long. These sleeves were made very full, and were drawn up upon
-the arm, in a sort of puff; it being the fashion to have as great a
-length of sleeve as could possibly be crowded on, between the shoulder
-and the wrist. The customary salutation between ladies and gentlemen
-in society, when this dress was in fashion, was performed through the
-intervention of the sleeves. On the approach of the gentleman, the
-lady, by a sudden and dexterous motion of her arm, would throw off the
-end of her sleeve to him. The sleeve, being so very long, could be
-thrown in this way half across the room. The gentleman would take the
-end of the sleeve which represented, we are to suppose, the hand of the
-lady, and, after kissing and saluting it in a most respectful manner,
-he would resign it, and the lady would draw it back again upon her arm.”
-
-Peter required the people to change this dress, and he sent patterns
-of the coats worn in Western Europe, to all parts of the country. He,
-however, met with a good deal of difficulty in inducing the people
-to follow these new fashions, especially regarding the shaving of
-their mustaches and beards. He thereupon assessed a tax upon beards,
-requiring every gentleman who wore one to pay a hundred rubles a year;
-and if any peasant entered the city wearing a beard, he was stopped at
-the gates, and rerequired to pay a fine of a penny. The officers of the
-customs, who were stationed at the gates of the towns, were ordered to
-stop every man who wore a long dress, and compel him to pay a fine
-of fifty cents, or else kneel down, and have all the part of his coat
-which lay upon the ground cut off with a pair of big shears. The Czar
-first set an example also, of rapid motion through the streets. It had
-been the custom for all the nobles to move about attended by a vast
-retinue; and as it was considered more stately to move slowly, and
-as all those lower in rank must stand, with uncovered heads, in the
-presence of their masters, the streets were often blocked in the snow
-and rain by these vast cavalcades of royalty; and crowds were obliged
-to stand in the cold and wet, with bare heads exposed to the inclemency
-of the weather. Peter the Great was attended, therefore, only by a
-few persons, when going out in carriage or sleigh, and his coachman
-was ordered to drive at a quick pace; and he limited the attendants
-of his nobles to a certain number. This story is told of the manner
-in which the Czar’s attention was attracted to young Menshikóf, who
-became one of his chief officers. Alexander Menshikóf was the son of a
-laboring man, in the service of a monastery, on the banks of the Volga.
-Young Menshikóf afterwards went to Moscow, and was there employed in
-a pastry-cook’s shop. It was his part of the work to go out in the
-streets and sell pies and cakes. In order to attract customers, he
-often sang songs. At one time Peter was passing, and stopped to listen
-to the songs of the young pastry-boy. Finally, the Czar asked him what
-he would take for his whole stock of cakes and pies, basket and all.
-The boy promptly stated the sum he would take for his wares, but as
-for the basket, as it belonged to his master, he could not sell it;
-but he dryly added: “Still, everything belongs to Your Majesty, and
-Your Majesty has, therefore, only to give me the command, and I shall
-deliver it up to you.”
-
-[Illustration: CATHEDRAL OF ST. PETER AND PAUL IN THE FORTRESS.]
-
-This reply so pleased the Czar, that he took the boy into his service.
-When Peter the Great first became the sole ruler of Russia, after the
-downfall of Sophia, he was about twenty years of age. His word was
-law. Life and death hung upon his will. His dominions extended so far,
-that, when he wished to send an ambassador to one of his neighbors—the
-emperor of China—it took the messenger more than eighteen months of
-constant travelling to go from the capital to the frontier. As to
-Peter’s character, he was talented, ambitious, energetic, and resolute;
-but he was also quick-tempered, imperious, merciless, towards his
-enemies, and possessed an indomitable will. Peter thus describes his
-first trial of the open sea:—
-
-“For some years I had the fill of my desires on Lake Pereyaslávl, but
-finally it grew too narrow for me. I then went to the Kúbensky Lake,
-but that was too shallow. I then decided to see the open sea, and
-began often to beg the permission of my mother to go to Archangel. She
-forbade me such a dangerous journey, but, seeing my great desire, and
-my unchangeable longing, allowed it, in spite of herself.”
-
-So, in 1693, Peter set out from Moscow, with a suite of a hundred
-persons, to go to Archangel. Having arrived there, the smell of the
-salt water was too inviting to be resisted; and Peter put out to sea
-on a little yacht, called St. Peter, which had been built for him. His
-mother, who had exacted a promise that he would not go to sea, hearing
-that he had gone on a sea journey, was much alarmed, and wrote to him,
-urging his return. She even had a letter written to him, in the name of
-his little son, Alexis, then three years old, begging him to come back.
-To this he replied:—
-
-“By thy letter I see, oh! oh! that thou hast been mightily grieved, and
-why? Why dost thou trouble thyself about me? Thou hast deigned to write
-that thou hast given me into the care of the Virgin. When thou hast
-such a guardian for me, why dost thou grieve?”
-
-While at Archangel, besides the time which Peter gave to the study of
-commerce and ship-building, he found leisure for inspecting various
-industries and for practising both at the forge and at the lathe. A
-chandelier made of walrus teeth, turned by him, hangs now over his
-tomb in the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul, at St. Petersburg;
-and carved work in bone and wood, and iron bars forged by him at this
-time, are still preserved. Besides the balls and dinners which he
-attended at Archangel, to which he had also been much given at Moscow,
-he frequently attended a neighboring church, where he himself read
-the Epistle, sang with the choir, and made great friends with the
-archbishop. In 1694 his mother Natalia died, and soon he repudiated his
-wife Eudoxia and shut her up in a convent, where he kept her confined
-all the rest of her life. Peter had only married this wife to please
-his mother and his nobles, and having never loved her, soon tired of
-her. She had been brought up in the old-fashioned Russian way, and was
-very ignorant; but as she appeared to love him devotedly, his treatment
-of her was wicked and cruel, and in his after domestic life there is
-much to condemn. Although he did much for the advancement of Russia,
-and his public enterprise and achievements are greatly to be admired,
-in character he was brutal and selfish, and his tastes were low and
-vicious. He was fond of drunken carousals, and sank the dignity of his
-rank in his associations with inferior and profligate companions. As a
-man, there is little to admire in him, but as a public benefactor of
-his country, he is greatly to be commended. As an artisan, statesman,
-and general, he introduced wise and good reforms into his realms, and
-raised his people from semi-barbarism to rank with the other civilized
-nations of Europe.
-
-Though he was not a scholar, he encouraged learning. There was, about
-this time, a second attempt made to assassinate the Czar. As Peter was
-often accustomed to attend conflagrations in Moscow, these conspirators
-formed the plan of setting fire to some building near the royal
-palace, and when the emperor, as was his wont, should come out to help
-extinguish the flames, he was to be assassinated. They then determined
-to go to the convent where Sophia was confined, release her, and
-proclaim her empress. This plot was, however, revealed to the Czar, and
-he thereupon ordered a small body of men to attend him, and he went at
-once to the houses of the various conspirators and arrested them. They
-were afterwards executed in a most barbarous manner. The criminals were
-brought out one by one. First their arms were cut off, then their legs,
-and finally their heads. The amputated limbs and heads were then hung
-upon a column in the market-place in Moscow, where they were left as a
-bloody warning to others, as long as the weather remained cold enough
-to keep them frozen. Thus ended the second conspiracy against the
-life of Peter the Great. In 1695 the Czar, in conjunction with other
-European powers, declared war again against the Turks and Tartars.
-Peter acquired great renown throughout Europe for his successful siege
-against Azof, to obtain which was one of the chief objects of the
-campaign. This success also increased Peter’s interest in the building
-of ships. He determined to establish a large fleet on the Black Sea,
-and in order to ascertain the best modes of ship-building, Peter
-resolved to make a journey to Western Europe.
-
-That he might not be burdened by fêtes and ceremonies, he adopted
-a disguise. Macaulay said of this journey, “It is an epoch in the
-history, not only of his own country, but of ours and of the world.”
-
-Various reasons have been given by different writers for this step
-of the Czar. Pleyer, the secret Austrian agent, wrote to the Emperor
-Leopold that the whole embassy was “merely a cloak for the freedom
-sought by the Czar, to get out of his own country and divert himself a
-little.” A document in the archives at Vienna states that the “cause of
-the journey was a vow made by Peter, when in danger on the White Sea,
-to make a pilgrimage to the tombs of the apostles St. Peter and St.
-Paul at Rome.” Voltaire said, “He resolved to absent himself for some
-years from his dominions, in order to learn how better to govern them.”
-Napoleon said, “He left his country to deliver himself for a while from
-the crown, so as to learn ordinary life, and remount by degrees to
-greatness.” But later writers say, “Peter went abroad, not to fulfil a
-vow, not to amuse himself, not to become more civilized, not to learn
-the art of government, but simply to become a good shipwright.”
-
-His mind was filled with the idea of creating a navy on the Black Sea,
-and his tastes had always been mechanical. In order to give the Czar
-greater freedom of action, the purpose of his journey was concealed
-by means of a great embassy, which should visit the chief countries
-of western Europe. In the suite of the ambassadors were twenty nobles
-and thirty-five called volunteers, who were going for the study of
-ship-building. Among these was the Czar himself. These volunteers were
-chiefly young men who had been comrades of Peter in his play-regiments
-and boat-building. During the absence of the Czar the government was
-intrusted to a regency of three persons, the uncle of the Czar and
-two princes. We have not space to describe this journey in full, and
-can only mention certain incidents. The Czar is thus described by the
-electress of Hannover and her daughter, whom Peter met at Koppenbrügge:—
-
-“My mother and I began to pay him our compliments, but he made Mr.
-Le Fort reply for him, for he seemed shy, hid his face in his hands,
-and said, ‘_Ich kann nicht sprechen_.’ But we tamed him a little, and
-then he sat down at the table between my mother and myself, and each
-of us talked to him in turn. Sometimes he replied with promptitude, at
-others, he made two interpreters talk, and assuredly he said nothing
-that was not to the point on all subjects that were suggested. As to
-his grimaces, I imagined them worse than I found them, and some are not
-in his power to correct. One can see also that he has had no one to
-teach him how to eat properly, but he has a natural unconstrained air
-which pleases me.”
-
-[Illustration: PETER THE GREAT IN THE DUTCH SHIPYARD.]
-
-Her mother also wrote: “The Czar is very tall, his features are fine,
-and his figure very noble. He has great vivacity of mind, and a ready
-and just repartee. But, with all the advantages with which nature has
-endowed him, it could be wished that his manners were a little less
-rustic. I asked him if he liked hunting. He replied that his father had
-been very fond of it, but that he himself, from his earliest youth, had
-had a real passion for navigation and for fireworks. He told us that
-he worked himself in building ships, showed us his hands, and made us
-touch the callous places that had been made by work. He has quite the
-manners of his country. If he had received a better education, he
-would be an accomplished man, for he has many good qualities, and an
-infinite amount of native wit.”
-
-The Czar proceeded to Holland, and in the little town of Saardam, not
-far from Amsterdam, may still be seen the shop which Peter occupied
-while there. The historians say, he entered himself as a common
-ship-carpenter, at Amsterdam, and worked for several months among
-the other workmen, wearing the same dress they wore. In moments of
-rest, the Czar, sitting down on a log, with his hatchet between his
-knees, was willing to talk to any one who addressed him simply as
-carpenter Peter, but turned away without answering if called Sire or
-Your Majesty. Peter’s curiosity was insatiable. He visited workshops,
-factories, cabinets of coins, anatomical museums, botanical gardens,
-hospitals, theatres, and numerous other places; and inquired about
-everything he saw, until he was recognized by his usual questions,
-“What is that for? How does that work? That will I see.” He made
-himself acquainted with Dutch home and family life. Every market day
-he went to the Botermarkt, mingled with the people, and studied their
-trades.
-
-He took lessons from a travelling dentist, and experimented on his
-servants. He mended his own clothes, and learned enough of cobbling to
-make himself a pair of slippers. He visited Protestant churches, and
-did not forget the beer-houses. The frigate upon which Peter worked so
-long, was at last launched, and proved a good ship. He had seen some
-English ships which pleased him so much, that he determined to set out
-for England, which he did in 1698, leaving his embassy in Holland.
-
-King William of England made Peter a present of an English yacht,
-with which he was much delighted. Peter spent much of his time in
-England, looking for suitable persons to employ in arts and mechanics
-in Russia. He avoided all court pomp and etiquette during this
-journey, and travelled incognito, as much as possible. He visited also
-the mint in England, for he was pleased with the excellence of the
-English coinage, and he designed recoining the Russian money, which
-he afterwards accomplished, coining copper, silver, and gold to the
-extent of $18,000,000 in the space of three years, to replace the bits
-of stamped leather formerly used. At length he returned to Amsterdam,
-where his embassy awaited him. When Peter the Great was excited by
-anger or emotion, the ugly aspect of his countenance and demeanor was
-greatly aggravated by a nervous affection of the head and face, which
-attacked him, particularly when he was in a passion, and which produced
-convulsive twitches of the muscles, that drew his head by jerks to one
-side, and distorted his face in a manner dreadful to behold. It was
-said that this disorder was first induced in his childhood, by some
-one of the terrible frights through which he passed. This distortion,
-together with the coarse and savage language he employed when in a
-passion, made him appear at times more like some ugly monster of
-fiction than like a man. He disliked court etiquette, and avoided
-pompous ceremonies. Of course there was much curiosity to see him in
-the various cities he visited, but he generally avoided the crowds;
-and when his splendid embassy entered a city in royal state, and the
-people collected in vast numbers to behold the famous Czar, while they
-were straining their eyes, and peering into every carriage of the royal
-procession in hopes of seeing him, Peter himself would slip into the
-city by some quiet street, in disguise, and meeting the merchants, with
-whom he delighted to associate, he would go to some inn and indulge in
-his pipe and beer, leaving his embassy to represent royalty. At last
-his disguise was discovered, and then the news was circulated that
-the Czar could be easily recognized by his great height,—nearly seven
-feet,—by the twitching of his face, by his gesturing with his right
-hand, and by a small mole on the right cheek. His appearance is thus
-described by one who saw him at this time:—
-
-“He is a prince of very great stature, but there is one circumstance
-which is unpleasant. He has convulsions, sometimes in his eyes,
-sometimes in his arms, and sometimes in his whole body. He at times
-turns his eyes so that one can see nothing but the whites. I do not
-know whence it arises, but we must believe that it is a lack of good
-breeding. Then he has also movements in the legs, so that he can
-scarcely keep in one place. He is very well made, and goes about
-dressed as a sailor, in the highest degree simple, and wishing nothing
-else than to be on the water.”
-
-But the Cardinal Kollonitz, primate of Hungary, gives a more flattering
-picture of Peter the Great:—
-
-“The Czar is a youth of from twenty-eight to thirty years of age,
-is tall, of an olive complexion, rather stout than thin, in aspect
-between proud and grave, and with a lively countenance. His left eye,
-as well as his left arm and leg, were injured by the poison given him
-during the life of his brother; but there remain now only a fixed and
-fascinated look in his eye, and a constant movement of his arm and
-leg, to hide which, he accompanies this forced motion with continual
-movements of his entire body, which, by many people in the countries
-which he has visited, has been attributed to natural causes, but really
-it is artificial. His wit is lively and ready; his manners rather
-civil than barbarous, the journey he has made having improved him,
-and the difference from the beginning of his travels and the present
-time being visible, although his native roughness may still be seen in
-him; but it is chiefly noticeable in his followers, whom he holds in
-check with great severity. He has a knowledge of geography and history,
-and, what is most to be noticed, he desires to know these subjects
-better; but his strongest inclination is for maritime affairs, at which
-he himself works mechanically, as he did in Holland; and this work,
-according to many people who have to do with him, is indispensable to
-divert the effects of the poison, which still very much troubles him.
-In person and in aspect, as well as in his manners, there is nothing
-which would distinguish him or declare him to be a prince.”
-
-[Illustration: PETER I., CZAR OF RUSSIA.
-
-(From Original Copperplate Engraving.)]
-
-During his visit to Paris, the Czar often astonished the polite
-Parisians. “On one occasion he went with the duke of Orleans to the
-opera, where he sat on the front bench of the large box. During the
-performance the Czar asked if he could not have some beer. A large
-goblet on a saucer was immediately brought. The regent rose, took it,
-and presented it to the Czar, who, with a smile and bow of politeness,
-took the goblet without any ceremony, drank, and put it back on the
-saucer, which the regent kept holding. The duke then took a plate with
-a napkin, which he presented to the Czar, who, without rising, made use
-of it, at which scene the audience seemed astonished.”
-
-Notwithstanding his rough manners, the history, character, and
-achievements of the Czar, together with his exact knowledge in so many
-directions, and his interest in everything that was scientific and
-technical, made a deep impression upon those who met him. St. Simon
-thus describes him: “He was a very tall man, well made, not too stout,
-with a roundish face, a high forehead, and fine eyebrows, a short
-nose—but not too short—large at the end; his lips were rather thick,
-his complexion a ruddy brown; fine black eyes, large, lively, piercing,
-and well apart; a majestic and gracious look when he wished, otherwise
-severe and stern, with a twitching which did not often return, but
-which disturbed his look and his whole expression, and inspired fear.
-That lasted but a moment, accompanied by a wild and terrible look,
-and passed away as quickly. His whole air showed his intellect, his
-reflection, and his greatness, and did not lack a certain grace. He
-wore only a linen collar, a round brown peruke without powder, which
-did not touch his shoulders; a brown, tight-fitting coat, plain, with
-gold buttons; a waistcoat, breeches, stockings, no gloves nor cuffs;
-the star of his order on his coat, and the ribbon underneath, his coat
-often quite unbuttoned; his hat on a table, and never on his head even
-out of doors. With all this simplicity, and whatever bad carriage
-or company he might be, one could not fail to perceive the air of
-greatness that was natural to him.”
-
-While at Vienna, Peter learned of another revolt of the Streltsi, and
-thereupon hastened back to Moscow to put down the insurrection. The
-rebellion was soon quelled; but the tortures and executions which
-followed were barbarous. Some were beheaded; some were broken on the
-wheel, and then left to die in horrible agonies; many were buried
-alive, their heads only being left above the ground. It is said
-that Peter took such a savage delight in these punishments that he
-executed many of the victims with his own hand. At one time, when half
-intoxicated, at a banquet, he ordered twenty prisoners to be brought
-in, and between his drinks of brandy cut off their heads himself, being
-an hour in cutting off the twenty heads.
-
-As Peter thought Sophia was implicated in this revolt, he ordered the
-arm of the ringleader of the plot to be cut off, and an address which
-he found, written to Sophia, to be placed in the stiffened hand, and
-by his order this ghastly relic was fastened to the wall in Sophia’s
-apartment. When the trials were over, a decree was issued, abolishing
-the Streltsi; and they were all sent into exile. Peter was now involved
-in a war with Sweden for the possession of the eastern shore of the
-Baltic Sea. At first, the Swedes were victorious; but in about a year
-the Czar gained possession of a considerable portion of the Baltic
-shore, and he thereupon determined to build a new city there, with the
-view of making it the naval and commercial capital of his kingdom. This
-plan was successfully carried out, and the building of the great city
-of St. Petersburg was one of the most important events in the reign of
-Peter the Great.
-
-At length, Charles XII., king of Sweden, began to be alarmed at the
-increasing power of the Czar in that part of the country, and he
-invaded Russia with an army. The famous battle of Pultowa, by which the
-invasion of the Swedes was repelled, was fought in 1709; and this was
-almost the only serious danger from any foreign source which threatened
-the dominions of Peter the Great during his reign.
-
-Peter, having been previously privately married to Catherine,
-determined, in 1712, to have a public ceremony. Peter’s first wife had
-one son, Alexis, who occasioned his father the most serious trouble.
-Alexis was indolent and most vicious in his habits of life; and so
-outrageous was his conduct that at last his father caused him to be
-imprisoned. It was then discovered that Alexis had been planning
-a revolt, and Peter referred his case to a grand council of civil
-authorities, and also a convocation of the clergy to determine upon
-the sentence to be pronounced upon this rebellious son. The council
-declared that he was worthy of death, and the Czar confirmed the
-judgment of the council, and a day was appointed on which Alexis was
-to be arraigned in order that sentence of death might be solemnly
-pronounced upon him. But before the appointed day arrived, Alexis was
-attacked with convulsions, caused by his terror; and the Czar visited
-him in the fortress where he was dying.
-
-The dying prince besought forgiveness of his father with such prayers
-and tears that Peter and his ministers were overcome with emotion. The
-Czar gave Alexis his forgiveness and his blessing, and took his leave
-with tears and lamentations. Soon after, Alexis expired. The funeral
-rites were performed by the Czar and his family with much solemnity. At
-the service in the church a funeral sermon was pronounced by the priest
-from the appropriate text, “O Absalom! my son! my son Absalom!” Thus
-ended this dreadful tragedy.
-
-The heir to the throne was now the little son of Catherine, Peter
-Petrowitz. The birth of this son, which occurred about three years
-before the death of Alexis, was such a delight to Peter the Great that
-he celebrated the event with public rejoicings. At the baptism of the
-babe, two kings—those of Denmark and of Prussia—acted as godfathers.
-The christening was attended with most gorgeous banquets. Among other
-curious contrivances were two enormous pies,—one served in the room of
-the gentlemen and the other in that of the ladies. From the ladies’
-pie, there stepped out, when it was opened, a young dwarf, very small,
-and clothed in a fantastic manner. The dwarf brought out with him from
-the pie some glasses and a bottle of wine, and he walked around the
-table, drinking to the health of the ladies, who were intensely amused
-by his droll manners. In the gentlemen’s room the pie was similar, from
-which a female dwarf stepped forth and performed the same ceremony.
-Peter the Great was much attached to his wife Catherine, whose romantic
-life we have not space to describe. Her influence over the Czar was
-most beneficial.
-
-About a year after the death of Alexis, the little Peter Petrowitz, the
-idolized son of the Czar, also died. Peter the Great was completely
-overwhelmed with grief at this new calamity. Even Catherine, who
-usually had power to soothe his fits of frenzy, anger, or grief, and
-whose touch would often stop the contortions of his face, could not
-comfort him now; for the sight of her only reminded him more keenly of
-his loss. It was feared at this time that grief would kill the Czar;
-for he shut himself up alone, and would not allow any one to come
-near him for three days and nights. Peter the Great, however, lived
-sixteen years after this event. During these last years he continued
-the reforms in his empire and increased the power and influence of his
-government among surrounding nations. As both of his sons were dead,
-he determined to leave the government in the hands of Catherine, and
-she was crowned empress with most imposing ceremonies. In less than
-a year after this event, the Czar was attacked with a sudden illness
-during the ceremonies of rejoicings connected with the betrothal of
-one of his daughters to a foreign duke. His death took place on the
-28th of January, 1725. Another of his daughters having died a short
-time after her father, their bodies were interred together. The funeral
-obsequies were so protracted, and were conducted with so much pomp and
-ceremony, that six weeks elapsed before the remains of Peter the Great
-were finally committed to the tomb. The fame of Peter the Great differs
-from that attained by other famous rulers of the world; for it was not
-consequent upon renowned foreign conquests, but the triumph which Peter
-achieved was the commencement of a work of internal improvement and
-reform which now, after a century and a half has passed, is still going
-on.
-
-
-
-
-FREDERICK THE GREAT.
-
-A.D. 1712-1786.
-
- “Kings are like stars,—they rise and set, they have
- The worship of the world, but no repose.”—SHELLEY.
-
- “A man’s a man;
- But when you see a king, you see the work
- Of many thousand men.”—GEORGE ELIOT.
-
-
-CARLYLE accused Schiller of “oversetting fact, disregarding reality,
-and tumbling time and space topsy-turvy.” That there is great danger
-of doing the latter, in condensing such a life as that of Frederick
-the Great into the small space allotted to these sketches, cannot be
-denied; but fiction itself could scarcely overstate the facts connected
-with this weird but most fascinating glimpse of historical events.
-Carlyle says: “With such wagon-loads of books and printed records as
-exist on the subject of Frederick, it has always seemed possible, even
-for a stranger, to acquire some real understanding of him; though
-practically, here and now, I have to own it proves difficult beyond
-conception. Alas! the books are not cosmic; they are chaotic.”
-
-[Illustration: FREDERICK II., KING OF PRUSSIA, ÆT. 58.]
-
-True it is, it is not want of material, but the overwhelming
-multiplicity of documents, which renders it difficult to trace out a
-clear-cut sketch of Frederick the Great; and that we may do it more
-concisely, and yet entertainingly, a series of panoramic pictures will
-perhaps be the best method of achieving the desired end.
-
-“About one hundred years ago there used to be seen sauntering on the
-terraces of Sans Souci for a short time in the afternoon—or you might
-have met him elsewhere at an earlier hour, riding or driving in a
-rapid business manner on the open roads, or through the scraggy woods
-and avenues of that intricate, amphibious Potsdam region—a highly
-interesting, lean little old man, of alert though slightly stooping
-figure, whose name among strangers was _King Friedrich the Second_, or
-Frederick the Great of Prussia, and at home among the common people,
-who much loved and esteemed him, was _Vater Fritz_, Father Fred.
-
-“He is a king, every inch of him, though without the trappings of a
-king. He presents himself in a Spartan simplicity of vesture: no crown
-but an old military cocked hat, generally old, or trampled and kneaded
-into absolute softness if new; no sceptre but one like Agamemnon’s—a
-walking-stick cut from the woods, which serves also as a riding-stick;
-and for royal robes a mere soldier’s blue coat with red facings, coat
-likely to be old, and sure to have a good deal of Spanish snuff on the
-breast of it; rest of the apparel dim, unobtrusive in color or cut,
-ending in high over-knee military boots, which may be brushed, but are
-not permitted to be blackened or varnished.
-
-“The man is not of god-like physiognomy, any more than of imposing
-stature or costume: close-shut mouth with thin lips, prominent jaws and
-nose, receding brow, by no means of Olympian height; head, however, is
-of long form, and has superlative gray eyes in it; not what is called a
-beautiful man, nor yet, by all appearance, what is called a happy. The
-face bears evidence of many sorrows, of much hard labor done in this
-world. Quiet stoicism, great unconscious, and some conscious, pride,
-well tempered with a cheery mockery of humor, are written on that
-old face, which carries its chin well forward in spite of the slight
-stoop about the neck; snuffy nose rather flung into the air, under its
-old cocked hat, like an old snuffy lion on the watch, and such a pair
-of eyes as no man, or lion, or lynx, of that century bore elsewhere.
-Those eyes, which, at the bidding of his great soul, fascinated you
-with seduction or with terror; most excellent, potent, brilliant eyes,
-swift-darting as the stars, steadfast as the sun; gray, we said, of
-the azure-gray color; large enough, not of glaring size; the habitual
-expression of them vigilance and penetrating sense, and gives us the
-notion of a lambent outer radiance springing from some great inner
-sea of light and fire in the man. The voice, if he speak to you, is
-clear, melodious, and sonorous; all tones are in it: ingenuous inquiry,
-graceful sociality, light-flowing banter up to definite word of
-command, up to desolating word of rebuke and reprobation.”
-
-Such is the picture of Frederick the Great in his later days; but
-now we will turn back our panoramic views, and behold the setting of
-his early years: and, to a clearer understanding of those events,
-an aid may be found in glancing at his native country, Prussia. For
-many centuries the country on the southern coasts of the Baltic Sea
-was inhabited by wild tribes of barbarians, almost as savage as the
-beasts which roamed in their forests. After a time the tribes, tamed
-and partly civilized, produced a race of tall and manly proportions,
-fair in complexion, with flaxen hair, stern aspect, great physical
-strength, and most formidable foes in battle. Centuries passed,
-of which history notes only wars and woes, when from this chaotic
-barbarism order emerged. Small states were organized, and a political
-life began. In 1700 one of the petty provinces was called the
-Marquisate of Brandenburg, whose marquis was Frederick, of the family
-of Hohenzollern. To the east of this province was a duchy, called
-Prussia, which was at length added to the domains of Frederick, the
-marquis of Brandenburg, and he obtained from the emperor of Germany the
-recognition of his dominions as a kingdom, and assumed the title of
-Frederick I. of Prussia. On the 16th of November, 1700, his ambassador
-returned triumphantly from Vienna. “The Kaiser has consented; we are
-to wear a royal crown on the top of our periwig.” Thus Prussia became
-a kingdom. When Frederick was crowned king of Prussia, most gorgeous
-was the pomp, most royal was the grandeur, of the imposing ceremonies.
-Carlyle says:—
-
-“The magnificence of Frederick’s processionings into Konigsburg, and
-of his coronation ceremonials there, what pen can describe it! what
-pen need! Folio volumes with copper-plates have been written on it,
-and are not yet all pasted in band-boxes or slit into spills. ‘The
-diamond buttons of his majesty’s coat’ (snuff-colored or purple, I
-cannot recollect) cost £1,500 apiece. By this one feature judge what
-an expensive Herr. Streets were hung with cloth, carpeted with cloth,
-no end of draperies and cloth; your oppressed imagination feels as if
-there was cloth enough of scarlet and other bright colors to thatch
-the Arctic Zone; with illuminations, cannon-salvos, fountains running
-wine. Frederick himself put the crown on his head, ‘King here in my own
-right, after all,’ and looked his royalest, we may fancy,—the kind eyes
-of him, almost fierce for moments, and the ‘cheerfulness of pride’ well
-blending with something of awful.”
-
-And now we must hang up the picture of Frederick the grandfather, for
-there has another Frederick come to claim our attention. “Courage,
-poor old grandfather! Poor old man! he got his own back half broken by
-a careless nurse letting him fall, and has slightly stooped ever since,
-much against his will, for he would fain have been beautiful. But here
-is a new edition of a Frederick, the first having gone off with so
-little effect. This one’s back is still unbroken. Who knows but Heaven
-may be kinder to this one? Heaven was much kinder to this one. Him
-Heaven had kneaded of a more potent stuff; a mighty fellow, this one,
-and a strange; of a swift, far-darting nature this one, like an Apollo
-clad in sunbeams and in lightnings, and with a back which all the world
-could not succeed in breaking.”
-
-Between the old grandfather and this famous Frederick there
-hangs the picture of still another Frederick, only a little less
-famous,—Frederick Wilhelm, crown prince of Prussia when his famous
-son was born, afterwards second king of Prussia, and withal most
-ferocious in his nature, part bear and part maniac; his picture is thus
-graphically sketched.
-
-“The new monarch, who assumed the crown with the title of Frederick
-William, not with that of Frederick II., to the utter consternation
-of the court dismissed nearly every honorary official of the palace,
-from the highest dignitary to the humblest page. His flashing eye
-and determined manner were so appalling that no one ventured to
-remonstrate. A clean sweep was made, so that the household was
-reduced to the lowest footing of economy consistent with the supply
-of indispensable wants. Eight servants were retained at six shillings
-a week. His father had thirty pages; all were dismissed but three.
-There were one thousand saddle-horses in the royal stables; Frederick
-William kept thirty. Three-fourths of the names were struck from the
-pension list. For twenty-seven years this strange man reigned. He
-was like no other monarch. Great wisdom and shrewdness were blended
-with unutterable folly and almost maniacal madness. Though a man of
-strong powers of mind, he was very illiterate. ‘For spelling, grammar,
-penmanship, and composition, his semi-articulate papers resemble
-nothing else extant,—are as if done by the paw of a bear; indeed,
-the utterance generally sounds more like the growling of a bear than
-anything that could be handily spelled or parsed. But there is a
-decisive human sense in the heart of it, and such a dire hatred of
-empty bladders, unrealities, and hypocritical forms and pretenses,
-which he calls wind and humbug, as is very strange indeed.’
-
-“His energy inspired the whole kingdom, and paved the way for the
-achievements of his son. The father created the machine with which the
-son attained such wonderful results. He commuted the old feudal service
-into a fixed money payment. He goaded the whole realm into industry,
-compelling even the apple-women to knit at the stalls.
-
-“The crown lands were farmed out. He drained bogs, planted colonies,
-established manufactures, and in every way encouraged the use of
-Prussian products. He carried with him invariably a stout rattan cane.
-Upon the slightest provocation, like a madman, he would thrash those
-who displeased him. He was an arbitrary king, ruling at his sovereign
-will, and disposing of the liberty, the property, and the lives of
-his subjects at his pleasure. Every year he accumulated large masses
-of coin, which he deposited in barrels in the cellar of his palace.
-He had no powers of graceful speech, but spent his energetic, joyless
-life in grumbling and growling. He would allow no drapery, no stuffed
-furniture, no carpets in his apartments. He sat upon a plain wooden
-chair. He ate roughly of roast beef, despising all delicacies. His
-dress was a close military blue coat, with red cuffs and collar, buff
-waistcoat and breeches, and white linen gaiters to the knee. His
-sword was belted around his waist. A well-worn, battered triangular
-hat covered his head. He walked rapidly through the streets which
-surrounded his palaces at Potsdam and Berlin. If he met any one, he
-would abruptly inquire, ‘Who are you?’ When his majesty took a walk,
-every human being fled before him, as if a tiger had broken loose
-from a menagerie. If he met a lady in the street, he gave her a kick,
-and told her to go home and mind her children. If he saw a clergyman
-staring at the soldiers, he admonished the reverend gentleman to betake
-himself to study and prayer, and enforced his pious advice by a sound
-caning administered on the spot. But it was in his own house that he
-was most unreasonable and ferocious. His palace was hell, and he the
-most execrable of fiends.”
-
-And now we will turn this unlovely picture of the bearish Frederick
-William to the wall, while we examine a portrait of the young Fritz,
-afterwards Frederick the Great.
-
-In the palace of Berlin, on the 24th of January, 1712, a small infant
-opened its eyes upon this world. Though small, he was of great promise
-and possibility, “and thrice and four times welcome to all sovereign
-and other persons in the Prussian court and Prussian realms in those
-cold winter days. His father, they say, was like to have stifled him
-with his caresses, so overjoyed was the man, or at least to have
-scorched him in the blaze of the fire, when happily some much suitabler
-female nurse snatched this little creature from the rough paternal
-paws, and saved it for the benefit of Prussia and mankind.”
-
-Then they christened this wee fellow, aged one week, with immense
-magnificence and pomp of ceremony, Karl Frederick; but the Karl dropped
-altogether out of practice, and Frederick (_Rich in Peace_) became
-his only title; until his father became king of Prussia, and Fritz
-stepped into the rank of crown prince, and subsequently became the most
-renowned sovereign of his nation, and took his place in the foremost
-rank of the famous rulers of the world.
-
-Frederick William had married, when eighteen years of age, his pretty
-cousin, Sophie Dorothee, daughter of George I. of England. Little Fritz
-had an elder sister, named Wilhelmina. There were several younger
-children afterwards, but our story mostly concerns Fritz and his sister
-Wilhelmina, for whom he showed greater affection than for any other
-person.
-
-Frederick William was very desirous that Fritz should be a soldier, but
-the beautiful laughing Fritz, with his long golden curls and sensitive
-nature, was fonder of books and music than of war and soldiering,
-which much offended his stern father; and so great was his abhorrence
-of such a feminine employment as he esteemed music, that little Fritz
-and Wilhelmina must needs practice in secret; and had it not been for
-the aid of their mother, the Queen Sophie Dorothee, they would have
-been denied this great pleasure. But the music-masters were sent to
-the forests or caves by the queen, and there the prince Fritz and
-Wilhelmina took their much-prized music-lessons. But one day the
-stern king found Fritz and Wilhelmina marching around together, while
-the laughing prince was proudly beating a drum, much to his own and
-sister’s delight. The king was so overjoyed at this manifestation
-of supposed military taste in his son, that he immediately called
-the queen to witness the performance, and then employed an artist to
-transfer the scene to canvas. This picture still hangs upon the walls
-of the Charlottenburg Palace.
-
-When Fritz was but six years old, a military company was organized for
-him, consisting of about three hundred lads. This band was called “The
-Crown Prince Cadets.” Fritz was very thoroughly drilled in his military
-duties, and a uniform was provided for him. An arsenal was built on the
-palace grounds at Potsdam, where he mounted batteries and practised
-gunnery with small brass ordnance. Until Fritz was seven years of age,
-his education had been under the care of a French governess; but at
-that age he was taken from his lady teachers and placed under tutors.
-These tutors were military officers of great renown.
-
-The following directions were drawn up by Frederick William, regarding
-his son’s education:—
-
-“My son must be impressed with love and fear of God, as the foundation
-of our temporal and eternal welfare. No false religions or sects of
-Atheist, Arian, Socinian, or whatever name the poisonous things have,
-which can easily corrupt a young mind, are to be even named in his
-hearing. He is to be taught a proper abhorrence of Papistry, and to
-be shown its baselessness and nonsensicality. Impress on him the true
-religion, which consists essentially in this: that Christ died for
-all men. He is to learn no Latin, but French and German, so as to
-speak and write with brevity and propriety. Let him learn arithmetic,
-mathematics, artillery, economy, to the very bottom; history in
-particular; ancient history only slightly, but the history of the
-last one hundred and fifty years to the exactest pitch. He must be
-completely master of geography, as also of whatever is remarkable in
-each country. With increasing years you will more and more, to an
-especial degree, go upon fortification, the formation of a camp, and
-other war sciences, that the prince may from youth upward be trained to
-act as officer and general, and to seek all his glory in the soldier
-profession.”
-
-Frederick William took little Fritz with him from early childhood on
-all his military reviews, and in going from garrison to garrison the
-king employed a common vehicle called a sausage-car. This consisted of
-a mere stuffed pole, some ten or twelve feet long, upon which they sat
-astride. It rested upon wheels, and the riders, ten or a dozen, were
-rattled along over the rough roads through dust and rain, in winter’s
-cold and summer’s heat. This iron king robbed his child even of sleep,
-saying, “Too much sleep stupefies a fellow.” Sitting astride of this
-log carriage, the tender and delicate Fritz, whose love was for music,
-poetry, and books, was forced to endure all kinds of hardship and
-fatigue. When Fritz was ten years of age, his exacting father made out
-a set of rules which covered all the hours of this poor boy’s life. Not
-even Saturday or Sunday was left untrammelled by his stern requirements.
-
-Fritz was a remarkably handsome boy, with a fine figure, small and
-delicate hands and feet, and flowing blonde hair. His father, despising
-all the etiquette and social manners of life and dress, ordered his
-beautiful hair to be cut off, and denied him every luxury of the toilet
-and adornment. Frederick William early displayed an aversion for his
-handsome son, which soon amounted to actual hatred. As Wilhelmina and
-the mother of Fritz both took his part against the angry and brutal
-king, the wrath of that almost inhuman monster was also meted out to
-them.
-
-When Fritz was fourteen years of age, he was appointed by his father as
-captain of the Potsdam Grenadier Guards. This regiment was the glory
-of the king, and was composed entirely of giants. The shortest of the
-men were nearly seven feet high, and the tallest nearly nine feet in
-height. Frederick William did not scruple to take any means of securing
-these coveted giants, and his recruiting officers were stationed in
-many places for the purpose of seizing any large men, no matter what
-their nationality or position. When the rulers of neighboring realms
-complained at this unlawful seizure of their subjects, the Prussian
-king pretended that it was done without his knowledge. If any young
-woman was found in his kingdom of remarkable stature, she was compelled
-to marry one of the king’s giants. This guard consisted of 2,400 men.
-
-The queen-mother, Sophie Dorothee, had set her mind upon bringing
-about a double marriage, between Wilhelmina and her cousin Fred, son
-of the king of England, and Fritz and his cousin, the princess Amelia,
-the sister of Fred. But though all her schemes came to naught, they
-occasioned much trouble in her family, and brought down upon the heads
-of poor Wilhelmina and Fritz much brutal persecution from their inhuman
-father.
-
-Frederick William took his son Fritz to visit Augustus, king of Poland.
-This king was an exceedingly profligate man, and the young Fritz
-learned vicious habits at this court, which lured him into evil ways
-which ever after left their blot upon his character and morals. This
-fatal visit to Dresden occurred when Fritz was sixteen years of age,
-and the dissipation of those four weeks introduced the crown prince
-to habits which have left an indelible stain upon his reputation, and
-which poisoned his life. The king’s previous dislike to his son was
-now converted into contempt and hatred, as he became aware of his
-vicious habits; for though the iron king was a maniac in temper, and
-cruel as a savage, he had no weakness towards an immoral life. King
-Frederick William was now confined to his chair with gout, and poor
-Wilhelmina and Fritz were the victims upon whom his severest tyrannies
-fell. The princess Wilhelmina was very beautiful, and had it not
-been for his love for this sister, upon whom the whole weight of his
-father’s resentment would then fall, Fritz would have escaped from his
-home and the terrible ill-treatment he there received.
-
-We have not space to give the pictures of the family broils in this
-unhappy household. Now the crabbed old man would snatch the plates
-from the table at dinner and fling them at the heads of his children,
-usually at hapless Wilhelmina or Fritz; then, angered at Wilhelmina
-because she refused to take whatever husband her cruel father might
-select, irrespective of her inclination or wishes, he shut the poor
-princess up in her apartment, and tried to starve her into submission;
-for, as she writes, “I was really dying of hunger, having nothing to
-eat but soup made with salt and water and a ragout of old bones, full
-of hairs and other dirt.” At last she yielded to her father’s demands;
-but then she incurred the anger of her mother, who had set her heart
-upon the match with the prince of Wales.
-
-So the poor princess’ days were full of bitterness. But, fortunately,
-the prince of Baireuth, whom she married, turned out to be a kind
-husband; but as he was absent most of the time on regimental duty,
-and had but his small salary, and the old marquis of Baireuth, her
-husband’s father, was penurious, irascible, and an inebriate,
-she often suffered for the necessaries of life. The home of her
-step-parents was unendurable, and the home of her childhood was still
-more so. Unhappy princess! and yet, in the midst of all this misery,
-her bright and graphic letters form one of the greatest delights to
-students of history, and give true pictures of the home of Frederick
-the Great, which can be found nowhere else.
-
-Fritz had now so seriously offended his father, that the king openly
-exposed him to contempt. He even flogged the prince with his rattan in
-the presence of others; and the young heir-apparent to the throne of
-Prussia, beautiful in person, high-spirited, and of superior genius,
-was treated by his father with studied insult, even in the presence of
-monarchs, of lords and ladies, of the highest dignitaries of Europe;
-and after raining blows upon his head, he exclaimed in diabolical
-wrath, as if desirous of goading his son to suicide: “Had I been so
-treated by my father, I would have blown my brains out. But this fellow
-has no honor. He takes all that comes.”
-
-But at last Fritz decided not to take longer all that came, and so he
-prepared for flight. On the 15th of July, 1730, the king of Prussia
-set out with a small train, accompanied by Fritz, to take a journey to
-the Rhine. When near Augsburg, Fritz wrote to Lieutenant Katte, one
-of his profligate friends, stating that he should embrace the first
-opportunity to escape to the Hague; that there he should assume the
-name of the Count of Alberville. He wished Katte to join him there,
-and to bring with him the overcoat and the one thousand ducats which
-he had left in his hands. Just after midnight the prince stole out to
-meet his valet, who had been commanded to bring some horses to the
-village green. But as Keith, the valet, appeared with the horses, he
-was accosted by one of the king’s guard; and the prince, although
-disguised with a red overcoat, was recognized and forced to withdraw to
-his own quarters and give up the attempt for that time. The king was
-informed of these things, and now the poor prince was put in the care
-of three of the guard, and they were informed if the prince was allowed
-to escape, death would be their doom. Upon the king’s arrival at Wesel,
-he ordered his culprit son to be brought before him. A terrible scene
-ensued. As the king would give no assurance that his friends who had
-aided him should be pardoned, the crown prince evaded all attempts to
-extort from him confessions which would implicate them. “Why,” asked
-the king, furiously, “did you attempt to desert?”
-
-“I wished to escape,” the prince boldly replied, “because you did not
-treat me like a son, but like an abject slave.”
-
-“You are a cowardly deserter,” the father exclaimed, “devoid of all
-feelings of honor.”
-
-“I have as much honor as you have,” the son replied; “and I have only
-done that which I have heard you say a hundred times you would have
-done yourself, had you been treated as I have been.”
-
-The infuriated king was now beside himself with rage. He drew his sword
-and seemed upon the point of thrusting it through the heart of his son,
-when General Mosel threw himself before the king, exclaiming, “Sire,
-you may kill me, but spare your son.” The prince was then placed in a
-room where two sentries watched over him with fixed bayonets. As the
-prince had held the rank of colonel in the army, his unjust father
-declared he was a deserter, and merited death. Frederick William, whose
-brutal cruelty exceeds our powers of belief, then sent a courier with
-the following despatch to his wife:—
-
-“I have arrested the rascal Fritz. I shall treat him as his crime and
-his cowardice merit. He has dishonored me and all my family. So great a
-wretch is no longer worthy to live.”
-
-His Majesty is in a flaming rage. He arrests, punishes, and banishes
-where there is trace of co-operation with deserter Fritz and his
-schemes. It is dangerous to have spoken kindly to the crown prince,
-or even to have been spoken to by him. Doris Ritter, a young girl who
-was a good musician, and whom the unfortunate Fritz had presented
-with music and sometimes joined in her singing in the presence of the
-girl’s mother, is condemned to be publicly whipped through the streets
-by the beadle, and to be imprisoned for three years, forced to the
-hard labor of beating hemp. The excellent tutor of the crown prince
-is banished, the accusation against him being that he had introduced
-French literature to the prince, which had caused him to imbibe infidel
-notions. The wicked old king never seemed to think that his own brutal
-conduct might have influenced the prince to be indifferent to the
-religion which he hypocritically professed to believe, but so poorly
-practised.
-
-Meanwhile the crown prince was conveyed from Wesel to the castle of
-Mittenwalde, where he was imprisoned in a room without furniture or
-bed. Here Grumkow, one of the king’s ministers, was sent to interrogate
-him. Though the cruel old minister threatened the rack of torture to
-force him to confess, Fritz had the nerve to reply:—
-
-“A hangman, such as you, naturally takes pleasure in talking of his
-tools and of his trade, but on me they will produce no effect. I have
-owned everything, and almost regret to have done so. I ought not to
-degrade myself by answering the questions of a scoundrel such as you
-are.”
-
-The next day the crown prince was sent to the fortress of Cüstrin,
-about seventy miles from Berlin.
-
-“The strong, dungeon-like room in which he was incarcerated consisted
-of bare walls, without any furniture, the light being admitted by a
-single aperture so high that the prince could not look out of it. He
-was divested of his uniform, of his sword, of every mark of dignity.
-Coarse brown clothes of plainest cut were furnished him. His flute
-was taken from him, and he was deprived of all books but the Bible
-and a few devotional treatises. He was allowed a daily sum amounting
-to twelve cents for his food,—eight cents for his dinner and four for
-his supper. His food was purchased at a cook-shop near by and cut for
-him. He was not permitted the use of a knife. The door was opened three
-times a day for ventilation,—morning, noon, and night,—but not for more
-than four minutes each time. A single tallow candle was allowed him;
-but that was to be extinguished at seven o’clock in the evening.”
-
-For long months this prince of nineteen was imprisoned in absolute
-solitude, awaiting the doom of his merciless father. But the savage
-king had reserved still greater torture for the unfortunate Fritz. By
-the order of the king, Fritz, who also had been condemned to die, was
-brought down into a lower room of the fortress, and there compelled
-to witness the execution of Lieutenant Katte, his friend, whom the
-king had condemned as guilty of high treason. As Fritz was led into
-the lower apartment of the fortress, the curtains which concealed the
-window were drawn back, and Fritz, to his horror, beheld the scaffold
-draped in black placed directly before the window. The frantic young
-prince was in an agony of despair, and exclaimed, with eyes full of
-tears, “In the name of God, I beg you to stop the execution till I
-write to the king! I am ready to renounce all my rights to the crown
-if he will pardon Katte.” But the attendants knew the iron will of
-the merciless monarch, and his cries and tears were unheeded. As the
-condemned was led by the window to ascend the scaffold, Fritz cried out
-to him, in tones of deepest anguish, “Pardon me, my dear Katte, pardon
-me! Oh, that this should be what I have done for you!”
-
-“Death is sweet for a prince I love so well,” replied the heroic Katte
-with calm fortitude, and ascending the scaffold, the bloody execution
-was performed, while four grenadiers held Fritz with his face to the
-window so that he must perforce look upon the ghastly scene. But as
-Katte’s gory head rolled upon the scaffold, the prince fainted.
-
-When the poor tortured prince regained his consciousness, his misery
-plunged him into a fever, and in his wild delirium he sought to take
-his life. When the fever abated, he sank into hopeless despair, looking
-forward to nothing but a like horrible death.
-
-With strange inconsistency, the ferocious king, who could thus torture
-the body and mind of the prince, expressed the greatest anxiety for
-the salvation of his soul. It is not strange that the example of such
-a father staggered the faith of his son, and failing to see that the
-religion professed by his father was bigoted fanaticism instead of the
-religion of the pure and saving truths inculcated by a sinless Christ,
-the crown prince became in after-life an infidel.
-
-In accordance with a promise made by the king that his life should be
-spared if he would acknowledge his guilt, which word was brought to
-the lonely captive by Chaplain Müller, the crown prince took an oath of
-submission to the king, and soon after wrote this letter to his father:—
-
-“All-serenest and All-graciousest Father,—To your royal majesty, my
-all-graciousest father, I have, by my disobedience as their subject and
-soldier, not less than by my undutifulness as their son, given occasion
-to a just wrath and aversion against me. With the all-obedientest
-respect I submit myself wholly to the grace of my most all-gracious
-father, and beg him most all-graciously to pardon me, as it is not so
-much the withdrawal of my liberty in a sad arrest as my own thoughts
-of the fault I have committed that have brought me to reason, who,
-with all-obedientest respect and submission, continue till my end my
-all-graciousest king’s and father’s faithfully-obedient servant and
-son, Frederick.”
-
-Though the prince had been brought by his terrors and sorrows to make
-such an humble appeal, his father’s anger was not entirely removed. The
-prince was still forced to dwell in the town of Cüstrin, in a house
-poorly furnished; and though allowed to wear his sword, his uniform was
-forbidden him. He was debarred all amusements, and was forbidden to
-read, write, or speak French, and was denied his flute, of which he was
-exceedingly fond. Three persons were appointed constantly to watch him.
-His only recreation was the order to attend the sittings of the Chamber
-of Counsellors in that district. At last, through the intercession of
-his sister Wilhelmina, the king consented to allow Fritz to come home.
-
-In March, 1732, the crown prince was betrothed to Princess Elizabeth,
-the daughter of the duke of Bevern. The sufferings of this unhappy
-princess cannot now be related. The queen of Prussia received her
-with bitter hatred because this match would crush her cherished plans
-of marrying her son to Princess Amelia of England; and Fritz himself,
-forced to be betrothed against his will, treated her with utter neglect.
-
-In June, 1733, the crown prince was married to Elizabeth, she being
-eighteen, and he twenty-one years of age.
-
-Frederick I. of Prussia had reared a very magnificent palace in Berlin;
-and in spite of all his stinginess in his household, Frederick William
-added masses of silver to the ornamentation of this palace, for he
-prided himself on his army and his money, as giving him power and
-influence in Europe. He had stored away many barrels of money in the
-vaults of his palace, and as there do not seem to have been banking
-institutions in his realms in those days, he ordered vast quantities of
-silver to be wrought into chandeliers, mirror-frames, and balconies,
-which gave him a great reputation for wealth, and could at any time be
-converted into money. This hoarded wealth saved his son from ruin, when
-involved in after wars which exhausted his treasury.
-
-The crown prince having married a niece of the emperor of Germany,
-and being also of age, his father lost much of his control over him.
-Frederick was now the rising sun, and his father the setting luminary.
-All the courts of Europe were anxious to gain the favor of the coming
-king of Prussia. The king allowed his son a petty income, but the crown
-prince borrowed large sums of money from the empress of Germany, from
-Russia, and from England, who were quite ready to supply his wants,
-being assured of payment when he should receive the throne. Fritz did
-not forget his sister Wilhelmina, but gave her money to relieve her
-wants. War now broke out between France and Germany, and Frederick
-William became an ally of the emperor.
-
-The crown prince accompanied the king of Prussia to the siege of
-Philipsburg. The campaign continued for some time, but the prince saw
-little of active service. The king of Prussia being broken down in
-health by gout and intemperance, now became very ill, and was obliged
-to return home.
-
-Though Frederick returned from this campaign neither socially nor
-morally improved, he had become very ambitious of high intellectual
-culture and of literary renown. He was now living at the village of
-Reinsburg, in a castle which the king had purchased and assigned to
-his son. He here gathered around him a number of scholarly men, and
-commenced and persevered in a severe course of study, devoting his
-mornings to his books, and the remainder of the day to recreation and
-music. The old king grumbled at his son’s studies and his recreations,
-but Frederick was now a full-grown man, whose heirship to the crown
-made him a power in Europe; and the snarling old king was confined
-to his room with dropsy and gout, growling away his last hours. The
-companions of Frederick’s hours of recreation were gay and profligate
-young men, who scoffed at religion and every virtue. No wonder that
-with such godless companions, and with such an inconsistent and
-irreligious example in his father, even while professing the most
-fanatical devotion to the church and religion, the mind of the talented
-young prince should have been turned into the wandering wilds of
-unbelief. Voltaire was at this time about forty years of age. His
-renown as a man of genius already filled Europe. Frederick became an
-ardent admirer of Voltaire, and a correspondence was commenced between
-them.
-
-[Illustration: FREDERICK THE GREAT.]
-
-But now the grim old king of Prussia is forced to meet a still grimmer
-antagonist, who will not take “no” for an answer. He has fought the
-world, fought all human affections, fought all feelings of humanity,
-fought every good spirit within his heart except a brutal fanaticism,
-which he ignorantly and superstitiously called religion; fought
-gout, dropsy, and manifold complaints of the flesh; fought his wife,
-fought his children, tried to fight the devil, but ended in being his
-slave; but he cannot fight grim Death, which now clutches him in his
-ghastly grasp. But not to be outdone, even by _this enemy_, while the
-death-gurgle was even rattling in his throat, he solemnly _abdicated_
-in favor of his son Frederick, and with his fingers trembling with the
-chill of the grave, he signed the deed, and falling back, expired. So
-the obstinate old king was determined that _his will_, not _death_,
-should hand over the crown of Prussia, which he could no longer clutch
-with his own cruel hands.
-
-Voltaire said of his reign, “It must be owned Turkey is a republic in
-comparison to the despotism exercised by Frederick William.”
-
-Frederick the Great was twenty-eight years of age when he became king
-of Prussia. He was very handsome and of graceful presence. In rapid
-succession the young king announced certain sentiments which were so
-amazing in the eyes of the rulers of that age as to be considered
-phenomena. The day after his accession to the throne he summoned
-his ministers and declared, “Our grand care will be to further the
-country’s well-being, and to make every one of our subjects contented
-and happy.”
-
-Strange ideas! when all sovereigns had hitherto thought only of their
-own contentment. Next, he abolished the use of _torture_ in criminal
-trials. More wonderful still, the world said. Soon he issued this
-marvellous edict, which struck consternation in the midst of the
-upholders of bigotry and fanatical superstition:—
-
-“All religions must be tolerated, and the king’s solicitor must have an
-eye that none of them make unjust encroachments on the other; for in
-this country every man must get to heaven his own way.”
-
-Europe was electrified, priests trembled, bigotry and religious
-persecution hung their heads and slunk away. But more surprises!
-“The press is free!” thundered forth this powerful young Frederick
-the Great; and all these phenomena accomplished in the first year of
-his reign. No wonder Europe turned their eyes to the rising monarch.
-Sad pity that he did not continue in this line of action, bringing
-blessings instead of woes upon mankind. But the angel of wise reform
-was soon driven from his heart and mind by the subtle and poisonous
-demon of selfish ambition.
-
-The young king soon abolished the Giant Guards. He no longer coveted
-fine clothes, no longer indulged in the luxury of slippers and French
-dressing-gown, which had raised the ire of his ease-hating father.
-His hours were rigidly counted, and various duties assigned them, in
-regular routine.
-
-Though he treated his nominal wife, Queen Elizabeth, politely in
-company, he utterly neglected her in his domestic life, and in later
-years rarely ever addressed a word to her.
-
-On the south-west frontier of Prussia was an Austrian realm, Silesia.
-For more than a century it had been a portion of the Austrian kingdom.
-Maria Theresa had inherited the crown of Austria. Frederick, wishing
-to enlarge his own domains, determined to invade Silesia. History has
-severely condemned this unprovoked invasion. In January, 1741, the
-Prussian army were encamped before Neisse. On Sunday morning, Jan. 15,
-the deadly fire of shot and shell was opened upon the crowded city,
-where women and children, wounded and bleeding, ran to and fro, frantic
-with terror. For five days the deadly missiles rained down upon the
-city almost without intermission.
-
-Not wishing entirely to destroy the city, Frederick then converted
-the siege into a blockade, and leaving his troops before the place,
-returned to Berlin. Frederick, in this six weeks’ campaign, had let
-loose the dogs of war, and he must now meet the consequences. The
-chivalry of Europe were in sympathy with the young and beautiful
-Austrian queen. Every court in Europe was aware of the fact that it was
-owing to the intervention of the father of Maria Theresa that the life
-of Frederick was spared, and that he was rescued from the scaffold,
-when the exasperated and ferocious Frederick William had condemned his
-own son to death. France had no fear of Prussia, but France did fear
-the supremacy of Austria over Europe; therefore, France was leaning
-towards the side of Frederick. England was the foe of France, therefore
-England sympathized with Austria. The puerile king of England, George
-II., hated his nephew, Frederick of Prussia, which hatred Frederick
-vigorously returned. Spain was at war with England and ready for
-alliance with her foes. The father of the infant czar of Russia was
-the brother of Frederick’s neglected wife Elizabeth. Russia had not
-yet displayed her partisanship to either side. Minor powers might be
-constrained by terror or led by bribes.
-
-Meanwhile the heroic Maria Theresa was resolved not to part with one
-inch of her territory, and the patriotism of the Austrian court,
-inspired by her, determined them to seek to drive the Prussians
-out of Silesia. A rumor comes that England, Poland, and Russia are
-contemplating invasion of the Prussian realms. Frederick immediately
-despatched a force to Hanover to seize upon that continental possession
-of the king of England upon the slightest indication of hostility.
-This menace alarmed George II. Young Prince Leopold had assaulted
-and captured Glogau from the Austrians, which Frederick considered
-an important achievement, and sent Prince Leopold a present of ten
-thousand dollars.
-
-Frederick next proceeded to push the siege of Neisse, but upon nearing
-that place, he found that General Neipperg, with a large force of
-Austrians, were coming against him. The siege of Neisse was abandoned,
-and the entire Prussian army gathered around the king. The night before
-the contemplated battle, Frederick wrote to his brother, Augustus
-William,—who, as Frederick had no children, was heir to the throne and
-crown prince of Prussia,—informing him of his danger, of the coming
-battle, and bidding farewell to himself and his mother in case of his
-death. No word of affectionate remembrance was sent to his neglected
-wife.
-
-On the morrow, which was Sunday, a snow-storm raged so furiously that
-neither army could move. On Monday the battle began. The Prussians
-advanced boldly with waving banners and martial music, and valiantly
-charged the enemy. But the Austrians returned the charge with such
-fury that the Prussian right wing, where Frederick himself commanded,
-was routed and put to flight. Frederick, struck with terror, lost
-his presence of mind, and ingloriously fled with the rest. As with
-his little band of fugitives he rushed into the gloom of night, he
-exclaimed in despair, “O my God, my God, this is too much!”
-
-But as the crestfallen king waits under the shelter of a mill, a
-courier rides up and cries, _“The Prussian army has gained the
-victory!”_ Thus the Prussian king had been galloping from the
-battle-field in fear and terror, while his valiant troops were
-achieving the victory. This incident caused unlimited merriment amongst
-the sarcastic foes of Frederick, and he himself was never known to
-allude to this humiliating adventure. The picture of the heroic and
-intrepid Maria Theresa encouraging her troops to patriotism and
-valor in the very face of her foes, and that of the terror-stricken
-Frederick rushing from the field of battle, do not form a comparison
-very flattering to the bravery of the young Prussian king. But as
-some actors on the stage who have had the worst stage-frights have
-afterwards made the most brilliant stars, so the ignominious flight of
-the king did not prevent him from becoming one of the greatest generals
-of the world. Gradually the secret alliance of France, Bavaria, and
-Prussia was made known. Under the threatening danger which menaced
-ruin, Maria Theresa, urged by her council and by the English court,
-consented to propose terms of compromise to Frederick. To the English
-ministers, sent from Vienna to offer a million dollars to the Prussian
-king if he would consent to relinquish this enterprise and retire from
-Silesia, Frederick answered: “Retire from Silesia, and for money? Do
-you take me for a beggar? Retire from Silesia in the conquest of which
-I have expended so much blood and treasure! No, sir, no! I am at the
-head of an army which has already vanquished the enemy, and which is
-ready to meet the enemy again. The country which alone I desire is
-already conquered and securely held. If the queen do not now grant me
-all I require, I shall in four weeks demand four principalities more.
-I now demand the whole of Lower Silesia, Breslau included. With that
-answer you can return to Vienna.”
-
-These tidings caused consternation in the Austrian council. Again the
-high-spirited queen was forced by her circumstances and influenced by
-her council and England to accede to the compromise, and she agreed to
-surrender the whole of Lower Silesia to Frederick. But when such word
-was brought to the Prussian camp, the king replied, “I will not see the
-minister; the time has past. I will not now listen to a compromise.”
-Now followed a dark and deceitful manœuvre on the part of Frederick,
-which even the stratagems of war cannot warrant. He entered into
-secret negotiations with Austria that if Silesia was delivered to him,
-he would form an alliance with them against the French, whose armies
-were already joined with his own; at the same time apparently keeping
-faith with the French, but promising to betray them to the Austrians,
-meanwhile stating that he must keep up sham attacks to deceive the
-French.
-
-Frederick now invested Neisse, and pretending a sham attack, he really
-so vigorously assaulted it that it surrendered, and having thus
-obtained the last fortress in Silesia, he caused himself to be crowned
-sovereign duke of Lower Silesia, and returned to Berlin in triumph.
-
-Having by this stratagem obtained Silesia, he assured the French of
-his unchanging fidelity, and denied that he had ever entered into
-any arrangements with Austria. In commencing this war he had said,
-“Ambition, interest, and the desire to make the world speak of me
-vanquished all, and war was determined on.” He had indeed made the
-world speak of him. All Europe spoke of him. Some extolled him, others
-denounced his amazing perfidy. Admiration for his sagacity and fear of
-his power made many courts of Europe seek his alliance. Carlyle thus
-comments on these events:—
-
-“Of the political morality of this game of fast-and-loose, what have
-we to say, except that the dice on both sides seem to be loaded; that
-logic might be chopped upon it forever; that a candid mind will settle
-what degree of wisdom (which is always essential veracity) and what of
-folly (which is always falsity) there was in Frederick and the others;
-and, in fine, it will have to be granted that you cannot work in pitch
-and keep hands evidently clean. Frederick has got into the enchanted
-wilderness populous with devils and their work. Alas! it will be long
-before he get out of it again; his life waning toward night before he
-get victoriously out.”
-
-This selfish rapacity of the Prussian king set the example to others.
-The whole world sprang to arms. Macaulay says: “On the head of
-Frederick is all the blood which was shed in a war which raged during
-many years, and in every quarter of the globe,—the blood of the column
-of Fontenoy, the blood of the brave mountaineers who were slaughtered
-at Culloden. The evils produced by this wickedness were felt in lands
-where the name of Prussia was unknown. In order that he might rob a
-neighbor whom he had promised to defend, black men fought on the coast
-of Coromandel, and red men scalped each other by the great lakes of
-North America.”
-
-In the winter of 1742 Frederick was engaged in a campaign to deliver
-Moravia, which was overrun by the Austrians. But in this he was not
-successful. On the morning of the 17th of May, 1742, Frederick again
-faced the Austrians at the battle of Chotusitz. In this famous battle
-Frederick was victorious, and the Austrians, under Prince Charles, were
-obliged to retreat. It required nine acres of ground to bury the dead
-after this bloody conflict.
-
-Frederick did not pursue the Austrians after this victory, and on the
-11th of June the treaty of Breslau was signed. By this treaty Silesia
-was ceded to Frederick, and he agreed to withdraw from the French
-alliance and enter into friendly relations with Maria Theresa. In
-1744, however, Maria Theresa, having been joined by England, had been
-achieving so many victories on the field, that Frederick, deciding
-that she was gathering her forces to reconquer Silesia, again entered
-into an alliance with France and took the field against the Austrians.
-But in this campaign Frederick himself narrowly escaped being taken
-prisoner, and returned a defeated monarch, leaving a shattered army
-behind him. He had already exhausted nearly all the resources which his
-father had accumulated. Already the sumptuous chandeliers and silver
-balconies had been melted up. His disastrous Bohemian campaign had
-cost him three hundred and fifty thousand dollars a month. The least
-sum with which he could commence a new campaign for the protection of
-Silesia was four million five hundred thousand dollars. In spite of
-these apparently insurmountable difficulties, the administrative genius
-of Frederick made a way by which he succeeded in raising another army.
-On the 4th of June, 1745, the battle of Hohenfriedberg was fought, by
-which victory Frederick escaped utter destruction, and the Austrians
-were forced sullenly to retire. All Europe was now in war, caused by
-the personal ambition of one man, who did not pretend that it involved
-any question of human rights. Frederick had openly avowed that he
-drew his sword and led his hundred thousand soldiers to death and
-destruction that he might enlarge his territories and achieve renown.
-All the nations of Europe wished to borrow. None but England had money
-to lend, and England was fighting Frederick, and supplying his foes
-with aid and money. Frederick realized that Maria Theresa, whom he had
-despised as a woman, was fully his equal in ability to raise and direct
-armies and in diplomatic intrigue. Berlin was almost defenceless. All
-Saxony was rising behind Frederick. In this hour of peril, with an army
-of twenty-six thousand men, Frederick was obliged to meet his foes at
-Sohr. Defeat to Frederick would have been utter ruin; but the brave
-determination of the Prussian king animated his troops with desperate
-valor to conquer or die. And conquer they did, and the victory of
-Frederick was complete.
-
-[Illustration: ARREST OF VOLTAIRE BY ORDER OF FREDERICK.]
-
-On the 25th of December, 1745, the peace of Dresden was signed. The
-demands of Frederick were acceded to. Augustus III. of Saxony, Maria
-Theresa of Austria, and George II. of England became parties to the
-treaty. Frederick now entered upon a period of ten years of peace.
-The Prussian king now constructed for himself a beautiful villa, on
-a pleasant hilltop near Potsdam, which he called _Sans Souci_, which
-Carlyle quaintly translates “No Bother.” He had three other palaces,
-far surpassing Sans Souci in magnificence,—Charlottenburg, at Berlin,
-the new palace at Potsdam, and his palace at Reinsberg.
-
-Voltaire made a long visit to the Prussian king. Frederick had been for
-many years greatly fascinated with that talented writer, but gradually
-Voltaire lost favor with the king. Frederick prided himself upon
-his literary abilities, and at first Voltaire flattered him; but on
-one occasion, when the king had sent him a manuscript to revise, he
-sarcastically exclaimed to the royal messenger, “When will his Majesty
-be done with sending me his dirty linen to wash?”
-
-This speech was repeated to the king. Frederick did not lose his
-revenge. Voltaire had been made chamberlain. His duties were to give an
-hour a day to the Prussian king, and, as Voltaire said, “to touch up a
-bit his works in prose and verse.”
-
-But Voltaire used his sarcastic pen against the king, and especially
-against the president of the academy founded by the king at Berlin. A
-bitter pamphlet, entitled _La Diatribe du Docteur Akakia_, appeared,
-and the satire was so scathing that the Prussian king ordered all
-copies to be burned. Voltaire, though allowing the whole edition to
-be destroyed before his eyes, managed to send a copy to some safe
-place, where it was again published, and arrived at Berlin by post
-from Dresden. People fought for the pamphlet. Everybody laughed; the
-satire was spread over all Europe. Frederick was enraged, and Voltaire
-thought it safe to leave Prussia. The king had previously presented
-him with a copy of his own poems, and fearing that Voltaire had
-him now in his power—as this volume contained some very wicked and
-licentious burlesques, in which Frederick had scoffed at everything
-and everybody—he ordered Voltaire to be arrested at Frankfort, and the
-book of poems recovered. Either by Frederick’s malice or the stupidity
-of his agent, Freytag, Voltaire and his friends were subjected to an
-imprisonment for twelve days in a miserable hostelry. The intimacy
-between Frederick and Voltaire was thus destroyed, and a lasting
-friendship made impossible.
-
-In 1756 Frederick invaded Saxony. Thus was commenced the Seven Years’
-War, which proved to be one of the most bloody and cruel strifes ever
-waged. It gave Frederick the renown of being one of the ablest generals
-of the world. In 1757 France, Russia, Austria, Poland, and Sweden
-were combined against Frederick. The entire force of the Prussian
-king did not exceed eighty thousand men. There were marching against
-him combined armies amounting to four hundred thousand men. On the
-battle-field of Leuthen Frederick met and conquered his foes.
-
-But still, peace was out of the question without further fighting.
-England, at last alarmed at the growing power of France, came to the
-aid of Frederick. But France, Austria, Sweden, and Russia prepared for
-a campaign against him.
-
-On Aug. 25, 1758, occurred the bloody battle of Zorndorf, between
-the Russians and the Prussians. It was an awful massacre. The stolid
-Russians refused to fly. The Prussians sabred them and trampled them
-beneath their horses’ feet. It is considered the most bloody battle
-of the Seven Years’ War, and some claim it was the most furious ever
-fought. Frederick was again victorious. But in October, 1758, on the
-field of Hochkirch, Frederick was defeated by the Austrians. Just
-after the dreadful defeat came the tidings of the death of his sister
-Wilhelmina. Thus ended the third campaign in clouds and darkness for
-the Prussian king.
-
-The destinies of Europe were now held in the hands of three women:
-Maria Theresa, who by common consent had good cause for war, and was
-fighting in self-defence; Madame de Pompadour, who, virtually sovereign
-of France, by reason of her supreme control of the infamous Louis XV.,
-as Frederick had stung her by some insult, did not hesitate to deluge
-Europe in blood; and Catherine II., empress of Russia, who was also
-Frederick’s foe on account of personal pique.
-
-Frederick himself was undeniably an unscrupulous aggressor, and some
-call him “a highway robber.”
-
-The cause of Maria Theresa alone could have been called honorable.
-In the fourth campaign of 1759 the terrible battle of Kunersdorf was
-fought in August. At first the Prussians were victorious, but the
-Russians at length routed them with fearful loss. So great was the
-despair of Frederick that it is said he contemplated suicide.
-
-For a year the struggle continued. The Prussian army left in Silesia
-was utterly destroyed by the Austrians. But at length the tide turned,
-and Frederick routed the Austrians at the battle of Liegnitz. But the
-position of Frederick was still most hazardous. He was in the heart of
-Silesia, surrounded by hostile armies, three times larger than his own.
-Weary weeks of marching, fighting, blood, and woe, passed on. Sieges,
-skirmishes, battles innumerable, ensued.
-
-At length the allies captured Berlin; whereupon Frederick marched
-quickly to the rescue of his capital. At his dread approach the allies
-fled. Frederick followed the Austrians.
-
-We have no space to give details of the end of the bloody war.
-Frederick attacked the Austrians, under Marshal Daun, at Torgan, saying
-to his soldiers:—
-
-“This war has become tedious. If I beat him, all his army must be taken
-prisoners or drowned in the Elbe. If we are beaten we must all perish.”
-
-After a day of hard fighting the Prussians held the field. Frederick,
-who was a very profane man, replied to a soldier, who inquired if they
-should go into winter quarters, “By all the devils I shall not till we
-have taken Dresden.” But Dresden he did not take at that time, and went
-into winter quarters at Leipsic. The fifth campaign of the Seven Years’
-War closed with the winter of 1760.
-
-[Illustration: EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF FREDERICK THE GREAT, ÆT. 73.]
-
-The Russians and Austrians had concentrated in Bohemia. The summer and
-autumn wore away with little accomplished; the allies feared to attack
-Frederick, and the Russians retreated for winter quarters. But the
-Austrians captured Schweidnitz and so could winter in Silesia. This
-was a terrible blow to Frederick, but no word betrayed the anguish of
-the hard-pressed Prussian king. Taking his weary, suffering troops to
-Breslau, Frederick sought shelter for the winter of 1761-62. At this
-dark time he wrote:—
-
-“The school of patience I am at is hard, long-continued, cruel; nay,
-barbarous. I have not been able to escape my lot. All that human
-foresight could suggest has been employed, and nothing has succeeded.
-If Fortune continues to pursue me, doubtless I shall sink. It is only
-she that can extricate me from the situation I am in. I escape out of
-it by looking at the universe on the great scale like an observer from
-some distant planet. All then seems to me so infinitely small, and I
-could almost pity my enemies for giving themselves such trouble about
-so very little.”
-
-Poor blinded Frederick! He could not even see that his own selfish
-ambition had tempted him to commence an unjust war, and thus to bring
-upon his own head all these sorrows.
-
-On the 24th of November, 1762, the belligerents entered into an
-armistice until the 1st of March. All were exhausted. On the 15th of
-February, 1763, peace was concluded. The bloody Seven Years’ War was
-over, and its immense result was, _Frederick the Great had captured
-and retained Silesia_.
-
-The expense of the war had been eight hundred and fifty-three thousand
-lives, which had perished on the battle-field. Of the hundreds of
-thousands of men, women, and children who had died from exposure,
-famine, and pestilence, no note is taken. The population of Prussia had
-diminished five hundred thousand. The world had run red with blood.
-The air had resounded with wails and cries and groans. Prussia was
-laid waste by the ravages of the war; and what had been accomplished?
-Frederick had achieved his renown; he had made himself _talked of_.
-Silesia had been captured, and Frederick the Great had been placed in
-the foremost ranks of the world’s generals.
-
-Compared with the achievements of Gustavus Adolphus, whose victories
-had laid the foundation for the success of the Reformation, how petty
-had been the prize! One, a Christian king, upholding liberty of
-conscience and religious freedom; the other, an infidel king fighting
-in an unjust war for his own glory and aggrandizement. But the world
-applauded. Berlin blazed with illuminations and rang with the shouts
-of rejoicing. For twenty-three years Frederick the Great still lived
-to bear his honors. He must have the credit of endeavoring, during the
-remainder of his life, to repair the terrible desolation and ruin which
-his wars had brought upon Prussia.
-
-We have but space to glance at his last hours. Dark was the gloom
-which shrouded his closing days. His worst enemies were the scoffing
-devils of unbelief he had let loose within his own soul. No Christian
-hopes illuminated the vast unknown into which he must so soon pass.
-To him the grave was but the awful portal to the direful abyss of
-annihilation.
-
-To his patient, cruelly neglected wife, he penned these last cold
-words: “Madam, I am much obliged by the wishes you deign to form, but a
-heavy fever I have taken hinders me from answering you.”
-
-With no companions near him but his servants and his dogs, he
-awaited the coming of his last despairing end. And thus this lonely,
-hopeless old man fought his last battle of life; and on the 17th of
-August, 1786, the fight was ended, the battle lost, and Frederick
-the Second—Frederick the Great—was carried to the tomb, and laid by
-the side of his father. What a warning to the world! What a warning
-to parents! The inconsistent, brutal life of his father made him an
-infidel.
-
-His own selfish ambition made him more of a curse than a blessing to
-mankind. In the eyes of the Great and Just Judge of the world, both
-lives were _terrible failures_.
-
-History has decreed that Frederick the Great gained a foremost place
-amongst the famous rulers of the world, and that his name stands in the
-first rank of the world’s conquerors.
-
-But history has also written over his career the verdict,—He was an
-ambitious aggressor in an unjust war, which plunged all Europe into
-the horrors of famine, pestilence, bloody conflicts, and desolated
-battle-fields piled up with heaps of ghastly corpses, above which rose
-the direful wails of anguished hearts and the relentless flames of
-ruined homes.
-
-
-
-
-NAPOLEON I.
-
-1769-1821 A.D.
-
- “He doth bestride the narrow world like a Colossus.”
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
- “Fame comes only when deserved, and then is as
- inevitable as destiny; for it is destiny.”—LONGFELLOW.
-
-
-IT was not physical force, it was the magnetic majesty of mind, which
-looked forth from those awe-inspiring eyes, and gave him Jovesque
-grandeur and dignity and sovereign pre-eminence among mankind. No
-merely mortal man stands beside him upon the same level on the heights
-of fame. Upon the highest mountain peak of human achievement and
-earthly greatness he stands alone, looking with calm, deep eyes and
-eagle glance upon the rolling centuries which preceded his marvellous
-career.
-
-In spite of all the contradictory views which have been presented of
-Napoleon; in spite of hostile historians who have stigmatized him
-as a usurper; in spite of foes who have denounced him as a tyrant,
-inexorable as Nero; in spite of calumny which has proclaimed him a
-blood-thirsty monster; in spite of English literature and English
-criticism, which have denounced him as a scourge of the race, as a
-“_cook_ roasting whole continents and populations in the flames of
-war”; in spite of many a Judas, such as Bourrienne, Augereau, Marmont,
-Berthier, Bernadotte, Moreau, and others among those whom his own
-genius had lifted into prominence and power; in spite of obstacles,
-such as no other mortal man ever conquered, Napoleon the Great stands
-forth the most amazing phenomenon of human achievement, personal
-magnetism, and mortal greatness.
-
-[Illustration: NAPOLEON.]
-
-“A man who raised himself from obscurity to a throne; who changed the
-face of the world; who made himself felt through powerful and civilized
-nations; who sent the terror of his name across seas and oceans; whose
-will was pronounced and feared as destiny; whose donatives were crowns;
-whose ante-chamber was thronged by submissive princes; who broke down
-the awful barrier of the Alps, and made them a highway; and whose fame
-was spread beyond the boundaries of civilization to the steppes of the
-Cossack and the deserts of the Arab,—a man who has left this record
-of himself in history has taken out of our hands the question whether
-he shall be called great. All must concede to him a sublime power of
-action, an energy equal to great effects.”
-
-“Whether we think of his amazing genius, his unparalleled power of
-embracing vast combinations, while he lost sight of none of the details
-necessary to insure success, his rapidity of thought and equally sudden
-execution, his tireless energy, his ceaseless activity, his ability
-to direct the movements of half a million of soldiers in different
-parts of the world, and at the same time reform the laws, restore the
-finances, and administer the government of his country, or whether we
-trace his dazzling career from the time he was a poor, proud charity
-boy at the military school of Brienne to the hour when he sat down on
-the most brilliant throne of Europe, he is the same wonderful man,—the
-same grand theme for human contemplation.”
-
-In this short sketch we have no space for arguments; nor does Napoleon
-need arguments to substantiate his claims to greatness. Facts
-only can prove the supremacy of his fame, and _facts_ proclaim him
-unparalleled in history. _Lies_ only defame him and make him out a
-tyrant. That he was without fault or blemish we would not maintain;
-that sad mistakes brought upon him evil consequences which he himself
-was the first to trace to their source, we do not deny. But that
-amongst all these famous rulers of the world, his is the greatest name,
-unprejudiced history has decreed.
-
-Of all these mighty conquerors of the world, Napoleon stands second to
-none.
-
-“When the sword of Alexander overthrew the Persian throne and
-subjugated the East as far as the Indus, he did but extend the
-civilization of Athens. The refinement of the age of Pericles, the
-acquirements of Attica, the philosophy of the academy and the lyceum,
-followed in the train of his victories.
-
-“When Cæsar subjugated Parthia and Germany, and carried the Roman
-eagles from the summit of Caucasus to the hills of Caledonia; when he
-passed from Gaul to Italy, from Rome to Greece, from the plains of
-Pharsalia to the shores of Africa, from the ruins of Carthage to the
-banks of the Nile and the Euxine; when he traversed the Bosphorus and
-the Rhine, the Taurus and the Alps, the Atlas and the Pyrenees,—in
-all these triumphal courses lie propagated under the protection of
-his personal glory, the name, the language, and manners of civilized
-Rome. If Alexander carried with him the Age of Pericles, and Cæsar
-that of Augustus, if they were accompanied in their triumphs by the
-genius of Homer and of Sophocles, of Plato and Aristotle, of Virgil and
-Horace, Napoleon carried with him an age that the arts, sciences, and
-philosophy have rendered equally illustrious, and his enterprise is no
-less than that of his predecessors.”
-
-Though the aristocracy of Europe denounced him as an odious despot
-and an insatiable conqueror, in the hearts of his people—the artisan,
-the laborer, and the soldier—he is still cherished as the “Man of
-the people, as the personification of that spirit of equality which
-pervaded both his administration and the camp.” His name is still
-religiously respected by the peasant in his cottage. His tomb is still
-cherished as the most sacred spot on earth by the French people.
-Never did mortal man inspire such love and adoration in the hearts
-of his soldiers. This unprecedented idolatry of a nation is the best
-refutation of the malign accusations of his enemies, “that Napoleon
-_usurped_ the sovereignty of France; that having attained the supreme
-power, he was a tyrant, devoting that power to the promotion of his
-own selfish aggrandizement; that the wars in which he was incessantly
-engaged were provoked by his arrogance.”
-
-Should the testimony of disappointed sycophants, whose pens are dipped
-in the venom of thwarted ambition and vanity, or the accusations of
-bitter foes, whose opinions are biassed by political intrigues, be
-believed against the character of Napoleon, rather than his own noble
-utterances, and the testimony of his incorruptible friends?
-
-That his invasion of Egypt was aggressive and unjust, we will admit;
-but should England be the one to make the loudest outcry against
-this expedition, when it was only following her own policy when she
-increased her possessions by her conquests in India? And even the
-superiority of English literature and English writers should not make
-us blind to the unjust prejudices of English critics. Had Napoleon
-not quelled the insurrection, and given the final death-blow to the
-Revolution, how can any monarchy in Europe be certain that all thrones
-in Europe might not have tottered and fallen; that all European
-kingdoms might not have had to face a revolution? Had Napoleon died
-upon the throne of France, even his English foes, who feared the lonely
-exile, whom their duplicity and treachery had banished to the dreary
-rock of St. Helena, more than they feared any European monarch, would
-doubtless have joined the plaudits of the world in honor of the _Hero
-of Success_, irrespective of methods or motives. It is only because
-Napoleon outlived his marvellous and almost miraculous success that
-the world condemns, and his enemies malign him. Had our own Washington
-been unsuccessful, then would he have been hung as a rebel, and our own
-glorious Revolution would have been called a rebellion, and none would
-have been so loud in the outcry against us as England.
-
-But our success has compelled her recognition, and our marvellous
-growth in strength, power, and resources has gained her reluctant
-admiration. It is hardly to be expected that England should ever forget
-how Napoleon made her tremble, and how near she came to being the
-conquered rather than the conqueror.
-
-From an earthly point of view, his was the greatest life of mortal man;
-but from a heavenly standpoint, even his greatness crumbles into dust,
-and his own higher nature was true enough to realize and acknowledge
-the instability of earthly renown, and the failure of even such
-phenomenal greatness as his own, to satisfy the higher cravings of the
-immortal soul.
-
-To properly estimate the genius of Napoleon, and his achievements in
-behalf of France, a glance must be given to the bloody background of
-the Revolution, which rises up with all its ghastliness and horrors.
-The rights and liberties of the French people had been trampled under
-foot by despotic and profligate kings and nobles; and then brute force
-arose against oppression; and brute force for a time conquered.
-
-Mobs surge like a mighty ocean through the streets of Paris. Men,
-women, and children are turned into wild beasts of fury, thirsting only
-for blood. And blood they get—till Paris runs red like a river, and all
-the demons of hades seem to have been let loose upon the world. Such
-was the hydra-headed monster of bloody, lawless license and ignorant
-defiance which confronted the dawning manhood of Napoleon Bonaparte.
-Such was the ferocious fury which the genius of this small, slender,
-pale-faced, smooth-cheeked youth of twenty-five encountered with
-such dauntless courage and quelled by his irresistible foresight and
-execution.
-
-The monarchy of France had been dethroned. Louis XVI. and Marie
-Antoinette had paid with their lives the forfeit of oppression which
-was not all their own. The Royalists and the Jacobins had joined the
-howling mob of insurgents, and all together were rushing onward to
-attack the Convention, which was the only representative of government
-then in France. The troops of the Convention had been sent to meet the
-mob, but retired in fear and panic. The mob advanced with demoniacal
-shouts of menace. The Convention trembled. In the midst of the terror
-and confusion one member exclaims,—
-
-“I know the man who can defend us if any can. It is a young Corsican
-officer, Napoleon Bonaparte.” The Convention immediately sent for
-him. All expected to see a stalwart soldier, of gigantic frame and
-imperious bearing. Their surprise was unbounded, when a young slender
-man of boyish presence appeared before them. The astonished president
-incredulously inquired,—
-
-“Are you willing to undertake the defence of the Convention?”
-
-“Yes,” was the laconic and calm reply. With half-disdainful contempt
-the president continued,—
-
-“Are you aware of the magnitude of the undertaking?”
-
-Sweeping the assembly with his magnetic glance, and fixing his eagle
-eye upon the president, Napoleon replied, “Perfectly; and I am in the
-habit of accomplishing what I undertake.”
-
-And accomplish he did. But how? By the same measures he had declared
-should have been taken when, a short time before, he had watched the
-furious mob rush unrestrained through the palace of the imprisoned
-monarch. Then he had exclaimed, “They should have swept down the first
-five hundred with grapeshot, and the rest would have soon taken to
-flight.” And his own successful quelling of the insurgents proved the
-correctness of his plans and the marvellous executive force of his
-genius. So Napoleon established the new government of France called
-the Directory. We have space only for a glance at his boyhood. He was
-born upon the island of Corsica, on the 15th of August, 1769. His
-father died while Napoleon was quite young, and his mother, Madame
-Letitia Bonaparte, was left with small means to provide for eight
-children,—Joseph, Napoleon, Lucien, Louis, Jerome, Eliza, Pauline, and
-Caroline.
-
-When Napoleon was about ten years of age, Count Marbœuf obtained his
-admission to the military school at Brienne, near Paris. Regarded as a
-charity student by his companions, he was here subjected to neglects
-and taunts which stung his sensitive nature to the quick. When Napoleon
-was fifteen, he was promoted to the military school at Paris. On one
-occasion a mathematical problem of great difficulty was given to his
-class. Napoleon secluded himself in his room for seventy-two hours
-and solved the problem. Napoleon did not blunder into greatness. His
-achievements were not accidents. That he possessed native genius cannot
-be denied; but he also possessed that perseverance and application
-which alone can win the success which genius aspires to, but which only
-energy and perseverance can make possible. When Napoleon was sixteen
-years of age, he was examined for an appointment in the army. At the
-close of this examination, one of the professors wrote opposite the
-signature of Napoleon, “This young man will distinguish himself in the
-world, if favored by fortune.”
-
-Napoleon secured the position of second lieutenant in a regiment of
-artillery. He was ordered to Lyons with his regiment. While there,
-the Academy at Lyons offered a prize for the best dissertation upon
-the question, “What are the institutions most likely to contribute to
-human happiness?” Napoleon won the prize. The English, uniting with the
-Royalists of France, had seized Toulon, a naval depot and arsenal of
-France. The Convention, the revolutionary government, promoted Napoleon
-to the rank of brigadier-general, and gave him the command of the
-artillery train at Toulon. It was here that his military abilities were
-noticed by the member of the Convention who afterwards proposed him as
-being the only man who could defend them against the mob, as we have
-already narrated. After quelling this formidable insurrection, Napoleon
-was enthusiastically received by the Convention. Five Directors were
-now chosen by the Convention, who should constitute the new Directory,
-and the Convention dissolved itself, surrendering the government
-into the hands of the Directory. Napoleon was appointed by them
-commander-in-chief of the Army of the Interior, and intrusted with the
-military defence and government of the metropolis. Having attained this
-high dignity, Napoleon placed his mother and the rest of his family in
-comfort.
-
-Famine was great in Paris. The Revolution had left all industries
-paralyzed. The poor were perishing.
-
-Napoleon immediately organized the National Guards, established order,
-and distributed wood and bread to the perishing citizens. It was at
-this time that he met his future wife, Josephine. She was a widow with
-two children. Her husband, the Viscount Beauharnais, had perished on
-the scaffold during the Revolution. On the 6th of March, 1796, Napoleon
-and Josephine were married. Napoleon was twenty-six years of age,
-Josephine being two years older. This marriage was one of ideal love.
-When Napoleon was crowned Emperor, he was privately married again by
-Cardinal Fesch, in accordance with the forms of the Church, which the
-Emperor had re-established.
-
-Napoleon turned with disgust from the profligacy and dissipation
-which ever disgrace an army. To the defamations of his enemies who
-endeavored to malign his character, by accusing him of immorality, let
-his own words answer: “When I took command of the army of Italy, my
-extreme youth rendered it necessary that I should evince great reserve
-of manners and the utmost severity of morals. My supremacy could be
-retained only by proving myself a better man than any other man in the
-army. Had I yielded to human weaknesses, I should have lost my power.”
-
-Napoleon was temperate in the extreme, and manifested the strongest
-disapproval for gaming. Napoleon’s first campaign in Italy was one of
-self-defence on the part of the French. France had renounced a monarchy
-and established a republic. The kings of Europe trembled. England was
-hovering around the coasts of France assailing every available point.
-Austria had marched an army of nearly two hundred thousand men to
-the banks of the Rhine. She had called into requisition her Italian
-possessions, and in alliance with the British navy the armies of the
-king of Sardinia together with the legions of Naples and Sicily,
-prepared to attack the French Republic.
-
-[Illustration: NAPOLEON IN THE PRISON OF NICE, 1794.]
-
-The Directory said to the young commander-in-chief: “We can furnish you
-only men. The troops are destitute of everything, but we have no money
-to provide supplies.”
-
-“Give me only men enough,” replied the undaunted Napoleon; “I will be
-answerable for the result.”
-
-Leaving his bride in Paris, Napoleon hastened to Nice, the headquarters
-of the army of Italy.
-
-Now the first of those wonderful proclamations rings out in the ears
-of the astonished troops. “Soldiers, you are hungry and naked; the
-government owes you much, and can pay you nothing. I come to lead you
-into the most fertile plains the sun beholds. There you will find
-abundant harvests, honor, and glory. Soldiers of Italy, will you fail
-in courage?”
-
-This apparent stripling then assembles his generals, all war-worn
-chiefs. Amazed and speechless, they listen to his plans.
-
-“The time has passed in which enemies are mutually to appoint the place
-of combat, advance, hat in hand, and say, ‘_Gentlemen, will you have
-the goodness to fire?_’ The art of war is in its infancy. Experienced
-generals conduct the troops opposed to us. So much the better, so
-much the better. It is not their experience which will avail against
-me. Mark my words: they will soon burn their books on tactics and
-know not what to do. Yes, gentlemen, the first onset of the Italian
-army will give birth to a new epoch in military affairs. As for us,
-we must hurl ourselves on the foe like a thunderbolt, and smite it.
-Disconcerted by our tactics, and not daring to put them into execution,
-they will fly before us as the shades of night before the uprising sun.”
-
-And fly before him they did at the battle of Montenotte, regarding
-which Napoleon afterwards proudly said, “My title of nobility dates
-from the battle of Montenotte.”
-
-The Austrians fled in one direction, the Sardinians in another, before
-this invincible conqueror, and Europe, amazed, inquired, Who is this
-young general who has blazed forth in such sudden and appalling
-splendor?
-
-Meanwhile Napoleon issues this stirring proclamation:—
-
-“Soldiers, you have gained in fifteen days six victories, taken
-one-and-twenty standards, fifty-five pieces of cannon, many strong
-places, and have conquered the richest part of Piedmont. You have
-gained battles without cannon; passed rivers without bridges; made
-forced marches without shoes; bivouacked without bread. The phalanxes
-of the republic, the soldiers of liberty, were alone capable of such
-services.”
-
-The humiliated king of Sardinia sued for peace. It was the evening of
-the 10th of May, 1796. The Austrians had intrenched themselves on the
-banks of the River Po. As the French were making the terrible passage
-of the bridge of Lodi, in the face of the enemies’ fire, Napoleon
-seized a standard, shouting to his men, “Follow your general!” and
-plunging through the blinding smoke, he led his bleeding column
-forward, and the bridge was carried.
-
-“This beardless youth,” said an Austrian general, indignantly, “ought
-to have been beaten over and over again; for whoever saw such tactics!
-The blockhead knows nothing of the rules of war. To-day he is in our
-rear, to-morrow on our flank, and the next day again in our front. Such
-gross violations of the principles of war are insufferable.”
-
-And more insufferable still would his enemies find the tactics of
-the invincible Napoleon. Some of the veterans of the army jocosely
-promoted Napoleon to the rank of corporal, in honor of his bravery at
-the bridge of Lodi. When their general next appeared before his army,
-he was greeted with the shouts, “_Long live our little corporal!_” and
-even in the dignity of consul and emperor, Napoleon never lost this
-affectionate nickname amongst his troops, of whom he was the idol.
-
-We have no space for details; the battles of Castiglione, Arcola,
-and the bloody conflict of Rivoli had been fought. The imperial
-court had sent out five armies against the French Republicans, and
-had encountered defeat and destruction at the hands of the beardless
-general, who they had disdainfully declared knew nothing about war
-tactics. Mantua had fallen, and the Austrians were driven from Italy.
-The Pope implored the clemency of the conqueror. But the Italian people
-everywhere hailed him as their deliverer. Still Austria refused to make
-peace with republican France, and the march to Vienna was commenced.
-Again one of those soul-stirring, inspiring proclamations was issued to
-his troops.
-
-“Soldiers, the campaign just ended has given you imperishable renown.
-You have been victorious in fourteen pitched battles and seventy
-actions. You have taken more than a hundred thousand prisoners, five
-hundred field-pieces, two thousand heavy guns, and four pontoon trains.
-You have maintained the army during the whole campaign. In addition to
-this, you have sent six millions of dollars to the public treasury,
-and have enriched the National Museum with three hundred masterpieces
-of the art of ancient and modern Italy, which it has required thirty
-centuries to produce. You have conquered the finest countries of
-Europe. The French flag waves for the first time upon the Adriatic,
-opposite to Macedon, the native country of Alexander. Still higher
-destinies await you. I know that you will not prove unworthy of them.
-Of all the foes that conspired to stifle the Republic in its birth, the
-Austrian emperor alone remains before you. To obtain peace we must seek
-it in the heart of his hereditary state. You will there find a brave
-people, whose religion and customs you will respect, and whose property
-you will hold sacred. Remember that it is liberty you carry to the
-brave Hungarian nation.”
-
-As he had to the Italian people, so also to the Austrian people
-Napoleon issued one of his glowing proclamations, assuring them that
-he was fighting not for conquest but for peace; that the _people_ of
-Austria would find in him a protector, who would respect their religion
-and defend all their rights.
-
-All was consternation in Vienna. The people clamored for peace, and the
-Austrian emperor sent ambassadors to Napoleon. A treaty was signed, and
-Austria was conquered. Not a year had elapsed since this nameless young
-man of twenty-six, with thirty thousand ragged, starving troops, had
-dauntlessly undertaken this seemingly impossible enterprise. Now Italy
-was at his feet. Austria was forced to come to terms. All his foes were
-stunned into terror-stricken inaction.
-
-Before the treaty of Campo Formio was signed, every possible endeavor
-was made to bribe Napoleon to make terms which should conduce to the
-advantage of his foes. The wealth of Europe was laid at his feet.
-Millions upon millions of gold were offered to him, but his noble
-spirit could not thus be tarnished.
-
-Napoleon arrived in Paris on the 7th of December, 1797, having been
-absent about eighteen months. The Directory, jealous of Napoleon’s
-power and popularity, were forced by the enthusiasm of the people to
-prepare a triumphal festival for the delivery of the treaty of Campo
-Formio.
-
-The magnificent palace of the Luxembourg was adorned for this
-gorgeous show. The walls were hung with glittering trophies; the vast
-galleries were crowded with those illustrious in rank; martial music
-rang out upon the air, and the thunders of the cannon mingled with
-the enthusiastic shouts of the rejoicing multitudes. Napoleon was
-introduced by Talleyrand in an eloquent speech. Calmly the great hero
-stood before the assembled multitude. His imposing presence required
-not the trappings of the bedecked and bejewelled grandees of the court.
-Majestic was his calm dignity as he addressed the people:—
-
-“Citizens! the French people in order to be free had kings to combat.
-To obtain a constitution founded on reason, it had the prejudices of
-eighteen centuries to overcome. Priestcraft, feudalism, despotism, have
-successively, for two thousand years, governed Europe. From the peace
-you have just concluded dates the era of representative governments.
-You have succeeded in organizing a great nation, whose vast territory
-is circumscribed only because Nature herself has fixed its limits. You
-have done more. The two finest countries in Europe—formerly so renowned
-for the arts, the sciences, and the illustrious men whose cradle they
-were—see with the greatest hopes genius and freedom issuing from the
-tomb of their ancestors. I have the honor to deliver to you the treaty
-signed at Campo Formio, and ratified by the emperor. Peace secures the
-liberty, the prosperity, and the glory of the Republic. As soon as the
-happiness of France is secured by the best organic laws, the whole of
-Europe will be free.”
-
-A wild burst of enthusiasm filled the air as Napoleon ceased speaking.
-The people shouted, “Live Napoleon, the conqueror of Italy, the
-pacificator of Europe, the saviour of France!”
-
-Napoleon now laid aside the dress of a soldier. He attended constantly
-the meetings of the Institute, and immediately assumed a pre-eminence
-amongst those distinguished scholars as marked as he had already
-attained as a general.
-
-Republican France was now at peace with all the world, England alone
-excepted. The Directory raised an army for the invasion of England,
-and gave Napoleon the command. Republicans all over Europe, England
-included, adored Napoleon as the great champion of popular rights.
-England trembled. It was necessary that the people should be taught to
-hate this man whom they now worshipped. The English press came to the
-rescue of the English government. The most malign and atrocious lies
-were published regarding Napoleon. He was represented as a demon in
-human form; a monster of profligacy and tyrannical ambition; a robber,
-plundering the nations for his own selfish aggrandizement. Regarding
-these bitter and false libels Napoleon said: “There is not one which
-will reach posterity. When I have been asked to cause answers to be
-written to them, I have uniformly replied, ‘My victories and my works
-of public improvement are the only response which it becomes me to
-make.’ When there shall not be a trace of these libels to be found,
-the great monuments of utility which I have reared, and the code of
-laws that I have formed, will descend to the most remote ages, and
-future historians will avenge the wrongs done me by my contemporaries.”
-Napoleon deeming an attack upon England too hazardous, the project was
-abandoned.
-
-Then followed Napoleon’s expedition into Egypt. Volumes could be
-written upon each one of Napoleon’s marvellous campaigns, but we can
-merely give a slight outline. The famous battle of the Pyramids made
-Napoleon the undisputed conqueror of Egypt. “Soldiers!” he exclaimed,
-as he rode along the ranks, “from those summits forty centuries
-contemplate your actions.”
-
-The name of Napoleon became suddenly as renowned in Asia and Africa as
-it had previously become in Europe. But twenty-one days had elapsed
-since he landed at Alexandria, and now he was sovereign of Egypt. The
-Egyptians welcomed him as a friend and liberator. He disclaimed all
-sovereignty over Egypt, and organized a government to be administered
-by the people themselves. In the mean time Lord Nelson learned that
-the French had landed in Egypt. He immediately proceeded thither.
-The famous battle of the Nile followed, in which the English were
-victorious. The French fleet had been destroyed, and Napoleon was cut
-off from Europe. All monarchical Europe rejoiced; all republican
-Europe mourned. Napoleon now undertook the Syrian expedition. With ten
-thousand men he commenced his march over the desert. We cannot describe
-their weary march through the burning sands, their sufferings from
-want, and the dreadful plague which soon broke out in the army. We can
-only note the siege of Acre. The subjugation of this fortress would
-have made Napoleon master of Syria. Sir Sidney Smith conducted the
-defence with the combined English and Turkish troops. It was here that
-the marvellous affection of Napoleon’s soldiers for their general was
-tested. Sir Sidney Smith circulated a proclamation, offering to convey
-every French soldier safely to France who would desert Napoleon. It is
-not known that a single man was false to Napoleon, whom all adored as a
-being seemingly more than mortal.
-
-The siege had continued for sixty days. Napoleon had lost three
-thousand men by the sword and the plague. At this time fresh Turkish
-troops arrived to join his enemies; and deeming the enterprise
-hopeless, Napoleon abandoned the siege. Napoleon was as great in defeat
-as in success. Speaking of his power to endure trials, he said: “Nature
-seems to have calculated that I should endure great reverses. She has
-given me a mind of marble. Thunder cannot ruffle it. The shaft merely
-glides along.”
-
-At midnight, on the 25th of July, 1799, Napoleon, with six thousand
-men, arrived within sight of the camp of the Turks, upon the shores
-of the Bay of Aboukir. Napoleon knew that the Turks were awaiting the
-arrival of the Mameluke cavalry from Egypt and of re-enforcements from
-Acre and other parts of Syria. Defeat to Napoleon now would have been
-utter ruin. But the terrific conflict which followed was not a defeat,
-but a victory so complete that the whole Turkish army was destroyed.
-Sir Sidney Smith fled in terror to his ships. Not a foe remained. In
-the enthusiasm of the moment, Kleber, who had just arrived with a
-division of two thousand men, for whom Napoleon had not waited, threw
-his arms around the neck of his adored chieftain, exclaiming, “Let me
-embrace you, my general; you are great as the universe!”
-
-Napoleon now learned that France was in a terrible state of confusion.
-The imbecile government was despised. Plots, conspiracies, and
-assassinations filled the land. Napoleon determined to return to
-France. As he had no fleet, he could not take his army. The matter was
-therefore concealed from them. With a small retinue, Napoleon embarked,
-and sailed to France. Then followed the overthrow of the Directory.
-France had tried republicanism, and the experiment had failed. The
-people were too ignorant to govern themselves. The next morning after
-the overthrow of the Directory, the three consuls, Napoleon, Sièyes,
-and Ducos, met in the palace of the Luxembourg.
-
-There was but one arm-chair in the room. Napoleon had seated himself in
-it. Sièyes exclaimed, “Gentlemen, who shall take the chair?”
-
-“Bonaparte, surely,” said Ducos; “he already has it. He is the only man
-who can save us.”
-
-“Very well, gentlemen,” said Napoleon, promptly; “let us proceed to
-business.”
-
-And important business he soon despatched. The revolutionary tribunals
-had closed the churches and prohibited the observance of the Sabbath.
-Napoleon recalled the banished priests, opened the churches, and
-restored religious worship. The treasury was bankrupt. Napoleon
-replenished it. The army was starving and ragged. Napoleon addressed
-them with his thrilling words of sympathy, and clothed and fed them.
-The navy was dilapidated. In every port in France, at the magic word
-of this magnetic man, the sound of the ship-hammer was heard, and a
-fleet was prepared to send to Egypt to convey to France his soldiers
-left there. The Constitution was framed and adopted, and Napoleon was
-elected First Consul of France. Civil war was now at an end. Napoleon
-wrote two letters, one to the king of England, and the other to the
-emperor of Germany, endeavoring to arrange a general peace. Austria was
-inclined to listen to this appeal, but England demanded war. She would
-have no peace while France continued a republic. So Napoleon was forced
-to prepare for war.
-
-“Moreau was sent with a magnificent army into Swabia, to drive back the
-Austrians towards their capital; Massena was appointed over the army
-of Italy, while Napoleon himself swept down from the heights of San
-Bernard, upon the plains of Lombardy.
-
-“At the fierce-fought battle of Marengo he reconquered Italy, while
-Moreau chased the vanquished Austrians over the Danube. Victory
-everywhere perched on the French standards, and Austria was ready to
-agree to an armistice, in order to recover from the disasters she had
-suffered. The slain at Montibello, around Genoa, on the plains of
-Marengo, in the Black Forest, and along the Danube are to be charged
-over to the British government, which refused peace in order to fight
-for the philanthropic purpose of giving security to governments.
-
-“Austria, though crippled, let the armistice wear away, refusing to
-make a treaty because she was bound for seven months longer to England.
-Bonaparte, in the mean time, was preparing to recommence hostilities.
-Finding himself unable to conclude a peace, he opened the campaign of
-Hohenlinden, and sent Macdonald across the Splugen. Moreau’s victorious
-march through Austria, and the success of the operations in Italy, soon
-brought Austria to terms, and the celebrated peace of Luneville, of
-1801, was signed. The energy and ability, and above all, the success of
-the First Consul had now forced the continental powers to regard him
-with respect, and in some cases with sympathy, while England, by her
-imperious demands, had embroiled herself with all the northern powers
-of Europe.”
-
-At length a general peace was concluded at Amiens, and the world was
-at rest. Napoleon was now the idol of France. Although his title was
-only that of First Consul, and France was nominally a republic, yet he
-was in reality the most powerful monarch in Europe. He ruled in the
-_hearts_ of forty millions of people. In 1803 the peace of Amiens was
-broken, and all impartial historians admit, and even English writers
-cannot deny the responsibility of this rupture rests with England. In
-that treaty it was expressly stipulated that England should evacuate
-Egypt and Malta, while France was to evacuate Naples, Tarento, and the
-Roman States. Napoleon had fulfilled his part of the agreement within
-two months after the peace. But the English were still in Alexandria
-and Malta. Napoleon was right, and England was entirely wrong. If a
-violation of a solemn treaty is a just cause for war, Napoleon was
-free from blame. England now drew Russia into this new alliance, then
-Austria and Sweden. Prussia refused to join the alliance, and sided
-with France. The bloody conflict began. For the slain left on the
-plains of Italy, for the tens of thousands strewn on the battle-field
-of Austerlitz, who is chargeable? Neither Napoleon nor France. Napier,
-in his “Peninsular War,” says:
-
-“Up to the peace of Tilsit, the wars of France were _essentially
-defensive_; for the bloody contest that wasted the continent for so
-many years was not a struggle for pre-eminence between ambitious
-powers, nor for the political ascendency of one or other nation, _but
-a deadly conflict to determine whether aristocracy or democracy should
-predominate,—whether equality or privilege should henceforth be the
-principle of European governments_.”
-
-“But how much does this ‘up to the peace of Tilsit’ embrace? First,
-all the first wars of the French Republic,—the campaigns of 1792, ’93,
-’94, ’95, and the carnage and woe that made up their history; second,
-eleven out of the eighteen years of Bonaparte’s career,—the campaigns
-of 1796, in Italy and Germany, the battles of Montenotte, Millesimo,
-Dego, Lodi, Arcola, Castiglione, and Rivoli, the campaigns of 1797,
-and the bloody battle-fields that marked their progress. It embraces
-the wars in Italy and Switzerland while Bonaparte was in Egypt; the
-campaign of Marengo, and its carnage; the havoc around and in Genoa;
-the slain thousands that strewed the Black Forest and the banks of
-the Danube, where Moreau struggled so heroically; the campaign of
-Hohenlinden, and its losses. And yet this is but a fraction to what
-remains. This period takes in also the campaign of Austerlitz and its
-bloody battle, and the havoc the hand of war was making in Italy; the
-campaign of Jena, and the fierce conflicts that accompanied it; the
-campaign of Eylau and the battles of Pultusk, Golymin, Heilsberg,
-crowned by the dreadful slaughter of Eylau; the campaigns of Friedland
-and Tilsit, and the multitudes they left on the plains of Europe. All
-these terrible campaigns, with their immense slaughter, does an English
-historian declare to be the result of a defensive war on the part of
-France, not merely a defence of territory, _but of human rights against
-tyranny_. Let republicans ponder this before they adopt the sentiments
-of prejudiced historians, and condemn as a monster the man who was
-toiling over battle-fields to save his country from banded oppressors.”
-
-The 2d of December, 1804, dawned clear and cold. It was Sunday, and
-upon this day Napoleon was to be crowned emperor at the church of Nôtre
-Dame. All Paris assembled to witness this imposing ceremony. The church
-was draped in costly velvet of richest hues. At one end a gorgeous
-throne was erected. The Emperor left the Tuileries in a splendid
-carriage, whose sides were of glass, thus allowing his magnificent
-robes to be seen. He wore a golden laurel wreath upon his head.
-
-The acclamations of the immense crowds thronging the streets filled the
-air. As Napoleon entered the church, five hundred musicians intoned a
-solemn chant. The Pope anointed the Emperor and blessed the sword and
-the sceptre. Then Napoleon lifted the crown and placed it upon his own
-head. Napoleon then took up the crown intended for the Empress, and
-approaching Josephine as she knelt before him, he placed it tenderly
-upon her brow. Their eyes met for one moment in a long and loving
-gaze of mutual affection, and tears filled the eyes of the beautiful
-Josephine as she glanced with undisguised adoration upon the husband
-she so reverenced and worshipped. And the lofty arches of Nôtre Dame
-resounded with shouts of “_Vive l’Empereur!_”
-
-The Cisalpine Republic had witnessed the change of France from a
-republic to an empire with great satisfaction. A deputation from
-Italy was now sent to Napoleon, begging him to assume the crown of
-Charlemagne. On the 20th of May, the coronation took place in the
-Cathedral of Milan. The ceremony was conducted with a magnificence not
-exceeded at Nôtre Dame. The iron crown of Charlemagne had reposed for
-a thousand years in the church of Monza. The Empress first appeared
-gorgeously dressed and glittering with jewels. Then Napoleon entered,
-arrayed in imperial robes, with the diadem upon his brow and the
-sceptre and crown of Charlemagne in his hands. He placed the crown upon
-his own head, saying, solemnly, “God has given it to me; woe to him who
-touches it!”
-
-Meanwhile, hostilities had commenced in the midst of Germany. Austria
-and Russia had united with England. The Austrians had passed the Inn;
-Munich was invaded; war was inevitable.
-
-Then followed the campaign of Ulm. Napoleon writes to Josephine, Dec.
-5, 1805:—
-
-“I have concluded a truce. The Russians have implored it. The victory
-of Austerlitz is the most illustrious of all which I have gained. We
-have taken forty-five flags, 150 pieces of cannon, and twenty generals.
-More than 20,000 are slain. It is an awful spectacle. I have beaten the
-Russian and Austrian armies commanded by the two emperors.”
-
-In 1806 England, Russia, and Prussia formed a new alliance against the
-French. Then followed the bloody battles of Jena and Auerstadt. On
-the 28th of October Napoleon made a triumphal entry into Berlin, and
-established himself in the king’s palace. While there he visited the
-tomb of Frederick the Great, at Potsdam. The sword of the Prussian was
-suspended over his grave. Napoleon took it down, saying, “I will send
-it to the governor of the Invalides.” General Rapp ventured to reply,
-“Were I in your place, I should not be willing to part with this sword.
-I should keep it for myself.”
-
-Napoleon jestingly answered, “_Have I not then a sword of my own,
-Mr. Giver of Advice?_” The Prussian monarchy was destroyed upon the
-fields of Jena and of Auerstadt. But England and Russia were yet
-clamorous for war. Again Napoleon tried to make overture for peace,
-again he was repulsed. Then followed the terrible battle-field of
-Eylau. Amid winter’s snow and ice and storms this famous battle was
-won. As Napoleon passed over the gory field after the awful carnage,
-he exclaimed with deep emotion, “To a father who loses his children
-victory has no charms.”
-
-A dragoon, dreadfully shattered and bleeding from the effects of a
-cannon ball, raised his head from the bloody snow, and faintly said,
-“Turn your eyes this way, please your Majesty. I believe that I have
-got my death wound. I shall soon be in the other world. But no matter
-for that; _vive l’Empereur!_”
-
-Napoleon immediately dismounted from his horse and took the hand of
-the wounded man, telling his aids to carry him to the ambulance. Large
-tears rolled down the cheeks of the dying dragoon, as he fixed his
-eyes upon that loved face, fervently exclaiming, “I only wish I had a
-thousand lives to lay down for your majesty.” Amidst a heap of dead,
-a feeble voice was heard crying, “_Vive l’Empereur!_” Half-concealed
-beneath a tattered flag lay a young officer. As Napoleon approached, he
-raised himself upon his elbow, though pierced with numerous wounds,
-and faintly cried: “God bless your majesty! farewell, farewell! Oh, my
-poor mother! To dear France my last sigh!” and falling back, was dead.
-Upon this dreadful battle-field, though it was after midnight, he wrote
-this fond note to Josephine:—
-
- MY LOVE,—There was a great battle yesterday. Victory
- remains with me, but I have lost many men. The loss of
- the enemy, still more considerable, does not console
- me. I write these two lines myself, though greatly
- fatigued, to tell you that I am well, and that I love
- you. Wholly thine,
-
- NAPOLEON.
-
-The peace of Tilsit was finally concluded, and Napoleon returned to
-Paris.
-
-The French government at this time was composed of three houses,—the
-Senate, the Tribunate, and the Legislature. Napoleon blended the
-Tribunate and the Legislature in one. He formed the Council of State,
-or Cabinet, with the greatest care, choosing the most able men in every
-department. The meetings of the Council were held in the palace of
-the Tuileries or at St. Cloud. The most perfect freedom of discussion
-prevailed in the Council.
-
-In September, 1808, occurred the memorable meeting of the emperors at
-Erfurth. Kings, princes, and courtiers came from all parts of Europe to
-witness the extraordinary spectacle. Napoleon was the gracious host who
-received them as his guests. No more gorgeous retinue had ever followed
-a monarch of the blood royal than surrounded the Emperor Napoleon as
-he left Paris for the appointed place of meeting. Amid all the royal
-magnificence which attended these imperial sovereigns, none appeared
-so majestic, so supremely commanding in their personal presence as
-Napoleon the Plebeian Monarch, who had raised himself by his own
-surprising and irresistible genius to the proudest place amidst the
-courts of Europe.
-
-All the other sovereigns trembled before his amazing power; the
-imperialism of mind and genius compelled the homage of royal titles and
-royal blood.
-
-We do not uphold that Napoleon’s career was free from error, and no
-greater blot tarnishes the brightness of his fame than his divorce of
-Josephine. From that moment Napoleon fell. From that moment Josephine
-mounted an eminence of self-sacrificing, unselfish devotion, of
-heart-martyrdom, never reached by woman before. Women have died for
-their husbands; but this was worse than death. Women have slaved
-and toiled, and been down-trodden by brutal husbands; but this was
-worse than that. Never before had woman stepped from so high an
-eminence of bliss into so deep an abyss of heart-desolating woe,
-and with self-renouncing, almost inconceivable, womanly devotion,
-allowed her royal place as wife to be taken by another, that thus a
-supposed political power might be gained by the idolized object of her
-affection; who, even though his cruel demand thus shattered her hopes,
-her heart, and her life, she was still unselfish enough to glory in
-her self-renunciatory sacrifice, for the still adored object of her
-love. No political excuse can cover this crime committed by Napoleon
-at the instigation of Fouché and other ambitious adherents, and worst
-of all, at the instigation of his own relations, whom historians
-acknowledge were the bitter enemies of his wife. No laxity of the
-times, in the sacred laws of marriage, which are the most solemn vows
-that human beings can take upon themselves, next to their vows to God,
-can excuse this blot upon Napoleon’s fame. By the very eminence of
-his genius above all other men, by the very exaltation of his lofty
-position, should he have made himself the model as an _upholder_, not a
-_desecrator_, of the most sacred human relation ever ordained by God.
-
-“What God hath joined together, let not man put asunder!” was a
-weightier obligation than any supposed political advantage, more
-binding than any patriotism, more encumbent upon him than any duty of
-state or country. No political reasons can palliate in the least degree
-this crime; they only weakly _explain_, but do not in any manner excuse
-it. That Napoleon, with his marvellous self-sufficiency of will, and
-genius, and wise forethought, and keen-eyed intuition, could have been
-led into such a deplorable act, is past all comprehension. That it was
-the cruel and bitter mistake of his life, he himself has acknowledged.
-Napoleon said afterwards, “In separating myself from Josephine, and in
-marrying Maria Louisa, I placed my foot upon an abyss which was covered
-with flowers.”
-
-It was an abyss deep and awful; and from this dark and direful abyss
-issued forth the horrible reptiles of disappointment, sorrow, and
-remorse, which thrust their cruel fangs into the quivering heart of
-the lonely exile at St. Helena. Perchance, in the silent anguish of
-his agonized but heroic soul, a dumb wail broke forth, “Ah, Josephine!
-my only love! bright star of my destiny! when I no longer gazed upward
-to thy heavenly light, but tempted by the demons of false counsel,
-followed an _ignis fatuus_ o’er the treacherous quicksands of political
-ambition, then did I find myself ingulfed in sorrows, and my heart was
-shrouded in the black darkness of a rayless night of hopeless despair.
-Had I been true to thee, perchance a just and righteous Providence
-might have been more merciful to me. Thou wert my star of hope and
-love! Thou wert ordained by heaven, my star of destiny! Bitterly do I
-remember thy prophetic words upon that memorable night, when the tie
-which bound us together was shattered by my blind ambition, ‘Bonaparte,
-behold that bright star; it is mine! and remember, to mine, not to
-thine, has sovereignty been promised. Separate, then, our fates, and
-your star fades!’
-
-“Ah, Josephine, you were right! It is to you alone that I owe the only
-few moments of happiness I have known in the world!”
-
-Yes, Josephine was right; that hour marked the commencement of the
-downfall of Napoleon. His star, which once blazed forth in matchless
-splendor in the heavens, was soon to sink forever. The two greatest
-errors of Napoleon were the conquest of Spain and the invasion of
-Russia. The first was unjust, the second was unfortunate. We can but
-give one picture of the Russian campaign. Napoleon and his army had
-marched in triumph more than two thousand miles from his capital.
-Victory had accompanied him. He had taken the metropolis of the most
-powerful nation on the continent, though that nation had been aided by
-England, Spain, Portugal, and Sweden. Moscow was in the possession of
-the French. Napoleon was established in the Krémlin.
-
-It was the 16th of September, 1812. At midnight the cry of “Fire!”
-resounded through the streets. Moscow was in flames! Mines were sprung,
-shells burst, cannons were discharged, wagons of powder exploded;
-earthquake succeeded earthquake; volcano followed volcano of flame and
-smoke and burning projectiles, until the whole vast city was wrapped
-in one wild ocean of flame. Napoleon said of this awful sight: “It
-was a spectacle of a sea and billows of fire, a sky and clouds of
-flame; mountains of red rolling flames, like immense waves of the sea,
-alternately bursting forth and elevating themselves to skies of fire,
-and then sinking into the ocean of flame below. Oh! it was the most
-grand, the most sublime, the most terrific sight the world ever beheld.”
-
-Nothing was left of Moscow save the remembrance of its former grandeur.
-Then followed the terrible retreat of the French army, through the
-cold and snow and winter storms. During this unfortunate expedition
-the entire army of Napoleon had been destroyed. “During the Russian
-campaign France is believed to have lost about three hundred and fifty
-thousand soldiers: a hundred thousand were killed in the advance and
-retreat, a hundred and fifty thousand died from hunger, fatigue, and
-the severity of the climate, and about a hundred thousand remained
-prisoners in the hands of the Russians, not more than half of whom ever
-returned to France.”
-
-Still, notwithstanding the enormous wars in which Napoleon had been
-engaged, he had expended in works of public improvement, for the
-embellishment of France, in the course of nine years, more than two
-hundred millions of dollars. “These miracles,” says a French writer,
-“were all effected by steadiness of purpose, talent armed with power,
-and finances wisely and economically applied. If a man of the age of
-the Medici, or of Louis XIV., were to revisit the earth, and at the
-sight of so many marvels, ask how many ages of peace and glorious
-reigns had been required to produce them, he would be answered,
-‘_Twelve years of war, and a single man!_’”
-
-But the war was not over. With an army formed of fresh recruits,
-again Napoleon was forced to meet his foes. Then followed the battle
-of Lützen, which is regarded as one of the most brilliant proofs of
-Napoleon’s genius. But now many a Judas appeared in the midst of his
-supposed friends. General Jomini deserted the staff of Marshal Ney, and
-went over to the Emperor Alexander. Bernadotte, of Sweden, took up arms
-against the French; and General Moreau went over to the camp of the
-Allies.
-
-[Illustration: NAPOLEON AT FONTAINEBLEAU.]
-
-After the disaster of Leipsic, and the losses sustained by different
-divisions of the army in that campaign, and the mortality which thinned
-so dreadfully the French armies on the Rhine, France felt herself
-exhausted and weak.
-
-In this depressed state, the civilized world was preparing its last
-united onset upon her. From the Baltic to the Bosphorus, from the
-Archangel to the Mediterranean, Europe had banded itself against
-Napoleon. Denmark and Sweden had struck hands with Austria and Russia
-and Prussia and England; while, to crown all, the princes of the
-Confederation of the Rhine put their signatures to the league, and _one
-million and twenty-eight thousand men_ stood up in battle array on
-the plains of Europe to overthrow this mighty spirit that had shaken
-so terribly their thrones. And all this resistless host were pointing
-their bayonets towards Paris. What man or nation could meet such an
-overwhelming foe? Never did Napoleon’s genius shine forth with greater
-splendor than in the almost super-human exertions he put forth in this
-last great struggle for his empire. The Allies entered the capital,
-and Napoleon was compelled to abdicate, preferring exile, rather
-than involve France in more terrible bloodshed. He then penned this
-memorable abdication:—
-
-“The allied sovereigns having declared that the Emperor Napoleon is the
-sole obstacle to the re-establishment of a general peace in Europe,
-the Emperor Napoleon, faithful to his oath, declares that he renounces,
-for himself and his heirs, the throne of France and Italy; and that
-there is no personal sacrifice, not even that of life itself, which he
-is not willing to make for the interests of France.”
-
-Then followed his mournful farewell to his soldiers.
-
-“As Napoleon arrived at the landing of the grand staircase, he stood
-for a moment and looked around upon the Guard drawn up in the court,
-and upon the innumerable multitude which thronged its surroundings.
-Every eye was fixed on him. It was a funereal scene, over which
-was suspended the solemnity of religious awe. Acclamations in that
-hour would have been a mockery. The silence of the grave reigned
-undisturbed. Tears rolled down the furrowed cheeks of the warriors, and
-their heads were bowed in overwhelming grief. Napoleon cast a tender
-and a grateful look over the battalions and the squadrons who had ever
-proved so faithful to himself and to his cause. Before descending to
-the courtyard, he hesitated for a moment, as if his fortitude were
-forsaking him. But immediately rallying his strength, he approached
-the soldiers. The drums commenced beating the accustomed salute. With
-a gesture Napoleon arrested the martial tones.” A breathless stillness
-prevailed. With a voice clear and firm,—every articulation of which was
-heard in the remotest ranks,—he said:—
-
-“Generals, officers, and soldiers of my Old Guard, I bid you farewell.
-For five and twenty years I have ever found you in the path of honor
-and of glory. In these last days, as in the days of our prosperity, you
-have never ceased to be models of fidelity and of courage. Europe has
-armed against us. Still, with men such as you, our cause never could
-have been lost. We could have maintained a civil war for years. But it
-would have rendered our country unhappy. I have therefore sacrificed
-our interests to those of France. I leave you; but, my friends, _be
-faithful to the new sovereign whom France has accepted_. The happiness
-of France was my only thought; it shall ever be the object of my most
-fervent prayers. Grieve not for my lot; I shall be happy so long as I
-know that you are so. If I have consented to outlive myself, it is with
-the hope of still promoting your glory. I trust to write the deeds we
-have achieved together. Adieu, my children! I would that I could press
-you all to my heart. Let me at least embrace your general and your
-eagle.”
-
-“Every eye was now bathed in tears. At a signal from Napoleon, General
-Petit, who then commanded the Old Guard, advanced and stood between
-the ranks of the soldiers and their emperor. Napoleon, with tears
-dimming his eyes, encircled the general in his arms, while the veteran
-commander, entirely unmanned, sobbed aloud. All hearts were melted, and
-a stilled moan was heard through all the ranks.
-
-“Again the Emperor recovered himself, and said, ‘Bring me the eagle.’ A
-grenadier advanced, bearing one of the eagles of the regiment. Napoleon
-imprinted a kiss upon its silver beak, then pressed the eagle to his
-heart, and said, in tremulous accents, ‘Dear eagle, may this last
-embrace vibrate forever in the hearts of all my faithful soldiers!
-Farewell, again, my old companions, farewell!’”
-
-But Elba could not long hold that daring, restless spirit. The next
-year he again unrolled his standard in the capital of France, and the
-army opened its arms to receive him. He at length staked all on the
-field of Waterloo. There the star of his destiny again rose over the
-horizon, and struggled with its ancient strength to mount the heavens
-of fame. The battle-cloud rolled over it, and when it again was swept
-away, that star had gone down, sunk in blood and carnage, to rise no
-more forever.
-
-“Volumes have been written on this campaign and last battle; but every
-impartial mind must come to the same conclusion,—that Napoleon’s
-plans never promised more complete success than at this last effort.
-Wellington was entrapped, and with the same co-operation on both sides,
-he was lost beyond redemption. Had Blücher stayed away as Grouchy did,
-or had Grouchy come up as did Blücher, victory would once more have
-soared with the French eagles. It is in vain to talk of Grouchy’s
-having obeyed orders. It was plainly his duty, and his only duty, to
-detain Blücher or to follow him.”
-
-Even yet Napoleon could have placed himself at the head of fifty
-thousand men in a few hours. He was entreated by his friends to grasp
-these powerful resources and again attack the foe. But treachery had
-already invaded the Chamber of Deputies. The wily Fouché—the same
-who had largely instigated the divorce of Josephine—had obtained the
-control, and joining with the Bourbons, persuaded the Chamber to demand
-the second abdication of the Emperor.
-
-“Two regiments of volunteers from the Faubourg St. Antoine, accompanied
-by a countless multitude, marched to the gates of the Elysée. A
-deputation waited upon the Emperor, stating that the traitorous
-Chamber of Deputies was about to sell France again to the Bourbons,
-and entreating him to take the reins of government into his own hands,
-as on the 18th Brumaire.” The Emperor replied, “You recall to my
-remembrance the 18th Brumaire, but you forget that the circumstances
-are not the same. On the 18th Brumaire the nation was unanimous in
-desiring a change. A feeble effort only was necessary to effect what
-they so much desired. Now it would require floods of French blood, and
-never shall a single drop be shed by me in defence of a cause purely
-personal. Putting the brute force of the mass of the people into action
-would doubtless save Paris and insure me the crown without incurring
-the horrors of civil war, but it would likewise be risking thousands of
-French lives. _No! I like the regrets of France better than her crown._”
-
-[Illustration: NAPOLEON ON BOARD THE BELLEROPHON.]
-
-And so Napoleon, sacrificing himself to save the lives of the French
-people, dictated his second act of abdication, and resigned himself
-with amazing calmness to this overwhelming disaster. But when he threw
-himself upon the generosity of England, she treacherously entrapped him
-on the _Bellerophon_, and afterwards conveyed him as a captive to the
-desolate island of St. Helena, where she set spies over him to torture
-and insult him, and gloated with demoniacal cruelty over the reports
-they gave of his sufferings.
-
-But England, with all her cunning and her base treachery, could not
-imprison the matchless mind and soul of the great Napoleon. Though his
-body was chained to a dreary rock-prison, his genius was still the
-royal emperor of the world. His wondrous sayings at St. Helena have
-become the text-books for the students of all climes.
-
-An English writer, who holds the position of a professor in the
-University at Cambridge, in a work lately published, thus gives to
-Napoleon his place in history: “There are times—and these are the most
-usual—when the most wonderful abilities would not have availed to raise
-any man from such a station as that in which Napoleon was born to the
-head of affairs. But the last years of the eighteenth century formed
-an exceptional period, in which such an ascent was not only possible in
-France, but was quite possible without very extraordinary abilities.
-That particular part of Napoleon’s career to which the Alexanders and
-Hannibals can show nothing parallel, is, in fact, just the part which,
-in that exceptional time, was within the reach of an ordinary man.
-Thus the miracle of Bonaparte’s rise to power lies not so much in his
-personality as in the time.”
-
-What a pity that this _English professor_ could not have happened to
-have lived when _ordinary_ men might have become so great!
-
-One great secret of Napoleon’s success was the union of two striking
-qualities which are not often found together. His imagination was as
-ardent, and his mind as impetuous, as the most rash warrior; at the
-same time his judgment was as cool and correct as the ablest tactician.
-“His mind moved with the rapidity of lightning, and yet with the
-precision and steadiness of naked reason.” This power of thinking
-quick and thinking right is one of the rarest and yet most important
-qualities to insure success. As a military leader he has no superior in
-ancient or modern times. Instead of following what was then considered
-the scientific mode of warfare, he fell back upon his own genius, and
-originated tactics which filled his foes with horrified surprise. His
-power of combination was unequalled; his mind seemed vast enough for
-the management of the globe. And yet so perfect was the system and
-arrangement of his plans and thoughts that the slightest detail was
-never overlooked. His bravery amounted to rashness where his own life
-was concerned. He feared neither shot nor shell, and carelessly exposed
-himself whenever he thought his presence was needed, replying to his
-soldiers, who often besought him not to risk his life so recklessly,
-“Courage! the bullet that is to kill me is not yet cast.”
-
-As a thinker and statesman, Napoleon was as remarkable as he was as a
-politician and general. His genius was universal. Had he not been a
-Napoleon, he might have been a Shakespeare or a Bacon. He condensed
-a volume into a sentence; his words were as keen as the blade of a
-Damascus sword, and as freighted with ominous meaning as the tides of
-the ocean. He knew men; he knew books; he knew nature. In twenty-five
-lessons Napoleon became so familiar with the English language that he
-could read any English book without difficulty.
-
-Another remarkable trait in Napoleon was his self-sufficiency. That
-self-confidence, which in smaller men would have been mad folly, was
-in him the most far-seeing wisdom. He needed no opinions of other men
-to govern his actions. He was sufficient unto himself. He took counsel
-only of his own genius and reason and marvellous intuitions.
-
-His self-reliance was his power in the midst of danger and
-difficulties. He believed God had given him a great part to play in the
-world’s drama, and he meant to play it well. His plans were almost the
-inspirations of prophetic foreknowledge.
-
-Napoleon was also the greatest of statesmen. His conversations at St.
-Helena display his wonderful knowledge of men and governments and
-laws and administrative legislation. Nowhere else can be found such
-profound thoughts upon politics, war, sciences, arts, or religion.
-He has been accused of infidelity. But few declarations of the
-Divinity of Christ, ever uttered by mortal lips, have equalled in
-far-reaching apprehension, and also acknowledgment of the divine
-incomprehensibility of the mystery of the Godhead, as the sayings of
-Napoleon. Conversing with General Bertrand at St. Helena, Napoleon
-said:—
-
-“I know men, and I tell you that Jesus Christ is not a man. Superficial
-minds see a resemblance between Christ and the founders of empires and
-the gods of other religions. That resemblance does not exist. There is
-between Christianity and all other religions whatsoever the distance
-of infinity. Paganism was never accepted as truth by the wise men
-of Greece, neither by Socrates, Pythagoras, Plato, Anaxagoras, nor
-Pericles. But on the other side, the loftiest intellects since the
-advent of Christianity have had faith, a living faith, a practical
-faith, in the mysteries and doctrines of the Gospel. Paganism is the
-work of man. What do these gods so boastful know more than other
-mortals? these legislators, Greek or Roman? this Numa? this Lycurgus?
-these priests of India or of Memphis? this Confucius? this Mohammed?
-Absolutely nothing. They have made a perfect chaos of morals. There is
-not one among them all who has said anything new in reference to our
-future destiny, to the soul, to the essence of God, to the creation. As
-for me, I recognize the gods and these great men as beings like myself.
-They have performed a lofty part in their times, as I have done.
-Nothing announces them divine. On the contrary, there are numerous
-resemblances between them and myself,—foibles and errors which ally
-them to me and to humanity.
-
-“It is not so with Christ. Everything in him astonishes me. His spirit
-overawes me, and his will confounds me. Between him and whoever else in
-the world there is no possible term of comparison; his birth, and the
-history of his life; the profundity of his doctrine, which grapples
-the mightiest difficulties, and which is of those difficulties the
-most admirable solution; his Gospel, his apparition, his empire, his
-march across the ages and the realms,—everything is to me a prodigy, an
-insoluble mystery, which plunges me into a reverie from which I cannot
-escape, a mystery which is there before my eyes, a mystery which I can
-neither deny nor explain. Here I see nothing human.
-
-“Jesus borrowed nothing from our sciences. His religion is a revelation
-from an intelligence which certainly is not that of man. One can
-absolutely find nowhere, but in him alone, the imitation or the example
-of his life. He is not a philosopher, since he advances by miracles,
-and from the first his disciples worshipped him. He persuades them
-far more by an appeal to the heart, than by any display of method and
-of logic. Neither did he impose upon them any preliminary studies or
-any knowledge of letters. All his religion consists in _believing_.
-In fact, the sciences and philosophy avail nothing for salvation. He
-has nothing to do but with the soul, and to that alone he brings his
-Gospel. The soul is sufficient for him, as he is sufficient for the
-soul. I search in vain in history to find a parallel to Jesus Christ,
-or anything which can approach the Gospel. Neither history, nor
-humanity, nor the ages, nor nature, can offer me anything with which I
-am able to compare it or explain it. The more I consider the Gospel,
-the more I am assured that there is nothing there which is not beyond
-the march of events, and above the human mind.
-
-“You speak of Cæsar, of Alexander, of their conquests, and of the
-enthusiasm they enkindled in the hearts of their soldiers; but can
-you conceive of a dead man making conquests with an army faithful and
-entirely devoted to his memory? My armies have forgotten me, even
-while living, as the Carthaginian army forgot Hannibal. Such is our
-power! A single battle lost crushes us, and adversity scatters our
-friends.
-
-“Can you conceive of Cæsar, the eternal emperor of the Roman Senate,
-from the depths of his mausoleum governing the empire, watching over
-the destinies of Rome? Such is the history of the invasion and conquest
-of the world by Christianity. Such is the power of the God of the
-Christians, and such is the perpetual miracle of the progress of the
-faith and of the government of his Church. Nations pass away, thrones
-crumble, but the Church remains. In every other existence but that of
-Christ, how many imperfections! From the first day to the last he is
-the same, always the same, majestic and simple, infinitely firm and
-infinitely gentle. Christ proved that he was the Son of the Eternal
-by his disregard of time. All his doctrines signify one and the same
-thing,—_Eternity_.
-
-“The Gospel is not a book; it is a living being, with an action, a
-power which invades everything that opposes its extension. Behold it
-upon this table, this Book surpassing all others” (here he solemnly
-placed his hand upon it); “I never omit to read it, and every day with
-the same pleasure. Nowhere is to be found such a series of beautiful
-ideas, admirable moral maxims, which defile like the battalions of a
-celestial army, and which produce in our soul the same emotion which
-one experiences in contemplating the infinite expanse of the skies,
-resplendent in a summer’s night with all the brilliance of the stars.
-Not only is our mind absorbed; it is controlled, and the soul can never
-go astray with this Book for its guide. Once master of our spirit, the
-faithful Gospel loves us. God even is our Friend, our Father, and
-truly our God.
-
-“What a proof of the divinity of Christ! With an empire so absolute, he
-has but one single end,—the spiritual amelioration of individuals, the
-purity of conscience, the union to that which is true, the holiness of
-the soul. So that Christ’s greatest miracle undoubtedly is the reign of
-charity.
-
-“Behold the destiny near at hand of him who has been called the great
-Napoleon! What an abyss between my deep misery and the eternal reign of
-Christ, which is proclaimed, loved, adored, and which is extending over
-all the earth. Is this to die? Is it not rather to live? The death of
-Christ! It is the death of God.” Turning to General Bertrand, “If you
-do not perceive that Jesus Christ is God, very well; then I did wrong
-to make you a general.” At length came the last, though to Napoleon
-most welcome, summons. A few days before his death, he awoke one
-morning, saying, “I have just seen my good Josephine, but she would not
-embrace me. She disappeared at the moment when I was about to take her
-in my arms. She was seated there. It seemed to me that I had seen her
-yesterday evening. She is not changed. She is still the same, full of
-devotion to me. She told me that we were about to see each other again,
-never more to part.”
-
-The disease progressed rapidly, and the dying hour drew near. It was
-the month of May, 1821. A violent storm raged with wild fury on that
-rocky prison-isle, as the spirit of the great Napoleon was freeing
-itself from its earthly fetters. His few faithful friends who shared
-his exile, stood weeping around his couch. In the solemn silence
-of that sacred hour his loved voice was once more faintly heard:
-“_France! Army! Head of the Army! Josephine!_” and the heart of
-Napoleon I. ceased to beat. “_Isle of Elba! Napoleon!_” had been the
-last words of the loving and forgiving Josephine. “France! the Army!
-Josephine!” were the last images which lingered in the heart, and the
-last words which trembled on the lips of the dying emperor.
-
-“When the prejudice, and falsehood, and hatred of his enemies shall
-disappear, and the world can gaze impartially on this plebeian soldier,
-rising to the throne of an empire, measuring his single intellect
-with the proudest kings of Europe, and coming off victorious from the
-encounter, rising above the prejudices and follies of his age, ‘making
-kings of plebeians, and plebeians of kings,’ grasping, as by intuition,
-all military and political science, expending with equal facility his
-vast energies on war or peace, turning with the same profound thought
-from fierce battles to commerce, and trade, and finances; when the
-world can calmly thus contemplate him, his amazing genius will receive
-that homage which envy and ignorance and hatred now withhold.
-
-“And when the intelligent philanthropist shall understand the political
-and civil history of Europe, and see how Napoleon broke up its systems
-of oppression and feudalism, proclaiming human rights in the ears
-of the world, till the continent shook with the rising murmurs of
-oppressed man; study well the changes he introduced, without which
-human progress must have ceased; see the great public works he
-established, the institutions he founded, the laws he proclaimed, and
-the civil liberty he restored; and then, remembering that the bloody
-wars that offset all these were waged by him in self-defence, and were
-equal rights struggling against exclusive despotism, he will regret
-that he has adopted the slanders of his foemen and the falsehoods of
-monarchists.”
-
-[Illustration: THE ROCK AT ST. HELENA.]
-
-Alexander’s conquests were only for selfish glory; he cared not for his
-people, and little for his soldiers. Cæsar’s triumphs were for his own
-personal honor and power. The wars of Frederick the Great were nearly
-all unjust and aggressive, and he openly asserted his selfish ambition.
-But Napoleon, equalling them all in the brilliancy of his conquests,
-stands so far above them, as the idol of his people and his soldiers,
-as a man of incorruptible character, in the midst of temptations as
-great as any which have beset mortal men, as an intellectual genius,
-with a mind so phenomenal as to make him almost a miracle in far-seeing
-intuitions and marvellous accomplishment,—that he must be acknowledged,
-not only as the most famous of all the rulers of the world, but as
-the greatest uninspired man that ever lived. The history of most men
-terminates with the grave. But Napoleon’s story ended not with his
-lonely death upon the dreary Isle of St. Helena. Each year his memory
-was growing brighter. Each year the French people realized more and
-more the irreparable loss they had sustained. The heart-melting story
-of his hardships at St. Helena was told over and over again in his
-beloved France, till at last the nation rose as one man to do his
-memory honor. Just twenty-five years from the time when Napoleon was
-landed a captive upon the Island of St. Helena, his sacred remains
-were brought from their humble resting-place upon that rocky isle, and
-placed in the magnificent mausoleum prepared for them in the Church of
-the Invalides. On the anniversary of the great victory of Austerlitz,
-the two funeral frigates entered the harbor of Cherbourg. Three ships
-of war, the _Austerlitz_, the _Friedland_, and the _Tilsit_,
-immediately encircled the ship which bore the sacred remains. All the
-forts, batteries, and warships fired a salute. All France flocked to
-the cities and villages through which the funeral cortège was to pass.
-
-At four o’clock, on the afternoon of the 14th of December, 1840,
-the flotilla arrived at Courbevoie, a small village four miles from
-Paris. Here the remains were to be transferred from the steamer to the
-shore. As the funeral barge sailed up the Seine, a colossal statue of
-Josephine, which had been erected on the shore, offered an appropriate
-and fitting welcome. Her fair form and face seemed to greet the return
-of her idolized husband. Maria Louisa, the daughter of the Cæsars,
-was then living ingloriously at Parma. No one thought of her. But at
-last Josephine and Napoleon were united together in sacred memories on
-earth, as their spirits had already been reunited in heaven.
-
-“A Grecian temple one hundred feet high was constructed at the
-termination of the wharf, under which the body was to lie in state
-until transferred to the funeral car. Here Sergeant Hubert, who for
-nineteen years had kept watch at the solitary grave of Napoleon at
-St. Helena, landed. All the generals gathered around him, and he was
-welcomed by the people with deep emotion. The imperial funeral car
-was composed of five distinct parts, the basement, the pedestal, the
-Caryatides, the shield, and the cenotaph. The basement rested on four
-massive gilt wheels. It was profusely adorned with rich ornaments which
-were covered with frosted gold. Upon this basement stood groups of
-cherubs, seven feet high, supporting a pedestal eighteen feet long,
-covered with burnished gold. This pedestal was hung with purple velvet
-embroidered with gold. Upon it stood fourteen Caryatides, antique
-figures larger than life, and entirely covered with gold, supporting
-with their heads and hands an immense shield of solid gold. This
-shield was of oval form, and eighteen feet in length, and was richly
-decorated. Upon the top of this shield, nearly fifty feet from the
-ground, was placed the cenotaph, an exact copy of Napoleon’s coffin. It
-was slightly veiled with purple crape embroidered with golden bees. On
-the cenotaph, upon a velvet cushion, were placed the sceptre, the sword
-of justice, the imperial crown, in gold and embellished with precious
-stones.
-
-“The Church of the Invalides had been magnificently adorned for the
-solemn ceremony. Thirty-six thousand spectators were seated upon
-immense platforms on the esplanade of the Invalides. Six thousand
-spectators thronged the seats of the spacious portico. In the interior
-of the church were assembled the clergy, the members of the Chambers
-of Deputies and of Peers, and all the members of the royal family and
-other distinguished personages from France and Europe.
-
-“As the coffin, preceded by the Prince de Joinville, was borne along
-the nave upon the shoulders of thirty-two of Napoleon’s Old Guard,
-all rose and bowed in homage to the mighty dead.” Louis Philippe,
-surrounded by the great officers of state, then stepped forward to
-receive the remains.
-
-“Sire,” said the prince, “I present to you the body of the Emperor
-Napoleon.”
-
-“I receive it,” replied the king, “in the name of France.” Then taking
-from the hand of Marshal Soult the sword of Napoleon, and presenting
-it to General Bertrand, he said, “General, I charge you to place this
-glorious sword of the Emperor upon his coffin.”
-
-Beneath the lofty dome of the church, where the massive tomb of
-Napoleon has since been erected, a magnificent cenotaph in the form of
-a temple had been reared. Within this richly decorated catafalque the
-coffin of Napoleon was reverently and solemnly placed, thus fulfilling
-the last wish of the Emperor, expressed in these memorable words, “It
-is my wish that my ashes may repose on the banks of the Seine, in the
-midst of the French people whom I have loved so well.”
-
-“He who united in himself alone the glory of Alexander, of Cæsar, of
-Charlemagne, and of Louis XIV., took his place in the Invalides, which,
-during his life, he had marked as the place of heroes.” His devoted
-Generals Bertrand and Duroc now lie beside him. A few aged veterans
-of the Old Guard still watch over him. The sunlight, softened by the
-rich tints of the costly windows, falls lovingly upon his tomb, and his
-cherished memory lives in the hearts of his beloved people, growing
-more beautiful, more triumphantly venerated, and sacredly respected
-with each passing year. As his faithful veterans cast their crowns of
-flowers at the foot of his coffin, with trembling voices they lovingly
-though mournfully cried, “_Vive l’Empereur!_” and this loved Emperor
-still lives in the hearts of his people, royally enshrined in a
-nation’s undying love.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Obvious punctuation errors repaired. Warenne, Earl of Surrey, was
-spelled both as Warren and Warrene throughout the text. This was
-retained. Varied hyphenation retained as printed.
-
-Page xi, “Kremlin” changed to “Krémlin” (The Krémlin of Moscow)
-
-Page 15, “Aphrodite” changed to “Aphrodité” (mother, Aphrodité, caught
-him)
-
-Page 80, “enthusiam” changed to “enthusiasm” (enthusiasm of Alexander’s)
-
-Page 157, “guantlets” changed to “gauntlets” (garnished with gauntlets)
-
-Page 160, “Debonnaire” changed to “Débonnaire” (called Louis le
-Débonnaire)
-
-Page 163, “Debonnaire” changed to “Débonnaire” (his son Louis le
-Débonnaire)
-
-Page 272, “seige” changed to “siege” (and commenced its siege)
-
-Page 279, “cortége” changed to “cortège” (brilliant _cortège_
-glittering)
-
-Page 372, illustration caption, “KREMLIN” changed to “KRÉMLIN” (THE
-KRÉMLIN OF MOSCOW)
-
-Page 441, “endeavord” changed to “endeavored” (enemies who endeavored)
-
-Page 442, “Sardina” changed to “Sardinia” (king of Sardinia together)
-
-Page 445, “pontroon” changed to “pontoon” (and four pontoon trains)
-
-Page 446, “striction” changed to “stricken” (terror-stricken inaction)
-
-Page 454, “Friendland” changed to “Friedland” (of Friedland and Tilsit)
-
-Page 454 “Tuilieries” changed to “Tuileries” (Tuileries in a splendid)
-
-Page 460, “Kremlin” changed to “Krémlin” (established in the Krémlin)
-
-Page 461, “Lutzen” changed to “Lützen” (of Lützen, which is)
-
-Page 473, “falshood” changed to “falsehood” (prejudice, and falsehood)
-
-Page 475, “cortege” changed to “cortège” (funeral cortège was to pass)
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boys' Book of Rulers, by Lydia Hoyt Farmer
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Boys' Book of Rulers
-
-Author: Lydia Hoyt Farmer
-
-Release Date: November 20, 2015 [EBook #50510]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOYS' BOOK OF RULERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Emmy, Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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-
-
-
-
-<h1 class="faux">The Boys’ Book of Famous Rulers</h1>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 485px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="485" height="800" alt="cover; This cover has been created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 459px;"><a id="frontispiece"></a>
-<img src="images/i-001.jpg" width="459" height="677" alt="King holding ball and swoord" />
-<div class="caption">CHARLEMAGNE.</div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="maintitle"><small>THE</small><br />
-<span class="smcap">Boys’ Book of Famous Rulers.</span></div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><br />
-BY<br />
-<span class="author">LYDIA HOYT FARMER,</span><br />
-<span class="authorof">AUTHOR OF “THE STORY OF SCIENCE,” “THE PRINCE OF THE FLAMING<br />
-STAR,” “WHAT SHE MADE OF HER LIFE,” ETC.</span><br /><br /><br /><br />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 244px;">
-<img src="images/emblem.jpg" width="244" height="210" alt="emblem" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="center"><br /><br /><br />
-<small>NEW YORK:</small><br />
-THOMAS Y. CROWELL &amp; CO.,<br />
-<small>No. 13 <span class="smcap">Astor Place</span>.</small><br />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="copyright">
-<i>Copyright</i>,<br />
-<span class="smcap">By Thomas Y. Crowell &amp; Co.</span><br />
-1886.<br />
-<br />
-<br /><br /><br /><br />
-<span class="smcap">J. S. Cushing &amp; Co., Printers, Boston.</span><br />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-DEDICATED<br /><br />
-TO<br /><br />
-MY CHILDREN<br /><br />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a><br /><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 77px;">
-<img src="images/deco1.jpg" width="77" height="8" alt="decoration" />
-</div>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> aim of this book is to give in as concise manner
-as possible, consistent with graphic narration and biographical
-completeness, the most important and interesting
-events in the lives of these famous rulers; together
-with a brief history of the various epochs in which they
-lived, and a description of the manners and customs of
-the people comprising the several nations governed by
-these illustrious monarchs.</p>
-
-<div class="sig">
-<span class="smcap">The Author.</span><br />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a><br /><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 77px;">
-<img src="images/deco1.jpg" width="77" height="8" alt="decoration" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-<tr>
-<td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
-<td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Agamemnon</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Cyrus the Great</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Alexander the Great</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Julius Cæsar</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Charlemagne</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Alfred the Great</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_169">169</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Richard Cœur de Lion</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Robert Bruce</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Ferdinand V. of Spain</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_266">266</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Philip II. of Spain</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_291">291</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Gustavus Adolphus</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_312">312</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Louis XIV.</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_334">334</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Peter the Great</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_367">367</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Frederick the Great</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_398">398</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Napoleon I.</span></td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_433">433</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table></div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a><br /><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="List of illustrations">
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Charlemagne</td>
-<td align="left"><i><a href="#frontispiece">Frontispiece</a></i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Jupiter sending the Evil Dream to Agamemnon</td>
-<td align="right"><i>Page</i> <a href="#Page_9">9</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Hector chiding Paris</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Diomed casting his Spear against Mars</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Ajax defending the Greek Ships against the Trojans</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Hector’s Body dragged at the Car of Achilles</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">The Funeral of Hector</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Persian Guardsman carrying Bow and Quiver</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Persian Soldier with Battle-Axe</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Persian Foot Soldiers</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Persian King seated on his Throne</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Persian Subjects bringing Tribute</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_58">58</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Chart of the Country around Babylon</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Supposed Plan of Ancient Babylon</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Babylonian King</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Persian Chariot</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Tomb of Cyrus</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Ruins of Babylon</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_70">70</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Temple of Diana at Ephesus</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_72">72</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Alexander the Great</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Demosthenes</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Darius</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Julius Cæsar—from the Antique Bust</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Julius Cæsar</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Cæsar in Gaul</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span>The Landing of Julius Cæsar in Britain</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_124">124</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Charlemagne—from Early Engraving</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">The Huns at Châlons</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">“Thrust him away or thou diest in his stead”</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Charlemagne</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_152">152</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Death of Roland</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Alfred the Great</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">The Northmen invading France</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Alfred the Great</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_182">182</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Alfred and the Cakes</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Richard Cœur de Lion</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Richard Cœur de Lion</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Richard tearing down the Austrian Banner</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_221">221</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">“Most Holy Land, Farewell!”</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">King John</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_230">230</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Warren, Earl of Surrey, Governor of Scotland under Edward I.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Robert Bruce</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_238">238</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">“Bruce was not slow in taking the warning”</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">“See! I have spoiled my good battle-axe”</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_260">260</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Ferdinand of Aragon</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_266">266</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Isabella of Castile</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_268">268</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Segovia: The Alcazar and Cathedral</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">The Cathedral and Port of Malaga</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_274">274</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Court of Lions, Alhambra</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_280">280</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Columbus</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_282">282</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Prison of the Inquisition at Barcelona</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_286">286</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Tomb of Ferdinand and Isabella in the Cathedral of Granada</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_289">289</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Philip II.</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_291">291</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Queen Mary plighting her Troth to Philip</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_292">292</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Destroying Statues, etc., in the Cathedral at Antwerp</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_304">304</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span>Philip II.</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_308">308</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Gustavus Adolphus</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_312">312</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Gustavus Adolphus—from a picture by Van Dyck</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_318">318</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Death of Gustavus and his Page</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_332">332</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Louis XIV.</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_334">334</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Anne of Austria and Cardinal Mazarin</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_340">340</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Louis XIV. taking leave of Fouquet</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_344">344</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Death of Turenne</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_350">350</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Jean Baptiste Colbert</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_352">352</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Revocation of the Edict of Nantes</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_354">354</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Peter the Great</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_368">368</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">The Krémlin of Moscow</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_373">373</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Peter saved from Slaughter by his Mother</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_374">374</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul in the Fortress</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_385">385</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Peter the Great in the Dutch Ship-yard</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_389">389</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Peter the Great</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_392">392</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Frederick II., King of Prussia, æt. 58</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_398">398</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Frederick the Great</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_418">418</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Arrest of Voltaire by order of Frederick</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_427">427</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Equestrian Statue of Frederick the Great, æt. 73</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_430">430</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Napoleon</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_434">434</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Napoleon in the Prison of Nice, 1794</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_442">442</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Napoleon at Fontainebleau</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_462">462</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">Napoleon on Board the Bellerophon</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_466">466</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td align="left">The Rock at St. Helena</td>
-<td align="right"><a href="#Page_474">474</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>BOYS’ BOOK OF FAMOUS RULERS.</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 119px;">
-<img src="images/deco2.jpg" width="119" height="13" alt="decoration" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2>AGAMEMNON.<br />
-
-<small>1184 B.C.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 8em;">“The rule</span></div>
-<div class="verse"> Of many is not well. One must be chief</div>
-<div class="verse"> In war, and one the king.”—<i>Iliad.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">FOR nine years the Greeks had besieged the city of
-Troy. This famous Trojan War, which is said to
-have occurred about 1184 <small>B.C.</small>, has been embellished by
-romance and poetry; and although the real events have
-been much distorted by fabulous tales, it holds an important
-place in ancient Grecian history.</p>
-
-<p>The marvellous Greek poet Homer has immortalized
-the wonderful story of this contest, in which, according
-to the old Grecian belief, gods and heroes fought for
-mastery; and it seems more fitting to the subject that
-we should view these events through the eyes of those
-ancient Greeks, whose weird yet fascinating fables
-peopled the mountains and seas with gods and goddesses;
-over whom proud Zeus or Jupiter ruled on the dread
-Mount of Olympus, from whence he hurled his awful
-thunderbolts, and shook the earth and heavens in his
-wrathful moods, when gods or mortals had dared to defy
-his imperial will. Agamemnon, king of Mycenæ, was
-the commander of all the Grecian hosts which for these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-nine years had surrounded the walls of Troy. The cause
-of the quarrel may be thus briefly stated:—</p>
-
-<p>Priam was the richest and most powerful of all the
-kings of Troy. His wife, Queen Hecuba, had dreamed
-that one of her children should become a firebrand which
-should consume the whole city. Whereupon, Priam was
-so alarmed, that he ordered that her next child should be
-exposed in a desert place among the mountains, and left
-to perish. Paris was this child, and when an infant, was
-hidden by his mother, that he might not be thus destroyed.
-Paris grew to be a youth of marvellous beauty, and was
-at length brought by his mother to the court of Priam.
-The king was so charmed by his beauty and accomplishments,
-that Paris ventured to make himself known, and
-was received by Priam, his father, with great kindness;
-for he was so pleased with the noble youth, that he ceased
-to remember the evil dream. This dream, however, was
-very strangely fulfilled years afterwards. Paris made an
-expedition into Greece, which country was at that time
-divided into many small kingdoms or states, each governed
-by its own king. Agamemnon was king of Mycenæ,
-and his brother Menelaüs was king of Sparta.</p>
-
-<p>Agamemnon and Menelaüs were the sons of Plisthenes;
-but as their father died when they were very young, their
-mother Aërope was afterwards married to Atreus; and
-these two brothers were brought up by their step-father
-as his own children, to whom his name was given, as
-they were called Atridæ.</p>
-
-<p>Atreus was afterwards murdered, and Agamemnon’s
-uncle Thyestes ascended the throne of Mycenæ. Agamemnon
-and his brother Menelaüs then fled to Sparta.
-The king of Sparta agreed to recover the kingdom for
-Agamemnon, if he would marry his daughter Clytemnestra,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-and make her his queen. To this Agamemnon
-consented, and with the aid of Tyndarus, king of Sparta,
-he recovered his own kingdom, and married Clytemnestra.
-His brother Menelaüs afterwards became king of Sparta.</p>
-
-<p>During the expedition into Greece, of Paris, the son
-of King Priam, he visited the court of Sparta, and was
-received most kindly by King Menelaüs. But the handsome
-and fascinating Paris ill-repaid this courteous reception,
-for he fell in love with Helen, the beautiful wife of
-Menelaüs, and carried her off with him on his return to
-Troy. Menelaüs, enraged at this wicked treachery, persuaded
-his brother Agamemnon, king of Mycenæ, to
-espouse his quarrel, and to join him in waging war with
-the Trojans, to revenge his indignity, and to recover, if
-possible, his wife, the fair Helen, who was so exquisitely
-beautiful, that all who saw her fell in love with her.
-Agamemnon was chosen commander-in-chief of all the
-powerful Grecian princes who now combined their forces
-to fight against Troy. Homer gives us the names of the
-most famous of these Grecian warriors. Agamemnon was
-sovereign lord of all the host, and Achilles was the
-bravest and most valiant man amongst them. But besides
-these, there was the yellow-haired Menelaüs, king
-of Sparta, and husband of the beautiful Helen; Ajax
-Oïleus, or, as men called him, the lesser Ajax, king of
-the Locri, swiftest of foot among the Greeks, after the
-great Achilles; Ajax Telamon, from Salamis; Diomed,
-son of Tydeus, king of Argos, and with him Sthenelus;
-Nestor, king of Pylos, oldest and wisest among the
-Greeks; Ulysses, king of Ithaca, most crafty in counsel;
-Idomeneus, grandson of the great judge Minos, king of
-Crete, and with him Meriones; Tlepolemus, son of Hercules,
-from Rhodes; Eumelus, from Pheræ, son of that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-Alcestis, who died for her husband, and was brought back
-from death by Hercules, according to Grecian mythology;
-and many more heroes too numerous to mention: but the
-bravest and strongest of all was Ajax, son of Telamon,
-and the best horses were those of Eumelus; but there was
-none that could compare with Achilles and the horses of
-Achilles, bravest of men, and swiftest of steeds.</p>
-
-<p>The heroes upon the Trojan side were also great and
-brave. The most famous of their chiefs were Hector,
-son of King Priam, most valiant of all the Trojan warriors;
-Æneas, whose father was Anchises, and whose
-mother was supposed to be the goddess Aphrodité; Pandarus,
-from Mount Ida, to whom Apollo had given a
-marvellous bow; Asius, the son of Hyrtacus, who came
-from the broad salt river, the Hellespont; Pylæmenes,
-king of Paphlagonia; and Sarpedon from Lycia, whom
-men affirmed to be the son of Zeus himself; and lastly,
-Glaucus his friend.</p>
-
-<p>When the Grecian fleet had started upon this expedition
-against Troy, a wonderful incident had occurred.
-The fleet of the Greeks was detained by contrary winds
-at Aulis, owing to the wrath of the goddess Diana, whom
-King Agamemnon had offended by killing one of her
-favorite deer. In this emergency Calchas the soothsayer
-was consulted, and he declared that to appease the anger
-of the goddess. Iphigenia, the eldest daughter of King
-Agamemnon, must be sacrificed. She was accordingly led
-to the altar, and was about to be offered as a victim, when
-she is said to have suddenly disappeared, being caught
-up by Diana, who in pity substituted a stag in her place.
-Virgil, however, tells this story somewhat differently;
-for he relates that Iphigenia was actually sacrificed. The
-goddess having been appeased, the winds were favorable,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-and the Grecian fleet sailed onward, and arrived safely at
-Troy; and for nine long years these famous warriors had
-been waging war around the walls of that city, within
-which, in the palace of Paris, son of King Priam, was
-concealed the matchlessly beautiful Helen, and much rich
-treasure, which that treacherous but fascinating prince
-had stolen from the Greeks.</p>
-
-<p>But now within the Grecian camp a strife arises between
-King Agamemnon and Achilles, bravest of all his
-host. The Greeks, having been away from home so
-many years, were accustomed to make frequent raids
-upon the surrounding cities to supply their needs, and
-thus to enable them to continue still longer this weary
-siege. They had thus ruthlessly attacked a city called
-Chrysa, sacred to Apollo, where was a temple of that
-god.</p>
-
-<p>The Greeks, in their plunderings, had not dared to
-molest the temple or its priest; but they had carried off,
-with other prisoners, the daughter of the priest of Apollo,
-named Chryseïs. The spoils obtained from these expeditions
-were divided between the various kings and heroes
-in the Grecian host; and the maiden Chryseïs had been
-apportioned as the share of King Agamemnon. The
-next day the priest Chryses came to the Grecian camp,
-bringing much gold, and wearing on his head the priest’s
-crown, that men might thereby reverence him the more.
-He demanded the return of his daughter, and offered his
-gold as her ransom. The Grecian chiefs were favorable
-to his suit, but King Agamemnon angrily repulsed him,
-exclaiming,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“Hence, on thy life, and fly these hostile plains,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Nor ask, presumptuous, what the king detains.</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Hence with thy laurel crown and golden rod;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Nor trust too far those ensigns of thy god.</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Mine is thy daughter, priest, and shall remain,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And prayers, and tears, and bribes, shall plead in vain.”</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The sorrowful priest turned away in silence, and as he
-walked along the seashore, he besought the aid of his
-god, Apollo, praying: “Hear me, God of the silver bow!
-If I have built thee a temple, and offered thee the fat of
-many bullocks and rams, hear me! and avenge me on
-these Greeks.”</p>
-
-<p>And Apollo heard him and descended with awful wrath
-from dread Olympus, where dwelt the gods. The rattle
-of his arrows filled the air, as he twanged his deadly bow,
-and sent the fateful shafts of pestilence upon the Grecian
-fleet below; meanwhile, enwrapping his own form in
-shadows black as night, from which his baleful darts shot
-forth like lightning’s flash. And so for ten long days
-the pestilence raged, till heaps of dead men and beasts
-lined the shore, and the black smoke ascended from
-myriad funeral piles. Then Achilles called upon the seer,
-Calchas, to tell them why Apollo was so wroth with them.
-To whom the sage replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“It is on behalf of his priest that Apollo is so wroth;
-for when he came to ransom his daughter, Agamemnon
-would not let the maiden go. Now then, ye must send
-her back to Chrysa without ransom, and with her a
-hundred beasts for sacrifice, so that the plague may be
-stayed.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, with a threatening frown, King Agamemnon
-started from his gorgeous throne, with eyes which flashed
-with angry light, as he exclaimed in fury,—</p>
-
-<p>“Prophet of plagues, forever boding ill! Still must
-that tongue some evil message bring. I will release the
-maid, that my people may be spared. But for this, my
-share of booty, shall the Greeks requite me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then Achilles answered,—</p>
-
-<p>“We have no treasures from which to make up thy
-loss. Let the maiden go! and when we capture Troy,
-we will repay thee fourfold.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Agamemnon replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I my prize resign while thou art possessed of
-thine? I will send back the maid to please Apollo; but
-know thou that I will seize thy share, even the girl
-Briseïs, that all may know that I am sovereign here.”</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon, Achilles was so fierce with anger, that he
-fain would have slain the monarch, and had, forsooth,
-half drawn his sword from the scabbard, to thrust it into
-the haughty king. But lo! the goddess Athené stood
-behind him, and caught him by his long yellow locks of
-hair. None saw the goddess, save only Achilles, to
-whom he said,—</p>
-
-<p>“Art thou come, fair Minerva, to witness these wrongs
-I bear from Atreus’ son? If thou dost see his crime, see
-also my proud vengeance.”</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon, he raised his sword to strike; but the goddess
-said,—</p>
-
-<p>“Forbear thy fury! Let great Achilles yield to reason.
-Put up thy sword; but if thou pleasest, use the dagger of
-thy tongue alone. With that, the gods permit thee to reproach
-him; but vengeance, leave thou to the care of
-heaven.”</p>
-
-<p>So spake the goddess, and Achilles thrust his sword
-back into its sheath, and in proud scorn exclaimed, while
-turning to the king with blazing eyes,—</p>
-
-<p>“Coward! thou rulest sure a puny race, else this had
-been thy last affront. Thou darest not to fight, but
-cowerest like a dog in safe retreat within the camp; but
-after we have fought and conquered, thou claimest the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-richest booty! But know, for this my grievous wrong,
-the gods shall avenge it! And when the Greeks lie in
-heaps before the walls of Troy, slain by the dreadful
-Hector, then shalt thou miss the strong arm of Achilles
-from thy side, and thy proud heart shalt mourn the affront
-thy madness gave. For thou hast made the bravest
-Greek thy bitterest enemy.”</p>
-
-<p>Then did Achilles dash his sacred sceptre on the
-ground, saying,—</p>
-
-<p>“As surely as this sceptre, which was once a branch
-from off a tree, now starred with golden studs and bound
-with bronze, an ensign of Jove’s favor, shall never
-blossom more, so surely shalt thou miss the arm of brave
-Achilles, when the Trojans press thee sore. Thou canst
-play the master over others, but think not to master me!
-As to the maid, my prize, which the Greeks gave me,
-let them take it again if they will, but if thou darest to
-invade my tent and touch whate’er is mine, thy blood shall
-stream forth at the point of my revengeful blade.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, the great Achilles strode forth from the
-counsel-tent with wrathful looks, and the august brow of
-Agamemnon was overcast with threatening gloom. In
-vain had Nestor, eldest of the Grecian kings and wisest
-of counsellors, endeavored to quell this ominous quarrel.
-His words of reason moved not the two fierce warriors.
-And surely, in this strife, Achilles held the right, and
-Agamemnon showed himself a selfish, proud, and haughty
-monarch.</p>
-
-<p>The priest’s daughter, Chryseïs, was sent back to her
-home with offerings to the god, and Ulysses was appointed
-to conduct her thither. But King Agamemnon would not
-be persuaded to renounce his purpose of seizing upon the
-war-prize which had been awarded to Achilles, namely,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-the maiden Briseïs; and forthwith he sent heralds to the
-tent of Achilles to obtain her. The heralds approached
-the warrior with much dread, for they feared his awful
-wrath. But Achilles said to them,—</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-032.jpg" width="600" height="425" alt="king on throne" />
-<div class="caption">JUPITER SENDING THE EVIL DREAM TO AGAMEMNON.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Fear not, ye heralds! It is no fault of yours that
-you are sent on such an errand.”</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon he commanded that the maiden should be
-brought from her tent and given to the heralds, who led
-her, much against her will, to the haughty Agamemnon.
-Then Achilles called upon his mother Thetis, who was a
-goddess of the sea, to avenge his wrongs. Thetis rose
-like a mist from the waves, and coming to Achilles, who
-sat upon the seashore, she comforted him and asked his
-trouble. Whereupon Achilles told her the cause of his
-anger, and besought her to go to the great Zeus, whom
-Thetis had once aided, when the other gods would have
-bound great Jove, by bringing Briareus of the hundred
-hands, who so fought for the mighty Jupiter, that the
-other gods dared no longer defy his power. And owing
-this kindness to the goddess Thetis, her son thought
-rightly that the great Jove would listen to her petitions
-on his behalf. So Achilles asked his mother to go to
-Olympus, and pray Zeus that he would help the sons of
-Troy and give them victory over the Greeks, whose sovereign
-king had thus dishonored the bravest of all his host.</p>
-
-<p>This, Thetis did, going to the palace of Jupiter on the
-top of Olympus, and making her prayer in her son’s behalf.
-Zeus was loath to grant it, for he knew that it
-would anger his wife Heré, who loved the Greeks and
-hated the Trojans. Yet on account of the past favor of
-Thetis, he would not refuse, and in giving assent, nodded
-his awful head, thus causing Olympus to shake and tremble.
-So Zeus called one of his swift-winged messengers,
-called a Dream, and said,—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Fly hence, swift Dream, and to the tent of Agamemnon
-go! Bid him lead all the Grecians forth to battle
-against Troy. Persuade him that the gods intend to give
-him victory.”</p>
-
-<p>So this false Dream, flying to Agamemnon’s side, took
-to itself the shape of wise old Nestor, whom the king
-honored more than all beside, and thus the false Nestor
-counselled,—</p>
-
-<p>“Sleepest thou, Agamemnon? Arise! for now Zeus
-declares that the immortal gods are favorable to thy
-plans, and through thy mighty hosts will send the doom
-of destruction upon the city of Troy; and thou shalt reap
-the eternal glory.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Agamemnon awoke from sleep and, little thinking
-how he had been duped by this false Dream, quickly
-donned his tunic, fastened his sandals on his feet, and
-hung from his shoulders his mighty silver-studded sword.
-Wrapping his great cloak around him, he took in his right
-hand his royal sceptre, token of his sovereignty over all
-the Greeks. Thus attired, in martial grandeur, he went
-forth and roused his chiefs, and then the heralds called
-the hosts to battle. Only Achilles sat apart within his
-tent and went not forth to battle with the Greeks.</p>
-
-<p>Now, as the two forces were about to fight, Paris, the
-Trojan prince, rushed forth and challenged the bravest of
-the Greeks to fight with him. Then Menelaüs, whom he
-had so greatly wronged, leapt from his chariot and rushed
-to meet his treacherous foe. But Paris was more beautiful
-in form and feature than brave in heart, and seeing
-the man whom he had so cruelly wronged, he was afraid
-to fight, and cowardlike ran back into the Trojan ranks.
-Then his brother, brave Hector, thus rebuked his cowardice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-036.jpg" width="600" height="417" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">HECTOR CHIDING PARIS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Fair art thou, Paris, beauteous indeed, but ill thy soul
-supplies a form so fair! Thou makest us the scorn of
-the proud Greeks, by thy unmanly fear. Little will it
-avail thee that thou art in form so stately, when thy soft
-curling locks and shapely limbs are lying in the dust.
-Thy silver lyre, nor all thy blandishments, will naught
-avert thy doom, for thou hast been the curse of Troy and
-ruin of thy race.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Paris, stricken with just shame, replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“Thou speakest well, Hector, and thy rebuke is just.
-Thy heart is like iron; yet are beauty and love also the
-gift of the gods, and not to be despised. Now let Menelaüs
-and me fight for the fair Helen and all her possessions,
-and if he prevail, let him take her, and them, and
-depart to Greece. But if I prevail, then shall the Greeks
-depart in peace without her.”</p>
-
-<p>This saying, which at last betokened some spirit, pleased
-Hector well; and going before the Trojan ranks, holding
-his spear by the middle, he kept them back. The Greeks
-would have hurled spears upon him, but Agamemnon
-cried out,—</p>
-
-<p>“Hold! Hector has somewhat to say to us.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Hector announced that Paris would fight with
-Menelaüs for the fair Helen and all her wealth. To
-which Menelaüs readily agreed, but demanded that King
-Priam should himself come and, with King Agamemnon,
-make a covenant with sacrifice, that the fair Helen and
-all her wealth should go to the one who should prevail.</p>
-
-<p>When the heralds went to bring the old King Priam,
-he was found on the wall with the beautiful Helen near
-him, to whom he was talking and asking the names of
-brave Grecian heroes whom he beheld among the hostile
-host. And in this wise he spake to fair Helen,—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Come near, my daughter, tell me about these old
-friends of thine. Who is that warrior, that I see, so fair
-and strong? There are others taller than he, but none
-of such majesty.”</p>
-
-<p>And Helen answered,—</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, my father, would that I had died before I left
-the fair land of Greece! That one is King Agamemnon,
-a good and brave soldier, and my brother-in-law, in the
-old days. And that one is Ulysses of Ithaca, who is
-better in craft and counsel than all other men.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Priam said,—</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that stalwart hero overtopping all others?”</p>
-
-<p>“That,” said Helen, “is mighty Ajax, the bulwark
-of the Greeks; and as for the other chiefs, I could name
-them all. But I see not my two brothers, Castor and
-Pollux;” for she wot not that they were already dead.</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon came the heralds and told King Priam that
-the armies had called for him. After the covenant between
-the Trojan and Grecian kings, Priam and Agamemnon,
-Hector and Ulysses marked out a space for the fight,
-and Hector shook two pebbles in a helmet, to decide
-which one should be the first to throw the spear, Paris or
-Menelaüs.</p>
-
-<p>The lot fell upon Paris, and the two warriors having
-armed themselves, came forth into the space and brandished
-their spears with wrathful eyes. Then Paris
-threw his spear. It struck the shield of Menelaüs, but
-pierced it not; and thereupon Menelaüs, with a prayer
-to Jupiter, cast his long-shafted spear. It struck the
-shield of Paris, pierced it through, and passing through
-both corselet and tunic, would have bruised the side of
-Paris, but he shrank aside, and so was wounded not.
-Then Menelaüs drew his sword and struck a mighty blow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-upon the top of Paris’ helmet; but the sword brake in
-four pieces in his hand. Then he rushed forward and
-seized Paris by the helmet, and fain would have dragged
-him to the Grecian host, but the goddess Aphrodité
-loosed the strap that was beneath the chin, and the helmet
-came off in the hand of Menelaüs, and the goddess
-snatched Paris away, covering him with a mist, and put
-him safely in his own palace in Troy.</p>
-
-<p>Then King Agamemnon said,—</p>
-
-<p>“Now, ye sons of Troy, give back the fair Helen and
-her wealth!”</p>
-
-<p>But just at this time the goddess Athené took upon
-herself the shape of Laodocus, and going to Pandarus,
-the false Laodocus, said,—</p>
-
-<p>“Darest thou aim an arrow at Menelaüs?”</p>
-
-<p>Now Pandarus had a marvellous bow made from the
-horns of a wild goat and tipped with beaten gold, and
-Pandarus strung his bow, his comrades, meanwhile,
-hiding him behind their shields. Then took he a sharp-pointed
-arrow from his quiver and laid it on the bow-string
-and let it fly. Right well the aim was made; but
-the gods decreed that the dart should not be fatal. For
-though it passed through belt and corselet and strong
-girdle, and pierced the skin so that the red blood rushed
-out, which sight filled Menelaüs and King Agamemnon
-with sore dismay, Menelaüs soon perceived the barb of
-the arrow, and so knew that the wound was not fatal;
-and when it was drawn forth by the physician Machaon,
-and the blood was staunched with healing drugs, King
-Agamemnon rejoiced that he should not thus lose his
-brave brother Menelaüs.</p>
-
-<p>Then the mighty hosts of Greeks and Trojans went
-forward to the battle, and on either side the gods urged<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-them on, Athené aiding the Greeks, and Ares—called also
-Mars—strengthening the Trojan warriors. Many were
-the valiant exploits that day performed; but we can mention
-but a few of them. So close pressed host on host,
-that the armies dashed together, shield on shield and
-spear on spear. Ajax Telamon slew Simoisius, and
-Antiphon, son of King Priam, aimed at Ajax, but missing
-him, slew Leucus, the friend of the valiant Ulysses.</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon, Ulysses, in great anger, to avenge his
-death, strode boldly midst the Trojan ranks and hurled
-his spear at Democoön, a son of Priam, whom he slew.
-At length the Trojan hosts were borne backward by the
-mighty onslaught of the Greeks, till Apollo cried from
-the heights of Pergamos,—</p>
-
-<p>“On, Trojans! The flesh of these Greeks is not stone
-or iron, that ye cannot pierce it; and remember that the
-great Achilles fights not with them to-day!”</p>
-
-<p>Athené also urged the Greeks to valiant deeds. This
-goddess aroused Diomed to battle, making a wondrous
-fire shine forth from his helmet, which made him seem a
-god, and he raged through the battle so furiously, that he
-was now seen amongst the Grecian ranks, now boldly invading
-the Trojan forces, and striking down his foes
-with mighty arm. Then Pandarus aimed an arrow at
-him and smote him on the shoulder. But the brave
-Diomed cared not for the arrow, and leaping from his
-chariot he called to Sthenelus, his charioteer, to draw the
-arrow from the wound; and praying to Athené for aid,
-he rushed madly into the Trojan ranks, slaying a man at
-every blow.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Æneas, driving his swift chariot, said to
-Pandarus,—</p>
-
-<p>“Climb up into my chariot, and thou shalt fight, and I
-will drive.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So Pandarus mounted the chariot, and the two drove
-towards Diomed, and as they came near, Pandarus cast
-his spear, which passed through the shield of Diomed and
-reached his corselet; whereupon Pandarus cried,—</p>
-
-<p>“Ha, now he bleeds! Low will this haughty Grecian
-lie!”</p>
-
-<p>But Diomed replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“Thy dart has erred! Now I will try my spear.”</p>
-
-<p>And straightway he hurled his keen lance toward his
-boasting foe. Through nose and jaw it crashed, and cleft
-the tongue in two; and the bright point came forth beneath
-the chin.</p>
-
-<p>Pandarus fell from the chariot mortally wounded, and
-Æneas leapt to the ground with drawn spear to defend
-the dead body of his friend. But Diomed raised a huge
-stone and hurled it at Æneas, and crushed his hip-bone,
-felling him to the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Then had brave Æneas perished, but his goddess
-mother, Aphrodité, caught him in her white arms and
-threw her veil about him. But so great was the rage of
-Diomed, that he spared not even the goddess, but rushing
-upon her, he wounded her in the wrist, and with a shriek
-of pain she dropped her son; but Apollo caught him up
-and covered him with a thick mist. Thrice Diomed pursued,
-and thrice Apollo drove him back. But as the rash
-Diomed advanced a fourth time, the god exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<p>“O son of Tydeus, beware! Nor think to match the
-immortal gods!”</p>
-
-<p>So Apollo carried Æneas out of the battle and placed
-him in safety in Troy. Meanwhile, fair Venus, pale from
-the wound which mortal man had dared inflict, was conducted
-by swift-winged Iris to the stern god Mars, her
-brother; and Venus begged his car to mount the distant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-skies, where in the fair realms of the gods her wounded
-hand was healed by sacred balm. Then Mars went down
-upon the field of battle to aid the Trojans, and Hector
-rushed to the front with the god Mars by his side; and he
-dealt death and destruction through the Grecian ranks.
-Juno and Minerva saw him from Mount Olympus, and
-they prayed Jupiter to allow them to stop him in his fury.
-The mighty Zeus consented, and the two goddesses yoked
-horses to the chariot of Juno and passed down to earth
-with flying strides. Having reached the battle-field, Juno
-took the shape of Stentor with the lungs of brass, whose
-voice was as the voices of fifty men, and thus she cried,—</p>
-
-<p>“Shame, men of Greece! When Achilles fought, the
-Trojans dare not leave the city; but now they fight even
-by the very ships.” Then Minerva chided Diomed for
-want of bravery, to whom he replied: “I know thee,
-great goddess, daughter of Jupiter! and ’tis thy commands
-I obey. Thou didst bid me fight with none of the
-immortals save only with Aphrodité; and therefore I
-gave place to Hector, for I perceived that he was aided
-by great Mars.”</p>
-
-<p>But Athené answered: “Heed not Ares! drive thy
-chariot at him and hurl thy spear. This morning did
-stern Mars promise to aid the Greeks, and now he joins
-with our Trojan foes.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, the goddess pushed the charioteer of Diomed
-from his place, and herself mounted and seized the reins
-and lashed the horses furiously. With swift speed they
-drove together till they found the god Mars, or Ares,
-where he had just slain Periphas the Ætolian. Minerva
-was even invisible to the god, for she had donned the helmet
-of Hades; and so Ares, not seeing her, cast his spear
-at Diomed; but the goddess caught the spear and turned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-it aside. Then Diomed thrust forth his spear, and Minerva
-leaned upon it, so that it even pierced the side of the god
-Mars, who shouted so loudly with the pain that the Greeks
-and Trojans trembled with fear; while the god of war,
-wounded by the fair goddess Athené, covered himself
-with a thunder-cloud, and in much rage ascended to
-Olympus.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-044.jpg" width="600" height="291" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">DIOMED CASTING HIS SPEAR AGAINST MARS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When Ares had departed, the Greeks prevailed again;
-but the seer Helenus said to Hector and Æneas: “Draw
-back the Trojan army and encourage them; and you,
-Hector, go within the city and bid thy mother queen,
-with the daughters of Troy, take the costliest robe she
-hath, and go to the temple of Athené and offer it to the
-goddess with prayers and sacrifice, that perchance she
-may relent and have pity on us and keep this terrible
-Diomed from our walls.”</p>
-
-<p>This counsel prevailed, and Hector departed to the city,
-whence he dispatched his queen mother to Athené’s temple,
-and exhorted his brother Paris to arm himself and
-come forth to battle. Hector then took a fond farewell
-of his much-loved wife Andromaché and his only child,
-called beautiful-headed as a star, and departed with Paris,
-who came forth clad in shining armor; and they fell upon
-the hosts of the Greeks and slew many chiefs of fame.</p>
-
-<p>Again came Athené to help the Greeks; and meeting
-the god Apollo, they agreed to stay the battle for that
-day; and to this end inspired Hector and King Agamemnon
-to agree that Hector should fight alone with the bravest
-of the Greeks, while both armies should rest from
-battle.</p>
-
-<p>Then Menelaüs desired to meet brave Hector in single
-combat. But King Agamemnon would not consent to
-this, fearing his brother would perish. Whereupon it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-resolved to decide the matter by lot, which fell upon Ajax
-the Greater, who, having armed himself, stepped forth to
-battle with the mighty Hector. First Hector hurled
-his spear, which passed through six folds of Ajax’s
-shield. Then Ajax threw his lance, striking proud Hector’s
-shield. Through shield, corselet, and tunic it passed,
-but Hector shrank from the sharp point, and the flesh was
-not pierced. Then again they rushed together with wild
-fury. And Ajax drove his spear at Hector’s shield and
-grazed his neck, so that the blood leaped forth. Then
-Hector hurled a mighty stone at Ajax; but his shield
-broke not. Whereupon Ajax raised a mightier stone and
-threw it with such aim that it broke the shield of Hector
-and felled him backwards to the ground. But Apollo
-raised him up, and as they drew their swords for deadlier
-conflict, the heralds held their sceptres between them and
-bid them cease. So Hector and Ajax, both mighty warriors
-and brave of heart, agreed to part as friends; in
-token whereof, Hector gave to Ajax a silver-studded
-sword, and Ajax to Hector a buckler splendid with purple.
-So they parted, and the conflict was stayed that
-night. In the morning came Trojan heralds to King Agamemnon’s
-host, saying: “This is the word of Priam and
-the sons of Troy. Paris will give back all the treasures
-of the fair Helen and much more besides, but the fair
-Helen herself will he not give up. But grant a truce that
-we may bury our dead.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-047.jpg" width="600" height="311" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">AJAX DEFENDING THE GREEK SHIPS AGAINST THE TROJANS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>So the truce was given, and the dead of both armies
-were burnt. Then the Greeks and Trojans both feasted
-through the night. But all through the hours of darkness
-the terrible thunder rolled on Mount Olympus; for mighty
-Zeus was counselling evil against the hapless Trojans.</p>
-
-<p>When the morning came, the two hosts again went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-forth to battle with each other. Till midday neither side
-prevailed; but then great Jupiter sent fear and panic
-amidst the Grecian forces, and they fled to their ships in
-terror.</p>
-
-<p>As the Greeks were flying in wild confusion, brave
-Hector driving in his chariot pursued them; and called to
-his horses, “Now Xanthus, Æthon, Lampus, and Podargus,
-speed ye well! Ye Flame of Fire, White Foot, and
-Brilliant, named! carry me fast, and well repay the tender
-care of my sweet wife Andromaché, who often from
-her fair white hands has fed thee! For I would win old
-Nestor’s marvellous shield of purest gold, and strip from
-off proud Diomed his boasted breastplate, wrought by
-the mighty Vulcan.”</p>
-
-<p>But Jupiter willed not that this should be; for King
-Agamemnon prayed aloud to Zeus for succor, and Jupiter
-heard his prayer, in token whereof he sent a sign, namely:
-an eagle flew above the Grecian hosts and dropped a kid
-out of his claws. Then did the Greeks take courage and
-renewed the fight with vigor. But the darkness came, and
-each host rested on their arms.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, King Agamemnon called a council of war,
-and fain would have returned to Greece and leave this
-invincible city of Troy. But brave King Diomed would
-not receive such craven counsel, and angrily exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<p>“Even though all the men of Greece depart, yet will I
-and Sthenelus abide the doom of Troy, for surely the
-gods have brought us hither.”</p>
-
-<p>To these brave words the Grecian chiefs agreed; and
-wise Nestor counselled that King Agamemnon should
-send to brave Achilles and seek to make peace with him
-that they might have the strong help of his mighty arm.
-To which King Agamemnon consented, and sent messengers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-to the tent of Achilles to seek his favor, promising
-him seven kettles of brass, ten talents of gold, twenty
-caldrons, twelve fleet horses, seven women slaves skilled
-in the work of the loom, and, more than all, the return of
-the maid Briseïs, the cause of all their quarrel; and when
-Troy should be taken, much spoil besides. And even
-more; for when they should return to Greece, King Agamemnon
-promised him one of his own daughters for his
-wife, and seven cities by the sea. But all this moved not
-the wrathful soul of stern Achilles, and he would not be
-appeased; nor would he come to help the Greeks against
-the Trojans, but still sat silent in his tent. Then it was
-decided that Diomed and Ulysses should go that night
-disguised into the Trojan camp, to spy out, if possible,
-their strength and plans. This same strategy had Hector
-also planned, and had already sent one Dolon, swift of
-foot, towards the Grecian host. But as he ran he met
-Diomed and Ulysses, who seized him, and under threatenings
-forced him to reveal the Trojan secrets. Then
-did they slay Dolon, and forthwith proceeded to where
-some men of Thrace, allies of the Trojans, lay sleeping.
-These Thracians possessed most matchless steeds—horses
-so fair and tall, whiter than snow and fleeter than
-the winds. Diomed and Ulysses would fain secure these
-as a rich prize, and so they slew the sleeping Thracians
-and led the captured horses back to the Grecian hosts,
-and arrived in safety at the ships. The next day the
-battle waged hot again. Ulysses was wounded, and Paris
-shot an arrow and pierced the brave physician Machaon.
-Meanwhile, Achilles was standing on his ship and looking
-upon the conflict. When he beheld Nestor bearing the
-wounded Machaon to the ships, he called to his friend
-Patroclus and bid him see if Machaon’s wound was fatal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Most fierce the battle raged. On the left, the Grecians
-prevailed, but on the right brave Hector and his host
-fought even to the very ships, dealing most deadly blows.
-So great were the shouts of battle that old Nestor, who
-was tending the wounded Machaon, was roused; and
-going forth he met King Agamemnon, and with him Diomed
-and Ulysses, who had been wounded that day. Then
-they counselled together. Again Agamemnon advised
-flight; but the others thought it not good to flee thus, and
-they counselled King Agamemnon that he should go to
-the Grecian ranks, bidding them bear themselves bravely
-and put courage into their hearts. This did he do, and
-roused their waning strength to fresh exploits. Then
-Ajax smote brave Hector with a mighty stone, which
-felled him to the ground; and the Greeks, with a great
-cry, rushed forth to bear him to their ranks; but the
-Trojans held their shields before him, and his friends
-lifted him up and carried him to a place of safety. But
-he was sorely bruised. Then Apollo, at Jupiter’s bidding,
-poured courage into his heart and healed him of his
-wound, so that he rushed once more upon the field of
-battle, strong and well and valiant as ever. Then were
-the Greeks struck with dire dismay. Then did Patroclus
-lament to Achilles on account of the ill fortune of the
-Greeks, and besought the mighty warrior, if he would not
-fight himself in their behalf, to let him go accompanied
-by the valiant Myrmidons, whom Achilles always led to
-battle. At which the heart of Achilles was moved; and
-he said,—</p>
-
-<p>“I will not go to battle until it reaches my own ships,
-but thou mayest put my armor upon thee and lead my
-Myrmidons to the fight.”</p>
-
-<p>So this was done; and when the Trojans beheld these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-famous Myrmidons led by one who wore the armor of
-the mighty Achilles, their hearts were faint with fear, for
-they supposed great Achilles himself had come against
-them. Thrice did Patroclus rush against the men of Troy,
-and each time slew nine chiefs of fame; but the fourth
-time Apollo stood behind him and struck him, and his
-eyes were darkened, and the helmet fell off his head, so
-that the waving plumes were soiled with dust. Never
-before had this proud helmet of Achilles touched the
-ground. Then Apollo broke his spear, and struck the
-shield from his arms, and loosed his corselet. Then all-amazed,
-poor Patroclus stood defenceless; so Hector
-struck him dead, and seized the matchless armor of the
-mighty Achilles.</p>
-
-<p>Fierce was the fight about the body of Patroclus, and
-many chiefs fell dead striving to obtain the prize. Then
-fled Antilochus to bear the ill tidings to the great Achilles,
-who, upon hearing of this dire defeat, poured dust upon
-his head, and called upon his goddess-mother to come to
-his aid.</p>
-
-<p>“Why weepest thou, my son?” said the sea-goddess
-Thetis, rising from the waves.</p>
-
-<p>“My friend Patroclus is dead, and Hector has my
-arms I gave him to wear, and, as for me, I care not to
-live unless I can avenge myself.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus Thetis said,—</p>
-
-<p>“Be comforted, my son; to-morrow I will go to
-mighty Vulcan; he shall forge new arms for thee.”</p>
-
-<p>Even as they spoke together, so sore the Trojans
-pressed the Greeks, that Jupiter sent Iris to Achilles, and
-bade him show himself to the Greeks that they might be
-filled with courage.</p>
-
-<p>“How can I go without arms?” replied Achilles.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the gods gave him courage, and he went, and
-Athené put her matchless shield upon his shoulders, and
-wrapped a golden halo round his head, so that he seemed
-clothed in godlike armor; and he shouted to the Trojans
-with a mighty voice, which so filled them with fear that
-they fell back, and the horses of the Trojan chariots were
-so terrified at the flaming fire above his head that they
-thrice fell back, and trampled on the Trojans, as thrice
-the awful voice of Achilles was heard and his shining
-form revealed. Thus was the body of Patroclus then secured,
-and carried on a bier, Achilles walking, weeping
-by his side.</p>
-
-<p>That night the conflict rested. Meanwhile, Thetis the
-goddess went to the dread Vulcan, and prayed him make
-new armor for her son Achilles. To this did stern Hephæstus
-consent, saying, “Be of good cheer! I will obey
-thy wish; for kind thou wast to me when my mother
-thrust me forth from heaven because she saw I was
-deformed and lame. I will make such arms for Achilles
-as the gods themselves might proudly wear.”</p>
-
-<p>So great Vulcan wrought at his mighty forge. First he
-made a ponderous shield, and wrought upon it the earth,
-and sky, and sea, and sun, and moon, and stars. He
-pictured upon it, also, two cities; one at peace, and one
-in dire confusion where war raged. In the peaceful city,
-they led a bride to her home with music and dancing, and
-women stood to see the show, and in the market-place
-judges sat, and men bartered. But around the other city,
-an army was besieging, and soldiers stood upon the walls,
-defending. Also, he wrought fields where men ploughed,
-and others reaped, and vineyards where youths and
-maidens gathered baskets of grapes while minstrels
-played on harps of gold. Also, he wrought herds of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-oxen going to the pasture, and sheepfolds, and a dance
-of youths and maidens who wore coronets of gold and
-belts of silver. Then, too, he pictured a fierce fight between
-lions and angry bulls. Around the shield he
-wrought the mighty ocean. He made also a corselet,
-brighter than fire, and a helmet of gold. At dawn the
-goddess Thetis brought to her son this marvellous armor,
-which when Achilles saw, his eyes flashed wild with joy;
-and seizing them, he put them on most eagerly, and
-rushed forth to rouse the Greeks to battle. Then an
-assembly was called, and Achilles stood up in the midst,
-saying, he had put away his wrath, and King Agamemnon,
-who had been wounded in the battle, declared that
-he had been wrong, and straightway commanded to be
-sent to the tent of Achilles all that he had promised him,
-including the maid Briseïs, which was done. The Greeks
-gathered again to battle. Then did the fight wage sore
-against the Trojans, who fled within the city gates; only
-brave Hector remained outside to meet the mighty Achilles,
-who rushed towards him to engage in single combat.
-Then did King Priam and Queen Hecuba beseech their
-much-loved son that he would come within the city walls,
-and not risk his life by thus meeting this dread foe; but
-Hector answered,—</p>
-
-<p>“Woe is me if I go within the walls!”</p>
-
-<p>But as Achilles came near, brandishing his great Pelian
-spear, while the flash of his arms was as a flame of fire,
-Hector trembled, and dared not abide to meet him, but
-fled around the walls, Achilles pursuing. Thrice they ran
-round the city, while the immortal gods looked down upon
-them from dread Olympus, and Jupiter said: “My heart
-is grieved for Hector. Come, ye gods! shall we save
-him?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But Minerva—she who was called the goddess of wisdom,
-for she sprang forth from the mighty head of Jove
-completely armed—thus counselled,—</p>
-
-<p>“Great Sire, is it well to rescue a man already
-doomed to die? If it be thy august will, then do it; but
-the other gods approve not.”</p>
-
-<p>To whom Zeus answered,—</p>
-
-<p>“My heart is loath, but be it as thou wilt.”</p>
-
-<p>Then did the goddess descend down from high Olympus
-in hot haste, and Athené lighted from the air at
-Achilles’ side, and whispered: “This is our day of glory,
-great Achilles! Hector shall be slain; but tarry a moment,
-that I may give him heart to meet thee in battle;
-so shalt thou slay him.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Minerva took the form of Deïphobus, and came
-near to Hector, saying, “Achilles presseth thee hard, my
-brother; let us stay and fight him.”</p>
-
-<p>Then was brave Hector glad to find one of his brothers
-faithful to him, and answered,—</p>
-
-<p>“I always loved thee best of all my brothers, good
-Deïphobus, and much more now to know thou darest to
-stand by my side in this hour of deadly peril.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus was Hector encouraged to meet Achilles, and
-Hector said to him: “Thrice, great Achilles, hast thou
-pursued me round the walls of Troy, and I dared not
-withstand thee; but now I will meet thee like a warrior.
-If Jupiter gives me the victory, I will do no dishonor to
-thy body; only thine armor will I take. Do thou the
-same to me.”</p>
-
-<p>But Achilles frowned, and answered,—</p>
-
-<p>“I make no covenants with thee. There is no agreement
-between wolves and sheep. Show thyself a warrior
-if thou canst. Athené shall kill thee by my spear.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-057.jpg" width="600" height="271" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">HECTOR’S BODY DRAGGED AT THE CAR OF ACHILLES.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then did they meet in deadliest conflict. Achilles
-threw his mighty spear; but Hector, crouching, avoided
-it, and the great spear fixed itself in the ground beyond.
-But, unseen by Hector, Athené brought it back to proud
-Achilles. Whereupon, Hector cried, “Thou hast missed
-thy aim, great Achilles. Look out for my spear!”</p>
-
-<p>And as he spake, he threw his long-shafted spear with
-so good an aim, that it struck the very middle of Achilles’
-shield; but it pierced it not, and it bounded far away.
-And when Hector turned to his supposed brother, Deïphobus,
-to get from him another spear, lo! he was gone;
-and Hector knew then that his doom had come. Then
-thought he to himself: “Though Athené has cheated me,
-and Jupiter and Apollo are against me, if I must die, I
-will die in such manner as shall do honor to my name.”
-Then he drew his mighty sword, and rushed upon Achilles.
-But at that same instant Achilles charged to meet
-him, and holding his shining shield before him, with his
-helmet plumes waving in the air, he raised his long-pointed
-spear, which gleamed like a star, and drove it
-through the neck of the brave Hector, so that the point
-stood out behind; and Hector fell dying in the dust.
-Then with his last breath, he besought Achilles to spare
-his body from the Greeks; for King Priam would ransom
-it with much gold and treasure, to give it burial rites.
-But Achilles, moved with fierce wrath, cried,—</p>
-
-<p>“Dog, seek not to entreat me! No gold could ransom
-thee.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Hector died, and Achilles drew out the spear
-from the corpse, and stripped off the arms. Then great
-Achilles did a shocking deed; for he bound the body of
-the dead Hector to his chariot, letting the brave and noble
-head lie in the dust; and so he dragged the corpse of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-valiant Trojan round the walls of Troy, even to the
-Grecian ships. And sorrowing Priam saw him from the
-walls; and fair Andromaché, the wife of Hector, also
-beheld this dreadful spectacle, and thereupon fell in a
-deadly swoon; and from her beautiful head dropped the
-golden wreath and diadem, which Aphrodité gave her on
-her bridal day.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-061.jpg" width="600" height="299" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">THE FUNERAL OF HECTOR.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then did old King Priam gather rich gifts, and aided
-by the gods, mount his swift chariot and go to the tent of
-great Achilles, to beg the body of his much loved son,
-brave Hector, praying to Jupiter that Achilles might have
-pity on him. This did Jove grant; for Achilles received
-him kindly, and gave up the body of dead Hector, which
-King Priam carried back into the city of Troy. For nine
-days the people wailed and mourned, and gathered much
-wood for a funeral pile, upon which they laid brave
-Hector; and when his body was burnt to ashes, they
-gathered up the white bones and put them in a chest of
-gold, and covered it with purple. This chest they placed
-in a coffin and laid upon it many stones, even until they
-had raised a mighty mound above it. Thus did they
-bury the valiant Hector, bravest of Trojan princes.</p>
-
-<p>Such is a brief outline of the story of the famous Trojan
-War, as told by the illustrious Homer in his matchless
-poem of the “Iliad.” Now we return to the few further
-facts regarding King Agamemnon which can be culled
-from history.</p>
-
-<p>There are two different accounts of the final overthrow
-and capture of Troy. According to one of these, Antenor
-and Æneas treacherously betrayed the Palladium to the
-Greeks, and at the same time threw open the gates of the
-city at night. The other account relates that the capture
-was effected by the stratagem of the wooden horse, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-was planned by the cunning of Ulysses. A huge, hollow
-structure resembling a horse, was filled with armed men,
-and left standing in the plain, while the Greeks went on
-board their ships and sailed to the island of Tenedos,
-which lay not far distant. By an artful manœuvre, the
-Trojans were made to believe that this horse was an
-offering to Minerva, and that they would achieve a great
-triumph by carrying it into the city. Accordingly they
-made a breach in the wall, and transported the horse
-within. In the dead of night the Greeks broke out of
-their concealment, and set the city on fire. The fleet, on
-a signal given, sailed back from Tenedos; the army
-landed. Troy was taken and destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>This event is usually placed about 1184 <small>B.C.</small> In the
-division of the spoils, after the taking of Troy, Cassandra,
-one of the daughters of King Priam, fell to the
-lot of Agamemnon. She was endued with the gift of
-prophecy, and warned Agamemnon not to return to
-Mycenæ. This warning, however, was disregarded by
-the king, who, upon his return from Troy, was carried by
-a storm to that part of the coast of Argolis where Ægisthus,
-the son of Thyestes, resided. This king, Ægisthus,
-had entered into a wicked agreement with Clytemnestra,
-wife of Agamemnon, to put that monarch to death upon
-his return from Troy, so that Ægisthus could seize the
-throne of Mycenæ, and marry Queen Clytemnestra.
-There are two accounts of the death of Agamemnon.
-One states that Ægisthus had set a watchman, with a
-promise of a large reward, to give him the earliest tidings
-of the return of the king. As soon as he learned that
-Agamemnon’s fleet was on the coast, he went out to welcome
-him, and invited him to his mansion. At the banquet
-in the evening, with the consent of Clytemnestra, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-placed twenty armed men in concealment, who fell on
-King Agamemnon and killed him, together with Cassandra
-and all their attendants. Another account makes Agamemnon
-to have fallen by the hands of his wife Clytemnestra,
-after he had just come forth from a bath, and
-while he was endeavoring to put on a garment, the sleeves
-of which she had previously sewed together, as well as the
-opening for his head; thus giving her time to commit the
-bloody deed before any succor could reach him. His
-death, however, was avenged by his son Orestes.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the extent of Agamemnon’s sway,
-Homer states that he ruled over many islands, and over
-all Argos; meaning not the city Argos, over which
-Diomed ruled, but a large portion of the Peloponnesus,
-including particularly the cities of Mycenæ and Tiryns.
-Homer also says that Agamemnon possessed the most
-powerful fleet; and as he was chosen the sovereign of all
-the Grecian kings, and commander-in-chief of all the
-Grecian hosts during the Trojan War, he may doubtless
-be called the greatest and most famous of all the more
-ancient Grecian rulers.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CYRUS THE GREAT.<br />
-
-<small>599-529 B.C.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“Death makes no conquest of this conqueror;</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">For now he lives in fame, though not in life.”</span></div>
-<div class="sig"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN a lonely and desolate country, in the depths of a
-dark forest, at the edge of a yawning precipice, there
-once lay an infant, robed in costly garments, which betokened
-noble or royal birth. The baby lay in a small
-basket cradle, made of golden wires and lined with richly
-embroidered cushions. It seemed to be slumbering, for
-it moved not, even when the afternoon shadows gathered
-more densely around it; and a rapacious bird of prey
-might have been seen hovering above its dangerous retreat,
-and the noise of wild beasts was heard in the dark
-forests around. Was there no one near to protect and
-care for this lovely child? Ah, see! as that vulture swoops
-down towards its helpless victim, a lonely watcher rushes
-forth from the forest, and drawing his bow, an arrow flies
-into the heart of the bird, which falls dead into the awful
-chasm below. But why does not the babe awake? and
-why is it left in this desolate spot? Just then a lion steals
-out of the brushwood, and after a stealthy glance at the
-tempting prey so near his reach, he prepares to spring.
-But again the watcher leaps forth from the shadow, and
-hurls a sharp javelin with so true an aim that the lordly
-beast is mortally wounded, and retreats to the forest,
-roaring with pain. And still the infant sleeps on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Just outside of the dreary forest is a poor herdsman’s
-hut. Here, too, might have been found an infant; but it
-is crowing and smiling as it raises its chubby fists to its
-mouth and tries to catch the sunshine, which streams in
-through the open door, and falls upon the wall over its
-head. This baby is clothed in the coarse garments of a
-peasant’s child. And yet the infant in the costly robes,
-in the wild forest, is really the dead child of a poor herdsman;
-and this crowing, laughing baby, dressed in peasant
-clothes, and lying in the lowly hut, is none other than
-the future Cyrus the Great, upon whom hang the destinies
-of a vast empire. The remarkable story regarding the
-birth and early boyhood of Cyrus the Great is recounted
-by Herodotus, one of the greatest and earliest of Grecian
-historians. Herodotus and Xenophon—a noted Grecian
-general, as well as historian—are the chief sources of
-information regarding most of the important historical
-events of that period of the world. Some parts of their
-accounts are thought to be historical romances, founded
-on facts; but as they have become a part of the history
-of those times, I shall gather the story of Cyrus from the
-events related by both these writers.</p>
-
-<p>About 599 <small>B.C.</small> there were three kingdoms in the centre
-of Asia: Assyria, Media, and Persia. Astyages was king
-of Media. One night Astyages awoke from a terrible
-dream: he had dreamed that a fearful inundation had
-overwhelmed his kingdom. As the deluge seemed in some
-mysterious manner to be connected in his mind with his
-only daughter, Mandane, he imagined that it portended
-that evil should come to his throne through her children.
-And so he arranged that she should marry Cambyses, ruling
-prince of Persia. In this manner he hoped to remove
-her so far distant, and place her in so weak a kingdom,
-that he need have no fears.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A year after his daughter’s marriage to the king of
-Persia, Astyages had another dream,—of a great vine
-which overspread his kingdom. This vine also appeared
-to be associated in his mind with his daughter. So he
-called the soothsayers, who declared that it portended the
-future power of his daughter’s son, who should become a
-king.</p>
-
-<p>Astyages was now so alarmed that he determined to
-destroy the child. So, with seeming kindness, he invited
-his daughter Mandane to make him a visit. He placed
-her in a palace and surrounded her with his own spies and
-servants. As soon as the infant son was born, Astyages
-sent for an officer of his court, named Harpagus, whom he
-thought was unscrupulous enough to obey his evil commands.
-Astyages ordered Harpagus to go and request
-the attendants of Mandane to allow him to see the infant;
-and then, under pretence that his grandfather Astyages
-desired that the infant should be brought to him, Harpagus
-should take the child away, and in some manner cause
-it to be put to death.</p>
-
-<p>Harpagus did not dare to refuse, and accordingly went
-to the palace in which Mandane was residing. Her attendants,
-not suspecting his evil designs, arrayed the infant
-in its most beautiful robes, and delivered it into his care.
-Harpagus took the child home and consulted with his wife
-what he should do. He did not dare to disobey the king,
-and also, as Mandane was the daughter of the king, he
-feared to carry out the terrible deed himself.</p>
-
-<p>In his perplexity he sent for one of his herdsmen, named
-Mitridates, living near wild and desolate forests. When
-Mitridates arrived, Harpagus gave the infant to him, commanding
-him to expose it in the forests for three days,
-and when the child was dead, to send him word.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The herdsman dared not refuse this wicked mission, and
-took the child home to his hut. His wife Spaco had at
-that time just lost an infant of the same age, and its dead
-body was still unburied. When she saw the beautiful babe
-of Mandane, she implored her husband to let her keep it
-in place of her dead child, who was accordingly arrayed in
-the costly robes of the young prince, while the royal baby
-was dressed in the coarse garments of the little dead peasant.
-The body of the dead infant was then placed in the
-royal cradle, or basket, in which the little prince had been
-carried from the palace; and after being exposed in the
-forest for three days, attended by watchers to keep away
-the wild beasts, the herdsman sent word to Harpagus that
-the infant was dead. Harpagus sent trusty messengers to
-see if the report was true; and when they saw the dead
-infant in the royal robes, they returned with the assurance
-that his orders had been complied with, and that they had
-seen the dead child. Harpagus gave orders to have the
-body buried, and sent word to King Astyages that the
-infant was dead.</p>
-
-<p>The truth about the young Cyrus was not discovered
-until ten years after, and came about in a very strange
-way. Cyrus had now grown to be a strong, bright boy of
-ten years of age, and was supposed to be the son of the
-peasant herdsman. Several of the sons of the Median
-nobles were accustomed to meet in the neighborhood where
-he lived, for their sports, and Cyrus was always their
-leader in all pursuits. The story goes that he was once
-chosen as their king in a boyish game; and one of the
-nobles’ sons, being one of his subjects, and having disobeyed
-his commands, the boy king Cyrus punished him
-very severely. The father of the young noble complained
-to King Astyages of this ill treatment which his son had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-suffered at the hands of a peasant boy. Whereupon, the
-herdsman Mitridates and his supposed son were summoned
-to appear at court.</p>
-
-<p>When the young Cyrus entered the presence of the king,
-Astyages was astonished at his manly bearing and his
-unusual beauty, and with an unaccountable feeling of
-interest in the supposed peasant boy, he inquired if the
-complaint of the noble was true. The little disguised
-prince looked up into the face of the dread monarch, in
-whose presence all his subjects trembled, and with perfect
-self-possession, replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“My lord, what I have done I am able to justify. I
-did punish this boy, and I had a right to do so. I was
-king, and he was my subject, and he would not obey me.
-If you think that for this I deserve punishment myself,
-here I am; I am ready to suffer for it.”</p>
-
-<p>Astyages was so surprised at this unlooked-for answer
-that he hastily commanded that Mitridates should be
-brought before him; and under threats of severe punishment,
-he demanded that he should tell him the truth about
-the lad; for he had grave doubts about his being the
-peasant’s son. Mitridates, frightened by the stern manner
-of the king, confessed the truth, and related all the
-circumstances regarding the infant who had been committed
-to him by Harpagus.</p>
-
-<p>Astyages had deeply regretted his evil intentions towards
-his grandson, which, as he supposed, had ended in his
-death, and gladly claimed Cyrus as his own. But with
-strange inconsistency, he was equally incensed against
-Harpagus, who had dared to disobey his commands, by
-not causing the infant to be put to death; and he determined
-to celebrate in a strange and most shocking manner
-his joy at the recovery of his grandson, and his anger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-at the disobedience of Harpagus. So with wicked craftiness
-he sent word to Harpagus that his grandson had
-been discovered, and commanded that Harpagus should
-send his son, a boy about thirteen years of age, up to the
-palace to be a companion for young Cyrus. Furthermore,
-he announced that he was about to celebrate his joy at
-the recovery of his grandson, by a grand festival, at which
-he invited Harpagus to be present.</p>
-
-<p>Harpagus suspecting no evil, and rejoicing at the
-happy sequel of that deed which had occasioned him
-much disquiet, having sent his son to the palace, according
-to the command of the king, related to his wife the
-strange events which had taken place. Neither of them
-were suspicious of any evil design in this seeming kindliness
-of Astyages, and thought it a fitting honor for their
-son, that he should be chosen as the companion of Prince
-Cyrus. Harpagus went to the festival, and was given
-a seat of honor at the table. Various dishes were set
-before the guests, and the attendants were especially
-attentive to see that Harpagus was most bountifully
-served. At the end of the feast, Astyages asked Harpagus
-how he had liked his fare. Harpagus expressed
-himself as being well pleased. The king then ordered
-the servants to bring in a basket, which they uncovered
-before Harpagus, and he beheld with horror the head,
-hands, and feet of his own son.</p>
-
-<p>The story relates that Harpagus did not display his
-terrible despair by word or look; and when the wicked
-king asked him if he knew what he had been eating, he
-replied that he did, and whatever was the will of the
-king was pleasing to him. Such shocking cruelties
-reveal the wickedness of those despotic times.</p>
-
-<p>Harpagus satisfied his revenge against the cruel Astyages,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-many years afterwards, in a manner which will be
-disclosed as this story continues. A king whose greed of
-power could condemn an own grandson to death would
-not scruple at other crimes. Astyages now again consulted
-the soothsayers as to his safety in recognizing
-Cyrus as his grandson and giving him his royal place at
-court. The Magi now replied, that as Cyrus had already
-been a king, even though it was only in a childish game,
-still, as he had been called a king, the oracles had been
-fulfilled, and Astyages need fear no further danger to his
-kingdom. Astyages therefore sent Cyrus to his parents
-in Persia, who received their long-lost son with overwhelming
-delight; and the youthful Cyrus was no doubt
-astonished and rejoiced to find himself the son and grandson
-of powerful kings, rather than a simple peasant boy,
-the son of a poor herdsman.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Cyrus is described by the historians as being tall and
-handsome, and excelling in all youthful exploits.</p>
-
-<p>Xenophon describes the life of young Cyrus in the
-court of his father Cambyses, king of Persia. The sons
-of all the nobles and officers of the court were educated
-together in the royal palace. They were not taught to
-read, as there were no books, but they had certain teachers
-who explained to them the principles of right and wrong,
-and described to them the various laws of the land, and
-the rules by which controversies should be settled. These
-were put to practical use in deciding the various cases
-which occurred among the boys themselves; and judges
-were chosen from their number who should discuss and
-decide these questions. Right decisions were rewarded,
-and wrong ones punished. Cyrus himself was once punished
-for a wrong decision. The case was this:—</p>
-
-<p>A larger boy took away the coat of a smaller boy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-whose coat was bigger than his own, and gave him his
-own smaller coat. The smaller boy appealed to Cyrus,
-who decided that each boy should keep the coat that
-fitted him. The teacher condemned his decision in these
-words,—</p>
-
-<p>“When you are called upon to consider a question of
-what fits best, then you should determine as you have
-done in this case; but when you are appointed to decide
-whose each coat is, and to adjudge it to the proper owner,
-then you are to consider what constitutes right possession,
-and whether he who takes a thing by force from one who
-is weaker than himself, should have it, or whether he who
-made it or purchased it, should be protected in his property.
-You have decided against law and in favor of violence
-and wrong.”</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="drawings">
-<tr><td align="center"><div class="figcenter" style="width: 194px;">
-<img src="images/i-072a.jpg" width="194" height="305" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">PERSIAN GUARDSMAN CARRYING
-BOW AND QUIVER.</div>
-</div></td><td align="center"><div class="figcenter" style="width: 95px;">
-<img src="images/i-072b.jpg" width="95" height="248" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">PERSIAN SOLDIER WITH
-BATTLE-AXE</div>
-</div>
-</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><div class="figcenter" style="width: 306px;">
-<img src="images/i-072c.jpg" width="306" height="178" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">PERSIAN FOOT SOLDIERS.</div>
-</div></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p>The boys at this Persian court were taught many kinds
-of manly exercises. They were trained to wrestle and
-run, and were instructed in the use of all kinds of arms
-then known. Each one was furnished with a bow and
-arrows, a shield, a sword, or dagger, which was worn at
-the side in a scabbard, and two javelins, one of which
-they were to throw, and the other to keep in the hand for
-use in close combat with the wild beasts which they might
-encounter in their hunting expeditions. These excursions
-were often long and fatiguing, which they took by
-turns with the king in the neighboring forests.</p>
-
-<p>They were subjected to long marches, to cold and hunger
-and storms, and sometimes dangerous conflicts.
-These experiences were considered necessary to fit them
-to become good soldiers in the future.</p>
-
-<p>When Cyrus was about twelve years of age, he was
-invited by his grandfather Astyages to make him a visit
-in Media. When Cyrus arrived in Media with his mother<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-Mandane, he was surprised at the magnificence and pomp
-of the royal court; as the manners and habits of the Persians
-were very simple, and as he had been sent to Persia
-as soon as his royal rank had been discovered, he had
-not before had an opportunity of seeing the splendor of
-his grandfather’s court.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 326px;">
-<img src="images/i-075.jpg" width="326" height="446" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">PERSIAN KING SEATED ON HIS THRONE.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In his first interview with Astyages, Cyrus displayed
-his great tact and natural courtesy. When he came into
-the presence of his grandfather, who wore a purple robe
-richly embroidered with gold and covered with precious
-stones, and bracelets upon his arms, and a long, flowing
-wig, while his face was painted and powdered, Cyrus
-exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<p>“Why, mother, what a handsome man my grandfather
-is!”</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus was dazzled by the great display around him, for
-in the Persian court, Cambyses his father, and all his
-nobles, were clothed with great simplicity. Mandane
-then said to Cyrus,—</p>
-
-<p>“Which one do you think the handsomer man, your
-father or your grandfather?”</p>
-
-<p>It was a very unwise question to ask a child, but Cyrus
-was equal to the emergency, and replied with great tact
-and politeness,—</p>
-
-<p>“My father is the handsomest man in Persia, but my
-grandfather is the handsomest of all the Medes.”</p>
-
-<p>Astyages was much pleased with the aptness of this
-reply, and Cyrus became a great favorite with his grandfather,
-who lavished upon him costly garments, rich feasts,
-rare jewels, and the attentions of a retinue of servants.
-But after the first novelty had passed away, Cyrus preferred
-his more simple raiment and plainer food.</p>
-
-<p>At one time, Astyages invited Cyrus and his mother<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-to one of his grand feasts in his palace, and ordered the
-rarest viands to be served for Cyrus in the most elegant
-and costly dishes. Instead of being flattered, Cyrus
-showed no particular pleasure or surprise, and when Astyages
-asked him if he did not delight in such rich and
-delicate food, and if the feast before him was not much
-finer than any he had seen in Persia, Cyrus replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“We manage much better in Persia; it is very troublesome
-to eat a little of so many things.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you manage in Persia?” asked Astyages.</p>
-
-<p>“When we are hungry, we eat plain meat and bread,
-and so we get health and strength and have very little
-trouble,” answered Cyrus.</p>
-
-<p>Astyages then told Cyrus that he might continue his
-plain fare in Media, if he thought it was better for his
-health. Cyrus then asked his grandfather if he would
-give him all the costly dishes before him to do as he
-wished with them. To this Astyages consented, and
-Cyrus, calling up one of the attendants after another,
-presented to them as gifts the various elegant dishes with
-their contents. To one he said, “I give you this because
-you serve the king faithfully”; to another, “I make you
-this present because you are faithful to my mother”; and to
-another, “Because you have taught me to throw the javelin.”
-Thus he went on until all the gifts had been disposed
-of. Now the king had one servant, whom he honored
-above all others, who held the office of cup-bearer.</p>
-
-<p>In those days this was an important trust, for those
-despotic monarchs possessed so many enemies that they
-were in constant danger of assassination or of being
-poisoned. The king’s cup-bearer must superintend the
-food of his master, and taste all wines himself before
-offering them to the king.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Great dexterity and grace were necessary to perform
-the latter service acceptably, as the king’s cup must not
-be placed to the lips of his cup-bearer, but a small portion
-must be poured into the palm of his hand, and lifted
-gracefully to his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Astyages’ cup-bearer was a Sacian; he was an officer
-of high rank, tall and handsome, and magnificently
-dressed. In distributing his gifts, Cyrus had neglected
-this officer, and when Astyages asked him his reason,
-Cyrus replied that he did not like the Sacian. Astyages
-inquired the cause of this dislike, and remarked, “Have
-you not observed how gracefully and elegantly he pours
-out the wine for me, and then hands me the cup?”</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus replied that he could pour out the wine and offer
-the cup as well as the Sacian, and requested his grandfather
-to allow him to try. To this the amused king consented,
-and Cyrus, taking a goblet of wine in his hand,
-retired from the room. He soon re-entered with the pompous
-and dignified bearing of the Sacian, and so mimicked
-his manner of gravity and self-importance as to
-occasion much mirth amongst the assembled guests.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus, having advanced to the king, presented him
-with the cup, neglecting not even one single motion of
-the usual ceremony, except tasting the wine himself.
-Mandane and the king laughed heartily, and the would-be
-cup-bearer, becoming the child again, jumped into his
-grandfather’s arms, exclaiming, “Now, Sacian, you are
-ruined; I shall get my grandfather to appoint me in your
-place. I can hand the wine as well as you, and without
-tasting it myself at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why did you not taste it?” asked his grandfather.</p>
-
-<p>“Because the wine was poisoned,” replied Cyrus.</p>
-
-<p>“What makes you think it is poisoned?” inquired
-Astyages.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Because,” said Cyrus, “it was poisoned the other
-day when you made a feast for your friends on your
-birthday. It made you all crazy. The things that you
-do not allow us boys to do you did yourselves, for you
-were very rude and noisy; you all bawled together so
-that nobody could hear or understand what any other
-person said. Presently you went to singing in a very
-ridiculous manner, and when a singer ended his song, you
-applauded him, and declared that he had sung admirably,
-though nobody had paid attention. You went to telling
-stories too, each one of his own accord, without succeeding
-in making anybody listen to him. Finally, you got
-up and began to dance, but it was out of all rule and
-measure; you could not even stand erect and steadily.
-Then you all seemed to forget who and what you were;
-the guests paid no regard to you as their king, but treated
-you in a very familiar and disrespectful manner, and you
-treated them in the same way; so I thought that the wine
-that produced these effects must be poisoned.”</p>
-
-<p>“But have not you ever seen such things before?”
-asked Astyages. “Does not your father ever drink wine
-until it makes him merry?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Cyrus, “indeed, he does not; he drinks
-only when he is thirsty, and then only enough for his
-thirst, and so he is not harmed.” He then added in a
-contemptuous tone, “He has no Sacian cup-bearer, you
-may depend, about him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why do you dislike this Sacian so much, my
-son?” asked Mandane.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, every time that I want to come and see my
-grandfather,” replied Cyrus, “he always stops me, and
-will not let me come in. I wish, grandfather, you would
-let me have the rule of him for just three days.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“What would you do?” asked Astyages.</p>
-
-<p>“I would treat him as he treats me now,” answered
-Cyrus. “I would stand at the door, as he does when I
-want to come in, and when he was coming for his dinner,
-I would stop him and say, ‘You cannot come in now; he
-is busy.’” Cyrus repeated these words in the tones and
-with the grave manner of the Sacian.</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” continued Cyrus, “when he was coming to
-get his supper, I would say, ‘You must not come in now;
-he is bathing, or he is going to sleep; you must come
-some other time, for he cannot be disturbed.’ Thus I
-would torment him all the time, as he now torments me
-in keeping me from you when I want to see you.”</p>
-
-<p>When the time arrived for Mandane to return to Persia,
-Astyages was very desirous to have Cyrus remain with
-him; Mandane gave her consent if Cyrus should wish to
-do so. Astyages told Cyrus that if he would stay, the
-Sacian should torment him no more, but that he should
-be allowed to come into his presence whenever he wished
-to do so, and, moreover, he should have the use of all his
-grandfather’s horses. He should also have boys of his
-own age for companions, and they would be allowed to
-hunt the animals in the park. They could pursue them
-on horseback and shoot them with bows and arrows, or
-throw the javelins at their prey. This pleasure of riding
-and hunting was a rare one to Cyrus, for the Persians had
-few horses, and there were no bodies of cavalry in their
-armies. Cyrus represented to his mother the great advantage
-it would be to him to be a skilful horseman, as
-that would give him a superiority over all the Persian
-youths. Mandane was somewhat anxious lest the luxurious
-habits and haughty manners of his grandfather
-should prove a bad example for Cyrus, but he assured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-her that she need have no fears, as his grandfather required
-all to be submissive to himself, and allowed imperiousness
-in no one but the king. So it was decided that
-Cyrus should remain in Media, and Mandane departed
-for Persia.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus now applied himself with great diligence to
-acquire all the various accomplishments and arts then
-most highly prized, such as leaping, vaulting, racing,
-riding, throwing the javelin, and drawing the bow. In
-the friendly contests among the boys, Cyrus would courteously
-challenge those superior to himself in these exercises,
-thus giving them the pleasure of winning the prize,
-and benefiting himself by thus having the greater stimulus
-of contesting with attainments higher than his own.
-He accordingly made rapid progress, and speedily learned
-to equal and then surpass his companions without occasioning
-any envy or jealousy.</p>
-
-<p>It was their favorite amusement to hunt the deer in his
-grandfather’s park; but at last, so vigorous had been their
-onslaught, that the animals were wellnigh exhausted, and
-Astyages went to great trouble to secure further supplies.
-Cyrus then requested that they be allowed to hunt in the
-forests, and hunt the wild beasts with the men. As Cyrus
-had now grown up into a tall, robust young man, able to
-sustain the fatigues of the hunt, his grandfather consented
-that Cyrus should go out with his son Cyaxares.
-The party set out in high spirits. There were certain
-attendants appointed to keep particular guard over Cyrus,
-and prevent him from rushing rashly into danger. His
-attendants told him that the dangerous animals were
-bears, lions, tigers, boars, and leopards; and as they
-often attacked man, he must avoid them; but that he
-could hunt the stags, goats, and wild sheep as much as he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-pleased. They also told him of the dangers in riding
-over a rough country where the broken ground and steep,
-rocky precipices made riding difficult, and hunters driving
-impetuously over such a country were often thrown from
-their horses, or fell with them into the chasms and were
-killed. Cyrus promised to remember their warning; but
-no sooner had he entered into the excitement of the chase
-than he forgot all their counsels, and riding furiously
-after a stag, his horse came to a chasm which he was
-obliged to leap. But the distance was too great, and the
-horse fell upon his knees as he reached the farther side,
-and for a moment before he recovered his footing Cyrus
-was in imminent danger of being precipitated to the
-bottom of the deep precipice. But Cyrus was fearless;
-and as soon as his horse had regained his feet
-and cleared the chasm, he pressed on after the stag, overtook
-him, and killed him with his javelin. As soon as his
-frightened attendants came up to him, they reproved him
-for his reckless daring, and they threatened to report to
-his grandfather. Just at the instant he heard a new
-halloo, as fresh game had been started, and forgetting
-all his resolutions, Cyrus sprang upon his horse with a
-loud shout and followed the chase. The game now
-started was a dangerous wild boar, and Cyrus instead of
-shunning the peril, as he should have done in obedience
-to his grandfather’s orders, dashed after the boar, and
-aimed so true a thrust with his javelin against the beast
-as to transfix him in the forehead. The boar fell dying
-upon the ground, and Cyrus waited for the party to arrive,
-with pride and triumph. When his uncle Cyaxares came
-near, he reproved Cyrus for running such risks, and said
-that if his grandfather knew what he had done, he would
-punish him. “Let him punish me,” said Cyrus, “if he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-wishes after I have shown him the stag and the hoar,
-and you may punish me too if you will only let me show
-him the animals I have killed.” Cyaxares consented, and
-ordered the bodies of the beasts and the bloody javelins
-to be carried home. Cyrus presented them to his grandfather,
-who thanked him for the presents, but said he had
-no such need of game as to require his grandson to thus
-expose himself to danger. “Well, grandfather,” said
-Cyrus, “if you don’t wish the meat yourself, will you let
-me give it to my friends.” Astyages agreed to this, and
-Cyrus divided his booty amongst all his young companions
-who had hunted with him in the park. The boys
-took their several portions home, giving glowing accounts
-of the skilful exploits of the giver. Thus was Cyrus
-thus early ambitious of spreading his own fame.</p>
-
-<p>When Cyrus was about sixteen years of age he went
-with his uncle Cyaxares on an excursion for plunder into
-some neighboring provinces. Neither the kings of those
-times nor their historians seem to have considered such
-expeditions as unjust or wrong, but rather as a more
-noble enterprise than even their favorite hunting. In this
-expedition Cyrus so distinguished himself by his exploits,
-that his father, hearing the reports thereof, concluded
-that if his son was beginning to take part as a soldier in
-military campaigns, it was time to recall him to his own
-country. He therefore sent for Cyrus to return home.</p>
-
-<p>There was great sadness in the Median court when
-Cyrus departed, for he had become a special favorite
-with king and people.</p>
-
-<p>The succeeding events of Cyrus’ life take us more out
-of the field of romance and are more strictly confined to
-the facts of history. Cyrus on his return to Persia grew
-rapidly in strength and stature, and soon became distinguished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-for his manly beauty, his personal grace, and
-winning manners, as well as excelling all others in the
-martial accomplishments he had acquired in Media. He
-gained great ascendancy over the minds of others, and as
-he advanced to manhood his thoughts turned from athletic
-sports and hunting to plans of war and ambitions for
-more extended dominions.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Harpagus, who had always meditated revenge
-upon Astyages for the horrible death of his son,
-though at the time he had been too wary to express
-resentment, was constantly watching every opportunity to
-work evil against the king. Fifteen years had now
-passed since the terrible deed was committed. He remained
-all this time in the court of Astyages, where he
-outwardly demeaned himself as the friend and zealous
-subject of the king, but meanwhile he plotted revenge.</p>
-
-<p>He kept up a constant communication with Cyrus, and
-at last went so far as to try to induce him to collect an
-army and march into Media against Astyages. The plausible
-motives which he suggested made it appear to Cyrus
-as though he would only be endeavoring to free his own
-Persia from ignoble bondage, as Persia was a Median
-dependency. Meanwhile, Harpagus sympathized with all
-the disaffected Medians, whose numbers rapidly increased,
-as the tyranny of Astyages made numerous enemies.</p>
-
-<p>At length the time came when Harpagus thought the
-right moment had arrived for a revolt. Cyrus had now
-determined to attempt the enterprise. Astyages had been
-guilty of some unusual acts of oppression, by which he
-had produced great dissatisfaction among his people.
-Harpagus found the principal men around him willing to
-enter into the conspiracy, so he desired that Cyrus should
-come into Media with as large a force as he could raise,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-and head the insurrection against the government of
-Astyages.</p>
-
-<p>Harpagus did not dare to trust this message to any
-messenger, and so he took this novel way of communicating
-with Cyrus. He wrote a letter to Cyrus, and then
-taking a dead hare he opened the body and concealed the
-letter within, and then neatly sewed up the skin again so
-that no signs remained of the incision. He then delivered
-the hare to some trusty servants, who should also carry
-hunting weapons, as though about to go upon some hunting
-expedition. He also commanded that they should
-give the hare to Cyrus himself, and that he should open it
-alone. The plan was successful; the hare reached the
-hands of Cyrus in safety, and opening it, he read a letter
-which was in substance as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“It is plain, Cyrus, that you are a favorite of Heaven,
-and that you are destined to a great and glorious career.
-You could not otherwise have escaped, in so miraculous a
-manner, the snares set for you in your infancy. Astyages
-meditated your death, and he took such measures to effect
-it as would seem to have made your destruction sure.
-You were saved by the special interposition of Heaven.
-You are aware by what extraordinary incidents you were
-preserved and discovered, and what great and unusual
-prosperity has since attended you. You know, too, what
-cruel punishments Astyages inflicted upon me for my
-humanity in saving you. The time has now come for
-retribution. From this time the authority and the dominions
-of Astyages may be yours. Persuade the Persians
-to revolt. Put yourself at the head of an army and
-march into Media. I shall probably myself be appointed
-to command the army sent out to oppose you. If so, we
-will join our forces when we meet, and I will enter your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-service. I have conferred with the leading nobles in
-Media, and they are all ready to espouse your cause.
-You may rely upon finding everything thus prepared for
-you here. Come, therefore, without delay.”</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus determined to comply with the proposal of Harpagus.
-He therefore resorted to deceit, or, as he called
-it, stratagem. Thus war upholds and justifies falsehood
-and treachery under the name of stratagem. Cyrus had
-a letter prepared in the form of a commission from Astyages,
-appointing him commander of a body of Persian
-forces to be raised in the service of the king. He then
-read this false letter at a public assembly, and called
-upon all the Persian warriors to join him.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus did not at first make known to them his designs,
-but commanded them all to assemble on a certain day at
-a place named, and each one was to provide himself with
-an axe. When they were thus mustered, he marched
-them into the forest, and employed them all day in felling
-trees. He gave them, moreover, only the coarsest food.
-When the day was over, he ordered them all to assemble
-again on the morrow. When they came the next day,
-instead of hard work and poor food, most sumptuous
-feasts had been provided for them, and they spent the
-day in merriment and revelry.</p>
-
-<p>In the evening Cyrus called them all together and revealed
-to them his plans, and said to them that if they
-would follow him, they should live in ease and plenty;
-otherwise, if they should continue as they were, they
-would spend their lives in toil and privation; and he
-reminded them of the two days just spent, and asked
-them which they preferred to live. The soldiers received
-his proposals with joy, and eagerly promised to follow
-him into Media. When everything was ready, Cyrus led<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-his army into Media. In the meantime Astyages, hearing
-of his insurrection, had collected a large force, and as
-had been anticipated, placed it under the command of
-Harpagus. When the battle was joined, the honest part
-of the Median army fought valiantly at first; but discovering
-that they were being deserted by their comrades,
-they fled in confusion. Cyrus, thus reinforced by the
-deserting Medians with Harpagus at their head, now
-found himself the leader of a large force, and advanced
-toward the capital. When Astyages heard of the treachery
-of Harpagus and the desertion of his army, he was frenzied
-with rage. The long-dreaded prediction of his
-dream seemed about to be fulfilled, and the Magi who
-had assured him that he was safe, as Cyrus had been a
-king when a boy, had proved themselves false.</p>
-
-<p>He directed them all to be seized and crucified. He
-then ordered every man capable of bearing arms, into the
-ranks, and putting himself at the head of this large force,
-he marched against Cyrus. But he was defeated, and he
-himself was taken prisoner. Harpagus was present when
-he was taken, and he exulted in triumph over his downfall.
-Harpagus asked him what he thought now of the
-supper in which he had compelled a father to feed upon
-the flesh of his own child. Astyages asked Harpagus if
-he thought the success of Cyrus was owing to what he
-had done. Harpagus replied that it was, and revealed to
-him how he had schemed for his destruction, and the
-preparation he had made in aid of Cyrus, so that Astyages
-might see that his downfall had been effected by Harpagus
-himself, in terrible retribution for the shocking crime he
-had committed so many years before.</p>
-
-<p>The result of this battle was the complete overthrow of
-the power and kingdom of Astyages, and the establishment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-of Cyrus on the throne of the united kingdoms of
-Media and Persia.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus treated his grandfather with kindness, though he
-kept him in a sort of imprisonment. The people rejoiced
-in his downfall, and were well pleased with the milder
-and more equitable government of Cyrus. Astyages met
-His death years after, in a strange manner. Cyrus sent
-for him to come into Persia, where he was then himself
-residing. The officer who had Astyages in charge, led
-him into a desolate wilderness, where he perished from
-hunger and exposure. Cyrus punished the officer for this
-crime, though it was supposed by some that it was done
-by the secret order of Cyrus, in retribution, perhaps, for
-the evil intentions of Astyages toward himself in his
-infancy, which, if they had been obeyed, would have
-resulted in his own death from the same cause.</p>
-
-<p>The character and nobleness of Cyrus, as evinced by
-numerous generous deeds throughout his life, would,
-however, seem to refute such a supposition. Harpagus
-continued in the service of Cyrus, and became one of his
-most celebrated generals.</p>
-
-<p>Such is one of the stories of the accession of Cyrus to
-the thrones of Media and Persia. Another account gives
-a different version of it, and states that Astyages died
-while king of Media, and was succeeded by his son
-Cyaxares, brother to Cyrus’ mother Mandane, or Mandana,
-as her name is given by some historians. The
-years of the reign of Cyrus are computed differently.
-Some make his reign thirty years, beginning from his first
-setting out from Persia at the head of an army to succor
-his uncle Cyaxares, who was in war with the Babylonians.
-Others make the duration of it to be but seven years,
-because they date only from the time when, by the death<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-of Cambyses and Cyaxares, Cyrus became sole monarch
-of the entire empire of both Media and Persia. But as
-Cyrus seems to have been the leader in both the Median
-and Persian empires long before the death of these kings,
-he probably ruled them both in partnership with them;
-and notwithstanding Cyrus conquered and acquired Babylon
-by his own valor, he complacently allowed his uncle
-Cyaxares, whose forces had been engaged with his own,
-to hold the first rank. This Cyaxares is called in the
-Bible Darius the Mede; and it was under his reign in
-Babylon, which only lasted two years, that Daniel the
-prophet had several revelations. But as our interest is
-more particularly in the life and conquests of Cyrus himself,
-rather than those of Cyaxares and Cambyses, and as
-the vast power and dominion of both Media and Persia
-seemed to have been owing to the valor and executive
-ability of Cyrus alone, our story will confine itself to the
-achievements of Cyrus the Great, without further mention
-of Cambyses or Cyaxares.</p>
-
-<p>We now come to the history of Cyrus and Crœsus,
-and before we recount the conquest of the kingdom of
-Lydia, it will make it more interesting, perhaps, to give a
-slight sketch of Crœsus, king of Lydia, and also to mention
-the oracles which played such an important part in
-the history of this king. The country of Lydia, over
-which this famous king ruled, was in the western part of
-Asia Minor bordering on the Ægean Sea. Crœsus, king
-of Lydia, acquired the enormous riches for which he was
-so famous, from the golden sands of the river Pactolus,
-which flowed through his kingdom. The river brought
-down the gold particles from the mountains above, and
-the slaves of Crœsus washed the sands, thus separating
-the metal, which was obtained in such vast quantities that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-this king’s name has become a proverb for fabulous
-wealth, in the old saying, “Rich as Crœsus.”</p>
-
-<p>The people of those days, however, had a very different
-story of the origin of the gold in the river Pactolus.
-Their legend was that ages before, a certain king named
-Midas had rendered some service to a god, who thereupon
-promised to grant him any favor he should ask.
-Midas prayed that the power might be granted him of
-turning everything he touched into gold. This power
-was bestowed by the god, and after Midas had turned
-many objects into gold, he began to find his gift very
-inconvenient, and was in danger of starving to death in
-the midst of all his wealth. For no sooner had he
-touched any food than it straightway became gold.
-Midas was then as anxious to get rid of his dangerous
-gift as he had been to secure it.</p>
-
-<p>He implored the god to take back the gift.</p>
-
-<p>The god told him to go and bathe in the river Pactolus,
-and he should be restored to his former state.</p>
-
-<p>Midas did so, and was saved, but in the operation a
-great portion of the sands of the river were transformed
-to gold.</p>
-
-<p>Crœsus was at one time visited by a famous Grecian
-lawgiver, named Solon. Crœsus received Solon with
-great distinction, and showed him all his treasures.</p>
-
-<p>One day the king asked Solon, who of all the persons
-he had ever met, he considered to be the happiest man.</p>
-
-<p>Of course Crœsus imagined that the sage would name
-himself, the king, as the happiest mortal. But Solon gave
-him the name of Tellus, a quiet Athenian citizen.</p>
-
-<p>Crœsus asked why he should place such a man before
-a monarch occupying such a throne as his own.</p>
-
-<p>Solon replied,—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You are now at the height of your power, but I cannot
-decide whether you are a fortunate and happy man,
-until I know your end.”</p>
-
-<p>Crœsus had two sons. One was deaf and dumb, the
-other was a young man of much promise; but he was
-killed while hunting.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Cyrus had become established on his throne
-as king of the Medes and Persians, his power began to
-extend westward toward the empire of Crœsus, king of
-Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>Crœsus was roused from the dejection into which he
-had been plunged by the death of his son, by the danger
-which now threatened his kingdom. In his uncertainty
-regarding the future, he determined to consult the oracles.
-The three most important of these oracles were situated,
-one at Delphi, one at Dodona, and the third at the Oasis
-of Jupiter Ammon.</p>
-
-<p>Delphi was a small town built on the southern side of
-Mount Parnassus. This mount was a famous place.
-From a deep cavern in the rocks there issued a stream of
-gaseous vapor, which was said to inspire all persons inhaling
-it with a spirit of divination and poetry. A temple
-was built upon this mountain, in which a priestess
-resided, and she gave responses to all who came to consult
-the oracle. When she gave her answers, she sat
-upon a three-legged stool, which was afterwards called
-the sacred tripod. This oracle became so renowned that
-many monarchs came great distances to consult it; and
-they made very costly presents to the shrine. The deity
-who was supposed to dictate the predictions was Apollo.
-Crœsus sent messengers to all of the various oracles to
-ask what should be the result of his contest with Cyrus.
-The replies were all unsatisfactory, except the Delphic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-oracle. Crœsus now decided that this was the oracle
-upon which he must rely, and immediately made preparations
-to send most magnificent and costly presents to the
-Delphic shrine. Some of the treasures were to be deposited
-in the temple, and some were to be offered as a burnt
-sacrifice to the god.</p>
-
-<p>After the ceremonies were completed, everything that
-had been used in the services, including gold and silver
-vessels, richly embroidered garments, and numerous other
-costly articles, were gathered into one vast funeral pile
-and burnt. So much gold had been employed in making
-these things, that it melted in the fire and ran into plates
-of great size. These were then collected and formed into
-an image of a lion, which was placed in the temple.
-Crœsus also presented the temple with a silver cistern,
-or tank, large enough to hold three thousand gallons of
-wine. There was one strange piece of statuary which he
-sent to this shrine, which we must not omit to mention.
-It was a statue of gold of a woman-servant in the household
-of Crœsus. It was called The Breadmaker. Its
-origin was this:—</p>
-
-<p>When Crœsus was a child, his mother died, and his
-father married again. His stepmother desired to have
-one of her children succeed to the throne instead of Crœsus.
-So she gave some poison to the woman who was
-accustomed to make the bread for the family, telling her to
-put it in the portion intended for Crœsus. This servant,
-however, instead of minding the wicked queen, revealed
-the plot to Crœsus, and put the poison in the bread of the
-queen’s own children. In gratitude for his preservation
-by this slave, Crœsus ordered a statue of gold to be made
-in her honor, when he came to the throne; and this he
-sent to the temple at Delphi. After Crœsus had presented<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-all these magnificent gifts to the shrine, he consulted
-the oracle. The answer was as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“If Crœsus crosses the Halys and prosecutes a war
-with Persia, a mighty empire will be overthrown. It will
-be best for him to form an alliance with the most powerful
-states of Greece.”</p>
-
-<p>Crœsus was much pleased with this answer, and then
-asked furthermore, whether his power would ever decline.</p>
-
-<p>The oracle replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“Whenever a mule shall mount upon the Median
-throne, then, and not till then, shall great Crœsus fear
-to lose his own.”</p>
-
-<p>These replies strengthened the belief of Crœsus that
-he should be victorious; but as the sequel shows, we will
-learn how vague and indefinite were the answers of the
-oracles, and so given that they could correspond with the
-event, whatever might be the result.</p>
-
-<p>Crœsus now sent ambassadors to Sparta to seek their
-aid, and meanwhile went on making great preparations
-for his campaign. When all things were ready, the army
-commenced its march eastward until it reached the river
-Halys.</p>
-
-<p>The army encamped upon its banks until some plan
-could be formed for crossing the river. Crœsus had with
-his army a very celebrated engineer named Thales. This
-engineer succeeded in getting the army of Crœsus over
-the river by ordering a large force of laborers to cut a
-new channel for the river behind the army, into which the
-water flowed, and Crœsus and his force passed on. Cyrus
-had heard of his approach, and soon the armies were face
-to face.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus had been conquering all the nations in his path,
-as he went forward to meet Crœsus, and thus had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-reinforced by all of the neighboring people, except the
-Babylonians, who were allied with Crœsus against him.
-A great battle was fought at Pteria, which continued all
-day, and at its close the combatants separated without
-either of them having gained much advantage.</p>
-
-<p>Crœsus thinking that this battle was enough for the
-present, and supposing that Cyrus would now go home,
-having found that he could not overcome him, determined
-to return to his own city Sardis, and there prepare for a
-more vigorous campaign in the spring.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus quietly remained in his position until Crœsus had
-time to return to Sardis. Whereupon, he followed with
-his entire army.</p>
-
-<p>Crœsus was now thoroughly alarmed, and collecting all
-the forces he could command, he marched forth to a great
-plain just without the city, to meet Cyrus.</p>
-
-<p>The Lydian army was superior to that of Cyrus in
-cavalry, and upon this plain they would have a much
-greater advantage. To avoid this, Cyrus ordered all his
-large train of camels, which had been employed as beasts
-of burden, to be drawn up in line in front of his army,
-each one having a soldier upon his back, armed with a
-spear.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that horses cannot endure the sight or smell
-of a camel; and when the two armies met, the cavalry of
-Crœsus, riding furiously to the attack, were confronted
-by the line of huge, awkward camels, with their soldier
-riders. The horses were so frightened by the spectacle,
-that they turned and fled in dismay, trampling down their
-own forces, and causing complete confusion in the Lydian
-army. The army of Crœsus was totally defeated, and
-they fled into the city of Sardis and entrenched themselves
-there.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Cyrus now besieged the city for fourteen days, endeavoring
-to find some place to scale the walls which surrounded
-it. One part of the wall passed over rocky
-precipices which were considered impassable. At length
-one of the soldiers of Cyrus, named Hyræades, observed
-one of the sentinels, who was stationed on the wall overlooking
-the precipice, leave his post, and come partway
-down the rocks to get his helmet, which had dropped
-down. Hyræades reported this incident to Cyrus, and so
-an attempt was made to scale the walls at that point. It
-was successful, and thus the city was taken. It is reported
-that in the confusion and noise of storming the
-city the life of Crœsus was saved by the miraculous
-speaking of his deaf-and-dumb son. Cyrus had commanded
-his soldiers not to kill Crœsus, but that they
-should take him alive, and he should then be brought to
-him. As Crœsus was escaping with his son a party of
-Persian soldiers took him prisoner, and were about to kill
-him, not knowing who he was, when the dumb boy cried
-out,—</p>
-
-<p>“It is Crœsus; do not kill him!”</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus had not ordered Crœsus to be spared from any
-motives of kindness; but that he himself might determine
-his fate.</p>
-
-<p>He commanded Crœsus to be put in chains, and a huge
-funeral pile to be built in a public square, and Crœsus
-and fourteen of the young Lydian nobles were placed
-upon the pile.</p>
-
-<p>Just as the torch was applied, Crœsus cried out in a
-tone of anguish and despair,—</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Solon! Solon! Solon!”</p>
-
-<p>The officers who had charge of the execution asked
-him what he meant, and Cyrus, also hearing him, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-being desirous of receiving an explanation of his mysterious
-words, commanded the fires to be put out, and
-ordered Crœsus to be unbound and to be brought to him.
-Cyrus now treated Crœsus with much kindness.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 490px;">
-<img src="images/i-097.jpg" width="490" height="361" alt="engraving" />
-<div class="caption">PERSIAN SUBJECTS BRINGING TRIBUTE.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Crœsus was very much incensed against the oracle at
-Delphi for having deceived him by false predictions; but
-the priests of the oracle replied that the destruction of
-the Lydian dynasty had long been decreed by fate on
-account of the guilt of Gyges, the founder of the line,
-who had murdered the rightful monarch, and usurped the
-crown. The oracles had foretold that a mighty empire
-would be overthrown, and Crœsus had wrongly imagined
-that it referred to the destruction of the kingdom of
-Cyrus. As to the other prediction made by the oracle,
-that when he should find a mule upon the throne of
-Media, he would lose his own, this had been fulfilled, as
-Cyrus, who was descended from the Persians on his
-father’s side, and from the Medians on his mother’s, had
-thus become a hybrid sovereign, represented by the mule.</p>
-
-<p>In his advance towards the dominions of Crœsus in
-Asia Minor, Cyrus had passed to the northward of the
-great and celebrated city of Babylon. He had now conquered
-all the nations from the Ægean Sea to the river
-Euphrates. He then subdued Syria and Arabia. After
-this he entered into Assyria and advanced towards Babylon,
-the only large city of the East yet unsubdued.</p>
-
-<p>The taking of Babylon is one of the greatest events in
-ancient history, and the principal circumstances with
-which it was attended were foretold in the Bible many
-years before it happened. Babylon, at this time, was the
-most magnificent city in the world. It was situated in
-a large plain, and was surrounded by walls which were
-eighty-seven feet thick, three hundred and fifty feet high,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-and sixty miles in circumference. These walls were in
-the form of a square, each side of which was fifteen miles
-long. They were built of large bricks cemented together
-with bitumen, which bound bricks so firmly together that
-the mortar soon became harder than the bricks themselves.
-This wall was surrounded by a deep, wide trench
-filled with water. The great wall of Babylon contained
-200,000,000 yards of solid masonry, or nearly twice the
-cubic contents of the famous wall of China. Each of the
-bricks was stamped with the name of Nebuchadnezzar.
-The wall was so wide that four chariots could move
-abreast upon its summit. Two hundred and fifty towers,
-each ten feet higher than the walls, rose above the parapet.
-One hundred gates of brass opened to as many
-streets. Each of the fifty streets was fifteen miles long,
-and one hundred and forty feet broad, crossing each
-other at right angles; these avenues divided the city into
-six hundred and seventy-six squares, each being two and
-a half miles in circuit. The buildings were erected
-around these squares with an open court in the centre,
-containing beautiful gardens and fountains. The river
-Euphrates flowed through the city, and was spanned by
-a bridge, five hundred feet long and thirty feet wide.
-Above the bridge rose an obelisk one hundred and
-twenty-five feet high. As the melting of the snows upon
-the mountains of Armenia caused the river Euphrates to
-overflow its banks in the months of June, July, and
-August, two artificial canals were cut, some distance
-above the city, which turned the course of these waters
-into the Tigris before they reached Babylon. To keep
-the river within its channel, they raised immense artificial
-banks on both sides, built with bricks cemented with
-bitumen. In making these works it was necessary to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-turn the course of the river another way. For this purpose
-a prodigious artificial lake was dug, forty miles
-square, one hundred and sixty in circumference, and
-thirty-five feet deep.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 334px;">
-<a href="images/i-101-big.jpg"><img src="images/i-101.jpg" width="334" height="559" alt="Map" /></a>
-<div class="caption">CHART OF THE COUNTRY AROUND BABYLON.</div>
-</div><div class="tnote"><div class="center"><small><b>Transcriber's Note:</b> If supported by the
-reader's device, a larger image of this map may be seen by clicking on the image.</small></div></div>
-
-<p>Into this lake the whole river was turned by an artificial
-canal, cut from the west side of it, until the entire work
-was finished, when the river was allowed to flow into its
-former channel. This lake was kept, however, as a reservoir,
-as a means of irrigating the surrounding fields.</p>
-
-<p>Along the banks of the river were the famous Hanging
-Gardens, where the many terraces bloomed with brilliant
-flowers, and were shaded by groves of trees, and cooled
-by fountains of sparkling water. These beautiful gardens,
-which were considered one of the Seven Wonders
-of the World, were constructed by Nebuchadnezzar to
-please his wife Amytis, whose native land was Media, as
-she was the daughter of Astyages.</p>
-
-<p>Surrounded by a triple wall, and guarded by gates of
-brass, rose the magnificent royal palace, whose walls were
-adorned by pictures of the chase, and martial and festive
-processions, and whose apartments were furnished with
-the rich carpets of Persia, the costly fabrics of Damascus,
-and the jewels of Bokhara.</p>
-
-<p>Rising above all the other structures was the lofty
-Tower of Belus, or Babel. The tower was six hundred
-feet high, and was crowned with a statue of Belus, forty
-feet high, made of pure gold, which shone resplendent in
-the sunlight, or gleamed with matchless beauty in the
-soft moonlight. It is said that this tower far exceeded
-the greatest pyramid of Egypt in height. The ascent to
-the top was by stairs round the outside of it; and as the
-tower proper was composed of eight stories, each decreasing
-gradually in size, the entire tower formed a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-pyramid. In the different stories were many rooms,
-which were richly adorned with tables, censers, cups, and
-other sacred vessels of massive gold. Diodorus, one of
-the ancient historians, estimates the value of the riches
-contained in this temple to amount to $93,240,000.
-This temple stood in the time of Xerxes, but on his return
-from his Grecian expedition, he entirely destroyed
-it, having plundered it of all its immense treasures.
-Alexander the Great purposed to rebuild it, and employed
-ten thousand men to remove the rubbish which
-had accumulated around it, but after they had labored
-two months, Alexander died, and that put an end to the
-undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>Belshazzar gave a great feast in his palace to all his
-chief officers and nobles, even though Cyrus the Great
-was then besieging Babylon. It was during this impious
-feast, after Belshazzar had commanded that the sacred
-vessels, which had been taken from the Temple of Jehovah
-in Jerusalem, should be desecrated by being used by
-his drunken guests as wine-goblets, that the marvellous
-writing appeared upon his palace wall, and the words
-“Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin” were traced in letters
-of fire by a mysterious hand. Belshazzar was aroused
-from his drunken carousal and filled with terror on
-account of the strange omen. None of his magicians
-could interpret its meaning. At last his mother, Queen
-Nitocris, remembered the old prophet Daniel, and his
-previous wonderful interpretations for Nebuchadnezzar.
-Daniel, being summoned, declared that it predicted the
-destruction of his kingdom, which should be divided,
-and given to the Medes and Persians.</p>
-
-<p>Swiftly, indeed, did the dread catastrophe overtake the
-wicked king. Cyrus had caused great ditches to be dug<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-on both sides of the city, above and below, so that the
-water of the river Euphrates might run into them.
-That very night he caused those great receptacles to be
-opened; and while Belshazzar and his drunken army were
-carousing in mad revellings, the channel of the river was
-emptied, and the hostile forces marched into the dry
-channel in two bodies of troops; one entering above the
-city, and one below. A guide who had promised to
-open all the gates to Cyrus left open the gates of brass
-which were made to shut up the descents from the quays
-to the river.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 314px;">
-<img src="images/i-105.jpg" width="314" height="350" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">SUPPOSED PLAN OF ANCIENT BABYLON.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus the army of Cyrus was enabled to penetrate into
-the very heart of the city without opposition. Arriving
-at the royal palace, they surprised the guards and killed
-them. Then rushing into the palace, and meeting the
-king, who had seized a sword, and stood in the midst of
-his frightened and helpless guests, the soldiers of Cyrus
-killed Belshazzar.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus, having entered the city, put all to the sword
-who were found in the streets. He then commanded the
-citizens to bring him all their arms, and afterwards to
-shut themselves up in their houses. Early the next
-morning, the garrison which kept the citadel, learning
-that the city had been taken, and their king killed, surrendered
-themselves to Cyrus. Thus did this prince,
-almost without striking a blow, find himself in possession
-of the strongest place in the world.</p>
-
-<p>In the first year after Cyrus conquered Babylon, he
-published the famous edict permitting the Jews to return
-to Jerusalem. Cyrus at the same time restored to the
-Jews all the vessels of the temple of the Lord, which
-Nebuchadnezzar had brought from Jerusalem, and placed
-in the temple of his god Belus, or Baal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After this conquest, Cyrus established his residence in
-the midst of the countries within his vast dominions. He
-spent seven months of the year at Babylon in the winter
-season, because of the warmth of that climate; three
-months at Susa in the spring; and two months at Ecbatana,
-during the heat of summer.</p>
-
-<p>There is an interesting story, told by Xenophon, of a
-princess, named Panthea, in connection with the expedition
-of Cyrus against the Assyrians. Among the prisoners
-of war taken by his army was a very beautiful
-princess, Panthea, the wife of Abradates, king of Susiana.
-Her husband was an Assyrian general, though he
-himself was not captured at this time with his wife.
-Cyrus committed this princess to the care of one of his
-young nobles, named Araspes. This nobleman fell in
-love with Panthea, and ventured to express to her his
-admiration for her. She was offended; and when Araspes
-continued his declarations of love, she complained to Cyrus.
-Cyrus severely reproved his officer for proving
-unworthy of the trust reposed in him. Araspes, mortified
-and repentant, was overwhelmed with fear and remorse.
-Cyrus, hearing of this, sent for Araspes, and
-instead of upbraiding him, sent him upon a trusty and
-difficult mission as a spy among the Assyrians. The loss
-of so brave an officer, who was supposed to have gone
-over to the enemy, greatly affected the army. Panthea,
-who imagined that she had been the cause of this loss to
-Cyrus, told him that she would supply the place of
-Araspes with an officer of equal merit. Accordingly, she
-sent for her husband Abradates. Upon his arrival, she
-told him of the kindness and consideration with which
-she had been treated by Cyrus, the generous conqueror.</p>
-
-<p>“And how,” said Abradates, “shall I be able to
-acknowledge so important a service?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 277px;">
-<img src="images/i-109.jpg" width="277" height="573" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">BABYLONIAN KING.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“By behaving towards him as he has done towards
-me,” replied Panthea.</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon, Abradates immediately expressed his gratitude
-to Cyrus, and offered to espouse his cause as his
-faithful ally. Cyrus received him with a noble and
-courteous manner and accepted his offer. Abradates
-then fitted up for Cyrus one hundred chariots at his own
-expense, and provided horses to draw them, from his own
-troop. These armed chariots were a very expensive sort
-of force. The carriages were heavy and strong and were
-usually drawn by two horses. They had short, scythe-like
-blades of steel projecting from the axletrees on each
-side, by which the ranks of the enemy were mowed down
-when the chariots were driven among them. Each chariot
-could hold one or more warriors beside the driver of the
-horses. The warriors stood on the floor of the carriage,
-and fought with javelins and spears. Abradates made
-one chariot much larger than the rest for himself, as he
-intended to command this corps of chariots.</p>
-
-<p>His wife Panthea took much interest in these preparations,
-and unknown to Abradates, she furnished from her
-own treasures a helmet, a corselet, and arm-pieces of
-gold for her husband. She also provided breast-pieces
-and side-pieces for the horses. When the day arrived for
-Abradates to go into battle with his chariot corps, Panthea
-presented her munificent gifts to him, which were most
-royal. Besides the defences of gold, there were other
-articles for ornament. There was a purple robe, a violet
-crest for the helmet, waving plumes, and costly bracelets.
-Abradates was greatly astonished, and exclaimed with
-surprise and pleasure,—</p>
-
-<p>“And so to provide me with this splendid armor and
-dress, you have been depriving yourself of all your finest
-and most beautiful ornaments!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No,” lovingly replied Panthea; “you are yourself
-my finest ornament, if you appear in the eyes of others as
-you do in mine; and I have not deprived myself of you.”</p>
-
-<p>There were many spectators present to see Abradates
-mount in his gorgeous chariot and drive away; but the
-attention of the beholders was centred upon the exquisite
-beauty of Panthea, as she stood by the side of his chariot
-to bid adieu to her husband. This was their last parting.</p>
-
-<p>As Panthea turned away from the royal train, her husband
-waved her a fond farewell.</p>
-
-<p>On the field of battle Abradates displayed heroic courage.
-His chariot was observed by Cyrus, in the thickest
-of the fight, rushing fearlessly into the places of the
-greatest danger.</p>
-
-<p>The victory was gained by Cyrus; but Abradates was
-killed in his chariot; and when Cyrus inquired about him,
-it was reported that Panthea was then attending to the
-interment of the body on the banks of a river which
-flowed near the field of battle.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus immediately went to the spot, where Panthea sat
-weeping over the remains of her beloved husband. Cyrus
-leaped from his horse, and knelt beside the corpse,
-exclaiming,—</p>
-
-<p>“Alas! thou brave and faithful soul, and art thou
-gone?”</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus said what he could to console Panthea; but she
-was unconsolable. He gave directions that everything
-should be furnished for her comfort. Panthea thanked
-him for his kindness.</p>
-
-<p>After Cyrus had left her, Panthea sent away all her
-servants but her waiting-maid, saying that she wished to
-be alone with the dead body of her husband. She then
-drew forth a small dagger, which she had kept concealed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-beneath her robe; and telling her maid to envelop her
-dead body in the same mantle with her husband, and to
-have them buried together in the same grave, she pierced
-her heart with the weapon before her affrighted servant
-could prevent the fatal wound. Abradates and Panthea
-were buried together in one grave, as the heart-broken
-wife had requested, over which Cyrus erected a lofty
-monument to their memory.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus, finding himself master of all the East by the
-taking of Babylon, did not imitate the example of most
-other conquerors, who sully the glory of their victories by
-their cruelties and wicked lives. Cyrus is justly considered
-one of the wisest conquerors and one of the most
-accomplished of the princes to be found in profane history.
-He was possessed of all the qualities necessary to
-make a great man. Cicero observes, that during the
-entire time of the rule of Cyrus he was never heard to
-speak one rough or angry word.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus, according to his belief, was very religious. He
-was, to be sure, a pagan; but he reverenced sacred
-things, and as his deliverance of the Jews showed, he
-acknowledged the power of Jehovah, even though we
-have no account of his complete conversion from idolatry.
-But his devotion to what he held to be religion is
-an example for the worshippers of the one true God.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus, having established himself in the midst of his
-wide kingdom, with his chief residence at Babylon,
-resolved to appear before the people in an august religious
-ceremony, by marching in a grand cavalcade to the
-places consecrated to the gods, in order to offer sacrifices
-to them. He ordered the superior officers of the Persians
-and allies to attend him; and he presented each one with
-a suit of clothes of the Median fashion. These were long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-garments, of various colors, of the finest and brightest
-dyes, richly embroidered with gold and silver. One of
-the historians gives this description of this gorgeous
-pageant.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 472px;">
-<img src="images/i-114a.jpg" width="472" height="273" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">PERSIAN CHARIOT.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 453px;">
-<img src="images/i-114b.jpg" width="453" height="286" alt="drwaing" />
-<div class="caption">TOMB OF CYRUS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“When the time appointed for the ceremony was come,
-the whole company assembled at the king’s palace by
-break of day. Four thousand of the guards, drawn up
-four deep, placed themselves in front of the palace, and
-two thousand on the two sides of it, ranged in the same
-order. All the cavalry were also drawn out, the Persians
-on the right, and that of the allies on the left. The
-chariots of war were ranged half on one side and half on
-the other. As soon as the palace gates were opened, a
-great number of bulls of exquisite beauty were led out,
-by four and four. These were to be sacrificed to Jupiter
-and other gods, according to the ceremonies prescribed
-by the Magi. Next followed the horses that were to be
-sacrificed to the sun. Immediately after them a white
-chariot, crowned with flowers, the pole of which was gilt;
-this was to be offered to Jupiter. Then came a second
-chariot of the same color, and adorned in the same manner,
-to be offered to the sun. After these followed a
-third, the horses of which were caparisoned with scarlet
-housings. Behind came the men who carried the sacred
-fire in a large hearth.</p>
-
-<p>“When all these were on the march, Cyrus himself made
-his appearance upon his car, with his upright tiara upon
-his head, encircled with the royal diadem. His under-tunic
-was of purple mixed with white, which was a color
-peculiar to kings; over his other garments he wore a
-large purple cloak. His hands were uncovered. A little
-below him sat the master of the horse, who was of a
-comely stature, but not so tall as Cyrus, for which reason<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-the stature of the latter appeared still more advantageously.</p>
-
-<p>“As soon as the people perceived the prince, they all
-fell prostrate before him and worshipped him; whether
-it was that certain persons appointed on purpose, and
-placed at proper distances, led others by their example,
-or that the people were moved to do it of their own
-accord, being struck by the appearance of so much pomp
-and magnificence, and with so many awful circumstances
-of majesty and splendor.</p>
-
-<p>“The Persians had never prostrated themselves in this
-manner before Cyrus till on this occasion. When Cyrus’
-chariot was come out of the palace, the four thousand
-guards began to march; the other two thousand moved at
-the same time, and placed themselves on each side of the
-chariot.</p>
-
-<p>“The eunuchs, or great officers of the king’s household,
-to the number of three hundred, richly clad, with javelins
-in their hands and mounted upon stately horses, marched
-immediately after the chariot. After them were led two
-hundred horses of the king’s stable, each of them having
-embroidered furniture and bits of gold. Next came the
-Persian cavalry divided into four bodies, each consisting
-of ten thousand men; then the Median horse, and after
-those the cavalry of the allies. The chariots of war, four
-abreast, brought up the rear and closed the procession.
-When they came to the fields consecrated to the gods,
-they offered their sacrifices first to Jupiter and then to
-the sun. To the honor of the first, bulls were burnt, and
-to the honor of the second, horses. They likewise sacrificed
-some victims to the earth, according to the appointment
-of the Magi; then to the demigods, the patrons
-and protectors of Syria. In order to amuse the people
-after this grave and solemn ceremony, Cyrus thought fit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-that it should conclude with games and horse and
-chariot races.</p>
-
-<p>“The place chosen for them was large and spacious.
-He ordered a certain portion of it to be marked out, and
-proposed prizes for the victors of each nation, which were
-to encounter separately and among themselves. He himself
-won the prize in the Persian horse-races, for nobody was
-so complete a horseman as he. The chariots ran but two
-at a time, one against another. Some days after, Cyrus,
-to celebrate the victory he had obtained in the horse-races,
-gave a great entertainment to all his chief officers,
-as well strangers as Medes and Persians. They had
-never yet seen anything of the kind so sumptuous and
-magnificent. At the conclusion of the feast he made
-every one a noble present, so that they all went home with
-hearts overflowing with joy, admiration, and gratitude;
-and all-powerful as he was, master of all the East and so
-many kingdoms, he did not think it descending from his
-majesty to conduct the whole company to the door of his
-apartment.</p>
-
-<p>“Such were the manners and behavior of those ancient
-times, when men understood how to unite great simplicity
-with the highest degree of human grandeur.”</p>
-
-<p>There are two accounts given of the death of Cyrus.
-Herodotus relates that Cyrus made war against the Scythians,
-and after having attacked them, made a feint of
-retreating, leaving a great quantity of provisions and wine
-behind him. The Scythians, supposing he had indeed
-departed, seized the booty and were soon thoroughly
-drunk from the effects of the wine. While they were
-still in a drunken slumber, they were surprised by Cyrus
-and completely routed. The son of Tomyris, queen of
-the Scythians, had commanded the vanquished army, and
-was taken prisoner. When he recovered from his drunken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-fit and found himself in captivity, with a disgrace hanging
-over his head which he could never hope to wipe out, he
-killed himself in despair. His mother, Queen Tomyris,
-determining to avenge the death of her son, collected a
-large force; and meeting the Persians in a second battle,
-they were defeated, and more than two hundred thousand
-of their number were killed, together with their king,
-Cyrus. Tomyris was so enraged against Cyrus, that
-even his death did not suffice her vengeance; but it is
-said that she ordered his head to be cut off and flung into
-a vessel full of blood. This shocking account, however,
-is not given by Xenophon, who relates that when Cyrus
-perceived the time of his death to be near, he ordered his
-children and officers of state to be assembled about him.
-After thanking the gods for their favors to him, he declared
-his oldest son, Cambyses, to be his successor, and
-left the other, whose name was Tanaoxares, several
-important governments. Having taken his leave of them
-all, he addressed these words to his sons:—</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-119.jpg" width="600" height="411" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">RUINS OF BABYLON.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I could never imagine that the soul only lived while
-in a mortal body, and died when separated from it. But
-if I mistake, and nothing of me shall remain after death,
-at least fear the gods, who never die, who see all things,
-and whose power is infinite. Fear them, and let that fear
-prevent you from ever doing, or deliberating to do, anything
-contrary to religion and justice. For my body, my
-sons, when life has forsaken it, enclose it neither in gold
-or silver, nor any other matter whatever; restore it immediately
-to the earth. Adieu, my dear children; may
-your lives be happy. Carry my last remembrance to
-your mother. And for you, my faithful friends, receive
-this last farewell, and may you live in peace.” Having
-said these words, he covered his face and died, sincerely
-lamented by all his people.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>ALEXANDER THE GREAT.<br />
-
-<small>356-323 B.C.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="center">
-“Self-conquest is the greatest of victories.”—<span class="smcap">Plato.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ONE day a terrible event transpired in the ancient
-city of Ephesus. The magnificent temple of Diana,
-one of the famous Seven Wonders of the World, was in
-flames. The people from all parts of the country flocked
-to the scene of the imposing conflagration. This marvellous
-temple had been built at the expense of all Asia
-Minor. One hundred and twenty-seven kings had contributed
-one hundred and twenty-seven magnificent columns
-of Parian marble, which were sixty feet in height,
-and wrought by the most famous artists. Pliny says that
-two hundred and twenty years were occupied in rearing
-this vast structure. But now the flames mount higher
-and higher. All the efforts of the distracted people to
-subdue them are in vain. See! the rapacious tongues of
-fire are nearing the sacred image of the goddess, which
-the Ephesians believed had fallen from heaven. Why
-does not Diana, the great goddess, prevent the destruction
-of this, her most imposing and sacred shrine? The people
-call upon her in their wild despair; but still the flames
-devour with fury the magnificent structure, and the air is
-rent with the cries of the horror-stricken multitude.
-That very night, while the heavens were still red with
-the lurid light of the burning temple, another event occurred
-upon the other side of the Ægean Sea, in the royal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-palace of the kingdom of Macedon. A tiny infant first
-opened its eyes upon this strange world; and above his
-royal cradle, king and nobles bent in gratified delight,
-and welcomed the little stranger with proud joy. But
-what had this helpless babe to do with the burning temple
-in Ephesus? This baby was the infant Alexander the
-Great; and so superstitious were the people of those
-times that in order to explain the strange fatality of a
-great goddess like Diana allowing her magnificent temple
-to be burned and destroyed without any miraculous intervention
-on her part, to punish such a sacrilegious desecration
-of her shrine by wicked mortals, the historians
-of those days declared that as Diana was at that time
-lending her aid and presence to insure the future greatness
-of the new-born infant Alexander, it was on account
-of her absence on so beneficent an errand, that her temple
-was not guarded from this impious destruction.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-123.jpg" width="600" height="372" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">TEMPLE OF DIANA AT EPHESUS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But what mortal had so dared to insult the gods, as to
-apply the torch to this most sacred shrine? At last it
-was discovered that a person named Herostratus had
-fired the temple; not by accident, but with wicked intent.
-Upon being put to the torture in order to force him to
-confess the motive for so infamous a crime, he declared
-that it was to immortalize his own name, that he might
-be known to all posterity as the destroyer of this famous
-structure. A decree was then published that all should
-be prohibited from mentioning his name. But this decree
-only caused greater curiosity, and scarcely one of the
-historians of those times have failed to mention the name
-of this wicked and vain man.</p>
-
-<p>These events happened about 356 <small>B.C.</small> Alexander was
-born the heir to the throne of one of the Grecian kingdoms.
-His father was King Philip of Macedon. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-kingdom of Macedon was in the northern part of Greece.
-The mother of Alexander was Olympias, the daughter of
-the king of Epirus, which was a kingdom lying west of
-Macedon. Olympias was a woman of very strong character,
-but possessed also some unlovely traits. His father,
-King Philip, was a great warrior, and during the boyhood
-of Alexander, he made many conquests in various parts
-of Greece. Alexander was much favored in the circumstances
-of his early life, and also in the possession of a
-superior mind, and handsome face and figure, and most
-winning manners. He was born to rule; and had he
-always used his many gifts as wisely as he employed his
-executive powers and physical courage, he would have
-been one of the greatest of men, whereas now he can be
-called only one of the greatest of conquerors, whose life
-was marred by some of the most terrible of vices.</p>
-
-<p>But the boy Alexander is intensely attractive and interesting.
-He seemed to possess few of the faults of youth.
-He was active, and full of ardor and enthusiasm, and at the
-same time he was calm and prudent in emergencies, and very
-thoughtful and far-seeing. He was kind and considerate,
-faithful to his friends, and generous to his foes. He possessed
-a remarkable mind, and delighted in study and in
-improving conversation with his teachers. He was privileged
-to be a pupil of the famous Aristotle. The progress
-of the pupil was equal to the care and ability of the preceptor.
-Alexander became very fond of philosophy and
-metaphysics, even though a young boy; and he did not
-omit mathematics and the study of the wonders of nature.
-But Alexander applied himself chiefly to the study of
-morality, as it contributes to the good conduct of a prince
-and the best government of a people. How sad it was
-that, with all these desirable qualities of heart and mind,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-his later years were marred by the greatest of vices, and
-his natural noble impulses were deadened by a life of
-brutal ferocity and drunken debauchery, which tarnished
-the brightness of his glory and sullied the reputation of
-a great conqueror, whose brilliant actions and intrepid
-bravery dazzled the eyes of friends and foes!</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 439px;">
-<img src="images/i-127.jpg" width="439" height="652" alt="line drawing" />
-<div class="caption">ALEXANDER THE GREAT.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But we must not suppose that the youthful Alexander
-was a melancholy dreamer or an embryo philosopher. His
-greatest delight was to read of the exploits of the Grecian
-heroes, which were described by Homer, an ancient poet
-who lived four or five hundred years before the time of
-Alexander. There were then no printed books, but these
-and other works were written on parchment rolls, which
-the young scholars were taught to read. As Homer’s
-tales were written in Greek, which was the native language
-of Alexander, he could understand them very
-easily, and was greatly excited with the stirring scenes
-there depicted. Aristotle ordered a beautiful copy of
-Homer’s poems to be prepared expressly for his princely
-pupil. Alexander afterwards carried this copy with him
-in all his campaigns; and years after, when he was fighting
-the Persians, among the spoils taken from them was a
-very costly casket, which King Darius had used for
-jewels or perfumes. This box was always afterwards employed
-by Alexander as a receptacle for his beautiful copy
-of Homer; and he placed it with his sword beneath his
-pillow at night. Although he was a prince, he was not
-brought up in habits of luxury. The Greeks in those days
-had no firearms, and in battle combatants fought in hand-to-hand
-conflicts. It was the business of the officers to
-lead the men on, and set them the example of bravery by
-performing themselves deeds of daring and valor. It was
-considered necessary to accustom the young, even though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-princes, to hardship and fatigue. Alexander was full of
-energy and spirit. He early evinced a great degree of
-ambition; and when news of his father’s many conquests
-would be brought to the court in Macedon, Alexander
-often remarked to his companions, in a tone of sorrow
-and dejection,—</p>
-
-<p>“There will be nothing left for us to conquer.”</p>
-
-<p>The story of Bucephalus, his famous horse, illustrates
-the courage and also the keen observation of Alexander.
-A spirited war-horse had been sent to Philip while Alexander
-was quite a young boy. The king and his courtiers
-went out into one of the parks to view and try the horse;
-but so furious was the animal that no one dared to mount
-him, as he seemed entirely unmanageable. Philip was
-very much provoked, and gave orders that the horse should
-be sent back into Thessaly, as useless.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander had stood quietly by, noticing the actions of
-the animal and attentively studying his traits. He perceived
-that the horse seemed to be frightened at his own
-shadow; and he begged the consent of his father to
-allow him to try the experiment of mounting him. Philip
-at last gave a reluctant consent, as the attempt seemed
-so hazardous for a young boy, when all his experienced
-grooms condemned the horse as too vicious to be subdued.
-Alexander, however, quickly turned the frightened creature
-round, so that he could not see his shadow; and patting
-him on the head and neck, reassured him with the gentle
-tones of his voice; and as he became less restive, he
-sprang upon the animal and gave him full rein to run as
-he pleased. King Philip and his nobles first looked on in
-terror, then in admiration, as the splendid steed flew over
-the plains like the wind, with his intrepid rider seated in
-calm grace upon his back, evidently perfectly fearless and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-self-possessed. Having allowed the horse to tire himself
-with his free run, Alexander reined him in with perfect
-ease, and returned safely to the king. Philip was so
-pleased and proud of his son that he embraced Alexander
-when he had alighted, and kissing his forehead, he said to
-him, “My son, seek a kingdom more worthy of thee, for
-Macedon is below thy merit.” This Bucephalus afterwards
-became the famous war-horse of Alexander the
-Great, and many surprising stories are told of his marvellous
-sagacity. When this horse was saddled and equipped
-for battle, he seemed to realize his proud position, and
-would allow no one to approach him but Alexander.
-When his master wished to mount him, he would kneel
-upon his forelegs. Some historians relate that when
-Alexander was fighting in a desperate battle, and had
-plunged too imprudently amidst his infuriated foes, Bucephalus,
-though severely wounded, bore his master to a
-place of safety, although he was himself bleeding to death,
-pierced with the fatal darts of the enemy. Then, perceiving
-that Alexander was safe, he fell exhausted, and expired.
-Others say that Bucephalus lived to be thirty years of age,
-and that Alexander so mourned for him at his death that
-he built a city on the spot where his faithful horse had
-been buried, and called it Bucephalia in honor of the
-noble and trusty steed.</p>
-
-<p>When Alexander was only sixteen years of age, his
-father, Philip, made him regent of Macedon while he was
-absent on a great military campaign against the other
-Grecian states.</p>
-
-<p>At this time some ambassadors from the Persian court
-arrived in Macedon. In the absence of Philip, Alexander
-received them with courtesy. They, supposing that he
-would be interested in hearing about the splendors of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-Persian court, entertained him with stories of the famous
-Hanging Gardens of Babylon; and the vine of gold, the
-grapes of which were emeralds, rubies, and other precious
-stones; and the marvellous golden plantain-tree. But
-Alexander, instead of appearing absorbed and delighted
-with these glowing accounts of fabulous wealth, inquired
-about the geography of the country, the various roads, and
-the strength and power of the Persian king. What battles
-he had fought, how he behaved towards his enemies, and
-how he governed his people. The ambassadors, astonished
-at such maturity in one so young, and filled with admiration
-for the Grecian prince, began to compare among themselves
-Alexander and their own Artaxerxes, saying, “This
-young prince is great, while our king is only rich.”</p>
-
-<p>When Alexander was eighteen years of age, King
-Philip took him with him on one of his military campaigns,
-during which Philip fought one of his great battles
-in Bœotia. Philip gave the command of one of the wings
-of his army to Alexander; and so valiantly did he lead
-his troops, that his wing was victorious, and Philip and his
-command had to exert themselves to prevent being outdone
-by the youthful prince. His mother, Olympias, was
-of a haughty and imperious temper, and Philip himself
-was headstrong and obstinate, and the result of their
-frequent quarrels was a final separation, and Philip obtained
-a divorce from his wife, she returning to the court
-of her father. Philip then married a young and beautiful
-princess, and at the wedding festivities an incident occurred
-which illustrated the traits of both father and son.
-The uncle of the new queen, having made some disparaging
-remark about Olympias, the mother of Alexander,
-that prince threw the cup from which he had been
-drinking at the offender’s head. Attalus, the queen’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-uncle, then threw his cup at Alexander, and Philip, enraged
-at such disturbance at the feast, seized his sword,
-and rushed towards his son. Having a lame foot, he
-stumbled, and fell upon the floor; and Alexander, looking
-upon him with scorn and contempt, exclaimed, “What
-a fine hero the states of Greece have to lead their armies,
-a man who cannot get across the floor without tumbling
-down!” He then turned away and left the palace, and
-afterwards joined his mother in Epirus, and espoused her
-cause in the quarrel with his father.</p>
-
-<p>Philip had been planning a great expedition into Asia.
-He had formed a strong combination among the states of
-Greece, and had raised a large army. Alexander is said
-to have taken sides with his mother, not so much out of
-filial devotion, as because he was jealous of his father’s
-conquests, and desirous himself of reaping the glory
-which seemed to await the Grecian army in the coming
-campaign. Before setting forth upon this expedition,
-Philip desired to become reconciled to his son Alexander,
-and Olympias. He realized the importance of securing
-the co-operation of Alexander in his plans; and it would
-be dangerous to leave his own kingdom with a son so
-near in open hostility. Whereupon, Philip sent conciliatory
-messages to Olympias and Alexander, and he proposed
-that one of his own daughters should marry the
-present king of Epirus, who was the brother of Olympias.
-His overtures were peacefully received; and Olympias and
-Alexander returned to Macedon, where great preparations
-were made for the proposed wedding festivities. Philip
-determined that this event should be celebrated with most
-gorgeous pomp and splendor.</p>
-
-<p>He received very costly presents from the other states
-of Greece; and though their professions of friendship<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-were very hollow on both sides, he took this occasion to
-pay marked attention to their kings and generals; and
-they sent him golden crowns, most beautifully wrought,
-and large embassies, expressing their good wishes.
-Athens, the seat of literature in Greece, sent a poem, in
-which the history of Philip’s expedition into Persia was
-related in anticipation, and in which he was described as
-being most triumphantly successful.</p>
-
-<p>The wedding was at length celebrated with much splendor,
-and the day after the nuptials was devoted to games
-and processions. In one of the latter, which was a
-religious ceremony, twelve statues of the gods, carved
-with marvellous art, were carried with great pomp through
-the streets. A thirteenth, which surpassed them all in
-magnificence, was a statue of Philip, representing him
-as a god. The procession was moving towards a great
-theatre, where games and spectacles were to be exhibited.
-At length Philip himself appeared in the procession.
-He had ordered that a wide space should be left around
-him, so that he might be more plainly visible to the
-populace, and also as a proof of his confidence in the love
-of his people, thus to expose himself without a guard.
-He was clothed in white robes, and adorned with a sparkling
-crown. Just as the statues of the gods had been
-carried into the theatre, and as that of Philip was about
-to be born in, an officer of the guards, a young Macedonian
-nobleman, named Pausanias, advanced quickly
-towards King Philip, and before the spectators suspected
-his design, he plunged his dagger into the heart of the
-king, who fell dead upon the ground. All was now confusion.
-The murderer was instantly cut to pieces by the
-guards; and an officer of state hastened to inform Alexander
-of his father’s death, and his succession to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-throne. An assembly of the leading statesmen was
-hastily summoned, and Alexander was proclaimed king.
-It was by some supposed that the motive which induced
-Pausanias to murder Philip was a private revenge for a
-personal insult he had received from the uncle of Philip’s
-present wife, which insult Philip would not notice. But
-others believed that the murder was instigated by the
-other states of Greece, who were hostile to Philip.
-Demosthenes, the celebrated orator, was Philip’s bitterest
-enemy, and he used his eloquence in stirring up the
-Grecians against him. These orations were called his
-Philippics.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 376px;">
-<img src="images/i-135.jpg" width="376" height="600" alt="engraving DEMOSTHENES" />
-</div>
-
-<p>Alexander’s first measures were to punish his father’s
-murderers. Although it could not be ascertained who
-were involved in the plot, several were suspected, and put
-to death. Alexander decided not to make any change
-in his father’s appointments, and to carry out his proposed
-campaigns. There were two officers in particular, who
-were the especial confidants of Philip,—Antipater and
-Parmenio. Antipater had charge of the civil, and Parmenio
-of military affairs. Alexander, at this time, was
-only twenty years of age; and Parmenio, a very distinguished
-general, was sixty years old. But the genius,
-power, and enthusiasm of Alexander’s character made
-even men of such age and experience willing to obey his
-orders, and aid in the execution of his plans.</p>
-
-<p>The Macedonians advised Alexander not to attempt to
-hold all the states of Greece; but to relinquish the conquests
-of Philip, and join with them in an alliance. But
-Alexander determined to march boldly into their midst,
-and demand their continued subjection, which his father
-had gained. This was a bold measure for so young a
-prince. He thereupon collected his forces, and set forth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-at their head. He first marched his troops to the banks
-of the Danube, which he crossed in one night. He defeated
-the king of the Triballi in a great battle, and subdued
-several barbarous nations. While he was thus
-engaged, several of the Grecian cities, inflamed by the
-eloquence of Demosthenes, who harangued the people,
-calling Alexander “a child, a hare-brained boy,” formed
-a powerful alliance against him. A false report that
-Alexander was dead inspired the Thebians with a boldness
-which proved their ruin. Alexander, having secured
-his kingdom from the barbarians, marched with much expedition
-towards Greece, and passed the Strait of Thermopylæ.
-He then said to his army, “Demosthenes
-called me, in his orations, a child, when I was in Illyria,
-and among Triballi; he called me a young man, when I
-was in Thessaly; and I must now show him, before the
-walls of Athens, that I am a man grown.” At the Pass
-of Thermopylæ, a great council was held between Alexander
-and the Thessalians, who were favorable to his
-claims. Alexander now appeared so suddenly before the
-city of Thebes, as to astonish them. He demanded only
-that they should deliver up to him the two ringleaders of
-the revolt against him, and then he promised a general
-freedom to the citizens. But the Thebans insultingly replied
-that they would only comply, if two of his generals
-were delivered to them. Alexander now determined upon
-a speedy punishment, and attacked them so vigorously,
-that the city was taken, and a large number of the Thebans
-were killed. Alexander then resolved to make Thebes a
-warning to all the Grecian states, and the city was accordingly
-destroyed, and thirty thousand of the Thebans were
-sold into slavery. He, however, set the priests at liberty;
-and those who had opposed the revolt, and also the descendants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-of Pindar, the famous poet. Alexander now sent
-word to Athens, and demanded that they should deliver
-up to him ten orators, whom he supposed had influenced
-the people against Philip and himself. The Athenians,
-though in this dilemma, were still unwilling to deliver up
-their orators to death; and at last, one Demades, who was
-a friend of Alexander’s, offered to undertake the embassy
-alone, and plead for them. Alexander, having now
-satiated his revenge, and believing that the Grecians
-were enough subdued to be controlled, waived his demand.</p>
-
-<p>He then summoned all the monarchs and potentates of
-Greece, to meet him at Corinth, that he might obtain
-from them the same supreme command against the Persians
-which had been conferred by them upon his father
-Philip. The deliberations of the assembly were short,
-and Alexander was appointed generalissimo against the
-Persians.</p>
-
-<p>There is a story told of Alexander and the philosopher
-Diogenes, who was then at Corinth. Alexander supposed
-that Diogenes would of course come with the officers and
-governors of cities, and philosophers, who waited upon
-him immediately to congratulate him upon his election.
-But Diogenes did not come, and so Alexander, having
-curiosity to see a man who would thus slight a king, condescended
-to call upon Diogenes. Attended by his courtiers,
-he paid the philosopher a visit.</p>
-
-<p>Diogenes was found lying in the sun, and seeing the
-crowd of people advance toward him, he sat up and fixed
-his eyes upon Alexander.</p>
-
-<p>That prince was surprised to see so great a philosopher
-in such seeming poverty, and accosting him kindly, asked
-him courteously if there was anything he wanted.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Diogenes, “that you would stand a
-little out of my sunshine.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The courtiers of the monarch were astounded at such
-audacious boldness; but Alexander exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<p>“Were I not Alexander, I would be Diogenes.” For
-Alexander perceived, that even with all his wealth and
-power, he was in some sense inferior to a man to whom
-he could give, and from whom he could take, nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander now returned to Macedon to prepare for his
-great expedition into Asia. As king of Macedon he possessed
-large estates and revenues, which were his own
-personal property, independent of the state. He apportioned
-these among his officers and generals, both those
-who were to go with him, and those who were to remain
-to guard his kingdom, over which he placed Antipater
-as viceregent during his absence.</p>
-
-<p>He displayed such generosity in his gifts, that his
-friends asked him what he had reserved for himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Hope,” replied Alexander.</p>
-
-<p>After all things were ready, Alexander celebrated the
-religious sacrifices and ceremonies. This great Macedonian
-festival was held in honor of the Muses, as well as
-Jupiter. The Muses, according to the belief of the
-Greeks, were nine singing and dancing maidens, who
-were very beautiful in face and form, graceful in motion,
-and brilliant in mind. They were supposed to have first
-come from Thrace, and having gone to Mount Olympus,
-they were made goddesses by Jupiter. At last they selected
-for their place of residence a palace in Mount
-Parnassus. They were worshipped all over Greece and
-Italy as the goddesses of music and dancing. Afterwards
-arts and sciences were assigned to them,—one
-being the goddess of history, another of astronomy,
-another of tragedy, etc.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander celebrated these festivities with great magnificence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-and pomp, and then bid a long farewell to his
-native land. His army consisted of about thirty thousand
-foot and four or five thousand horse. But they were all
-brave men. His officers were experienced men of sixty
-years of age, who had served under Philip his father.
-Parmenio commanded the infantry, Philotas his son the
-cavalry. Alexander sent a fleet of one hundred and fifty
-galleys over the Ægean Sea, to land at Sestos, to be
-ready to transport his army across the Hellespont. The
-army marched to Sestos by land. Having arrived there,
-Alexander left Parmenio to conduct the transportation of
-the army, while he himself went in a single galley to
-visit the ruins of Troy, which city was the scene of
-Homer’s poems, which had so charmed Alexander in his
-early years. So Alexander resolved that his first landing
-in Asia should be at Troy. As they approached the
-Asiatic shore, Alexander took the helm and steered the
-galley himself, and just before he reached the land, he
-stood upon the prow and threw a javelin at the shore as
-he approached, as a sign of his purpose to take possession.
-He then leaped upon the land before any of his
-crew, and afterwards offered sacrifices to the gods, having
-erected altars on the shore to Jupiter, Minerva, and to
-Hercules.</p>
-
-<p>A large part of Asia Minor had been settled by the
-Greeks, and sometimes these cities had been under Grecian
-rule, and sometimes under Persian. They were now included
-in the dominion of Persia. One of these cities,
-called Lampsacus, had incurred the anger of the Greeks,
-because it had formerly revolted from their rule. Alexander
-determined to destroy this city. The ambassador
-sent by the city to implore his mercy was a famous historian,
-who had once been Alexander’s teacher. Alexander<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-knowing his errand, and fearing his former friendship
-might weaken his resolve, declared with a solemn oath,
-as the ambassador approached him, that he would not
-grant the request he was about to make. The witty historian
-replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“I have come to implore you to <i>destroy</i> Lampsacus.”</p>
-
-<p>Alexander, pleased with the readiness of the reply,
-kept his oath; and of course the city was saved.</p>
-
-<p>In his progress onward, Alexander found himself
-obliged to cross either Mount Ida, or a river which descended
-from its slopes, called the Granicus. As they
-neared the river, some of the Grecian scouts, or as they
-were called by the Greeks, <i>prodromi</i>, reported that the
-opposite side was lined with Persian troops, waiting to
-dispute the passage.</p>
-
-<p>Parmenio counselled Alexander against an immediate
-crossing, but Alexander was unwilling to delay. Accordingly,
-the army advanced to the banks in order of battle.
-The centre portion of the Grecian troops was arranged in
-a peculiar manner, and was called a phalanx. The men
-composing it were heavily armed. They bore a shield
-upon the left arm, and they carried spears sixteen feet
-long and pointed with iron, which they clasped firmly
-with both hands, with the points projecting in front.
-These men were placed in line, one behind another, to
-the number of sixteen, all facing the enemy. So that a
-phalanx contained sixteen thousand men. The spears
-were so long, that when drawn up in close lines, the points
-of eight or ten of the ranks projected in front, forming a
-bristling wall of sharp points of steel. This wall no force
-could penetrate; men, horses, elephants, rushed upon it,
-only to meet inevitable destruction. If their enemies
-threw javelins from a distance, the shields upon their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-arms were held in such a manner as to form a mass of
-close scales of metal, upon which the javelins fell harmlessly.
-The troops upon the sides of the phalanx were
-called the wings, and were composed of cavalry and foot-soldiers,
-who were more lightly armed, and could therefore
-move with greater speed.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander commanded one wing, and Parmenio the
-other. The Persians had assembled in vast numbers
-upon the opposite shore. The Grecian army, led by Alexander,
-descended into the stream, and moved on through
-the water. The Persians dashed down the farther banks,
-and strove to oppose their landing. A terrible battle ensued,
-the soldiers grappling with each other in the midst
-of the waves, and the Granicus ran red with the blood
-of the wounded. Alexander was fearless and irresistible,
-and his long white plume, waving from his shining helmet,
-was a conspicuous target for the arrows and javelins of
-the enemy. At one time, meeting the foe in close combat,
-a Persian horseman aimed a blow at his head with a
-sword. The weapon took off the white plume, and cut
-into the helmet of Alexander, who immediately stabbed
-his antagonist through the heart. Just as a second Persian
-had raised his sword to strike a fatal blow upon the
-exposed head of the Grecian hero, a Macedonian general
-cut the uplifted arm from the assailant’s body, and saved
-the life of Alexander the Great. The Persians were defeated,
-and Alexander landed his brave band of warriors
-upon the opposite bank, while the terrified Persians fled
-in dire confusion.</p>
-
-<p>Darius himself had not commanded this Persian force,
-and he employed all of the following winter in preparing
-for a vigorous defence of his dominions from the encroaching
-foe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Alexander, however, did not remain idle during the
-winter. He marched from province to province, meeting
-with many adventures. During this time Parmenio had
-remained in the western part of Asia Minor, with quite a
-large force. As the spring approached, Alexander ordered
-him to meet him at Gordium. One reason which
-influenced Alexander in this plan was the desire to attempt
-to untie the famous Gordian knot. The story of
-the Gordian knot was this:—</p>
-
-<p>Gordius was a sort of mountain farmer. One day he
-was plowing, and an eagle flew down and alighted upon
-his yoke, and remained there until he had finished his
-plowing. This was an omen; but Gordius did not know
-what it meant. So he went to a neighboring town to consult
-the prophets and soothsayers. On his way he met a
-maiden who was going forth to draw water. Gordius fell
-into conversation with her, and related to her the occurrence
-which had just transpired. The maiden advised
-him to go back and offer a sacrifice to Jupiter. Finally
-she consented to go back with him and aid him. The
-affair ended in her becoming his wife, and they lived in
-peace and happiness for many years upon their farm.
-They had a son named Midas. The father and mother
-were accustomed to go out in their wagon drawn by oxen,
-with Midas as their driver. One day they were going into
-the town in this manner, at a time when it happened that
-there was an assembly convened, which was in a state of
-great perplexity, on account of civil dissensions in the
-country. They had just inquired of an oracle what they
-should do. The oracle said that “a cart would bring
-them a king who would terminate their eternal broils.”
-Just then Midas came up, driving the cart in which his
-father and mother were seated. The assembly thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-at once that this must be the cart meant by the oracle,
-and they made Gordius king by acclamation. They took
-the cart and yoke to preserve as sacred relics, consecrating
-them to Jupiter, and Gordius tied the yoke to the pole of
-the cart by a thong of leather, making a knot so close
-and complicated that nobody could untie it again. It
-was called the Gordian knot. The oracle afterwards said
-that whoever should untie this knot should become monarch
-of all Asia. Thus far, nobody had succeeded.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander was very desirous of examining this wonderful
-knot and trying his own fortune. He accordingly
-went into the temple where the sacred cart had been
-placed, and after looking at the knot, he became convinced
-that it could not be untied, whereupon he cut it to
-pieces with his sword.</p>
-
-<p>From this story comes the old saying, when any one
-gets out of a difficulty by very violent means, “He has
-cut the Gordian knot.”</p>
-
-<p>After leaving Gordium, Alexander proceeded with his
-whole army against Darius, who was now advancing to
-meet him.</p>
-
-<p>On a very warm day, after a long and fatiguing march,
-the Grecian army reached the river Cydnus, a small stream
-which came down from Mount Taurus, near the city of
-Tarsus. Alexander, warm and weary, plunged into the
-cold mountain stream, and was taken with a violent chill,
-and as he was lifted out of the water, he fainted away.
-He was borne to his tent. A severe and protracted fever
-came on. Alexander bewailed this enforced delay, and
-summoned his physicians, to whom he said,—</p>
-
-<p>“The present condition of my affairs will not admit
-either of slow remedies or fearful physicians. A speedy
-death is more eligible to me than a slow cure. In case<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-the physicians think it is in their power to do me any
-good, they are to know that I do not so much wish to
-live as to fight.”</p>
-
-<p>All his physicians but one, however, were afraid to dare
-any violent and hazardous remedies, especially as an unfavorable
-result would endanger their honor; for Darius
-had published that he would reward with a thousand talents
-the man who should kill Alexander.</p>
-
-<p>His old family physician, named Philip, who had attended
-him from childhood, offered to give him a dose of
-medicine which would be speedy in its effects, but desired
-three days to prepare it. During this interval of waiting
-Alexander received a letter from Parmenio, who had been
-left behind in Cappadocia, warning him against this physician
-Philip, and stating that Darius had bribed him by
-promising a thousand talents, and his sister in marriage.
-Alexander courageously refrained from divulging its contents,
-and placed the letter under his pillow.</p>
-
-<p>When Philip entered the tent with the medicine, Alexander
-took the cup, and handing the letter at the same
-time to the physician, he swallowed the dose without
-waiting his perusal of it. After reading the letter, Philip
-replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“Royal sir, your recovery will soon clear me of the
-guilt of murder, with which I am charged.”</p>
-
-<p>Three days after, Alexander showed himself to his
-army, who were filled with delight at his wonderful recovery;
-and the accused physician was now the recipient of
-the most lavish praises, and looked upon with the deepest
-reverence, because he had saved the life of their
-sovereign.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly Darius marched in stately grandeur to meet his
-advancing enemy. A description of his martial procession<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-reads more like a picture of a grand tournament
-than the march of an army. One of the historians thus
-describes this gorgeous pageant:—</p>
-
-<p>“The king advanced with his troops towards the Euphrates.
-It was a custom long used by the Persians never
-to set out upon a march till after sunrise, at which time
-the trumpet was sounded for that purpose from the king’s
-tent. Over this tent was exhibited to the view of the
-whole army the image of the sun set in crystal, as the
-Persians were worshippers of the sun and fire.</p>
-
-<p>“The order they observed in their march was as follows:
-First, they carried silver altars, on which there was
-fire, called by them sacred and eternal; and these were
-followed by the Magi, singing hymns after the manner of
-their country. They were accompanied by three hundred
-and sixty-five youths, corresponding to the number of
-days in a year, clothed in purple robes. Afterwards came
-a chariot consecrated to Jupiter, drawn by white horses,
-and followed by a courser of a prodigious size, to whom
-they gave the name of the sun’s horse; and the equerries
-were dressed in white, each having a rod of gold in his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Ten chariots, adorned with sculptures in gold and silver,
-followed after. Then marched a body of horse,
-composed of twelve nations, whose manners and customs
-were various, and all armed in a different style. Next
-advanced those whom the Persians called the Immortals,
-amounting to ten thousand, who surpassed the rest of the
-barbarians in the sumptuousness of their apparel. They
-all wore gold collars, were clothed in robes of gold tissues,
-with surtouts completely covered with precious
-stones. Then followed those called the king’s relations,
-to the number of fifteen thousand, in habits very much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-resembling those worn by women, and more remarkable
-for the vain pomp of their dress than the glitter of their
-arms. Then came the king’s guards; they carried the
-cloak of the monarch, and walked before his chariot, in
-which he seemed to sit as on a high throne. This chariot
-was enriched on both sides with images of the gods in
-gold and silver; and from the middle of the yoke, which
-was covered with jewels, rose two statues a cubit in
-height, the one representing war, the other peace, having
-a gold eagle between them, with wings extended, as
-ready to take its flight.</p>
-
-<p>“But nothing could equal the magnificence of the king.
-He was clothed in a vest of purple, striped with silver,
-and over it a long robe glittering all over with gold and
-precious stones, that represented two falcons rushing
-from the clouds and pecking at one another. Around
-his waist he wore a gold girdle, called cidaris, after the
-manner of women, from which hung his scimitar, the
-scabbard of which flamed all over with gems. On his
-head he wore a tiara, or mitre, round which was a fillet of
-blue mixed with white. On each side of him walked two
-hundred of his nearest relations, followed by ten thousand
-pikemen, whose pikes were adorned with silver and tipped
-with gold; and lastly, thirty thousand infantry, who composed
-the rear-guard. These were followed by the king’s
-horses, four hundred in number, all of which were led.</p>
-
-<p>“Then came the chariots of his wife Statira and his
-mother Sysigambis, with the several female attendants
-of both queens, riding on horseback. After them came
-fifteen large chariots, in which were the king’s children
-and those who had the care of their education, escorted
-by a band of household officers. Then followed three
-hundred and sixty carriages, containing the ladies of the
-court, dressed in the costumes of princesses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 309px;">
-<img src="images/i-149.jpg" width="309" height="362" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">DARIUS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“After these marched six hundred mules and three
-hundred camels, which carried the king’s treasure, and
-were guarded by a great body of archers. After these
-came other chariots, in which rode the wives of the crown
-officers and of the greatest lords of the court; then the
-sutlers and servants of the army. In the rear were a
-body of light-armed troops, with their commanders, who
-closed the imposing procession.”</p>
-
-<p>Darius, at the head of six hundred thousand men, and
-surrounded with this mighty pomp, considered himself
-invincible, and imagined that he had only to show his
-gorgeous army to the few Grecian troops led by the boy
-Alexander, in order to inspire such awe as should cause
-them to fly in terror.</p>
-
-<p>The two opposing forces came in sight of each other
-upon a plain near the city of Issus. It was now evening.
-At midnight the army of Alexander had reached a defile
-in the chain of mountains called Mount Taurus. Among
-these mountains there are various tracts of open country,
-and upon one of these the army of Darius was encamped.
-Alexander ascended one of the eminences from whence
-he could look down upon the great plain beyond, which
-was dimly illuminated by the smouldering fires of the
-Persian encampment. Alexander there sacrificed by
-torchlight to the gods of the Grecians, and returning to
-his army, prepared for an early conflict. In the morning,
-at break of day, Alexander began his march down to the
-plain. The battle waged hotly all day, and at sunset all
-the valleys and defiles around the plain of Issus were
-thronged with the vast masses of the Persian hosts, flying
-in confusion from the victorious Macedonians. The
-flight of Darius had been so sudden that he had left his
-wife and mother and children and much of his treasure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-behind in the deserted camp. He pressed on in his
-chariot as far as he could, and then mounted a horse and
-fled for his life. Alexander and his army soon abandoned
-the pursuit, and returned to take possession of the Persian
-camp. The tents of King Darius were filled with gold
-and silver vessels, caskets, boxes of rich perfumes, and
-many articles of luxury. The greater part of his vast
-treasures, however, he had previously sent to Damascus,
-where they were afterwards captured by Parmenio. So
-that Alexander came into possession of all his splendid
-treasures, upon which he had so prided himself. Alexander
-treated the captive wife, mother, and children of
-Darius with great kindness, and gave them every attention
-he would have paid to honored guests.</p>
-
-<p>Darius got together a small remnant of his army and
-continued his flight. After he had crossed the Euphrates,
-he sent an ambassador to Alexander to make propositions
-for peace. He offered him any sum he desired as a ransom
-for his wife, mother, and child, and agreed to become
-his ally and friend if he would deliver them up and
-depart to his own dominions. Alexander replied by a
-brief letter. He reminded him that the Persians had
-been the first to invade Greece. “I am acting only on
-the defensive,” wrote Alexander. “The gods, who always
-favor the right, have given me the victory. I am
-now monarch of a large part of Asia, and your sovereign
-king. If you will admit this, and come to me as my subject,
-I will restore your wife, mother, and child without
-any ransom. And, at any rate, whatever you decide in
-respect to these proposals, if you wish to communicate
-with me on any subject hereafter, I shall pay no attention
-to what you send unless you address it to me as your
-king.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As the vast army of the Persian king had now been
-defeated, none of the smaller kingdoms or provinces
-thought of resisting. They yielded one after another, and
-Alexander appointed governors of his own to rule over
-them. He then advanced along the shores of the Mediterranean
-Sea, until he reached the city of Tyre.</p>
-
-<p>The Tyrians wished to avoid a quarrel if possible, and
-so sent complimentary congratulations to Alexander, presenting
-him with a golden crown. Alexander replied
-courteously, and stated that his reason for coming to
-Tyre was to offer sacrifices to Hercules, a god whom the
-Tyrians worshipped. The Tyrians, fearful of allowing
-him to enter the city, sent him word that it would not be
-in their power to receive him in the city, but that he could
-offer the sacrifice on the site of ancient Tyre, as there
-was a temple sacred to Hercules among the ruins there.</p>
-
-<p>This answer displeased Alexander, and he now determined
-to build a broad causeway from the mainland to
-the island upon which the present city of Tyre stood.
-This causeway he would build out of the ruins of old
-Tyre, and then march his army over it and take the new
-city. His soldiers accordingly commenced this work.
-But the Tyrians constantly harassed the workers; now
-attacking them with arrows and javelins; then they took
-a large galley and filled it with combustibles, and towing
-it near the enemy’s works, they set fire to it; and putting
-it in motion towards the pier where there was the largest
-collection of engines and machines, the vessel drifted
-down upon Alexander’s works, and notwithstanding the
-most strenuous efforts of the Macedonians, the whole
-mass was destroyed. Not long after this the sea itself
-came to the aid of the Tyrians, and a fearful storm destroyed
-the portions of the work which had escaped the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-fire. Whereupon the Tyrians deridingly inquired,
-“Whether Alexander was greater than Neptune, and
-if they pretended to prevail over that God?”</p>
-
-<p>But Alexander was not to be defeated by fire, or storm,
-or the hostile Tyrians, and again ordered his men to
-repair the pier. Meanwhile, Alexander himself collected
-and equipped a fleet, and sailed into the Tyrian seas.</p>
-
-<p>The fleet of galleys now protected the men at work on
-the pier, and Alexander began to prepare for the final
-assault. He proposed to force his entrance on the southern
-side of the city, where there was a large breach in
-the wall.</p>
-
-<p>The plan was successful. He prepared a number of
-ships, with platforms raised upon them in such a manner
-that on getting near the walls they could be let down, and
-form a sort of bridge, over which the men could pass to
-the broken fragments of the wall, and thence ascend
-through the breach above.</p>
-
-<p>The ships advanced to the proposed place of landing.
-The bridges were lowered, and before the Tyrians realized
-their danger the city was filled with thirty thousand infuriated
-soldiers, who showed them no mercy. Thus the
-city was stormed.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander here displayed a brutal ferocity which tarnished
-the brightness of his victory. The inhabitants
-were put to the sword, some were executed, some thrown
-into the sea; and it is said that two thousand were crucified
-along the seashore.</p>
-
-<p>Prosperity and power were beginning to exert a baneful
-influence upon the character of Alexander. He became
-haughty, imperious, and cruel. About this time
-Darius sent him a second communication, proposing terms
-of peace. Darius offered him a large sum of money for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-the ransom of his wife, mother, and child, and agreed to
-give him all the country he had conquered. He also
-offered him his daughter Statira in marriage. He recommended
-that he should be content with his conquests, and
-added that he could not hope to succeed in crossing the
-mighty rivers of the East, which were in the way of his
-march toward the Persian dominions.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander replied “that if he wished to marry the
-daughter of Darius, he could do it without his consent;
-as to ransom, he was not in want of money; and as to
-the offer of Darius to give him all the territory west of
-the Euphrates, it was absurd for a man to speak of giving
-what was no longer his own; that he had crossed too
-many seas in his military expeditions, since he left Macedon,
-to feel any concern about the <i>rivers</i> that he might
-find in his way; and that he should continue to pursue
-Darius wherever he might retreat in search of safety and
-protection, and he had no fear but that he should find
-and conquer him at last.”</p>
-
-<p>The siege and storming of Tyre has been considered
-one of the greatest of Alexander’s exploits.</p>
-
-<p>After the subjugation of Tyre, Alexander commenced
-his march for Egypt. His route led him through Judea.
-This was about three hundred years before the birth of
-Christ. A Jewish writer, named Josephus, who lived and
-wrote a few years after Christ, relates the circumstances
-of Alexander’s visit to Jerusalem.</p>
-
-<p>When Alexander had been besieging Tyre, he had sent
-to Judea for supplies, which were refused, as the Jews
-were subjects of Darius. Hearing that Alexander was
-about to pass through Jerusalem, they began to fear a
-fate like that of Tyre. Accordingly the high priest Jaddus,
-who was the chief magistrate at Jerusalem, caused<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-great sacrifices to be offered to Almighty God, and public
-and solemn prayers were made, to implore his guidance
-and protection.</p>
-
-<p>The day after these services he told the people that
-they need fear nothing; for God had appeared to him in
-a dream, and directed him what to do. “We are not to
-resist the conqueror,” said he, “but go forth to meet him
-and welcome him. We are to strew the city with flowers,
-and adorn it as for a festive celebration. The priests are
-to be dressed in their pontifical robes, and lead the procession,
-and the people are to follow. In this way we are
-to go out to meet Alexander as he advances, and all will
-be well.”</p>
-
-<p>When Alexander met this procession he stopped, and
-appeared both pleased and surprised. He advanced to
-meet the high priest with an air of the profoundest reverence.</p>
-
-<p>Parmenio, astonished at such a sudden change in his
-sovereign, asked for an explanation. To which Alexander
-replied,—</p>
-
-<p>“When I was in Macedon, before setting out on this
-expedition, one night I had a remarkable dream. In my
-dream this very priest appeared before me, dressed just
-as he is now. He exhorted me to banish every fear, to
-cross the Hellespont boldly, and to push forward into the
-heart of Asia. He said that God would march at the
-head of my army, and give me the victory over the Persians.
-I recognize this priest as the same person who
-appeared to me then. It is through his encouragement
-and aid that I am here, and I am ready to worship and
-adore the God whose service he administers.”</p>
-
-<p>Alexander then joined the high priest in the procession,
-and returned with him to Jerusalem. The high priest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-afterwards read and interpreted to Alexander some of the
-prophecies of Daniel, which were supposed to refer to that
-conqueror; and Alexander then assured the Jews that
-they should be protected in their rights, and especially in
-their religious worship.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander next proceeded to the city of Gaza. This
-was a place of considerable importance, and was under
-command of a governor, named Betis, whom Darius had
-appointed. This Betis refused to surrender the place to
-Alexander; whereupon, he besieged it for two months.
-Having captured the city, Alexander treated the wretched
-captives with extreme cruelty. He cut the garrison to
-pieces, and sold the inhabitants into slavery. Then becoming
-still more brutal, his punishment of Betis was
-most shocking. He ordered him into his presence, and
-said to him, “You are not going to die the simple
-death that you desire. You must suffer the worst torments
-that revenge can invent.”</p>
-
-<p>Betis calmly looked at Alexander, without reply. This
-still more incensed the cruel conqueror.</p>
-
-<p>“Observe his dumb arrogance,” said Alexander; “but
-I will conquer him. I will show him that I can draw
-groans from him, if nothing else.”</p>
-
-<p>He then ordered holes to be made through the heels of
-his helpless victim; and passing a rope through the
-wounds, commanded the body to be fastened to a chariot,
-and dragged about the city until the poor captive was
-dead. Thus had prosperity and conquest degraded the
-character of Alexander.</p>
-
-<p>Having destroyed Gaza, with such inhuman brutality,
-Alexander now formed a more ambitious project. The
-heroes of Homer were represented as sons of the gods;
-and Alexander now began to aspire to supernatural honors,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-and accordingly resolved that he should be declared
-to be the son of a god. He determined to visit the temple
-of Jupiter Ammon, in the Oasis of Siwah, and bribe the
-priests there to declare his divine origin.</p>
-
-<p>The priests at the great temple of Jupiter Ammon
-received Alexander with marks of distinction and honor.
-After most solemn and magnificent ceremonies, the priests,
-pretending to confer with the god in the temple, declared
-that Alexander was indeed his son; and accordingly they
-paid him almost divine honors. Alexander, in his subsequent
-orders and decrees, styled himself Alexander king,
-son of Jupiter Ammon.</p>
-
-<p>On his return from the Oasis, Alexander began building
-a city at the mouth of the river Nile. This city he
-called Alexandria. This city is the only monument of his
-greatness which still remains. Upon an island near the
-coast, opposite the city of Alexandria, a magnificent lighthouse
-was erected, which was considered in those days
-one of the Seven Wonders of the world. It was said to
-have been five hundred feet high.</p>
-
-<p>The building of the city of Alexandria was one of the
-most beneficent acts of Alexander. How much better for
-the world, as well as for his own true glory, if good deeds
-had been the rule instead of the exception in the life of
-this famous man!</p>
-
-<p>Alexander was now master of Asia Minor, Phœnicia,
-Judea, and Egypt. He now continued his pursuit of
-Darius.</p>
-
-<p>The Persian army had crossed the Tigris river, and
-encamped upon the extensive plain of Arbela. Here
-Darius waited the approach of his relentless foe.</p>
-
-<p>The night before the noted battle between Alexander
-and Darius, the conqueror, who had come within sight of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-the Persian host, having completed his arrangements for
-the morrow’s conflict, retired to rest. Early in the morning
-Parmenio awoke him, and expressed surprise at his
-sleeping so quietly when such vast issues were at stake.
-“You seem as calm,” said he, “as if you had fought the
-battle and gained the victory.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have done so,” replied Alexander; “I consider the
-whole work done, when we have gained access to Darius,
-and forced him to give us battle.”</p>
-
-<p>Alexander is thus described as he appeared at the head
-of the army on this important occasion. “He wore a
-short tunic, girt close around him, and over it a linen
-breastplate, strongly quilted. The belt by which the
-tunic was held was embossed with figures of beautiful
-workmanship. Upon his head was a helmet of polished
-steel, surmounted with a white plume. He wore also a
-neck-piece of steel, ornamented with precious stones; he
-carried a shield, lance, and sword.”</p>
-
-<p>The Persians employed elephants in their wars. They
-also had chariots, armed with long scythes. But the terrible
-Macedonian phalanx, with columns of infantry and
-flying troops of horsemen on either side, cut through the
-mighty mass of their enemies with irresistible force. The
-elephants turned and fled. The Persian troops were
-routed, and Darius himself was obliged to flee. Alexander
-went to Babylon, where he was received as a conqueror.
-The storehouse of the Persian treasures were at
-Susa, a strong city east of Babylon. Alexander then
-marched to Susa, and took possession of the vast treasures
-collected there. Besides these treasures, Alexander
-here found a number of trophies which had been brought
-from Greece by Xerxes, some hundred years before. Alexander
-sent them all back to Greece. He then proceeded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-in a triumphal march to Persepolis, the great Persian capital.
-Here Alexander exhibited another striking instance
-of wicked weakness. He was giving a great banquet to his
-officers. Among the women at this feast was a vain and
-foolish woman named Thais. While the guests were half
-intoxicated from the effects of wine, this Thais, seizing a
-burning torch and waving it above her head, proposed
-that they should set fire to the great palace of Persepolis,
-which had been built by Xerxes, and amuse themselves
-by watching the imposing conflagration. Alexander,
-flushed with wine, consented; and the drunken guests
-sallied forth, alarming the inhabitants with their boisterous
-shouts and flaming torches. Arriving at the magnificent
-palace, they applied their torches, and the gorgeous
-structure was soon a frightful mass of lurid flames. Alexander,
-sobered by the sublime and awful spectacle, repented
-of his wild folly. He ordered the fire to be
-extinguished; but it was too late; the infamous deed
-was done; the grand old palace was a hopeless mass of
-ruins, and another blot, which never can be effaced, tarnished
-the fame and character of Alexander.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding Alexander’s evil deeds, he was kind
-to his mother. He sent her rich presents after his conquests;
-and though she was proud and imperious, and
-made Antipater, whom Alexander had left in command
-in Macedon, much trouble, so that Antipater was forced
-to complain of her, Alexander said that a single tear of
-his mother’s would outweigh ten thousand accusations
-against her. Olympias, however, did not repay his devotion
-with equal nobleness; she wrote frequent letters to
-him full of petty fault-finding, and making unkind comments
-upon his officers and generals; and though Alexander
-showed her respect, he evinced more love towards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-the mother of Darius, treating her and the captive children
-of his foe with the greatest kindness and consideration.
-After the battle of Arbela, while Alexander marched to
-Babylon and Susa, Darius had fled to Ecbatana. He was
-thus in one of the Persian royal palaces, while his family
-were with his conqueror at another. The wife of Darius
-had died before this time, while still a captive in the Grecian
-camp. Many of the forces of Darius had gone over
-to Alexander’s side, about forty thousand remaining
-faithful to him. But among these seeming friends were
-treacherous foes. A general, names Bessus, formed the
-plan of seizing Darius, and making him a prisoner, and
-then taking the command of the army himself. If Alexander
-should be likely to conquer him, he would then try
-to save himself by giving up Darius. If, on the other
-hand, their forces should be successful, he would then get
-Darius out of his way by assassinating him, and usurping
-the throne. Bessus communicated his plans to many of
-the chief officers, who agreed to become parties in the
-plot. The Grecian soldiers in the Persian army revealed
-this conspiracy to Darius, but he would not believe in the
-treachery of his countrymen. As Alexander advanced,
-Darius had retreated from Ecbatana, and Alexander
-followed him. While halting for rest, a Persian nobleman
-came into the Macedonian camp, and informed Alexander
-that the enemies’ forces were two days’ march in
-advance. Bessus was in command, and Darius deposed,
-the plot having been successfully carried out. Alexander
-immediately set forward in pursuit of Bessus and his
-royal prisoner. Alexander had now been two years advancing
-from Macedon into the heart of Asia, in pursuit
-of Darius. His conquest would not be complete until
-that monarch was captured. As soon as Bessus and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-Persian army found that Alexander was close upon them,
-they attempted to hurry forward in the hope of escaping.
-Darius was in a chariot. They urged this chariot on, but
-it was too cumbersome for rapid flight. Bessus and his
-chief conspirators then called upon Darius to mount a
-horse and escape with them, leaving the rest of the army
-to its fate. Darius refused. Having become convinced
-of their treachery, he said he would rather trust himself
-in the hands of Alexander than to such traitors as they.
-Bessus and his confederates, exasperated by this reply,
-thrust their spears into Darius’ body as he sat in the
-chariot, and galloped away. Darius remained in his
-chariot, wounded and bleeding. His many sorrows had
-at last overwhelmed him. His kingdom was lost; his
-beloved wife was in the grave; his family were in captivity;
-his cities were sacked; his palaces and treasures
-plundered; and now, betrayed and abandoned, he was
-dying, slain by his treacherous countrymen, whom he
-had trusted as his friends. Alone, deserted by all the
-world, he, the once mighty monarch of vast dominions,
-now lay there, faint and bleeding, waiting the coming of
-death or his victorious conqueror.</p>
-
-<p>The Macedonians at last discovered the chariot in
-which Darius was lying pierced with spears. The floor
-of the chariot was covered with blood. They raised him
-a little, and he spoke; he called for water. A Macedonian
-soldier went to get some; others hurried to find Alexander,
-and bring him to the spot where his long-pursued
-enemy was dying. When the soldier returned with the
-water, Darius received the drink, and then said to those
-about him, “That he charged them to tell Alexander that
-he died in his debt, though he had never obliged him;
-that he gave him a multitude of thanks for the great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-humanity he had exercised towards his wife, mother, and
-his children, whose lives he had not only spared, but treated
-them with the greatest consideration and care, and had
-endeavored to make them happy; that he besought the
-gods to give victory to his arms, and make him monarch
-of the universe; that he thought it was not necessary to
-entreat him to revenge his murder, as this was the common
-cause of kings.” Then taking Polystratus, one of
-the Macedonians who had brought him the desired water
-to relieve his agonizing thirst, he continued, “Give Alexander
-thy hand, as I give thee mine, and carry him in my
-name the only pledge I am able to offer,—of my gratitude
-and affection.” Saying these words, Darius breathed
-his last.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander, coming up a moment after, was shocked at
-the spectacle before him, and wept bitterly. He then
-spread his own military cloak over the dead monarch.
-Having ordered the body to be embalmed, it was then
-enclosed in a costly coffin, and sent to Sysigambis, the
-mother of Darius, in order that it might be buried with
-the ceremonies usually paid to Persian monarchs, and be
-entombed with his ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>The Persian generals under Bessus now resolved to
-betray him, as he had betrayed his master. They sent
-word to Alexander that they would deliver him into his
-hands if he would send a small force to the place where
-they designated. Accordingly this command was entrusted
-to a Macedonian officer named Ptolemy, who
-found Bessus in a small walled town, to which he had
-fled for refuge.</p>
-
-<p>When Bessus was brought to Alexander, that monarch
-ordered the prisoner to be publicly scourged, and then
-caused his face to be mutilated in a manner customary in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-those days when a criminal was condemned to be stamped
-with a perpetual mark of infamy. Alexander then sent
-the traitor as a second present to Sysigambis, to be dealt
-with as her revenge for the death of Darius might dictate.</p>
-
-<p>After being terribly tortured, the miserable Bessus paid
-the last penalty of his crimes by a most shocking death,
-inflicted upon him by Sysigambis, to avenge her murdered
-son.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander was now twenty-six years of age. He was
-now the undisputed master of all western Asia. His
-wealth was boundless, his power was supreme, but his
-character was fearfully demoralized. He lived in the
-palaces of the Persian kings, and gave himself up to all
-sorts of vices. He spent his time in drunken debaucheries.
-The strong sentiment of love and respect with
-which he had formerly inspired all around him was gone,
-and conspiracies and treason prevailed. When the suspicions
-of Alexander were aroused, he put to death some
-of his most trusted officers.</p>
-
-<p>At last there was a conspiracy, in which Philotas, the
-son of the faithful Parmenio, was implicated. Being
-arrested and put to the torture, Philotas accused his
-father, in the hopes of saving himself. Though there was
-no evidence against that trusty general, Alexander caused
-them both to be put to death.</p>
-
-<p>The death of Parmenio and his son, in this violent
-manner, raised much unfavorable feeling against Alexander.</p>
-
-<p>Another case exemplifies the wicked deeds of Alexander
-when under the influence of wine, and puffed up
-with vain-glorious pride.</p>
-
-<p>One of his oldest and most faithful generals, named
-Clitus, was present at one of the frequent banquets given<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-by Alexander. That monarch, excited with wine, had
-been boastfully recounting his own exploits, and had
-spoken disparagingly of those of his father Philip in comparison.
-Clitus, also heated with wine, began to praise
-Philip, under whom he had fought; and then growing
-bolder, he upbraided Alexander for the death of Parmenio.
-Alexander, frenzied with wine and rage, seized
-a javelin, hurled it at Clitus, and struck him down, saying,
-“Go then, and join Philip and Parmenio.” Alexander,
-as soon as he came to himself, was overwhelmed with
-remorse and shame. He could not, however, restore Clitus
-to life, or remove the disgrace from his own name.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander continued for two or three years his expeditions
-and conquests in Asia. He penetrated into India as
-far as the banks of the Indus. But his soldiers refused to
-go further. He made an address to his army, but he
-could not change their decision. At last one of his officers
-said to him:—</p>
-
-<p>“We have done all for you that it was possible for man
-to do. We have crossed seas and land. We have marched
-to the end of the world, and you are now meditating the
-conquest of another, by going in search of new Indias,
-unknown to the Indians themselves. Such a thought may
-be worthy of your courage and resolution, but it surpasses
-ours, and our strength still more. Look at these ghastly
-faces, and these bodies covered with wounds and scars.
-Remember how numerous we were when first we set out
-with you, and see how few of us remain. The few who
-have escaped so many toils and dangers have neither
-courage nor strength to follow you any further. They all
-long to revisit their country and their homes, and to enjoy
-for the remainder of their lives the fruits of all their toils.
-Forgive them these desires so natural to man.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Alexander was bitterly disappointed, but found himself
-obliged to relinquish further conquest. He returned to
-Babylon, where his triumphal entrance was a scene of
-magnificence and gorgeous splendor.</p>
-
-<p>But his life soon evinced the hopeless degradation into
-which he had fallen. He not only indulged in vice himself,
-but encouraged others to follow his evil example.
-He would offer prizes at his banquets to those who would
-drink the most, thus causing forty deaths at one of his
-entertainments.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander now entered upon a life of the most effeminate
-luxury and profligate dissipation. He separated
-himself more and more from his old Macedonian friends,
-and delighted in Persian associates. He married Statira,
-the eldest daughter of Darius, and gave the youngest
-daughter to his particular friend Hephæstion, who was
-his chosen companion in all his drunken revels.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander’s habits of intoxication and vice rapidly increased.
-On one occasion, after he had spent a whole
-night in drinking and carousing, some of the guests proposed
-that they should begin a second banquet instead
-of retiring.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander half intoxicated, agreed. There were twenty
-present at this new feast. Alexander, to show how much
-he was able to drink, pledged each one separately, and
-then all together.</p>
-
-<p>There was a very large cup, called the bowl of Hercules,
-which he now called for, and having filled it to the
-brim, he drank it off, and again filled the huge bowl, and
-again drank the entire contents. His strength soon failed
-him, and he sank to the floor.</p>
-
-<p>They bore him away to his apartments. A violent fever
-followed this terrible debauch, which his physicians in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-vain tried to allay. At last, finding he must die, he drew
-his signet ring off from his finger; this was the token that
-he felt all was over. He handed the ring to one of his
-friends, saying, “When I am gone, take my body to the
-temple of Jupiter Ammon, and inter it there.”</p>
-
-<p>Being asked to whom he left his kingdom, he replied:
-“To the most worthy.” Thus died Alexander the Great,
-at the age of thirty-two.</p>
-
-<p>Preparations were now made to convey his body with
-royal pomp to its last resting-place, in accordance with
-his orders.</p>
-
-<p>A very large and magnificent funeral carriage was built.
-“The spokes of the wheels were overlaid with gold, and the
-axles were adorned upon the outside with massive golden
-ornaments. The platform, or floor, of the carriage was
-eighteen feet long and twelve feet wide. Upon this there
-was erected a magnificent pavilion, supported by Ionic
-columns, profusely ornamented, both within and without,
-with purple and gold. The interior of the pavilion was
-resplendent with gems and precious stones.</p>
-
-<p>“A throne was raised in the centre of the platform,
-richly carved and gilded. It was empty; but the crowns
-of the various nations over which Alexander had ruled
-were hung upon it. At the foot of the throne was the
-coffin, made of solid gold, containing the remains of the
-great conqueror. The arms of Alexander were placed
-between the throne and the coffin.</p>
-
-<p>“On the four sides of the carriage were sculptured figures
-representing Alexander. There were Macedonian
-soldiers, Persian squadrons, elephants of India, troops of
-horse, and various other emblems of the departed hero’s
-conquests, sculptured upon this magnificent funeral carriage.
-Around the pavilion was a network of golden lace,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-to which bells were attached, which tolled mournfully as
-the carriage moved slowly along. Sixty-four mules, selected
-for their great size, drew this ponderous car. Their
-harness was mounted with gold and enriched with precious
-stones.”</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding all this gorgeous pomp, the body of
-Alexander never reached its first destination. Ptolemy,
-the officer, to whom Egypt was given in the division of
-Alexander’s empire, came forth to meet this solemn procession,
-and preferring that the body of Alexander should
-be buried in the city of Alexandria, it was interred there,
-and an imposing monument was erected over his grave.
-This monument is said to have remained standing for fifteen
-hundred years, though no remains of it are to be
-found.</p>
-
-<p>The most fitting comment upon the life and character
-of Alexander the Great will be found in these brief words
-of Napoleon Bonaparte, who said of Alexander: “He
-commenced his career with the mind of Trajan, but closed
-it with the heart of Nero and the morals of Heliogabalus.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>JULIUS CÆSAR.<br />
-
-<small>100-44 B.C.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 12em;">“The elements</span></div>
-<div class="verse">So mix’d in him, that Nature might stand up</div>
-<div class="verse">And say to all the world, This was a man!”</div>
-<div class="sig"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare.</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THERE was wild tumult in the ancient city of Rome.
-The populace thronged the streets, carrying stones
-and bludgeons. Armed troops hurried hither and thither.
-The members of the Senate, a sort of House of Lords,
-were assembled in confusion; and their blanched faces
-denoted the terror which rendered them powerless to help.
-Several of the principal citizens had been murdered, and
-the other Roman lords, or patricians, knew not how soon
-their doom might come. But who was their terrible foe?
-Had some wild barbarian horde invaded their land and
-taken possession of their proud and magnificent city?
-Why did the nobles and men of rank tremble; and why
-were the common people roused to this wild outburst of
-fury?</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 433px;">
-<img src="images/i-169.jpg" width="433" height="640" alt="drawing JULIUS CÆSAR." />
-</div>
-
-<p>It was no barbarian enemy, but civil discord amongst
-themselves, which thus filled the streets with murderers
-and the patricians with terror. Two powerful rivals were
-fighting for the possession of the Eternal City, which, at
-that time, was mistress of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Marius, the plebian, or champion of the common people,
-had roused the populace to fight against Sylla, the
-patrician, who had been absent with his army in Italy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-Sylla had been appointed by the Senate to command the
-forces which were to wage war with Mithridates, a
-powerful Asiatic monarch. But during his absence, his
-enemy, Marius, had contrived to have this appointment
-revoked, and to gain for himself this coveted command.
-Two officers, called tribunes, were sent to Sylla’s camp,
-to inform him of this advantage which his rival had gained
-over him. Sylla killed the two officers for daring to
-bring him such a message, and immediately marched
-towards Rome.</p>
-
-<p>Marius, in retaliation, caused some of Sylla’s friends in
-the city to be put to death, and with his bands of soldiers
-endeavored to resist the entrance of Sylla and his army
-by throwing stones upon the troops from the roofs of the
-houses as they entered the city. Sylla then ordered every
-house to be set on fire, from which missiles had been
-thrown, and thus the helpless citizens were endangered
-by lawless and infuriated mobs on the one side, and relentless
-flames on the other. Marius was conquered, and
-obliged to flee for his life. He was an old man of seventy
-years of age. The Senate declared him a public enemy,
-and offered a large sum for his head. Alone and friendless,
-Marius wandered from place to place, enduring the
-greatest privations, and encountering many dangers, till
-at last he crossed the Mediterranean Sea, and took refuge
-in a poor hut among the ruins of ancient Carthage.
-Surely it would seem that his days of conquest were
-over. Alone, starving, helpless, old, and banished, with
-a heavy price set upon his head, his fortunes seemed
-indeed hopeless.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving this fallen champion in his hut, amidst the
-ruins of a past power which could only remind him of
-his own hopeless prospects, we must return to the city
-of Rome, and look upon another scene.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A religious procession is wending its way through the
-famous Forum. This Forum was a magnificent square,
-surrounded by splendid edifices and adorned with sculptures
-and statues and many gorgeous trophies of past
-victories. There were vast colonnades forming covered
-porticoes, where the populace assembled and where courts
-of justice were held. This Forum was constantly embellished
-with new monuments, temples, statues, arches, and
-columns by the successful generals, as they returned in
-triumph from foreign campaigns. Here the various orators
-delivered their famous orations which inflamed the
-people to arms, or moved them to wild outbursts of enthusiastic
-applause in favor of some successful candidate,
-or calmed their boisterous tumult into silent and breathless
-attention to the impassioned and eloquent words
-which fell from the lips of these intellectual monarchs
-over the minds of their less gifted countrymen. It is night
-now in this great public square, and as the procession of
-priests and attendants slowly pass beneath a row of
-majestic colonnades and enter one of the temples, we
-note the face and figure of the foremost one. He is
-scarcely more than a boy, but he wears the purple robe
-called <i>læna</i>, and a conical mitre known as the <i>apex</i>, which
-mark his distinguished rank as holding the office of <i>Flamen
-Dialis</i>, or High Priest of Jupiter. This youth,
-seventeen years of age, is tall and fair, and though slender
-in form, is handsome and noble in bearing. He is
-descended from patrician families of high rank and proud
-position; and as he passes within the portal of the sacred
-temple, the beholder would involuntarily cast upon him
-an admiring glance, and if a stranger, would surely inquire
-who was this comely, noble youth who so early in life was
-distinguished by so high an office and royal bearing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Again we enter the Forum, but it is now high noon. A
-noted orator has ascended the pulpit, where public speakers
-were accustomed to stand when addressing the assemblies.
-This pulpit was ornamented with brazen beaks of
-ships, which had been taken by the Romans in their many
-wars. Such a beak was named a rostrum, and the pulpit
-so adorned was called the <i>Rostra</i>, or the Beaks,—often
-termed in modern books a rostrum. As the orator of
-the day began to speak, a youth might have been seen
-pressing through the crowd, and listening with wrapt attention
-to the eloquent words which fell from the speaker’s
-lips. As the burst of impassioned appeal became more
-persuasive, the dark eyes of the youth flashed with responsive
-fire, and his cheek glowed with a flush of kindling
-enthusiasm. Though he wears now the robes of a
-Roman patrician, we recognize him as the same person
-whom we beheld at midnight entering the temple in the
-attire of a High Priest of Jupiter.</p>
-
-<p>Again the scene changes to midnight, but it is not in
-the Roman Forum, but at a grand feast in one of the
-sumptuous palaces of a Roman lord. Amidst a party of
-gay and joyous young men, seemingly intent only upon
-luxurious pleasures, we see once more the face and figure
-of this same youth who has already so attracted our interest
-and admiration. Priest, student, devotée of pleasure,
-little did his companions or acquaintances imagine that this
-young Julius Cæsar, patrician born, but at the same time
-personally inclined towards the plebeian party, would become
-Julius Cæsar, future Master of Rome, and therefore
-ruler of nearly all of the then known world. This Julius
-Cæsar became the greatest hero of Roman history, and
-ranks as one of the three heroes of ancient days,—Alexander
-of the Greeks, Hannibal of the Carthaginians, and
-Julius Cæsar of the Romans, forming the famous trio.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Again we must return to the old exile among the ruins
-of Carthage. One day he is awakened from his hopeless
-despondency by wild rumors from Rome. His rival and
-enemy, Sylla, had equipped a fleet and sailed away to
-wage war with Mithridates. The friends of Marius now
-rally again, and the old exile is brought back from Africa
-in triumph and given the command of a large army. As
-he pretended to be the friend of the common people, they
-flocked to his standard. Vast multitudes of revolted
-slaves, outlaws, and desperadoes joined his forces, which
-now advanced toward Rome. As soon as Marius gained
-possession of the city, he began a dreadful work of murder
-and destruction. He beheaded one of the consuls,
-and ordered his head to be set up as a spectacle of horror
-in the public square. Blood ran like a red river in the
-streets of Rome. Patricians of the highest rank and
-station were everywhere seized without warning, without
-trial, and put to torture and death.</p>
-
-<p>It is midnight in the great city, and under cover of the
-darkness, the evil deeds of blood-thirsty men, fired by
-hatred and lawless ambition, are renewed with fresh
-ferocity.</p>
-
-<p>Against his bitterest enemies Marius contrived special
-modes of execution, in order to wreak upon them his
-insatiable revenge for his exile, and consequent sufferings
-and privations.</p>
-
-<p>See! a party of men, composed of soldiers, and an enfuriated
-mob of people are dragging a lord of noble rank
-up to the top of a high rock, known as the Tarpeian
-Rock, from the summit of which state criminals were
-hurled down the precipice, upon sharp rocks below, where
-they were left to die in awful torture. This patrician, or
-Roman noble, had incurred the especial animosity of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-Marius, and so by his orders, the proud old man is torn
-from family and friends; and without trial, with the
-senate powerless to help, he is dragged here at midnight
-to suffer the ignominious and terrible death of a state
-criminal. This noted Tarpeian Rock still stands in
-Rome, and it received its name from this ancient story.
-In early times there was a Roman girl, named Tarpeia,
-living in the ancient city, when it was besieged by an
-army from a neighboring country. The soldiers of the
-besieging forces wore golden bracelets upon their arms,
-as well as shields; and upon demanding that Tarpeia
-should open the gates to them, she declared that if they
-would give her, “those things they wore upon their arms,”
-she would comply with their demands. She meant, of
-course, their bracelets; but not knowing the word by
-which they were designated, she brought upon herself
-a fearful doom. The soldiers agreed to grant her desire,
-and so she opened to them the gates. As they passed
-within, they threw their shields upon the poor girl, in
-proud derision, instead of giving her the coveted bracelets,
-exclaiming, “Here are the things we wear upon our
-arms.” Tarpeia was crushed to death beneath the
-weight of the ponderous shields; and so the spot where
-she fell became a rock of blood, and was ever afterwards
-called, in remembrance of her sad fate, the Tarpeian
-Rock. There is a further legend connected with this spot,
-for some of the ignorant people believe that in the interior
-of one of the many caverns, which have been found perforating
-this rock, Tarpeia still sits, enchanted, covered
-with gold and jewels. But should any one attempt to
-find her, he is fated to lose his way, and never to return
-from his reckless adventure. But the bloody triumph of
-Marius was of short duration. He was seized with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-fatal sickness, and the cruel tyrant was obliged to meet
-an enemy he could not conquer. Death meted out to him
-some of the horrible torments he had inflicted upon others,
-as he died in delirious ravings, haunted by the presence
-of phantom foes. His son Marius assumed his father’s
-power; but Sylla, having returned from the Asiatic wars,
-and in his turn taking possession of the city of Rome,
-the followers of Marius were put to death with the same
-ferocity with which they had murdered others, and Sylla
-even exceeded the bloody deeds which had so brutally
-been performed by his hated rival. Thus the city of
-Rome was again plunged into wild confusion, and the
-scenes of murder and massacre, with all their shocking
-horrors, were re-enacted.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 332px;">
-<img src="images/i-177.jpg" width="332" height="339" alt="drawing from photo" />
-<div class="caption">JULIUS CÆSAR.<br />
-
-(From Photograph of Bust in Capitol, Rome.)</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is at this time that the young Julius Cæsar first
-becomes a prominent figure in that bloody drama. Although
-Julius Cæsar was a patrician by birth, he was
-favorable to the plebian party. The elder Marius had
-married his aunt, and Cæsar himself had married a
-daughter of Cinna, who was four times consul, and was
-a powerful and ardent partisan of the party of Marius.
-Julius Cæsar, although at this time a very young man,
-was too prominent a person to be overlooked by Sylla,
-in his vengeance against the plebian party. The friends
-of Julius Cæsar tried to plead his youth with Sylla,
-saying that surely such a mere boy could do no harm.
-But Sylla had marked the aspiring spirit of the young
-nobleman, who with all his love of gayety and pleasure
-had not neglected his studies, and who was already gaining
-the dangerous reputation of an eloquent orator. Sylla
-now demanded that Julius Cæsar should divorce his wife
-Cornelia, the daughter of Cinna. Cæsar absolutely refused,
-partly from devotion to his wife, and partly from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-a proud indomitable spirit, which thus early was a prominent
-trait in his character, and which made him brave
-any danger rather than allow himself to be controlled.
-Knowing that punishment for his refusal to comply with
-the commands of Sylla would be destruction, Cæsar fled
-from Rome. Sylla deprived him of his rank and titles,
-confiscated the property of his wife and his own estates,
-and placed his name on the list of public enemies.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar was now a fugitive and exile. He was also
-suffering from intermittent fever, and was obliged to seek
-some new place of refuge each day, as a price was set
-upon his head. He was at one time seized by a centurion,
-but Cæsar offered him a bribe sufficient to secure
-his release. After various adventures, he wandered into
-Asia Minor, and coming to the kingdom of Bithynia, he
-joined himself to the court of the king Nicomedes, and
-remained some time in that country. After leaving
-Bithynia, Julius Cæsar, while sailing near the isle of
-Pharmacusa, was taken prisoner by some pirates from a
-mountainous country called Cilicia. These Cilician pirates
-were half sailors and half mountaineers. They built swift
-galleys, and made excursions over the Mediterranean
-Sea for conquest and plunder. Cæsar asked the pirates
-what sum they demanded for his ransom. They replied
-twenty talents, whereupon Cæsar laughed at such a paltry
-sum being considered sufficient for his ransom, and told
-them they evidently did not know who he was. He then
-declared he would give them fifty talents, and forthwith
-sent all of his companions and attendants to the shore to
-go to the cities where he was known, and secure the sum
-required. Meanwhile he boldly remained among these
-rough men, with no attendants but a physician and
-two servants. Cæsar now assumed command over his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-very captors, giving orders, and demanding quiet when he
-wished to sleep. He joined them in their sports, and
-wrote and read orations to them as though he was their
-ruler. His boldness and skill elicited their profound admiration.
-The pirates one day asked him what he would
-do to them if he should ever capture them after obtaining
-his own release. He replied laughingly that he would
-crucify them all. This, though a seeming jest, was well
-fulfilled. His attendants, having returned with the ransom
-money, Julius Cæsar was released. He proceeded immediately
-to Miletus, equipped a small fleet, then sailed back to
-the place where the ships of the pirates still lay at anchor,
-and having attacked them, he recovered the ransom
-money, seized their ships, and took all the men prisoners.
-He carried his captives to the land, and having cut all
-their throats he hung their dead bodies upon crosses, in
-fulfilment of his threat.</p>
-
-<p>Julius Cæsar then went to Rhodes, where his former
-teacher Apollonius, a noted philosopher and rhetorician,
-resided. Cicero was also one of the pupils of this philosopher.
-Cæsar at length obtained pardon from Sylla,
-through the intercession of the vestal virgins and some of
-his friends. When Sylla at last yielded to their importunity,
-he exclaimed, “Your suit is granted; but know
-that this man, for whose safety you are so extremely
-anxious, will some day or other be the ruin of the party
-of the nobles, in defence of which you are leagued with
-me, for in this one Cæsar you will find many a Marius.”
-Sylla had since died, and though the aristocratical party
-were still in the ascendency, the party of Marius were
-recovering somewhat from their overthrow.</p>
-
-<p>Julius Cæsar now returned to Rome, and boldly espoused
-the popular cause. His first public act was the arraignment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-of Dolabella, governor of the province of Macedonia.
-When the trial came on Cæsar appeared in the Forum,
-and gained great applause for his eloquence and daring.
-Dolabella was defended by noted orators, and was acquitted
-by the Senate. But Julius Cæsar had displayed
-his marvellous powers of eloquence, which immediately
-gave him great renown.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar now devoted himself to public speaking in the
-Forum, and acquired much celebrity. He pronounced
-a splendid panegyric upon the wife of Marius at her funeral;
-and also upon his wife Cornelia, who died soon after.
-Cæsar now became ambitious of securing public offices,
-and lavished large sums in shows and spectacles to
-amuse the people and secure their votes. He thus became
-deeply involved in debt, but he was still successful
-in rising from one office to still higher positions, until he
-obtained that of <i>quæstor</i> in the province of Spain. This
-was the second office in command, the first officer being
-called a <i>prætor</i>. During his absence in Spain, Cæsar
-beheld a statue of Alexander the Great, which adorned
-one of the public buildings in the city of Cadiz, or Hades,
-as it was then called. Cæsar was now about thirty-five
-years of age, and reflecting upon the conquests of Alexander,
-who had died when only thirty-two years of age,
-Cæsar sighed over his own tardy accomplishment of his
-lofty ambitions, and leaving his post, returned to Rome,
-determined to seek higher honors.</p>
-
-<p>He was chosen <i>ædile</i> by the people. He now had
-charge of the public edifices of the city, and of the games
-and spectacles which were exhibited in them. The arrangements
-made by him for the amusement of the people
-were on the most magnificent and extravagant scale.
-He exhibited three hundred and twenty pair of gladiators,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-and he made great additions to the public buildings. He
-now endeavored to have Egypt assigned to him as a province;
-but the senate resisted this plan, and Cæsar was
-obliged to abandon it. About this time, Cæsar obtained
-a triumph over the senate, who were very jealous of his
-increasing power. He replaced the statues and trophies
-of Marius in the capital, which had been taken down and
-destroyed by the order of Sylla when he returned to
-power. In their place, Cæsar had ordered magnificent
-new ones to be made, and put up secretly in the night.
-The senate endeavored to take them down again, but the
-people rallied in such vast numbers, as to prevent the
-work of destruction, and Cæsar was triumphant.</p>
-
-<p>A dangerous conspiracy, headed by the notorious Catiline,
-was now discovered, and several conspirators were
-arrested. It was when the senate was debating whether
-they should be put to death, that Cæsar made his noted
-speech which was replied to so hotly by Cato.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar was by some accused of being cognizant of this
-plot, if he were not indeed a participant.</p>
-
-<p>After the death of Cornelia, Cæsar had married Pompeia,
-but he afterwards divorced her. Julius Cæsar now
-began to plan for a still higher office, and upon the death
-of Metellus, the chief pontiff, Cæsar solicited the office.</p>
-
-<p>He was now so heavily involved in debt, that he faced
-ruin if defeated, or glory if elected. When the day of
-election came, Cæsar parted with his mother, saving,—“You
-will see me this day either chief pontiff or an exile.”</p>
-
-<p>But he succeeded in gaining the election. Having obtained
-this added power, he desired to procure the position
-of <i>prætor</i> in Spain. This he also secured, but so
-large were his debts, that Crassus, a man of immense
-wealth, was, by Cæsar’s promises of using his political<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-power in his behalf, persuaded to lend him the sum needed
-to satisfy his creditors.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar was very successful in his province in Spain,
-and he returned in a short time with military glory, and
-with money sufficient to pay his debts, and furnish fresh
-supplies for further bribes to secure still higher positions.
-He now aspired to the office of consul, which was the
-highest office in the Roman state.</p>
-
-<p>At this time, Pompey was the military idol of the people,
-and Crassus, powerful on account of his vast wealth, was
-Pompey’s bitter enemy. Cæsar conceived the plan of
-reconciling these two dangerous foes, and availing himself
-of the aid of both to further his own ambitious projects.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar was successful in this plan, and they then formed
-a triple league, binding themselves to promote the political
-elevation of each other. Having secured such powerful
-adherents, Cæsar now pushed his claims for consulship.
-He chose a man of great wealth, named Lucceius, to be
-associated with himself, who agreed to pay all the expenses
-of the election, for the sake of the honor of being
-consul with Cæsar. But the political enemies of Cæsar,
-knowing that they could not defeat his election, determined
-to place Bibulus, in the place of Lucceius, as the
-associate of Cæsar. Accordingly they raised as much
-money to expend for Bibulus as Lucceius should employ.
-The result was the election of Cæsar and Bibulus as the
-two consuls. But having entered upon the duties of that
-office, Cæsar so completely ignored Bibulus, and assumed
-so entirely the whole control of the consular power, that
-Bibulus retired to his house in chagrin and mortification,
-and allowed Cæsar to have his own way. Two consuls
-were always required by law, and so the wags of the city,
-in speaking of Cæsar’s consulship, instead of saying, “In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-the year of Cæsar and Bibulus, consuls,” according to the
-usual form, would often say, “In the year of Julius and
-Cæsar, consuls,” ignoring the name of Bibulus, and taking
-the two names of Cæsar to denote his supreme rule.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;">
-<img src="images/i-185.jpg" width="460" height="678" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">CÆSAR IN GAUL.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Cæsar’s ambition was not yet satisfied. He had secured
-the highest place in the state, and now he aspired to military
-glory and foreign conquest. Having obtained the
-command of an army, he entered upon a campaign in the
-heart of Europe, which he continued for eight years.</p>
-
-<p>The large tract of country now known as Northern
-Italy, Switzerland, France, Germany, and England, was
-then spoken of as Gaul. The part on the Italian side of
-the Alps was called Cisalpine Gaul, and that which lay
-beyond was termed Transalpine Gaul.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar now placed himself at the head of an army of
-three Roman legions, and set out for Gaul. The first
-battle he fought was with the German king Ariovistus.
-Cæsar was victorious, and the Germans were put in complete
-subjection. Other provinces of Gaul now submitted
-without resistance, and those who determined to league
-together to resist this new military power were soon
-brought to submission.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most interesting of the various excursions
-made by Cæsar during these eight years was his expedition
-into Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>When Cæsar arrived on the northern shores of France,
-he began to inquire of all the travelling merchants whom
-he met, and who in those days journeyed from one nation
-to another to buy and sell goods, about the best manner
-of crossing the channel, and regarding the people on the
-English side of the water. But the merchants could give
-him little information, and so he fitted out a galley, manned
-with many oarsmen, and placing it under the command of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-an officer, he directed him to cross the channel and discover
-the best harbors to land on the other side, and then
-to return and report. This officer was gone five days, and
-upon his return, Cæsar determined to transport his troops
-across the channel. Cæsar had collected a large number
-of sailing vessels upon which he embarked his forces,
-and upon a given day, at one o’clock in the morning, the
-fleet set sail.</p>
-
-<p>The Britons had in the meantime learned of Cæsar’s intended
-invasion, and they collected in vast numbers to
-guard the shore.</p>
-
-<p>When the Roman fleet approached the land, the cliffs
-were everywhere lined with troops of Britons, and every
-available point was well guarded.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar now proceeded with his fleet along the shore,
-the Britons following on the land until a level plain was
-reached. Here Cæsar determined to attempt to disembark.
-A dreadful struggle ensued. The Britons plunged
-into the water, and the Romans shot darts and arrows
-from the decks of the vessels upon the assailants of their
-comrades, who were endeavoring to make the landing.
-The Britons were at last driven back, and Cæsar succeeded
-in obtaining possession of the shore.</p>
-
-<p>These campaigns of Cæsar, in a military point of view,
-were a succession of magnificent exploits. The people at
-Rome were unbounded in their enthusiastic praise, and
-decreed him triumph after triumph, and were prepared to
-welcome him with high honors when he should return.
-Plutarch says of these eight years of foreign conquest,
-that Cæsar took eight hundred cities, conquered three
-hundred nations, fought pitched battles, at separate
-times, with three millions of men, took one million of
-them prisoners, and killed another million on the field.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 498px;">
-<img src="images/i-189.jpg" width="498" height="468" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">THE LANDING OF JULIUS CÆSAR IN BRITAIN.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>From a humane standpoint, however, what a fearful
-destruction of human lives, to satisfy the insatiable ambition
-of one man. How much more desirable would have
-been the fame of blessing, rather than destroying and
-injuring three millions of his fellow men. The time was
-now drawing near for Cæsar’s return to Rome. During
-his absence a dangerous rival had become the idol of the
-fickle people. After the death of Pompey’s wife Julia,
-who was the daughter of Julius Cæsar, the former alliance
-between these two powerful rivals had been broken, and
-they were now open foes. While Cæsar was absent in
-Gaul, he had not neglected to endeavor to retain his
-hold upon the populace of Rome. He had distributed
-vast sums for the adornment of the city. He expended
-over four million dollars in purchasing ground for the enlargement
-of the Forum; and when he heard of the death
-of his daughter Julia, the wife of Pompey, he ordered her
-funeral to be celebrated with gorgeous splendor. He distributed
-corn in immense quantities among the people,
-and sent home many captives to be trained as gladiators
-to amuse the populace in the theatres. Men were astounded
-at the magnitude of these vast expenditures; but
-Pompey was, nevertheless, fast securing the heart of the
-people. Pompey, in his vanity, imagined that he was so
-far above Cæsar that he need feel no solicitude at the
-return of his rival, and therefore took no precautions to
-resist any hostile designs. Cæsar had now advanced
-toward the Rubicon, which was a little stream that formed
-the boundary line between the north of Italy, which was
-a Roman province called Hither Gaul, and the immediate
-jurisdiction of the city of Rome.</p>
-
-<p>Generals commanding in Gaul were never allowed to
-pass this river with an army. Hence, to cross the Rubicon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-with an armed force, was rebellion and treason.
-When Cæsar arrived at the farther shore of this small
-but significant stream, he halted at a small town called
-Ravenna, and established his headquarters there. Pompey
-now sent to him to demand the return of a legion he
-had lent him when they were friends. Cæsar returned
-the legion immediately, adding some of his own troops to
-show his indifference to the size of his own force.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the partisans of Cæsar and Pompey
-in the city of Rome, grew more threatening in their struggles.
-The friends of Cæsar demanded that he should be
-elected consul. The friends of Pompey replied that
-Cæsar must first resign the command of his army, and
-come to Rome and present himself as a candidate in the
-character of a private citizen, as the constitution of the
-state required. Cæsar replied that if Pompey would lay
-down his arms, he would also do so; but otherwise, it
-was unjust to require it of him. This privilege he demanded
-as a recompense for the services he had rendered
-to the state. A large part of the people sided with Cæsar;
-but the partisans of Pompey, with the inflexible
-Cato at their head, withstood the demand. The city
-was much excited over the impending conflict. Pompey
-displayed no fear, and urged the Senate to resist all of
-Cæsar’s claims, saying, that if Cæsar should presumptuously
-dare to march with his forces to Rome, he could
-raise troops enough to subdue him by merely stamping
-on the ground. Cæsar meanwhile had been quietly making
-his preparations at Ravenna. It was his policy to
-move as privately as possible. Accordingly, he sent
-some cohorts to march secretly to the banks of the river,
-and encamp there, while he employed himself in his usual
-occupation. He had established a fencing school, and on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-the very eve of his departure he went as usual to this
-school, then feasted with his friends, going afterwards
-with them to a public entertainment. As soon as it was
-dark enough, and the streets were deserted, he stole away
-with a few attendants. During the night, Cæsar and his
-guides found themselves lost, and they wandered about
-until nearly break of day, when a peasant guided them to
-the shore, where he found his troops awaiting him. Having
-arrived at the banks of the stream, Cæsar stood for
-some moments musing upon the step he was about to
-take. If he crossed that narrow stream retreat would
-be impossible. The story is told that a shepherd coming
-up took the trumpet from one of Cæsar’s trumpeters,
-and sounded a charge, marching rapidly over the bridge
-at the same time. “An omen! a prodigy!” exclaimed
-Cæsar. “Let us march where we are called by such a
-divine intimation—<i>The die is cast!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the bridge was crossed, Cæsar called an
-assembly of his troops, and made an eloquent appeal to
-them, urging them to stand faithful to him, and promising
-them large rewards should he be successful. The
-soldiers responded with enthusiastic applause. As Cæsar
-advanced towards Rome, several towns surrendered to
-him without resistance. He met with but one opposition.
-The Senate had deposed Cæsar from his command during
-the hot debates preceding his crossing of the Rubicon,
-and had appointed Domitius to succeed him. That
-general had crossed the Apennines at the head of an
-army, and had reached the town of Corfinium. Cæsar
-advanced and besieged him there. The town was soon
-captured; and Cæsar, to the surprise of everyone, who
-supposed he would wreak vengeance upon his foes, received
-the troops into his own service, and let Domitius<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-go free. News had now reached the city of Rome, of
-Cæsar’s crossing the Rubicon, and rapid advance. The
-Senate were terribly alarmed, and looked to Pompey in
-vain for help. Pompey himself was terrified, but could do
-nothing; and the Senate then derisively called upon him
-to raise the promised army of which he had boasted, telling
-him they thought it was high time to stamp with his
-feet, as he declared that by so doing he could secure a
-force large enough to defeat Cæsar. Cato and many of
-the prominent men fled from the city.</p>
-
-<p>Pompey, calling upon all his partisans to follow him,
-set forth at night to retreat across the country towards
-the Adriatic Sea.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar was rapidly advancing toward Rome. As all
-supplies of money were cut off by his crossing the Rubicon,
-which severed his connection with the government,
-his soldiers voted to serve him without pay. His treatment
-of Domitius was much applauded by the people.
-He himself says, in a letter written to a friend at the
-time, “I am glad that you approve of my conduct at
-Corfinium. I am satisfied that such a course is the best
-one for us to pursue, as by so doing we shall gain the
-good will of all parties, and thus secure a permanent victory.
-Most conquerors have incurred the hatred of mankind
-by their cruelties, and have all, in consequence of
-the enmity they have thus awakened, been prevented
-from long enjoying their power. Sylla was an exception,
-but his example of successful cruelty I have no disposition
-to imitate. I will conquer after a new fashion, and
-fortify myself in the possession of the power I acquire by
-generosity and mercy.”</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar now pursued Pompey to Brundusium, whither
-Pompey had retreated. Cæsar laid siege to the city, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-Pompey secretly made preparations for embarking his
-troops. He caused all the streets to be barricaded, except
-two, which led to the landing, and in the darkness of the
-night, he began embarking his forces as fast as possible
-on board of transports already provided. Cæsar was
-made aware of this fact, and his army quickly brought
-ladders and scaled the walls of the city, but the barricaded
-streets so impeded their progress through the darkness of
-the night, that Pompey and his troops succeeded in sailing
-away. As Cæsar had no ships, he continued his march to
-Rome, and entering the city without opposition, re-established
-the government and took control. After various
-subsequent campaigns in Italy, Spain, Sicily, and Gaul,
-which resulted in completely subjugating these nations to
-his dominion, he commenced the pursuit of Pompey, across
-the Adriatic Sea.</p>
-
-<p>As Pompey had cleared the seas of every vessel which
-could aid him in his flight, Cæsar had great difficulty in
-procuring even a sufficient number of galleys to transport
-a part of his army, and embarking with these he landed
-on the opposite shore, and sent back the galleys for the
-remainder of his forces, while he pursued Pompey with
-the troops already with him. Some of Pompey’s generals
-intercepted a part of Cæsar’s galleys, and destroyed them;
-the sea also, becoming very boisterous, the troops were
-afraid to embark, not being stimulated to courage by the
-presence and voice of Cæsar. Julius Cæsar still pursued
-Pompey, who constantly retreated; and the winter wore
-away with no decided battle, and leaving both armies in
-a suffering condition. At last, one stormy night, Cæsar
-determined to embark upon a galley and return to the
-Italian side, and bring the remainder of his army over.
-Cæsar disguised himself in a long cloak, with his head<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-muffled in his mantle, and thus got aboard the galley and
-ordered the men to row him across. A violent wind arose,
-and the waves were so high that at last the rowers declared
-they could go no further; Cæsar then came forward, threw
-off his mantle, and exclaimed: “Friends, you have nothing
-to fear; you are carrying Cæsar!” Thus inspired
-the men put forth herculean efforts, but all to no purpose,
-and Cæsar was obliged, reluctantly, to turn back. His
-army on the Italian shore, however, hearing of this brave
-deed were inspired with new courage, and making another
-attempt, they were successful in joining Cæsar, who, thus
-strengthened, planned for a vigorous attack in the spring.
-A parley had been held several times between the hostile
-hosts, but to no effect; and many skirmishes and partial
-conflicts took place, but no decided battle. At one time,
-Pompey’s troops so hemmed in the army of Cæsar that
-his forces suffered for want of food, but his soldiers
-bravely made use of a sort of root which they dug from
-the ground, and made into a kind of bread, telling Cæsar
-they would live upon the bark of trees rather than abandon
-his cause. At length the army of Pompey was in
-turn hemmed in by Cæsar’s forces, and becoming very
-desperate, on account of the distress occasioned by want
-of food and water, Pompey made some successful attacks
-upon Cæsar’s lines, and broke away from his enemy’s
-grasp.</p>
-
-<p>At last, however, they came to open battle on the plain
-of Pharsalia. As Pompey’s forces far outnumbered those
-of Cæsar he felt confident of victory. “The hour at
-length arrived; the charge was sounded by the trumpets,
-and Cæsar’s troops began to advance with loud shouts and
-great impetuosity toward Pompey’s lines. There was a
-long and terrible struggle, but the forces of Pompey began<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-finally to give way. Notwithstanding the precautions
-which Pompey had taken to guard and protect the wing
-of his army which was extended toward the land, Cæsar
-succeeded in turning his flank upon that side by driving
-off the cavalry, and destroying the archers and slingers;
-and he was thus enabled to throw a strong force upon
-Pompey’s rear. The flight then soon became general, and
-a scene of dreadful confusion and slaughter ensued. The
-soldiers of Cæsar’s army, maddened with the insane rage
-which the progress of a battle never fails to awaken,
-and now excited to frenzy by the exultation of success,
-pressed on after the affrighted fugitives, who trampled
-one upon another or fell pierced with the weapons of their
-assailants, filling the air with their cries of agony and
-their shrieks of terror.”</p>
-
-<p>When Pompey perceived that all was lost he fled from
-the field, and having disguised himself as a common soldier,
-he retreated with a few attendants until he reached
-the Vale of Tempe in Thessaly. Here, in this picturesque
-spot, noted for its beautiful scenery, the fallen Pompey
-took his weary way. Having at length reached the Ægean
-Sea, he took refuge in a fisherman’s hut; hearing still of
-Cæsar’s pursuit he did not dare to rest, but embarked the
-next morning in a little vessel, with three attendants. He
-was afterwards taken up by the commander of a merchant
-ship, and was at length conveyed to the island of Lesbos,
-where his wife, Cornelia, was residing; Pompey had married
-her after the death of Julia, Cæsar’s daughter.
-Cornelia now provided a small fleet, and, determining to
-accompany her husband, they set sail upon the Mediterranean
-Sea. At last Pompey decided to seek refuge in
-Egypt. Some years before Pompey had been the means
-of restoring a king of Egypt to his throne; this king had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-since died, but had left his daughter, the famous Cleopatra,
-on the throne, to rule, conjointly, with a younger
-brother, named Ptolemy. At this time, the Egyptian ministers,
-who acted for the young prince, who was not old
-enough to be invested with the royal power, had dethroned
-Cleopatra that they might thus govern alone.</p>
-
-<p>Cleopatra went into Syria to raise an army to recover
-her lost throne, and Ptolemy’s ministers had gone forth to
-battle with her. It was then that Pompey arrived in
-Egypt, and thinking that the young prince Ptolemy would
-receive him on account of the services Pompey had rendered
-to the Egyptian king, father of Ptolemy, Pompey
-and Cornelia, with their little fleet, approached the shore
-intending to land. A messenger was sent to the young
-king to solicit a kind reception. The Egyptian ministers
-of Ptolemy persuaded him that it would be dangerous
-either to grant or refuse Pompey’s request, and therefore,
-counselled that he might be invited to their camp, and then
-that he should be killed; this would please Cæsar, who
-was now so powerful, and it would put Pompey out of
-their way. This ungrateful counsel prevailed, and an
-Egyptian was appointed to perform the bloody deed. A
-courteous invitation was sent to Pompey to land, who,
-however, parted with his wife, Cornelia, with many
-forebodings of evil. As the boat of the Egyptians reached
-Pompey’s galley the officers hailed him with every mark of
-respect; bidding Cornelia farewell, Pompey, with two
-centurions, stepped into the Egyptian boat and was rowed
-to the shore. Just as he was about to step from the boat
-the assassins drew their swords, and Pompey was slain
-before the very eyes of his wife, who beheld the bloody
-scene from the deck of her galley, and her piercing shriek
-was wafted to the ears of her dying husband. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-Egyptians then cut off the head of Pompey, leaving the
-headless body lying upon the shore. The two centurions
-who had accompanied Pompey, afterwards burned the
-body, and sent the ashes to the heartbroken Cornelia.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar, in pursuit of Pompey, soon after reached Alexandria,
-where he learned of his death; and the Egyptians,
-hoping to please him, presented to him the bloody head of
-his late enemy. But though Cæsar was very ambitious,
-he was not blood-thirsty, nor brutal in his wars. Instead
-of being pleased with such a ghastly gift, Cæsar turned
-from the shocking spectacle in horror. While Cæsar
-was in Alexandria many of Pompey’s officers came and
-surrendered themselves to him; and Cæsar, finding himself
-so powerful, determined to use his authority as
-Roman consul, to settle the dispute between Cleopatra and
-her brother Ptolemy. It was at this time that Cleopatra,
-in order to plead her cause, was brought by her commands
-to Cæsar’s quarters, rolled up in a bale of carpeting, and
-carried upon the shoulders of a slave. As all the avenues
-of approach to Cæsar’s apartments were in the possession
-of her enemies she feared falling into their hands. Cæsar
-espoused her cause, and determined that she and her
-brother Ptolemy should reign jointly. Ptolemy was so
-incensed against his sister, for thus securing Cæsar’s
-allegiance, that a violent war was waged between the
-Egyptians and Cæsar. This is called in history the Alexandrine
-War. In the course of this contest Cæsar took
-possession of the famous lighthouse of Pharos, one of
-the Seven Wonders of the world. During the progress of
-this war a great disaster occurred, which was the burning
-of the famous Alexandrian library. The number of volumes,
-or rolls of parchment there collected, was said to have
-been seven hundred thousand. When we remember that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-the people in those days possessed no printed books, and
-that each one of these rolls had been written by hand,
-with immense labor, and at vast expense, the loss to the
-world of works which could never be reproduced was
-irreparable. Cæsar was victorious in this war. The young
-king Ptolemy was defeated, and in attempting to retreat
-across one of the branches of the Nile he was drowned.
-Cæsar finally settled Cleopatra and a younger brother upon
-the throne of Egypt and returned to Rome. While Cæsar
-was in Egypt three great powers had arisen against him,
-in Asia Minor, in Africa, and in Spain.</p>
-
-<p>He first went to Asia Minor and so quickly defeated
-his enemies there, that it was in reference to this battle
-that he wrote the famous inscription for his banner, which
-appeared in his triumphal procession, “<i>Veni, Vidi, Vici</i>,”
-I came, I saw, I conquered. Cæsar then proceeded to
-Africa, where his old enemy Cato had raised a large
-force against him. Cæsar was successful also in this
-contest, and finally shut up Cato in the city of Utica.
-Cato, finding defence hopeless, killed himself.</p>
-
-<p>From Africa, Cæsar returned to Rome for a short time,
-and then went to Spain to put down the rebellion there
-which was led by the sons of Pompey. Here also he was
-successful, and the conqueror returned to Rome the undisputed
-master of the whole Roman world. Then came his
-magnificent triumphs. Cæsar celebrated four triumphs
-for his four great campaigns, in Egypt, in Asia Minor, in
-Africa, and in Spain. These were celebrated upon separate
-days. These triumphs were gorgeous in the extreme.
-Forty elephants were employed as torch-bearers
-in one triumph which took place at night, each elephant
-holding a great blazing flambeau in his proboscis and
-waving it proudly in the air. These triumphal processions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-are thus described by one historian. “In these
-triumphal processions everything was borne in exhibition
-which could serve as a symbol of the conquered country
-or a trophy of victory. Flags and banners, taken from
-the enemy; vessels of gold and silver and other treasures
-loaded in vans; wretched captives conveyed in open
-carriages, or marching sorrowfully on foot, and destined,
-some of them, to public execution when the ceremony of
-the triumph was ended; displays of arms and implements
-and dresses and all else which might serve to give the
-Roman crowd an idea of the customs and usages of the
-remote and conquered nations; the animals they used
-caparisoned in the manner in which they used them;
-these and a thousand other trophies and emblems were
-brought into the line to excite the admiration of the
-crowd, and to add to the gorgeousness of the spectacle.
-In these triumphs of Cæsar a young sister of Cleopatra,
-wearing chains of gold, was in the line of the Egyptian
-procession. In that devoted to Asia Minor was a great
-banner containing the words already referred to, Veni,
-Vidi, Vici. There were great paintings, too, borne aloft,
-representing battles and other striking scenes. Of course,
-all Rome was in the highest state of excitement during
-the days of the exhibition of this pageantry.</p>
-
-<p>“The whole surrounding country flocked to the capital to
-witness it, and Cæsar’s greatness and glory were signalized
-in the most conspicuous manner to all the world.
-After these triumphs, a series of splendid public entertainments
-were given, over twenty thousand tables having
-been spread for the populace of the city. Shows of every
-character and variety were exhibited. There were dramatic
-plays and equestrian performances in the circus, and
-gladiatorial combats, and battles with wild beasts, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-dances and chariot races and every other amusement
-which could be devised to gratify a population highly cultivated
-in all the arts of life, but barbarous and cruel in
-heart and character. Some of the accounts which have
-come down to us of the magnificence of the scale on which
-these entertainments were conducted are absolutely incredible.
-It is said that an immense basin was constructed near
-the Tiber, large enough to contain two fleets of galleys,
-which had on board two thousand rowers each and one
-thousand fighting men. These fleets were then manned
-with captives,—the one with Asiatics, and the other with
-Egyptians,—and when all was ready, they were compelled
-to fight a real battle for the amusement of the spectators
-who thronged the shores, until vast numbers were
-killed, and the waters of the lake were dyed with blood.
-It is also said that the entire Forum and some of the
-great streets in the neighborhood, where the principal
-gladiatorial shows were held, were covered with silken
-awnings to protect the vast crowds of spectators from
-the sun, and thousands of tents were erected to accommodate
-the people from the surrounding country, whom
-the buildings of the city could not contain.”</p>
-
-<p>All open opposition to Cæsar’s power was now put down.
-The Senate vied with the people to do him honor. He
-was first made consul for ten years, and then perpetual
-dictator. They conferred upon him the title of “The
-Father of his Country.” Cæsar now began to form plans
-for immense improvements which should benefit his empire.
-He completed the regulation of the calendar. “The system
-of months in use in his day corresponded so imperfectly
-with the annual circuit of the sun, that the months
-were moving continually along the year in such a manner
-that the winter months came at length in the summer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-and the summer months in the winter. This led to great
-practical inconveniences. For whenever, for example,
-anything was required by law to be done in certain
-months, intending to have them done in the summer, and
-the specified month came at length to be a winter month,
-the law would require the thing to be done in exactly the
-wrong season. Cæsar remedied all this by adopting a
-new system of months which should give three hundred
-and sixty-five days to the year for three years, and three
-hundred and sixty-six for the fourth; and so exact was
-the system which he thus introduced that it went on unchanged
-for sixteen centuries. The months were then
-found to be eleven days out of the way, and a new correction
-was introduced by Pope Gregory XIII., and it will
-now go on three thousand years before the error will
-amount to a single day. Cæsar employed a Greek astronomer
-to arrange the system he adopted, and for this
-improvement one of the months was called July, after
-Julius Cæsar. Its former name was Quintilis.”</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar commenced the collection of vast libraries;
-formed plans for draining the Pontine Marshes, and for
-bringing great supplies of water into the city by an aqueduct;
-and he intended to cut a new passage for the Tiber
-from Rome to the sea. He also planned a road along the
-Apennines, and a canal through the Isthmus of Corinth,
-and intended to construct other vast works which should
-make Rome the wonder of the world.</p>
-
-<p>But in the midst of all these grand projects he was suddenly
-stricken down. Although the Romans disliked the
-thought of being ruled by a king, they preserved certain
-statues of their kings in some of the public buildings, and
-the ambition of Cæsar led him very foolishly to place his
-own statue among them. He also had a seat prepared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-for himself in the Senate in the form of a throne. On
-one occasion, when the members of the Senate were to
-come to him in a temple to announce certain decrees they
-had passed to his honor, Cæsar received them sitting upon
-a magnificent chair, which seemed a throne, so gorgeous
-was it; and he did not even rise to welcome them, as was
-the usual custom, thus showing that he would receive
-them as a monarch, who never rises in the presence of
-inferiors. This incident, small as it may seem, aroused
-much indignation. His statue was also found adorned
-with a laurel crown, to which was fastened a white fillet,
-which was an emblem of royalty. On another occasion,
-at a public entertainment, an officer placed a diadem upon
-the head of Cæsar, who pretended to be disinclined to
-receive it, and taking it off, it was offered twice again, and
-refused, when Cæsar sent the diadem to a temple near
-by as an offering to Jupiter. Although he thus appeared
-to reject the honor, his manner indicated that he only
-desired to be more warmly pressed to receive it. There
-was now formed a strong conspiracy against Cæsar,
-headed by Cassius, who had for a long time been Cæsar’s
-enemy. Cassius at last succeeded in persuading Marcus
-Brutus to join him. The plan was then divulged to such
-men as the conspirators thought most necessary to the
-success of their plot. It was agreed that Cæsar must be
-slain. They at length decided that the Roman Senate
-was the proper place. As it had been rumored that
-Cæsar’s friends were about to attempt to crown him as a
-king on the Ides of March, that day was chosen by the
-conspirators as a fitting one on which Julius Cæsar should
-meet his doom. Cæsar received many warnings of his
-approaching fate, and the soothsayers reported many
-strange omens which betokened some portentous event.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-One of these soothsayers informed Cæsar that he had
-been warned, by certain signs at a public sacrifice, that
-some terrible danger threatened his life on the Ides of
-March; and he besought him to be cautious until that day
-should have passed. The Senate were to meet on the Ides
-of March in a new and magnificent edifice, which had been
-erected by Pompey. In this Senate Chamber was a
-statue of Pompey. The day before the Ides of March,
-some birds of prey from a neighboring grove came flying
-into this hall, pursuing a little wren which had a sprig of
-laurel in its beak. The birds tore the poor wren to
-pieces, and the laurel fell from its bill to the marble pavement
-below. As Cæsar had been crowned with laurel
-after his victories, and always wore a wreath of laurel on
-public occasions, this event was thought to portend some
-evil to him. The night before the Ides of March, both
-Cæsar and his wife Calpurnia awoke from terrible dreams.
-Cæsar dreamed that he ascended into the skies and was
-received by Jupiter, and Calpurnia, awakening with a
-wild shriek, declared that she had dreamed that the roof
-of the house had fallen in, and that her husband had been
-stabbed by an assassin. When morning came, Calpurnia
-endeavored to persuade Cæsar not to go to the Senate,
-and he had consented to comply with her wish, until one
-of the conspirators, who had been appointed to accompany
-Cæsar to the Senate, came to the house of Julius
-Cæsar, and by his declarations that the people were waiting
-to confer upon their dictator the title of king throughout
-all the Roman dominions excepting Italy alone, he at
-length persuaded Cæsar to go with him. On the way to
-the Senate, a Greek teacher, having learned something of
-the plot, wrote a statement of it, and as Cæsar passed
-him he gave it to him, saying, “Read this immediately;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-it concerns yourself, and is of the utmost importance.”
-Cæsar made the attempt to do so, but the crowd of people
-who pressed towards him and handed him various
-petitions, as was the usual custom when a state officer
-appeared in public, prevented Cæsar from thus learning
-of the dreadful fate awaiting him. There was one warm
-friend of Cæsar, named Marc Antony, whom the conspirators
-feared might interfere with the successful completion
-of their plot, and so it was arranged that one of their
-number should engage the attention of Antony, while the
-petitioner chosen should advance and make his appeal to
-Cæsar, which should be the signal for the bloody deed.
-This conspirator made a pretence of asking Cæsar for the
-pardon of his brother, which request, as they had expected,
-Cæsar declined to grant. This occasioned an outburst of
-pretended fury, under cover of which the conspirators
-rushed upon Cæsar and stabbed him with their swords.
-Cæsar at first attempted to defend himself, but as Brutus,
-his former friend, also plunged his dagger into his side,
-he exclaimed, “And you, too, Brutus?” and drawing his
-mantle over his face, he fell at the feet of Pompey’s
-statue and expired. Now again the city of Rome was in
-wild tumult.</p>
-
-<p>The conspirators marched boldly through the streets
-with their bloody swords. They boasted of their shocking
-deed, and announced that they had delivered their country
-from a tyrant. The people, stunned by the daring of
-this terrible act, knew not what to think or do. Some
-barricaded their houses in fear; others hurried through
-the streets with blanched faces; and still others excitedly
-seized any kind of weapon near at hand, and joined a
-mob, which threatened to break out in awful violence, to
-avenge the death of Cæsar, their idol.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>During all this time the body of Cæsar lay unheeded at
-the foot of Pompey’s statue, pierced with twenty-three
-wounds, made by the hands of men he thought were his
-friends. Three slaves were his only guardians; and at
-last they lifted the poor bruised, bleeding, and ghastly
-corpse, and carried it home to the distracted Calpurnia.
-The next day, Brutus and the other conspirators called
-the people together in the Forum, and there addressed
-them, endeavoring to persuade them that the deed had
-been committed only in the interests of the people, to rid
-them of a tyrant. But the subsequent famous funeral
-speech of Marc Antony, roused the people to such a wild
-frenzy of revenge, that the conspirators were only saved
-from death with great difficulty by the intervention of
-the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>The Field of Mars had been chosen as the place for the
-funeral pile; but after the speech of Marc Antony in the
-Forum, where the body of Cæsar had been placed on a
-gilded bed covered with scarlet and cloth of gold, under
-a gorgeous canopy made in the form of a temple, the
-people in their wild outbursts of love for Cæsar, as they
-had then learned from his will, which Antony read aloud
-to them, of his munificent bequests to the Roman citizens,
-became ungovernable in their desires to do him reverence.
-As a crier, by Antony’s order, read the decrees of the
-Senate, in which all honors, human and divine, had been
-been ascribed to Cæsar, the gilded bed upon which he lay
-was lifted and borne out into the centre of the Forum; and
-two men, having forced their way through the crowd, with
-lighted torches set fire to the bed on which the body of
-Cæsar lay, and the multitudes with shouts of enthusiastic
-applause, seized everything within reach and placed them
-upon the funeral pile. The soldiers then threw on their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-lances and spears; musicians cast their instruments into
-the increasing flames; women tore off their jewels to add
-to the gorgeous pile, and all vied with each other to contribute
-something to enlarge the blazing funeral pile. So
-fierce were the flames that they spread to some of the
-neighboring buildings, and a terrible conflagration which
-would have given Cæsar the most majestic funeral pile in
-the annals of the world, for it would have been the blazing
-light from the burning city of Rome itself, was only prevented
-by the most strenuous efforts.</p>
-
-<p>Some time after, Octavius Cæsar, the successor of Julius
-Cæsar, and Marc Antony, waged war with Cassius
-and Brutus; and at the battle of Philippi, where Cassius
-and Brutus were defeated, and while they were fleeing
-from the field, hopeless of further defence, they both
-killed themselves with their own swords.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar died at the age of fifty-six. The Roman people
-erected a column to his memory, on which they placed
-the inscription, “To the Father of His Country.” A
-figure of a star was placed upon the summit of this memorial
-shaft, and some time afterwards, while the people
-were celebrating some games in honor of Cæsar’s memory,
-a great comet blazed for seven nights in the sky, which
-they declared to be a sign that the soul of Cæsar was
-admitted among the gods.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHARLEMAGNE.<br />
-
-<small>742-814 A.D.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“To whom God will, there be the victory.”</div>
-<div class="sig"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THERE was great terror and dismay among the inhabitants
-of the city of Paris, called in those early days,
-Lutetia.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 288px;">
-<img src="images/i-209.jpg" width="288" height="374" alt="drawing from engraving" />
-<div class="caption">CHARLEMAGNE.<br />
-
-(From Early Engraving.)</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Gauls, who dwelt in that part of the country,
-were now menaced by a foe even more terrible than the
-Roman soldiers led by the famous Julius Cæsar, who had
-invaded their land about 500 years before, and made their
-country a Roman province.</p>
-
-<p>But now a fearful war-cry rings through the air; and
-as the frightened Gauls hastily arm themselves for resistance,
-a horde of Teutonic giants, with light complexions,
-long yellow hair waving in the wind, and eyes so bright
-and cat-like that they fairly shone with a green glare of
-animal-like ferocity, which was heightened by their clothing
-made of the skins of the bear, the boar, and the wolf,
-making them look in the distance like a herd of wild
-beasts, came rushing like an avalanche of destruction
-over the peaceful homes of the Gauls. These hordes advanced
-in a mighty wedge-like phalanx, formed of their
-bravest warriors, each man carrying in his right hand a
-long lance, and in the left a buckler, or skin-covered
-shield, while his girdle held a sharp two-edged axe, which
-became, with dexterous handling, a most dangerous weapon,
-and was hurled from a distance with marvellous aim. With
-mounted warriors protecting the wings of this invincible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-phalanx, on came this fierce, wild tribe, charging to battle
-with a terrible war-whoop, which they made more shrill
-by placing the edge of the buckler to the mouth.</p>
-
-<p>In vain the Gauls looked to Rome for help. There was
-too much trouble in Italy for the Roman government to
-help any one. So these giant Franks came rushing unchecked
-on to Paris, while the frightened Gauls were
-powerless to resist them. The leader of this horde was
-called Hilperik, the son of Meerwig; and having taken
-possession of Paris, and several surrounding provinces,
-he founded the kingdom afterwards called France, from
-this tribe who were called Franks.</p>
-
-<p>The story of kings is too often a story of blood and
-cruelty, and the kingdom which the great Charlemagne
-inherited had been the scene of fearful and continual conflicts.</p>
-
-<p>The Goths, one of the fierce German nations, had conquered
-a large part of Gaul after it had become a Roman
-province, and in the year 451, the Huns, a more terrible
-nation still, whose chief was the famous Attila, who
-called himself the “Scourge of God,” invaded Gaul with
-his army,—horrible looking men, whose faces had been
-gashed by their savage parents in their infancy, that they
-might look more dreadful. The poor Gauls thought
-rightly, that it was more fearful to fall into their hands
-than into those of the Franks; but the Huns came no
-further than Orleans, where an army, composed of Gauls,
-Franks, Goths, Burgundians, all under the Roman general
-Ætius, attacked the Huns at Châlons-sur-Marne, beat
-them, and drove them back. Châlons was the last victory
-in Gaul, won under the Roman banners, and now the
-poor Gauls were obliged to meet their enemies alone. The
-chief tribes of those warlike races, who swarmed over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-Europe, both north and south, were the Goths who conquered
-Rome, and settled in Spain; the Longbeards or
-Lombards, who spread over the north of Italy; the Burgundians,
-or town-livers, who held all the country around
-the Alps; the Swabians and Germans, who stayed in the
-middle of Europe; the Saxons, who dwelt south of the
-Baltic, and finally conquered South Britain; the Northmen,
-who found a home in Scandinavia; and the Franks,
-who had been long settled on the rivers Sale, Meuse, and
-Rhine. Their name meant freemen, and they were noted
-for using an axe, called after them. Of the Franks there
-were two noted tribes,—the Salian, from the river Sale,
-and the Ripuarian. They were great horsemen, and the
-Salians had a family of kings, who were supposed to have
-descended from one of their warlike gods, called Odin.
-Although the Franks were a ferocious and sometimes
-cruel race, they were in some respects superior to the
-other barbaric tribes, and were liked better by the Gauls
-than any other of those various nations.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 462px;">
-<img src="images/i-213.jpg" width="462" height="673" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">THE HUNS AT CHÂLONS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After Cæsar’s conquest many of the Romans had remained
-in Gaul, and had built and conquered cities, and
-lived under Roman laws. They taught the Gauls to speak
-Latin, and organized many schools and colleges among
-them. The Gauls adopted the Roman dress and religion.
-The religion of the ancient Gauls had been taught to
-the people by priests, called Druids. Druidism was a
-confusion of mingled ideas of Oriental dreams and traditions,
-borrowed from the mythologies of the East and the
-North; and although it was degraded by barbaric practices
-such as human sacrifices in honor of the gods or of
-the dead, it possessed one germ of truth, for the Druids
-believed in the immortality of the soul. Their priests
-were old and wise men, who had studied often for twenty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-years before they were considered wise enough to become
-“Men of the Oak,” as the chief Druids were called.
-They made laws for the people and settled questions of
-dispute. Once every year the Druids went out to look
-for the mistletoe, which they considered a sacred plant.
-When a mistletoe was found growing upon an oak, the
-people came from all parts of the country and stood around
-the tree. Then a Druid, clothed in white, climbed up the
-oak-tree, and cut off the sacred mistletoe with a golden
-sickle, and the much prized plant was caught by the
-other Druids below, in a white cloth, and was carried
-away to be preserved as a great treasure.</p>
-
-<p>But the Gauls living in those provinces conquered by
-the Romans, had given up their old Druidical religion, and
-adopted that of their conquerors, which was no improvement,
-for it was also a paganism, and was such a mass of
-superstition and idolatry, derived from Grecian mythology
-and old traditions, that it did not even possess the vital
-force of the Druidical belief. For the Druids worshipped,
-as they thought, living deities, while the Græco-Roman
-paganism was a dead religion, with only dead gods, buried
-beneath their still standing altars. Such were the superstitions
-and false religions with which the Christians of the
-early centuries had to contend in laboring to convert the
-then known world to the worship of the one true and
-living God and His Son Jesus Christ, who had already
-lived his holy life upon this earth, and given himself a
-sacrifice for the salvation of mankind. Already the disciples
-of Christ had founded Christian churches in Asia
-Minor and Palestine, and many of them had died as
-martyrs for the faith. St. Paul had preached at Athens
-and at Rome, and having finished his glorious work he
-had received his crown of martyrdom. And all down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-these early centuries teachers had been sent out by the
-Christian churches, to endeavor to convert the heathen
-world around to a belief in the one true and only religion
-which could secure the salvation of the immortal soul.
-The Roman emperors had all persecuted the Christians
-and sought to uphold paganism. But when <small>B.C.</small> 312, the
-Emperor Constantine declared himself a Christian,
-“paganism fell, and Christianity mounted the throne.”
-Previous to the conquest of Gaul by the Franks, the Gauls
-had adopted Christianity, and when Hilperik, king of the
-Franks, conquered Paris and the surrounding country,
-and at his death left this kingdom to his son, named
-Hlodwig, or Clovis, there were many Christians and
-churches and monasteries in Gaul. Clovis conquered
-many of the surrounding provinces, and at last became
-the ruler of nearly the whole of Gaul. Clovis had
-married a Burgundian maiden, named Clothilda, and as
-she was a Christian he allowed her to worship God in the
-Christian churches. But in the great battle of Tolbiacum,
-which Clovis fought with the Germans, when it seemed
-as though the Franks would be defeated, Clovis took an
-oath that if the God of his wife would give him the victory
-he would become a Christian. The Franks were
-victorious, and Clovis was baptized with all his chief
-warriors.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 458px;">
-<img src="images/i-218.jpg" width="458" height="670" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">“THRUST HIM AWAY, OR THOU DIEST IN HIS STEAD.”</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When Clovis died, he left four sons, among whom he
-divided his kingdom. One was the king of Paris; another,
-king of Orleans; a third, king of Soissons; and
-the fourth, who reigned over that part of Gaul nearest
-Germany and the Rhine, was called king of Metz. In
-a battle with the Burgundians, the king of Orleans, Clodomir,
-was killed, leaving three young sons who were
-placed in the care of their grandmother Clothilda. At<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-length the kings of Paris and Soissons became jealous
-of these children of their elder brother Clodomir, and
-sent for the children, under pretence of placing them
-upon the throne of their father. But as soon as they had
-them in their cruel power, they sent a pair of scissors and
-a sword to Clothilda, with a message, saying: “We wait
-thy wishes as to the three children; shall they be slain or
-shorn?” meaning, shall they be killed or shut up in
-monasteries? Clothilda, in despair, cried out: “Slain,
-rather than shorn!” and the messengers, not waiting to
-hear her further words, returned to the cruel kings, and
-announced that they had secured the consent of Clothilda
-for the shocking deed. The wicked kings then hastily
-entered the room where the three helpless boys were imprisoned,
-and having slain the eldest, the second one clung
-to the knees of his uncle Childebert, king of Paris, who
-was for a moment moved with pity, and asked his brother
-Clotaire to spare the boy. But the wicked Clotaire,
-king of Soissons, exclaimed in wrath, “Thrust him away
-or thou diest in his stead!” Whereupon, Childebert
-tried no more to save him, and Clotaire seized the poor
-boy, who was now shrieking with terror, and plunged a
-hunting-knife into his side, as he had his brother’s, and
-slew him. These murdered children were only ten and
-seven years old. The third brother was snatched up by
-some brave friends, and hidden away where the cruel
-uncles could not find him. He was afterwards placed in
-a monastery, and became a monk, and founded a monastery
-near Paris, called after him, St. Cloud. After the
-sons of Clovis there followed a line of kings in France
-called the Meerwings, or long-haired kings, known in history
-as the Merovingians; and only two of them are important
-enough to be mentioned, and those only on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-account of their crimes. One of the sons of Clovis left
-four sons; and two of these, named Hilperik and Siegbert,
-married the two daughters of the king of the Goths,
-in Spain. These sisters were called Galswinth and
-Brunehild. Hilperik loved a slave girl he owned, named
-Fredegond, and either with or without his consent, his
-wife Galswinth was found strangled in her bed, and
-he afterwards married the murderess, Fredegond, who,
-though most atrociously wicked, became a powerful
-queen. Brunehild persuaded her husband Siegbert to
-make war upon Hilperik, to avenge the death of her sister.
-Hilperik was defeated, but the Queen Fredegond
-contrived to have Siegbert murdered, and afterwards
-killed her husband’s other children, thus leaving her own
-son heir to the throne. She then ordered her husband
-also to be put to death, so that she could reign alone in
-the name of her infant son. The four kingdoms left by
-Clovis had been now merged into three,—Neustria, which
-is now the north of France; Austrasia, which is now the
-north-east corner of France, and part of Belgium, and
-part of the western side of Germany; and the third kingdom
-was called Burgundy. The Neustrians and the
-Austrasians were usually at war with each other, the
-Burgundians taking now one side of the quarrel and now
-the other. Queen Fredegond’s part of Gaul was Neustria,
-while Queen Brunehild governed Austrasia. But
-Brunehild quarrelled with the chiefs of the country; and
-after many years of wars, plots, and murders, she was at
-last brutally killed by the son of Fredegond, who became
-king of all the Franks; and in Neustria every one
-obeyed him; but in Austrasia the great chiefs and
-bishops were opposed to him. The bishops had by this
-time become rich and powerful, for a great amount of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-land had been left to the church by the wills of dying
-Christians, or as gifts from kings and chiefs. When
-Clotaire, son of Fredegond, died, he left two sons; one
-of them named Dagobert made himself master of Neustria
-and Austrasia, and gave his brother land in the
-south part of the country, which had not been visited
-before by a Frankish king. Dagobert took Paris for his
-chief town; he made himself a splendid court, took journeys
-through his kingdom, doing justice to his subjects,
-and encouraged the building of churches, and had copies
-of the old Frankish laws written out and sent throughout
-his kingdom. The people liked him; but the powerful
-chiefs and the bishops, who had become so worldly that
-they thought a great deal more about piling up riches
-than in turning the people to Christianity, were filled with
-dismay to have so wise and just a king, who was fast
-gaining a great power over the people. After ten years
-Dagobert died and left two sons; one was king of Austrasia;
-and the younger king of Neustria. After these,
-there followed three more kings in Neustria, and four in
-Austrasia, but they had no power, and were only called
-kings, while the government was really in the hands of a
-new set of men, from which line the illustrious Charlemagne
-sprang. The chief man next the king in these
-countries was called the Mayor of the Palace. He had
-the chief command in times of war, and at last became in
-truth the sovereign ruler; and they only put up one of
-their do-nothing kings as a figure-head. After the death
-of Dagobert, there was no other Frankish king of any
-importance in the line of the Merovingians. The Fainéants,
-or do-nothing kings, as they were called, sat on the
-throne and pretended to rule, but the mayor of the palace
-told them what they must say to the people and what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-they must do. This went on for nearly a hundred years.
-When Dagobert died, the mayor of the palace was named
-Pepin, and through several reigns he really governed both
-Austrasia and Neustria. He made war against the Germans,
-and sometimes when they were very troublesome
-he went with an army and subdued them; and at other
-times he sent monks to try and convert them to Christianity.
-When Pepin died, his son Karl became the
-mayor of the palace. Now Karl wished to secure money
-to give to his chiefs, so that they would fight for him,
-and so he took away from the bishops the rich lands
-which belonged to the church, and gave them to his
-warriors. Karl had first to fight the Saxons, whom he
-defeated, and then there appeared a new foe. The
-Arabs lived in Arabia, on the east side of the Red Sea,
-in Asia.</p>
-
-<p>They had always been a poor, wandering people. But
-about one hundred and fifty years before this time, an
-Arab had appeared among his countrymen, claiming to
-be a mighty prophet, and teaching them a new religion.
-It was not the Christian religion; but this man, who was
-named Mohammed, claimed that he had been sent by God
-to teach the people; and so the religion he proclaimed
-was called Mohammedanism. Now the Arabs had never
-left their own country before, but they determined to go
-forth and conquer the world, and make all the nations
-Mohammedans. They conquered Persia, Egypt, Spain,
-and a part of Africa. When they overcame any nation,
-if the people would consent to become Mohammedans,
-the Arabs treated them with kindness; but if they refused,
-they made slaves of them, and sometimes put
-them to death. Having conquered Spain, the Arabs
-wished to become masters of France.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When they had passed the Pyrenees, Karl went forth to
-meet them. There was a great battle, known in history
-as the Battle of Tours, and at length Karl conquered the
-Mohammedans, and drove them out of France. Some
-accounts state that three hundred thousand Arabs were
-killed.</p>
-
-<p>This mayor of the palace has been called Karl the
-Hammer, or in French, Charles Martel, in memory of the
-blows he inflicted upon these Mohammedan enemies.
-He was afterwards called the Duke of the Franks.</p>
-
-<p>In the time of Charles Martel, several kings became
-monks. An English monk named Winfrid had been
-sent by the Pope and Charles Martel to preach to the
-Saxons. After persuading thousands of the people to be
-baptized, this monk was made bishop and then archbishop.
-But he thought more of converting the heathen
-than of wearing honors, and leaving his bishopric to
-another, he went forth into a wild part of the country to
-preach Christianity. When a large number of people had
-assembled to be baptized, an armed force of the heathen
-attacked them, killing Winfrid and all the Christian people.
-This good monk is called also St. Boniface.</p>
-
-<p>After the death of Charles Martel his two sons ruled
-for six years together, and then one of them went into a
-monastery, leaving the younger, Pepin, who now became
-the only duke of the Franks.</p>
-
-<p>The people began to think it absurd to have a useless
-set of lazy, do-nothing, Merovingian, or long-haired kings,
-who were only puppets in the hands of the reigning duke.
-So Pepin, also called Le Bref, or the Short, asked the
-Pope to make him king, instead of the figure-head who sat
-upon the throne, who at that time bore the name of Hilperik.
-The answer of the Pope was, “He who has the
-power ought also to have the name of king.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 434px;">
-<img src="images/i-225.jpg" width="434" height="626" alt="drawing: CHARLEMAGNE." />
-</div>
-
-<p>As the Pope had thus consented to the change, all the
-Franks were delighted, and they took the useless king
-from his throne, cut off his long yellow hair, which was
-his sign of royalty, and shut him up in a monastery. He
-died two years afterwards, and was the last of the Merovingian
-kings.</p>
-
-<p>Pepin was now crowned by St. Boniface, as this event
-preceded the death of that king, and thus he became the
-first of the Carlovingian kings, so called from Carolus,
-the Latin for Charles, which was the name of Pepin’s
-father, and his still greater son.</p>
-
-<p>Pepin now aided the Pope by marching into Italy and
-fighting the Lombards; and having conquered them, he
-took their lands and gave them to the Pope, which property
-afterwards descended from one pope to another, so
-that the popes at last became masters of quite a kingdom
-in Italy. Pepin also besieged a town in Southern Gaul,
-belonging to the Arabs, and after seven years captured it,
-and drove the Arabs over the Pyrenees, into Spain. He
-reigned for sixteen years, and dying left his kingdom to
-his two sons Karl and Karloman, who divided it between
-them; but Karloman lived but three years, when Karl
-became the king of France.</p>
-
-<p>While his Austrasian subjects, who spoke German,
-called him Karl, the Neustrians, whose language was a
-mingling of the Latin and the German, which has since
-become the French language, called him Charles; and
-after he became so famous, the Latin word <i>magnus</i>, meaning
-great, was added, and Charles-Magnus thus became
-the Charlemagne of history.</p>
-
-<p>Very little can be learned regarding the early life of
-Charlemagne. One of the old writers, named Eginhard,
-who afterwards became the secretary of Charlemagne,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-records that neither he himself, nor any one then living,
-knew anything about the birth of this prince, nor about
-his infancy, nor even youth. His father, King Pepin,
-had his two sons associated with himself, when he received
-the title of king from the Bishop of Rome; but neither
-of them received any separate government during their
-father’s life. They were taught, with the other young
-nobles, by Peter of Pisa, whom Pepin retained at his
-court for this purpose. It is supposed that King Pepin
-took the young princes with him in his Italian expeditions,
-and that Charlemagne accompanied his father in the Aquitanian
-war. When King Pepin died, his eldest son was
-twenty-six years and a half old, while the younger was
-barely nineteen. Both were already married to wives of
-the Frank race. Charles, or Charlemagne, to Himiltrude,
-and Carloman to Gerberge.</p>
-
-<p>The first battle in which Charlemagne engaged was
-soon after his father’s death, with the Aquitanians, who
-were the people living in the south-west part of France.
-The brother-kings raised troops to meet them, but Carloman
-through jealousy withdrew his forces, leaving Charlemagne
-to carry on the war alone. He was victorious,
-and the Aquitanians submitted. The queen-mother
-Bertrada now used her influence to secure a permanent
-alliance between the Lombards and the Franks, and
-persuaded Charlemagne to divorce his wife and marry
-Desiderata, the daughter of Didier the Lombard king.
-This Charlemagne consented to do, even against the advice
-of the Pope, and he suffered for his folly, or wickedness;
-for so it was, even though his mother did sanction
-it, for he was so unhappy with Desiderata, that in about
-a year he put her away and married Hildegarde. In those
-days kings married and divorced their wives as often as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-they pleased, and Charlemagne, with all his greatness and
-his aid to Christianity, was in this particular very culpable,
-and his domestic life was not at all in keeping with
-the majesty, and goodness, and uprightness of his public
-life. After the death of Hildegarde, he married two
-other wives. One Fastrada, an Austrasian, was a very
-wicked woman, and caused him much trouble. The last
-one, whom he loved the most, was named Luitgarda.
-She was kind and gentle, and her influence over Charlemagne
-was very beneficial after the wicked Fastrada had
-led him into so much trouble. The French have an old
-legend, which relates that the evil influence which Fastrada
-exercised over the strong mind of the great king,
-leading him to acts of injustice and tyranny, which alienated
-the affections of his nobles, was due to the magic
-spell of a ring which she wore. On her death, the ring
-came into possession of a bishop, for whom Charlemagne
-immediately showed such admiration, that the bishop
-found it unpleasant, and cast the ring into a neighboring
-lake. Here it also exercised its magic charm, and the
-king would sit for hours gazing into the waters of the
-lake, as though spell-bound. But this legend cannot disguise
-the weak side of Charlemagne’s character, and we
-can only turn from it and fix our attention upon his great
-career.</p>
-
-<p>He was one of the wisest and most powerful of kings.
-His life was one of constant war. He fought the Saxons
-for thirty-three years, but at last he conquered Witikind,
-the great Saxon leader, in 785, and persuaded him to
-be baptized. Charlemagne made him Duke of Saxony,
-and he lived in good faith to the new vows he had taken.
-Notwithstanding this victory over the Saxons, Charlemagne
-foresaw the evils which should come upon Europe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-through the formidable Northmen. The monk of St. Gall
-relates this incident: “Charlemagne arrived unexpectedly
-in a certain town of Narbonnese Gaul. Whilst he was at
-dinner, and was as yet unrecognized of any, some corsairs
-of the Northmen came to ply their piracies in the
-very port. When their vessels were descried, they were
-supposed to be Jewish traders according to some, African
-according to others, and British in the opinion of others;
-but the gifted monarch perceiving by the build and lightness
-of the craft that they bare not merchandise, but
-foes, said to his own folk, ‘These vessels be not laden
-with merchandise, but manned with cruel foes.’ At these
-words, all the Franks, in rivalry one with another, ran to
-their ships, but uselessly, for the Northmen, indeed, hearing
-that yonder was he whom it was still their wont to
-call Charles the Hammer, feared lest all their fleet should
-be taken or destroyed in the port, and they avoided by a
-flight of inconceivable rapidity not only the blows, but
-even the eyes of those who were pursuing them.</p>
-
-<p>“Pious Charles, however, a prey to well-grounded fear,
-rose up from table, stationed himself at a window looking
-eastward, and there remained a long while, and his eyes
-were filled with tears. As none durst question him, this
-warlike prince explained to the grandees who were about
-his person the cause of his movement and of his tears.
-‘Know ye, my lieges, wherefore I weep so bitterly? Of
-a surety I fear not lest these fellows should succeed in
-injuring me by their miserable piracies; but it grieveth
-me deeply that whilst I live, they should have been nigh
-to touching at this shore, and I am a prey to violent sorrow
-when I foresee what evils they will heap upon my
-descendants and their people.’”</p>
-
-<p>But during all the years of the Saxon wars, Charlemagne<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-had been carrying on various campaigns elsewhere. The
-Lombards were again at war with the Popes, and the
-king of Lombards, Didier, whose daughter Charlemagne
-had married and so soon divorced, had now become his
-bitter foe. The new Pope, Adrian I., sought the aid of
-Charlemagne in this war with the Lombards, and he prepared
-for this Italian expedition. He raised two armies,—one
-to cross the Valais and descend upon Lombardy
-by Mount St. Bernard, and the other, to be led by Charlemagne,
-was to go by the way of Mount Cenis. Didier
-had with him a famous Dane, named Ogier, who had quarrelled
-with Charlemagne and taken refuge in Lombardy.
-One of the monks of that time thus describes Charlemagne’s
-arrival before Pavia, where Didier and the Dane
-Ogier had shut themselves up, as it was the strongest
-place in Lombardy.</p>
-
-<p>“When Didier and Ogger (for so the monk calls him)
-heard that the dread monarch was coming, they ascended
-a tower of vast height, whence they could watch his arrival
-from afar off and from every quarter. They saw,
-first of all, engines of wars, such as must have been
-necessary for the armies of Darius or Julius Cæsar. ‘Is
-not Charles,’ asked Didier of Ogger, ‘with this great
-army?’ But the other answered, ‘No.’ The Lombard,
-seeing afterwards an immense body of soldiery gathered
-from all quarters of the vast empire, said to Ogger,
-‘Certes, Charles advanceth in triumph in the midst of
-this throng.’ ‘No, not yet; he will not appear so
-soon,’ was the answer. ‘What should we do, then,’ rejoined
-Didier, who began to be perturbed, ‘should he
-come accompanied by a larger band of warriors?’ ‘You
-will see what he is when he comes,’ replied Ogger; ‘but
-as to what will become of us I know nothing.’ As they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-were thus parleying appeared the body of guards that
-knew no repose, and at this sight the Lombard, overcome
-with dread, cried, ‘This time ’tis surely Charles.’ ‘No,’
-answered Ogger, ‘not yet.’ In their wake came the
-bishops, the abbots, the ordinaries of the chapels royal,
-and the counts; and then Didier, no longer able to bear
-the light of day or to face death, cried out with groans,
-‘Let us descend and hide ourselves in the bowels of the
-earth, far from the face and the fury of so terrible a foe.’
-Trembling the while, Ogger, who knew by experience
-what were the power and might of Charles, and who had
-learned the lesson by long usage in better days, then
-said, ‘When ye shall behold the crops shaking for fear in
-the fields, and the gloomy Po and the Ticino overflowing
-the walls of the city with their waves blackened with
-steel (iron), then may ye think that Charles is coming.’
-He had not ended these words when there began to be
-seen in the west, as it were, a black cloud, raised by the
-north-west wind or by Boreas, which turned the brightest
-day into awful shadows. But as the emperor drew
-nearer and nearer, the gleam of arms caused to shine on
-the people shut up within the city a day more gloomy
-than any kind of night. And then appeared Charles
-himself, that man of steel, with his head encased in a helmet
-of steel, his hands garnished with gauntlets of
-steel, his heart of steel and his shoulders of marble
-protected by a cuirass of steel, and his left hand armed
-with a lance of steel which he held aloft in the air, for
-as to his right hand, he kept that continually on the hilt
-of his invincible sword. The outside of his thighs, which
-the rest for their greater ease in mounting a horseback
-were wont to leave unshackled even by straps, he wore
-encircled by plates of steel. What shall I say concerning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-his boots? All the army were wont to have them invariably
-of steel; on his buckler there was nought to be seen
-but steel; his horse was of the color and the strength of
-steel. All those who went before the monarch, all those
-who marched at his side, all those who followed after,
-even the whole mass of the army, had armor of the like
-sort, so far as the means of each permitted. The fields
-and the highways were covered with steel; the points of
-steel reflected the rays of the sun; and this steel, so
-hard, was borne by a people with hearts still harder.
-The flash of steel spread terror throughout the streets of
-the city. ‘What steel! alack, what steel!’ Such were
-the bewildered cries the citizens raised. The firmness of
-manhood and of youth gave way at sight of the steel, and
-the steel paralyzed the wisdom of the gray beards. That
-which I, poor tale-teller, mumbling and toothless, have
-attempted to depict in a long description, Ogger perceived
-at one rapid glance, and said to Didier, ‘Here is what ye
-have so anxiously sought’; and whilst uttering these
-words he fell down almost lifeless.”</p>
-
-<p>But notwithstanding all King Didier’s fear, he and the
-Lombards evinced such resistance, that Charlemagne was
-obliged to settle down before Pavia in a long siege. His
-camp without the city became a town, so that he sent for
-his wife, Queen Hildegarde, and her court, also his children
-and their attendants, and said to the chiefs of his
-army, “Let us begin by doing something memorable.”
-So men were at once set to work to build a basilica, and
-within a week it was completed, with its walls, roofs, and
-painted ceilings, which would seemingly have required a
-year to erect.</p>
-
-<p>In this chapel, Charlemagne, and his family, court, and
-warriors, celebrated the festival of Christmas, 773. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-just before Easter, 774, Charlemagne determined to leave
-his lieutenants to continue the siege, and attended by a
-numerous and brilliant retinue, he set off for Rome. On
-Holy Saturday, when Charlemagne was about three miles
-from Rome, the magistrates and citizens and pupils of
-the schools came forth to meet him, bearing palm-branches
-and singing hymns. At the gate of the city, Charlemagne
-dismounted before the cross, and entered Rome on foot,
-and having ascended the steps of the ancient basilica of
-St. Peter, he was received at the top by the Pope himself.
-Then a chant was sung by the people all around him:
-“Blessed be he that cometh in the name of the Lord.”</p>
-
-<p>According to the custom of pilgrims, Charlemagne
-visited all the basilicas in Rome. He confirmed his
-father’s gift to the former Pope, and added new gifts of
-his own. The Pope gave to Charlemagne a book containing
-a collection of the canons written by the pontiffs
-from the origin of the church. This he dedicated to
-Charlemagne, and wrote in it, “Pope Adrian, to his
-most excellent son Charlemagne, king.”</p>
-
-<p>Charlemagne then returned to his camp before Pavia,
-and having captured the city, received the submission of
-all the Lombards. In 778 Charlemagne had a war with
-the Arabs in Spain. He crossed the Pyrenees and went
-as far as the Ebro, but the Arabs gave him large gifts of
-gold and jewels, and persuaded him to spare their fine
-cities. As he was returning over the mountains, his army
-was attacked by a wild people called the Basques; and
-several of his bravest leaders were killed, among them
-the famous Roland, concerning whom various stories are
-told, one being that he blew a blast on his bugle with his
-last breath, to warn Charlemagne, who was far in the front,
-of this unexpected danger. Another legend makes him to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-have possessed herculean strength, in token of which a
-great cleft is shown in the Pyrenean Hills, said to have
-been made by one stroke of his sword, and it bears the
-name of the “La Brèche de Roland.” Pfalgraf, or
-Count of the Palace, was the name given to some of the
-bravest Frank lords, and in old romances Roland and
-others are called the Paladins.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 465px;">
-<img src="images/i-235.jpg" width="465" height="678" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">DEATH OF ROLAND.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Charlemagne had three sons, Carl, Pepin, and Lodwig,
-afterwards called Louis le Débonnaire. In 781 Charlemagne
-took his two younger sons, Pepin, aged four, and
-Louis, only three years of age, to Rome, where they were
-anointed by Pope Adrian I.,—Pepin as king of Italy, and
-Louis as king of Aquitaine. On returning from Rome,
-Charlemagne sent the baby Louis at once to take formal
-possession of his kingdom. He was carried to Orleans
-in a cradle, and then the little prince was clad in a tiny
-suit of armor, and attendants held him up on horseback
-as he entered his kingdom of Aquitaine. He was accompanied
-by many officers and men of state who were to
-form his council of guardians. Afterwards the poor
-baby king was taken back to his father’s palace to be
-educated.</p>
-
-<p>Charlemagne founded Aix-la-Chapelle and made it his
-favorite winter residence. He went out to fight each
-summer, and came back to his kingdom in the winter. He
-was very seldom defeated in war, for he was wise and
-energetic, and moved his army about so quickly that he
-was a match for much larger forces than his own. He
-held a council of war every Easter when all his chiefs
-assembled, and Charlemagne made known to them his
-plans for his coming campaign. He made improvements
-in the armor and weapons of his soldiers. Their helmets
-were provided with visors which could be brought down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-to protect their faces in battle, and their shields were
-long and large, instead of the small round skin-covered
-bucklers of the early Gauls. His soldiers fought with
-sharp-pointed, two-handed swords, and they employed
-also heavy clubs covered with iron knobs, which were
-most formidable weapons. Charlemagne’s forces were
-mounted on strong fleet horses from the Rhine, and so
-great was his knowledge of all the surrounding countries,
-that he could despatch an army to any part of his kingdom
-at short notice, and with perfect accuracy as to
-route.</p>
-
-<p>On the 23d of November, 800, Charlemagne arrived
-at Rome, where he was met by Pope Leo III., whom he
-had several times aided in conflicts with his enemies, at
-one time receiving Leo into his own palace for a year,
-when conspirators at Rome were seeking the Pope’s life.
-In return for these favors, and to secure the help of so
-mighty a warrior, Pope Leo crowned Charlemagne Emperor
-of Rome. The ceremony was performed on Christmas
-day, 800. Eginhard thus described the scene: “The
-king came into the basilica of the blessed St. Peter, apostle,
-to attend the celebration of mass. At the moment
-when in his place before the altar he was bowing down
-to pray, Pope Leo placed upon his head a crown, and all
-the Roman people shouted, ‘Long life and victory to
-Charles Augustus, crowned by God, the great and pacific
-emperor of the Romans!’ After this proclamation the
-pontiff prostrated himself before him, and paid him adoration
-according to the custom established in the days of
-the old emperors; and thenceforward Charles, giving up
-the title of patrician, bore that of emperor and Augustus.”
-Charlemagne had now become emperor of France,
-of Germany, and of Italy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But it is not only as a great warrior that Charlemagne
-is famous. His government was a model for those times,
-and he held his subjects, so diverse as to nationality and
-education, under a most wise and powerful authority; and
-out of a chaos of different nations—the wild anarchy of
-ruined Rome, and the ill-regulated force of barbaric
-hordes—he founded a monarchy strong in him alone, and
-though it fell at his death, each piece of his great empire
-possessed enough of the vitalizing force, which his mind
-and wisdom had given to it, to enable it to rise an empire
-by itself. So, though Charlemagne’s kingdom could not
-be preserved by his successors, from that great power
-rose the separate empires of France, Germany, and Italy.
-One of Charlemagne’s humane acts was his care for the
-slaves in Gaul. At that time all the chiefs were warriors,
-while their lands were tilled by serfs, or slaves, who went
-with the land as part of the property, whether bought or
-captured. He made laws to protect the slaves as far as
-possible against unjust and cruel masters.</p>
-
-<p>Charlemagne was also fond of study. He learned
-Latin and Greek, and improved his native German language
-by inventing German words for the months and
-the winds. He paid great attention to astronomy and
-music, and in theological studies evinced a strong interest.
-He caused to be commenced the first Germanic
-grammar. But with all his learning there was one thing
-he could not accomplish, which was to write a good hand,
-though he zealously practiced the art, even putting his
-little tablets under his pillow that he might catch at any
-odd moments day or night to perfect his imperfect writing.
-At whatever palace Charlemagne was residing, he
-always formed there a school called the School of the
-Palace, where many learned men were gathered together,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-and where members of the royal family, including Charlemagne
-himself, and his children, took lessons in the
-different sciences, grammar, rhetoric, and theology. Two
-names are famous among these wise men, who became
-the particular advisers and confidants of Charlemagne,
-Alcuin and Eginhard, who afterwards became the biographer
-of Charlemagne, and the adviser of his son Louis
-le Débonnaire. It was the custom for members of this
-school to assume other names than their own: thus
-Charlemagne was called David; Alcuin, Flaccus; Angilbert,
-Homer; and Eginhard, Bezaleel,—that nephew of
-Moses to whom God had granted the gift of knowing how
-to work skilfully in wood and all materials needed for
-the ark and tabernacle. All of these scholars afterwards
-became great dignitaries in the church. Charlemagne
-was of a cheerful disposition, and fond of hunting and
-other sports. He was especially expert in swimming.
-He sometimes played jokes upon his chiefs and nobles, and
-the old monks of his time tell several stories regarding
-his sly humor. At one time when he thought his courtiers
-were too much given to fine clothes, he commanded a
-party of them when decked out in their finest trappings, to
-follow him in the chase through the rain, mud, and brambles.
-He was of a tall figure, and though his dress was
-rich and gorgeous when the occasion demanded it, he was
-not fond of finery. His appearance is thus described by
-Eginhard:—</p>
-
-<p>“Charlemagne was large and robust in person, his
-stature was lofty, though it did not exceed just proportion,
-for his height was not more than seven times the
-length of his foot. The summit of his head was round,
-his eyes large and bright, his nose a little long, beautiful
-white hair, and a smiling and pleasant expression. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-reigned in his whole person, whether standing or seated,
-an air of grandeur and dignity; and though his neck was
-thick and short, and his body corpulent, yet he was in
-other respects so well proportioned that these defects
-were not noticed. His walk was firm, and his whole
-appearance manly, but his clear voice did not quite harmonize
-with his appearance. His health was always
-good, except during the four years which preceded his
-death. He then had frequent attacks of fever, and was
-lame of one foot. In this time of suffering he treated
-himself more accordingly to his own fancies than by the
-advice of the physicians, whom he had come to dislike
-because they would have had him abstain from the roast
-meats he was accustomed to, and would have restricted
-him to boiled meats. His dress was that of his nation;
-that is to say, of the Franks. He wore a shirt and
-drawers of linen, over them a tunic bordered with silken
-fringe, stockings fastened with narrow bands, and shoes.
-In winter, a coat of otter or martin fur covered his shoulders
-and breast. Over all he wore a long blue mantle.”</p>
-
-<p>He would not adopt the short mantle worn by the later
-Franks, but preferred the long cloak of the ancient
-Franks, which made him a distinguished and royal-looking
-person amidst his short-cloaked courtiers. He was
-always girded with his sword, which became so famous
-that it received the name of Joyeuse, whose hilt was
-of gold and silver, his girdle being also of gold. Upon
-solemn festive occasions this sword was replaced by one
-enriched with precious stones. After he became Emperor
-he sometimes wore the long tunic, the chlamys, and the
-sandals of the Romans. At great feasts or festivals his
-dress was embroidered with gold, and his shoes adorned
-with precious stones. His mantle was fastened with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-brooch of gold, and he wore upon his head a glistening
-diadem of gold and gems; but his usual dress was simple.
-He avoided all excesses at the table, particularly
-that of drinking, for he abhorred drunkenness. While
-he was dining he liked to have histories or poems read to
-him. He took great pleasure in the works of St. Augustine.
-He was endowed with a natural eloquence which
-rendered his speech delightful. His chosen name of
-David was not inappropriate, for he was a founder and
-benefactor of the church, and was very devout in the outward
-observances of the Christian religion; but his domestic
-life was an irretrievable blot upon his character, which
-no plea of the laxity of those times can remove. It is
-true that the same fault mars the greatness of Alexander,
-Julius Cæsar, and other famous rulers; but Alexander
-and Cæsar were not Christians, while Charlemagne
-stands forth as the great champion and upholder of the
-religion of the spotless Christ. Charlemagne caused to
-be erected at Aix-la-Chapelle a magnificent basilica, or
-chapel, which he adorned with gold and silver, and with
-screens and gates of brass from Rome, and marbles and
-columns from Ravenna. He always attended service here
-night and morning, and often arose to assist at some especial
-worship in the night. He introduced great improvements
-in the lessons and the psalmody, and is said to
-have composed several hymns, among them the “Veni
-Creator Spiritus,” that invocation of the Holy Spirit
-which is sung at ordinations. Charlemagne was always
-ready to help poor Christians, not only in his own kingdom,
-but in Syria, Egypt, in Africa, at Jerusalem, Alexandria,
-Carthage, and elsewhere. Of all the holy places
-he had most veneration for the Church of St. Peter at
-Rome. He sent rich gifts of gold and silver and precious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-stones to that cathedral, for he desired to make it
-surpass all other churches in its decorations and riches.
-But he was only able to go four times during his reign of
-forty-seven years, to visit that cherished place. Toward
-the end of his vigorous life and magnificent career, the
-Emperor Charlemagne met with severe family losses. In
-less than two years his sister, daughter, and his sons, the
-two Pepins, one of whom was a hunchback, died; and
-lastly his son Charles, whom he intended should be
-crowned emperor, also died, leaving only Louis and several
-daughters. But Louis was the worthiest of all the sons
-of Charlemagne to succeed his illustrious father. In the
-year 813 Charlemagne, fearing that his end was drawing
-near, assembled all his chief men at Aix-la-Chapelle, and
-in a grand ceremonial in the chapel he caused his son to
-be declared emperor, bidding him take the diadem himself
-from the altar, and place it on his own head, whereupon
-Charlemagne exclaimed, “Blessed be the Lord, who hath
-granted me to see my son sitting on my throne!” But
-he did not at that time resign the crown. Louis went
-back to his kingdom in Aquitaine; and Charlemagne, in
-spite of his growing infirmities, continued through the
-autumn his usual hunting excursions, returning to Aix in
-November. In January Charlemagne was seized with a
-fever, but he determined to doctor himself, as was his
-usual method, which was to “starve” the fever. But
-pleurisy set in, and still refusing to be ministered to by
-physicians, on the seventh day after he had taken to his
-bed, having received communion, he expired about nine
-o’clock in the morning on the 28th of January, 814, in
-the seventy-first year of his age, and the forty-seventh
-year of his reign. He was buried with unusual grandeur.
-A large and beautifully carved sarcophagus of classical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-workmanship, was lying empty in the basilica of Aix.
-But they placed Charlemagne in a large marble chair in
-the crypt beneath the dome of his great basilica. The
-chair was ornamented with gold, and Charlemagne was
-clad in his royal robes with his sparkling crown upon his
-head, and his royal sceptre in his hand, and the good
-sword Joyeuse, which had served him in so many famous
-battles, was girded to his side, while his pilgrim’s pouch
-was suspended from his girdle, and a copy of the Gospels
-was laid upon his knees. Thus was he seated on the
-throne chair, with his feet resting in the carved sarcophagus,
-as though the great emperor was not to be shut up
-in a coffin like common mortals, but even in death still
-sat upon his throne in royal state. Beneath the dome,
-on the stone which closed the entrance to the tomb, was
-carved the following epitaph in Latin:—</p>
-
-<p>“In this tomb reposeth the body of Charles, great and
-orthodox emperor, who did gloriously extend the kingdom
-of the Franks, and did govern it happily for forty-seven
-years. He died at the age of seventy years, in the
-year of the Lord, 814, in the seventh year of the Indication,
-on the fifth of the Kalends of February.”</p>
-
-<p>This crypt was opened two hundred years afterwards
-by the Emperor Otho III., when he found the remains of
-Charlemagne, as described above. A huge black flagstone
-now lies under the dome, bearing the inscription,
-“Carolo Magno,” and it is supposed to cover the entrance
-to the tomb of Charlemagne. Over it hangs a large
-golden candelabrum which the Emperor Barbarossa gave
-to burn above the grave. In the time of Barbarossa, the
-church enrolled the name of the great emperor in its
-Calendar as St. Charlemagne.</p>
-
-<p>No sovereign ever rendered greater service to the civilized<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-world than Charlemagne, by stopping in the north
-and south the flood of barbarians and Arabs, Paganism
-and Islamism. This was his great success, and although
-he ultimately failed in founding a permanent empire
-which should exist in unity and absolute power after his
-death, though at one time he seemed to be Cæsar,
-Augustus, and Constantine combined, his death ended
-his empire; but he had opened the way for the Christian
-religion and human liberty to establish other and more
-lasting governments. The illustrious French writer,
-Guizot, thus sums up the life and achievements of Charlemagne.
-“Great men are at one and the same time instruments
-and free agents in a general design which is
-infinitely above their ken, and which, even if a glimpse
-of it be caught, remains inscrutable to them,—the
-design of God towards mankind. Charlemagne had this
-singular good fortune, that his misguided attempt at imperialism
-perished with him, whilst his salutary achievement,
-the territorial security of Christian Europe, has
-been durable to the great honor, as well as great profit, of
-European civilization.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>ALFRED THE GREAT.<br />
-
-<small>849-901 A.D.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“An honest man’s the noblest work of God.”</div>
-<div class="sig"><span class="smcap">Pope.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">STORY and song have immortalized the romantic traditions
-regarding the early inhabitants of the British
-realm, and although many of them are no doubt fabulous
-tales, the romantic history of Alfred the Great would be
-robbed of much of its weird fascination if no mention
-were made of these fantastic but charming traditions.
-King Alfred’s reign was eight hundred years after the
-Christian Era. Authentic history takes us back through
-those eight hundred years to the time of Julius Cæsar
-and his invasion of Great Britain, and traditions carry
-us still farther back, for eight hundred years more, to
-the days of Solomon.</p>
-
-<p>There is a story that at the close of the Trojan war,
-which we have described in the life of Agamemnon, Æneas
-landed in Italy with a company of Trojans. They settled
-near the spot upon which Rome was afterwards built.
-One day, while Brutus, the great-grandson of Æneas,
-was hunting in the forests, he accidentally killed his father
-with an arrow. Brutus, fearing evil consequences from
-this terrible accident, fled from Italy. Going to Greece,
-he collected a band of Trojans, and they made war upon
-a king named Pandrasus. Brutus conquered this king
-but promised to make peace with him if he would agree
-to provide a fleet of ships for Brutus, and give him his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-daughter in marriage. This Pandrasus did, and Brutus
-sailed with his bride and fleet, until they arrived at a deserted
-island, upon which they found the ruins of a city
-and an ancient temple of Diana, where there still remained
-an image of the goddess.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 407px;">
-<img src="images/i-247.jpg" width="407" height="650" alt="ALFRED" />
-</div>
-
-<p>The story goes that Brutus consulted this oracle of
-Diana, and received the following answer:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“Far to the West, in the ocean wide,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Beyond the realm of Gaul, a land there lies;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Sea-girt it lies, where giants dwelt of old.</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Now void, it fits thy people; thither bend</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Thy course; there shalt thou find a lasting home.”</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Brutus followed this direction, and proceeded westward
-through the Mediterranean Sea. He arrived at the Pillars
-of Hercules, which was the name given in those days
-to the Rock of Gibraltar, and then he turned northward
-and coasted along Spain. At length they arrived on the
-shores of Britain. They found the island covered with
-rich verdure, and in the forests were many wild beasts
-and the remnants of a race of giants.</p>
-
-<p>Brutus and his forces drove the wild beasts into the
-mountains of Wales and Scotland, and killed the giants,
-and seized upon the island as their own. Many wild
-adventures are told of his successors, down to the time
-of the invasion of Julius Cæsar. Such is the story in
-brief of the early Britons.</p>
-
-<p>After the conquest by Cæsar, the Romans retained possession
-of the island for four hundred years. During
-this time there were many rebellions in the various provinces,
-until at last the Britons submitted to their sway.
-Now another enemy advanced against this picturesque
-island. The Picts and Scots, hordes of lawless barbarians,
-who inhabited the mountains of Ireland and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-Scotland, made continual expeditions for plunder into
-the fair land of the Britons. At length one of the
-Roman emperors named Severus, visited the island of
-Britain, and endeavored to conquer the Picts and Scots.
-It was at this time that the famous Wall of Severus was
-built. The wall extended across the island, from the
-mouth of the Tyne on the German Ocean, to the Solway
-Frith, nearly seventy miles. This wall was a good defence
-against the barbarians, as long as Roman soldiers
-remained to guard it. But about two centuries after the
-time of Severus, the Roman soldiers were required by
-their own government at home, and the Britons were left
-to fight with the Picts and Scots alone. During this
-time another brave and warlike race had arisen. The
-Anglo-Saxons had now become powerful sea-rulers on
-the German Ocean and Baltic Sea. They delighted in
-storms and tempests, and cared not whether it was summer
-or winter when they sailed the seas, so brave and
-fearless were they. They would build small vessels of
-osiers, covering them with skins, and in these frail boats
-they courageously sailed amidst the rough winds and
-foaming surges of the German Ocean, in search of conquest
-and wild adventure. If they fought they conquered,
-and if they pursued their enemies they were sure
-to overtake them, and if they retreated they successfully
-made their escape. Neither winds, waves, nor enemies
-could quell this adventurous and brave race, which was
-fast rising into power and renown. They were clothed
-in loose and flowing garments, and wore their hair long,
-floating about their shoulders. They had much skill in
-fabricating arms of superior workmanship, which gave
-them a great advantage over their enemies. The landing
-of a few boat-loads of these determined and fearless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-Anglo-Saxons, on a small island near the mouth of the
-Thames, was an event which marks an important epoch
-in English history, as it was the real beginning of British
-greatness and power. The names of the commanders
-who headed the expedition of the Anglo-Saxons which
-first landed in Britain, were Hengist and Horsa. They
-were brothers. The island where they landed was called
-Thanet. The name of the king of Britain at this time
-was Vortigern. When the Anglo-Saxons arrived, his
-kingdom was distracted by the constant incursions of the
-Picts and Scots. In this danger, Vortigern appealed to
-the Anglo-Saxons for help. He offered to give them a
-large tract of territory in the part of the island where
-they had landed, if they would aid him in his contest
-with his enemies. Hengist and Horsa agreed to this proposal,
-and they thereupon engaged in battle with the
-Picts and Scots, and defeated them, and they were driven
-back to their mountains in the north. The Anglo-Saxons
-now established themselves in the part of the island
-assigned to them, and it is related that Hengist gave his
-daughter Rowena in marriage to King Vortigern, to
-strengthen the alliance more closely. At last the Britons
-became alarmed at the increasing power of the Anglo-Saxons,
-and the result was a fierce contest. It is related
-that King Vortigern, with three hundred of his officers,
-were invited by Hengist to a feast, and a quarrel having
-arisen, an affray occurred in which the Britons were all
-killed, except Vortigern who was taken prisoner, and was
-only ransomed by ceding three whole provinces to his
-captors.</p>
-
-<p>The famous King Arthur, whose Knights of the Round
-Table have been so celebrated in fable and song, was a
-king of the Britons during these wars between his people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-and the Saxons. He is said to have performed marvellous
-exploits of strength and valor. He was of prodigious
-size, and undaunted courage. He slew giants,
-killed the most ferocious wild beasts, gained many splendid
-victories, and is said to have made long expeditions
-into foreign countries, once even going to Jerusalem on
-a pilgrimage to obtain the Holy Cross. He was afterwards
-killed in a combat with his nephew, who had
-gained the affections of Arthur’s wife during his absence.
-Arthur had been a deadly enemy of the Saxons. He
-fought twelve great pitched battles with them, in every
-one of which he gained the victory. It is related that he
-killed with his own hand, four hundred and seventy men
-in one of these contests. The landing of the Saxons,
-under Hengist and Horsa, is supposed to have been in
-the year 449. It was more than two hundred years after
-this before the Britons were entirely subdued, and the
-Saxon power became supreme. In one or two centuries
-more the Saxons had, in their turn, to meet an implacable
-and powerful enemy. These new invaders were the
-Danes.</p>
-<div class="figright" style="width: 430px;">
-<img src="images/i-253.jpg" width="430" height="625" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">THE NORTHMEN INVADING FRANCE.</div>
-</div>
-<p>The territory of Britain was divided into seven or eight
-Saxon kingdoms, each under a separate king. This
-power is known in history as the Saxon Heptarchy.
-The Danes were not exclusively the natives of Denmark.
-They came from all the shores of the Northern and Baltic
-Seas. They were a race of bold naval adventurers,
-as the Saxons themselves had been two or three centuries
-before. They were banded together in large hordes, each
-ruled by a chieftain, called a sea-king. One of the most
-famous of these sea-kings was named Ragnar Lodbrog.
-His father was a prince of Norway, and Ragnar had
-married a Danish princess, and had acquired a sort of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-right to a Danish kingdom, which right was disputed by
-one Harald. The Franks aided Harald in this contest,
-and Ragnar was defeated. But he now brought the other
-sea-kings under his control, and raising a large force, he
-invaded France, and landing at Rouen he marched to
-Paris. The king of the Franks finding himself completely
-in his power, bought off the sea-kings by paying
-a large sum of money, and Ragnar and his hordes returned
-to the Baltic Sea with riches and wide renown for
-their daring adventures. Ragnar afterwards invaded
-Spain, and finally grew bold enough to attack the Anglo-Saxons
-on the island of Britain. For this contest, Ragnar
-had prepared two enormous ships, and, filling them
-with picked men, he sailed down the coast of Scotland
-until he reached Northumbria. Here he encountered a
-large force of Saxons under their king Ella. A terrible
-struggle ensued. Ragnar was defeated and taken prisoner,
-and was afterwards put to death in a barbarous
-manner by the Saxons. They filled a den with poisonous
-snakes, and drove the captive Ragnar amongst these
-horrid reptiles, by whose venomous fangs he was killed.
-In 851 a large horde of Danes landed on the island of
-Thanet, and afterwards advanced boldly up the Thames.
-They plundered London and Canterbury, and marched
-thence into one of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, called
-Mercia. Although the Danes were there defeated by a
-large force of Saxons, new hordes were continually arriving,
-and becoming more formidable. At length an immence
-force of Danes landed, under the command of
-Guthrum and Hubba. This horde was led by eight
-kings and twenty earls. Hubba was one of Ragnar’s
-sons, and many of the horde were his relatives and
-friends, who swore vengeance for his cruel death. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-was at this time that young Alfred appears prominently
-upon the scene of English history.</p>
-
-
-<p>Alfred was the youngest child of Ethelwolf, king of
-the West Saxons. Under Egbert, the father of Ethelwolf,
-the kingdoms of the West Saxons had been united;
-and Egbert is called king of the English, he having
-given the name of Anglia to the whole kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>When young Alfred was five years old, his father sent
-him to Rome to see the Pope, and to be anointed by him
-as king of the West Saxons; as Ethelwolf intended to
-pass over his elder sons and give his throne to his favorite
-son Alfred. This journey was made with great pomp
-and splendor; and a large train of nobles and ecclesiastics
-accompanied the young prince, who was received
-with splendid entertainments as he passed through
-France. Two years after this journey, Alfred’s father
-Ethelwolf determined himself to go to Rome, and his
-favorite son accompanied him. Ethelwolf placed his
-elder sons in command of his affairs at home, and with
-a magnificent retinue crossed the channel, and landed in
-France on his way to Rome. King Ethelwolf and Prince
-Alfred were received with great distinction by King
-Charles of France, and after a short stay in the French
-court they proceeded to Rome. The king of England
-carried most costly presents to the Pope. Ethelwolf had
-been educated for the monastery, as he was a younger
-son, but the death of his father and elder brother placed
-him on the throne instead of in an ecclesiastical office.
-Therefore his religious inclinations were always very
-strong, and this pilgrimage to Rome was made as a religious
-ceremony as well as for political objects, and his
-offerings were very magnificent. One gift was a crown of
-pure gold, weighing four pounds. Another was a sword<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-richly mounted in gold. There were also many vessels
-of gold and silver, and several robes richly adorned.
-King Ethelwolf also distributed money to all the inhabitants
-of Rome; giving gold to the nobles and clergy, and
-silver to the people. So great was his munificence, and
-so magnificent was his courtly retinue, that this visit
-attracted universal attention, and made the little Alfred,
-on whose especial account the journey was performed, an
-object of great interest. King Ethelwolf remained a
-year at Rome, to give young Alfred the benefit of the
-advantages of the schools which had been established
-there. As they returned home through France, King
-Ethelwolf was married to the young daughter of the king
-of France, Princess Judith, who was only twelve or
-fourteen years of age. The mother of Alfred had died
-about three years before, and although this marriage
-occasioned much trouble in the kingdom of Ethelwolf,
-the young bride Judith was a kind and affectionate stepmother
-to Alfred, who was at this time about eight years
-of age. The story is related, that on one occasion Judith
-was showing Alfred and his older brothers a manuscript
-of some Saxon poems. Although much care had been
-bestowed upon the education of Alfred, he could not yet
-read. Indeed, very few even of the princes or kings in
-those days ever learned to read. Reading was considered
-as a necessary art, only for those who were to become
-professional teachers. Alfred expressed so much delight
-in this manuscript, which was beautifully illuminated with
-hand drawings, that Judith promised the volume to the
-one who should first learn to read it. Alfred’s brothers,
-although much older, did not aspire to this honor, and
-Alfred made such diligent use of his time, that with the
-help of his teachers he was soon able to read the poems<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-fluently, and so claimed and received the prize. About
-two years after, the father of Alfred died, and Judith became
-the wife of Ethelbald, the eldest brother of Alfred,
-who succeeded to the throne. He died soon after, however,
-and Judith returned to France, where she married
-a Flemish noble, whom her father afterwards made Count
-of Flanders. We cannot stop to trace the life of Judith
-any farther, but we must mention that Alfred the Great
-afterwards gave his daughter Elfrida in marriage to the
-second count of Flanders, who was the eldest son of
-Judith. Through this marriage the English sovereigns
-trace their descent from Alfred the Great.</p>
-
-<p>There is a strange story connected with the youth of Alfred,
-which is best given in the quaint language of one of
-the biographers of this good and brave king. “As he
-advanced through the years of infancy and youth, his
-form appeared more comely than those of his brothers,
-and in look, speech, and manners he was more graceful
-than they. He was already the darling of the people, who
-felt that in wisdom and other qualities he surpassed all
-the royal race. Alfred, then, being a youth of this fair
-promise, while training himself diligently in all such learning
-as he had the means of acquiring, and especially in
-his own mother tongue and the poems and songs which
-formed the chief part of Anglo-Saxon literature, was not
-unmindful of the culture of his body, and was a zealous
-practiser of hunting in all its branches, and hunted with
-great perseverance and success. But before all things he
-was wishful to strengthen his mind in the keeping of
-God’s commandments; and finding that worldly desires
-and proud and rebellious thoughts which the devil, who is
-ever jealous of the good, is apt to breed in the minds of
-the young, were likely to have the mastery of him, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-used often to rise at cock-crow in the early mornings, and
-repairing to some church or holy place, there cast himself
-before God in prayer, that he might do nothing contrary
-to His holy will. But finding himself still hard tempted,
-he began at such times to pray, as he lay prostrate before
-the altar, that God in his great mercy would strengthen
-his mind and will by some sickness, such as would be of
-use to him in the subduing of his nature, but would not
-show itself outwardly, or render him powerless or contemptible
-in worldly duties, or less able to benefit his
-people. For King Alfred from his earliest years held in
-great dread leprosy and blindness, and every disease
-which would make a man useless or contemptible in the
-conduct of affairs. And when he had often, and with
-much fervor, prayed to this effect, it pleased God to afflict
-him with a very painful disease, which lay upon him with
-little respite until he was in his twentieth year. At this
-age he became betrothed to her who was afterwards his
-wife, Elswitha, the daughter of Ethelred, the Earl of the
-Gaini in Mercia. Alfred, then, at that time being on a
-visit to Cornwall for the sake of hunting, turned aside
-from his sport, as his custom often was, to pray in a certain
-chapel in which was buried the body of St. Guerir.
-There he entreated God that he would exchange the sickness
-with which he had been up to that time afflicted for
-some other disease, which should in like manner not render
-him useless or contemptible. And so, finishing his
-prayers, he got up and rode away, and soon after perceived
-within himself that he was made whole of his old
-sickness. So his marriage was celebrated in Mercia, to
-which came great numbers of people, and there was feasting
-which lasted through the night as well as by day. In
-the midst of which revelry Alfred was attacked by sudden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-and violent pain, the cause of which neither they who were
-then present, nor indeed any physician in after years,
-could rightly ascertain. At the time, however, some
-believed that it was the malignant enchantment of some
-person amongst the guests; others, that it was the special
-spite of the devil; others again, that it was the old sickness
-come back on him, or a strange kind of fever. In
-any case, from that day until his forty-fourth year he was
-subject to this same sickness, which frequently returned,
-giving him the most acute pain, and, as he thought, making
-him useless for every duty. But how far the king was
-from thinking rightly in this respect, those who read of
-the burdens that were laid upon him, and the work which
-he accomplished, can best judge for themselves.” Such
-is this quaint account of Alfred’s religious devotion, and
-his patient endurance of suffering.</p>
-
-<p>According to the will of Ethelwolf, the father of Alfred,
-Ethelbald, his eldest son, was to retain the throne of Wessex
-until his death, when he should be succeeded by his
-two youngest brothers, Ethelred and Alfred, in succession;
-while Ethelbert, the second son, should be king of
-Kent, Sussex, and Surrey. His estates and other property
-were divided amongst his children. From 858 until
-860 Ethelred and Alfred lived in Kent with their brother
-Ethelbert. Upon the death of Ethelbald in 860, Ethelred
-and Alfred both waived their rights, and allowed
-Ethelbert to ascend the throne of Wessex. In 866 Ethelbert
-also died, and Ethelred now became the sovereign,
-and Alfred the crown prince. Alfred was very fond of
-study, and also very devout, as the above description
-from the old annals shows. During his youth he had
-gathered together the Services of the Hours, called <i>Celebrationes
-Horarum</i>, with many of the Psalms, which he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-written in a small handbook that he always carried with
-him; and on battle-field, or exiled in the wild forests, or
-ruling the nation as a proud king, this little book of devotion
-was always within reach, and constantly perused.</p>
-
-<p>Within six weeks after his marriage he was called to
-arms by the invasion of the Danes, already mentioned,
-under Guthrum and Hubba; and within a few short
-months his brother Ethelred had been killed in battle, he
-himself had become king, and nine pitched battles had
-been fought in his own kingdom of Wessex under his
-leadership.</p>
-
-<p>To understand more clearly the character of the Danes,
-a slight description of their weird and fantastic religious
-ideas is necessary. Woden was the chief figure in their
-ancient mythology. He was the god of battles, “who
-giveth victory, who re-animates warriors, who nameth
-those who are to be slain.” This Woden had been an
-inspired teacher as well as a conqueror, and had given to
-these wild Northmen a Scandinavian alphabet, and songs
-of battle. Their traditions related that Woden had led
-them from the shores of the Black Sea to the fiords of
-Norway, the far shores of Iceland. Having departed
-from them, he drew their hearts after him, and lived ever
-after in Asgard, the garden of the gods. There in his
-own great hall, Valhalla, the hall of Odin, he dwelt.
-And it was believed that the brave slain in battle should
-be permitted to go to Valhalla, and feast there with the
-mighty Odin.</p>
-
-<p>There were also supposed to be other gods in this hall
-of Valhalla. Chief of these was Balder, the sun-god,
-white, beautiful, benignant; and Thor, the thunder-god,
-with terrible smiting hammer and awful brows, engaged
-mainly in expeditions into Jotun land, a chaotic world,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-the residence of the giants, or devils, known as frost, fire,
-tempest, and the like. Thor’s attendant was Thealfi,
-or manual labor. This thunder-god was described to be
-full of unwieldly strength, simplicity, and rough humor.
-There was supposed to be a tree of life also in the unseen
-world,—Igdrasil, with its roots in Hela, the kingdom of
-death, at the foot of which sit the three Nornas, known
-as the past, present, and future. They also believed that
-there would some day be a struggle of the gods and Jotuns,
-or dwellers in the chaotic world, and that at last the
-gods, Jotuns, and Time himself would all sink down into
-darkness, from which in due season there should issue
-forth a new heaven and a new earth, in which a higher
-god and supreme justice shall at last reign.</p>
-
-<p>So their religion was only a religion of war; and, to be
-brave in battle, they thought the most pleasing devotion
-they could show to their warlike gods. So this contest
-between the Danes and Saxons was not only one for the
-possession of the fruitful land of England, but was a
-contest between Paganism and Christianity. King Alfred
-was a devout Christian, and although the Saxons’ ideas of
-religion were mixed with much superstition and bigotry,
-they believed in the true God, Jehovah, and in salvation
-through the redemption of Jesus Christ; although the
-pure Gospel, as taught by Christ himself when on the
-earth more than eight hundred years before this time, had
-become mixed with all sorts of legends of saints and
-marvellous stories fabricated by the priests, and handed
-down as traditions among the people, whose ignorance
-placed them completely under the sway of the only class
-of men who were educated sufficiently to read and write,
-and by whom all copies were made of such books as they
-possessed at that day, which consisted only of rolls of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-parchment, penned laboriously by hand in the various
-monasteries, scattered throughout the different kingdoms
-of the then civilized world. The most famous battle
-between the Saxons and the Danes is known as the
-battle of Ashdown, and is thus described in the old English
-annals:—</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 428px;">
-<img src="images/i-263.jpg" width="428" height="593" alt="Alfred Roy d’Angleterre, Né en 849. Mort le 28.8bre. 899." />
-</div>
-
-<p>“At early dawn the hosts were on foot. Alfred
-marched up promptly with his men to give battle, but
-King Ethelred stayed long time in his tent at prayer hearing
-the mass. Now the Christians had determined that
-King Ethelred with his men should fight the two pagan
-kings, and that Alfred his brother, with his men, should
-take the chance of war against the earls. Things being
-so arranged, the king remained long time in prayer, while
-the pagans pressed on swiftly to the fight. Then Alfred,
-though holding the lower command, could no longer support
-the onslaught of the enemy without retreating, or
-charging upon them without waiting for his brother. A
-moment of fearful anxiety was this for the young prince,
-who thus no doubt mused: ‘Bagsac and the two Sidrocs
-at the top of the down with double my numbers, already
-overlapping my flanks: Ethelred still at mass—dare I
-go up at them? In the name of God and St. Cuthbert,
-yes!’ and with a strong heart, brave for this great crisis,
-Alfred puts himself at the head of his men, and leads
-them up the slope against the whole pagan host, ‘With
-the rush of a wild boar.’ For he too relied on the help
-of God. He formed his men in a dense phalanx to meet
-the foe, which was never broken in that long fight. Mass
-being over, Ethelred comes up to the help of his brother,
-and the battle raged along the whole hillside. The
-pagans occupied the higher ground, and the Christians
-came up from below. There was also in that place, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-single stunted thorn-tree. Round this tree the opposing
-hosts came together with loud shouts from all sides, the
-one party to pursue their wicked course, the other to fight
-for their lives, their wives and children, and their country.
-And, when both sides had fought long and bravely, at
-last the pagans, by God’s judgment, gave way, being no
-longer able to abide the Christian onslaught; and after
-losing a great part of their army, broke in shameful flight.
-One of their two kings and five earls were there slain,
-together with many thousand pagans, who covered with
-their bodies the whole plain of Ashdown. And all the
-pagan host pursued its flight, not only until night, but
-through the next day, even until they reached the stronghold
-from which they had come forth. The Christians
-followed, slaying all they could reach until dark. Neither
-before nor since was ever such slaughter known since
-the Saxons first gained England by their arms.”</p>
-
-<p>Alfred’s decision and promptness, in that time of emergency,
-not only won the day, but hardened his own nerve
-to flint, and his judgment, amid the clash of arms, to
-steel. Through all the weary years of battle and misfortune
-that followed, there was no sign of indecision and
-faint-heartedness. He had conquered fear and hesitancy
-there, as valiantly as he had conquered temptations to
-evil in his earlier youth. About two months after the
-battle of Ashdown, Ethelred and Alfred fought for the
-last time together, against their unwearied foes. In this
-contest Ethelred was mortally wounded, and died soon
-after, and was buried by Alfred with kingly honors in
-Wimborne Minster.</p>
-
-<p>Alfred, now at the age of twenty-three, ascended the
-throne of his fathers, which seemed at that time tottering,
-and was not an inheritance to be desired in the year of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-871, when Alfred succeeded his brother. It would not
-be surprising if for a moment he lost heart and hope, and
-allowed himself to doubt whether God would by his hand
-deliver his afflicted people from their relentless foes. In
-the eight pitched battles which had been fought with the
-pagan army, the flower of the youth of the Saxon nation
-had fallen. Kent, Sussex, and Surrey were at the mercy
-of the Danes. London had been pillaged and was in
-ruins, and several provinces in his own Wessex had been
-desolated. The Danes were even then striking into new
-districts, and if the rich lands yet unplundered were to
-be saved from their voracious grasp, it would only be
-by prompt and decisive action.</p>
-
-<p>A month has passed since the death of Alfred’s brother
-and his succession to this tottering throne. Alfred, with
-the greatest difficulty, collects enough men to take the
-field openly. The first great battle that Alfred fought,
-as king, was at Wilton. At first Alfred’s troops carried
-all before them, but the tide turned in favor of the Danes,
-and Alfred and the Saxons were driven from the field.
-There was immense loss upon both sides, and a treaty
-was agreed upon between Alfred and Hubba, the Danish
-chieftain. By this treaty, the Danes were to retire from
-Alfred’s dominions, provided that he would not interfere
-with their conquests in other parts of England. Alfred
-has been censured for making this treaty; but he was
-obliged to choose between protection for his own realm,
-and perhaps the entire destruction and overthrow of not
-only his dominions, but of all England. He had no
-power to aid others, and therefore endeavored to protect,
-if possible, his own subjects. The Danes then went to
-Mercia. The king of Mercia was Buthred, the brother-in-law
-of Alfred. Buthred paid the Danes large sums of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-money to leave his kingdom. The Danes departed for
-a while, but treacherously returned, and were again
-bought off. Hubba scarcely left the kingdom this time,
-but spent the money received, and then went to plundering
-as before, regardless of all promises. Buthred, in
-despair, fled the country and went to Rome, where he
-died soon after of grief. The Danes then took possession
-of Mercia, and set over the people a king from whom
-they demanded an annual tribute. In the meantime, new
-hordes of Danes arrived in England; and one place after
-another was plundered by them, and they obtained possession
-of the town of Exancester (now Exeter), which
-was a great loss to Alfred. King Alfred then determined
-to meet the Danes upon their own element; and he built
-and equipped a small fleet, and was successful in his first
-encounter with his enemies, having defeated a fleet of
-Danish ships in the channel, and having captured one of
-the largest of their vessels.</p>
-
-<p>But after all, Alfred gained no decisive victory over his
-foes. He then tried to bind the Danes by Christian
-oaths, in making a treaty with them. The Danes were
-accustomed to swear by a certain ornament which they
-wore, when they wished to impose a very solemn religious
-oath; and to swear by this bracelet was to place themselves
-under the most solemn obligations they could
-assume. Alfred, however, was not satisfied with this
-pagan ceremony, but obliged them, in one treaty, to
-swear by certain Christian relics, which were held in
-great awe and sacredness by the Saxons. But the
-Danes broke their treaties with the most reckless defiance;
-and, as years passed, Alfred found his army
-broken, his resources exhausted, his towns and castles
-taken, until about eight years after his coronation at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-Winchester, as monarch of the most powerful of all the
-Saxon kingdoms, he found himself unable to resist the
-further attacks of the Danes, who had come over in fresh
-hordes, and captured his kingdom of Wessex; which
-calamity Alfred was powerless to prevent.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 443px;">
-<img src="images/i-269.jpg" width="443" height="650" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">ALFRED AND THE CAKES.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Saxon chieftains and nobles fled in terror, and
-Alfred himself, with only one or two trusty friends,
-retired to the vast forests, which skirted the remote
-western frontiers of his once proud realm. It was during
-these homeless wanderings that the incident is said to
-have occurred, which has ever since been related of this
-bitter experience of want and misery in the life of
-Alfred the Great. The story is, that Alfred, weary and
-hungry, sought shelter in the miserable hut of a cow-herd,
-who gave him such poor fare as his lowly lot allowed.
-Alfred, while remaining with these simple folks, was one
-day engaged in mending his arrows, when the cow-herd’s
-wife, totally unconscious of the rank and station of her
-guest, requested him, in no polite terms, to watch her
-cakes which were baking in the coals, while she employed
-herself in other labors. King Alfred, absorbed
-in his sorrowful musings, forgot the injunctions of the
-ill-natured woman, and so allowed her cakes to burn;
-which, when she perceived, she gave him a good scolding;
-saying, “You man! you will not turn the bread you see
-burning, but you will be very glad to eat it when it is
-done!” This unlucky woman little thought she was
-addressing the great King Alfred.</p>
-
-<p>Alfred, though restless and wretched in his apparently
-hopeless seclusion, bore his privations with patience and
-fortitude, and did not cease to plan some way by which
-he might reorganize his forces and rescue his country
-from the ruin into which it had fallen. Alfred now established<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-himself at a place called Ethelney; and, having
-gradually collected a few followers, they built a kind of
-fortress, where Alfred’s family at length joined him, and
-to which numbers of his old troops began to repair.
-The following incident is recorded in the old annals concerning
-this time in King Alfred’s life. It was very difficult
-to supply his little garrison with food, and sometimes
-they found themselves in sore want. At one time the
-provisions in the house were nearly exhausted, and to add
-to their distress, it was also in the winter. All of Alfred’s
-little band having gone away with their fishing apparatus
-and bows and arrows in the hope of securing some food,
-Alfred was left alone with only one attendant. King
-Alfred was sitting reading, when a beggar came to the
-door and asked for food. Alfred, looking up from his
-book, inquired of his attendant what food there was in the
-house. It was found that there was only a single loaf
-of bread remaining, and a little wine in a pitcher. This
-would not be half enough for their own wants, should the
-hunting party return unsuccessful. Alfred ordered half
-of the loaf to be given to the stranger; but when he had
-been served he was seen no more, and the loaf remained
-whole, as though none had been taken from it, and the
-pitcher was now full to the brim. Alfred, meantime, had
-turned to his reading, over which he fell asleep, and
-dreamed that St. Cuthbert stood by him and told him it
-was he who had been his guest; and that God had seen
-his afflictions and those of his people, which were now
-about to end, in token whereof his people would return
-that day from their expedition with a great take of fish.
-And while Alfred yet mused on this strange dream from
-which he had awakened, his servants came in, bringing
-fish enough to have fed an army. The legend also goes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-on to say, that on the next morning King Alfred went
-forth in the forests and wound his horn thrice, which drew
-to him before noon five hundred men. Another story is
-told of the manner in which King Alfred discovered the
-number and power of his enemies’ forces. It is said that
-he assumed the garb of a minstrel, and with one attendant
-visited the camp of the Dane Guthrum. Here he
-stayed, amusing the Danish king and nobles with his
-songs and harp, boldly venturing into their very tents,
-until he had learned all he desired to know concerning
-their plans.</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon he returned to Ethelney; and the time having
-arrived for a great effort, he sent word to his people
-to meet him at a place called Egbert’s Stone. Here, on
-the 12th of May, 878, King Alfred met his gathered
-forces, and losing no time, moved forward toward Guthrum’s
-camp. Alfred encamped for the night on an eminence
-from which he could watch the movements of his
-enemies. That night, as he was sleeping in his tent, he
-had a remarkable dream. St. Neot appeared to him, and
-told him to have no fear of the immense army of pagans
-whom he was about to encounter on the morrow, as God
-had taken him under his special protection, having accepted
-his penitence for all his faults; he might now go
-forward into the battle without fear, as God was about to
-give him the victory over all his enemies.</p>
-
-<p>The king related this dream to his army the next morning,
-and the men were inspired with new ardor and enthusiasm
-as Alfred led them to the camp where their enemies
-lay; for it was Alfred’s intention to surprise the Danes.
-The Saxons advanced to the attack; and the Danes, surprised
-and terror-stricken, soon began to yield. At last
-the flight among the pagans became general. They were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-pursued by Alfred’s victorious columns. The retreating
-army was in a short time reduced to a small force, which,
-with Guthrum at their head, reached a castle, where they
-took refuge. Guthrum, shut up in this castle, was now
-besieged by Alfred’s forces; and when many of his men
-were raving in the delirium of famine and thirst, or dying
-in dreadful agony, he could resist no longer, but surrendered
-to Alfred. Thus King Alfred was once more in
-possession of his kingdom. The treaty which Alfred now
-made with the Danes evinces his generous Christian forgiveness;
-and perhaps even the pagan Guthrum, in accepting
-the terms proposed, was influenced by emotions of
-gratitude and admiration for the example of Christian
-virtue which Alfred exhibited. As the Danes had now
-become so intermingled with the Saxons by their long
-residence in England and frequent intermarriages, Alfred
-determined to expel only the armed forces from his dominions,
-allowing those peaceably disposed to remain in quiet
-possession of such lands in other parts of the island as
-they already occupied. Instead, therefore, of treating
-Guthrum with harshness and severity as a captive enemy,
-he told him that he was willing to give him his liberty,
-and to regard him, on certain conditions, as a friend and
-an ally, and to allow him to reign as king over that part
-of England which his countrymen already possessed. The
-conditions were that Guthrum was to go away with his
-forces out of Alfred’s kingdom under solemn oaths never
-to return; that he was to give hostages for the faithful fulfilment
-of these stipulations; and that Guthrum should become
-a convert to Christianity, and publicly avow his adhesion
-to the Saxon faith by being baptized in the presence of
-the leaders of both armies in the most open and solemn
-manner. These conditions were accepted, and some weeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-after the surrender, the baptism was performed in the presence
-of many chieftains of both nations. Guthrum’s Christian
-name which he received at this ceremony was Ethelstan.
-King Alfred was his god-father. The various ceremonies
-connected with the baptism were protracted through several
-days, and were followed by a number of festivities
-and public rejoicings. The admission of the pagan chieftain
-into the Christian church did not mark, perhaps, any
-real change in his personal opinions, but it prepared the
-way for the reception of the Christian faith by his followers;
-and Alfred, in leading Guthrum to the baptismal
-font, was achieving, in the estimation of all England,
-France, and Rome, a far greater and nobler victory than
-when he conquered his enemies on the field of battle. A
-full and formal treaty of peace was now concluded between
-the two sovereigns; for Guthrum received the title
-of king, and was to hold a separate kingdom in the dominions
-assigned to him. Guthrum endeavored to keep
-this treaty faithfully, and whenever other parties of Danes
-came upon the coast of England, they found no favor or
-assistance from him against the Saxons.</p>
-
-<p>The generosity and nobleness of mind displayed in his
-treatment of Guthrum made a great impression on the
-world at that time, and has never ceased to throw a halo
-of glory around the memory of this good and great king.
-Many stories are told to illustrate the kindness of Alfred
-the Great. It is said that once, while hunting in the
-forest with a party, he heard the cries of a child, which
-seemed to come from the air above their heads. It was
-found, after much searching, that the sounds proceeded
-from an eagle’s nest in the top of a lofty tree. On
-climbing to the nest, it was discovered that a child had
-been carried by the eagle to its nest, and the infant was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-screaming with pain and terror. Alfred ordered the boy
-to be brought to his castle, and not being able to find the
-parents of the child, he adopted him as his own son, gave
-him a good education, and provided for him well when he
-grew to manhood. King Alfred manifested great interest
-in the arts of peace, notwithstanding the warlike
-influences and habits of his life. He was the ruler of a
-race capable of appreciating intelligence, order, justice,
-and system; and, foreseeing the future power of this people,
-his chief attention during all the years of his reign
-was devoted to their advancement in learning, setting
-them an example in his own case by pressing forward
-diligently in his own studies, even in the midst of his
-overwhelming cares. It was not possible in those days
-to educate the masses, as there were no books; but
-Alfred made great efforts to promote the intellectual
-improvement of his people, which was all the more remarkable
-at that time when all other monarchs were
-ambitious only of their own power and personal glory.
-King Alfred wrote and translated many books, which
-were copied and, so far as it was possible, circulated
-amongst those who could read them. These writings of
-King Alfred exerted a wide influence. They remained in
-manuscript until the art of printing was invented, when
-many of them were printed. Some of the original manuscripts
-may still be seen in various English museums.
-One of the greatest of King Alfred’s measures was the
-founding of the great university of Oxford. He also
-repaired the castles, which had become dilapidated in the
-wars. He rebuilt the ruined cities, organized governments
-for them, restored the monasteries, and took pains
-to put men of learning and piety in charge of them. He
-revised the laws of his kingdom. Through all his reign,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-his desire was to lay lasting foundations for the permanent
-prosperity of his realm. His own life was governed
-by fixed principles of justice and of duty; and his calm,
-patient, unselfish character gave him a wide influence
-over his people, and made him a shining example of the
-truths he endeavored to impress upon them. King Alfred
-invented a plan for marking the different hours of the
-day by the burning of wax candles, so exactly made as to
-size that they would each burn a certain fixed time.
-The candles were each a foot long, and would burn four
-hours. They were divided into inches by marks upon
-them, and each inch would last twenty minutes. A large
-number of these candles were prepared, and a person was
-appointed to keep a succession of them burning in a
-chapel, and to ring bells to designate the successive
-periods of time denoted by their burning. There was
-one difficulty, however, which interfered somewhat with
-their exactness, which was that the blowing of any slight
-breeze or draught would make the burning uncertain.
-To obviate this trouble, King Alfred contrived a kind of
-lantern made of sheets of horn so thin that they were
-almost transparent. A plate of horn was set in each of
-the four sides of a box, which was fastened over the candle,
-thus forming a sort of rude lantern. This was the
-first lantern in England, and King Alfred is generally
-credited with being their first inventor; but as Diogenes,
-the Greek philosopher, was said to have carried a lantern
-in the old story, the English lantern of King Alfred may
-not have been the earliest ever invented. Alfred the
-Great was very systematic about the employment of his
-own time. He was accustomed to give one-third of the
-twenty-four hours to sleep and refreshment, one-third to
-business, and one-third to religious duties. Under this last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-head was probably included study, writing, and the management
-of ecclesiastical affairs. At length, however, at
-the close of King Alfred’s life, a famous Northman
-leader, named Hastings, landed in England, at the head
-of a large force, so that Alfred’s reign ended as it had
-begun,—in desperate and protracted conflicts with the
-Danes. Hastings had made one previous invasion into
-England, but Guthrum, faithful to his promise to Alfred,
-repulsed him. But Guthrum was now dead, and so King
-Alfred was forced to meet this tireless and implacable foe
-again. Year after year passed, during which a succession
-of battles were fought between the two nations,
-now the Danes gaining an advantage, now the Saxons.
-Hastings was finally expelled from England in 897, and
-once more Alfred’s kingdom was at peace. But King
-Alfred’s life was now drawing very near its close. His
-children had now grown to manhood, and repaid his love
-and care by endeavoring to imitate their illustrious
-father’s example. His eldest son Edward was to succeed
-King Alfred on the English throne. A daughter
-named Ethelfleda, who was married to a prince of Mercia,
-was famed all over England for the superiority of her
-mind, her many accomplishments, and her devoted piety.
-Alfred the Great was fifty-two years of age when he died.
-His body was interred in the great cathedral at Winchester,
-and the kingdom passed peacefully to his son.
-His own dying farewell to his son Edward is the best
-memorial encomium which can be passed upon his life,
-and he most truly earned the title of Alfred the Great,—great
-in wisdom, great in power, and, best of all, great
-in goodness; and his purified spirit passed from earth
-with these truly great words upon his dying lips:—</p>
-
-<p>“Thou, my dear son, sit thee now beside me, and I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-will deliver thee true instructions. I feel that my hour is
-coming. My strength is gone; my countenance is wasted
-and pale; my days are almost ended. We must now
-part. I go to another world, and thou art left alone in
-the possession of all that I have thus far held. I pray
-thee, my dear child, to be a father to thy people. Be the
-children’s father and the widow’s friend. Comfort the
-poor, protect and shelter the weak, and, with all thy
-might, right that which is wrong. And, my son, govern
-<i>thyself</i> by <i>law</i>. Then shall the Lord love thee, and God
-himself shall be thy reward. Call thou upon Him to
-advise thee in all thy need, and He shall help thee to
-compass all thy desires.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>RICHARD CŒUR DE LION.<br />
-
-<small>A.D. 1157-1199.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“Yet looks he like a king; behold his eye,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">As bright as is the eagle’s, lightens forth</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Controlling majesty.”—<span class="smcap">Shakespeare.</span></span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE history of Richard Cœur de Lion is a history of
-the third crusade, and the most memorable one of
-all. Upon the side of the Mussulmans was Saladin,
-sultan of Egypt and Syria. Saladin, whose name means
-“splendor of religion,” was a noble and generous man,
-and though a Mohammedan, he often evinced a far more
-humane and commendable spirit than many of his foes,
-who called themselves Christians. Upon the side of the
-Mohammedans, as well as that of the Christians, this
-conflict was regarded as a holy war; for the Christians
-were fighting to obtain Jerusalem and the Holy Sepulchre,
-where the body of Jesus Christ was supposed to have
-lain, while the Mohammedans were just as zealously fighting
-to retain Jerusalem; and Saladin’s answer to the
-Christians, when they demanded the surrender of that
-city was, “Jerusalem never was yours, and we may not
-without sin give it up to you; for it is the place where
-the mysteries of our religion were accomplished; and the
-last one of my soldiers will perish before the Mussulmans
-renounce conquests made in the name of Mohammed.”</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 440px;">
-<img src="images/i-281.jpg" width="440" height="637" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">RICHARD CŒUR DE LION.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Before the time of Richard the Lion-Hearted, Jerusalem
-had been conquered by the Christians, and they had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-set up in it a king. This was in 1099, when the crusaders
-elected Godfrey de Bouillon as king of Jerusalem.
-But he reigned but one year and died. In the space of
-one hundred and seventy-one years, from the coronation
-of Godfrey de Bouillon as king of Jerusalem in 1099, to
-the last crusade under Louis IX. of France, in 1270,
-there were seven crusades which were undertaken by the
-kings of France and England, the emperors of Germany,
-the king of Denmark, and various princes of Italy. They
-all failed in the end of accomplishing the permanent possession
-of the city of Jerusalem by the Christians; but
-these various crusades called forth a number of devout
-and self-sacrificing monks and bishops, and gave occasion
-for brave and valiant deeds by many knights and kings,
-and none were so brave, and none became so famous in
-the annals of these holy wars as Richard I., king of
-England, called by the Christians Cœur de Lion, the
-Lion-hearted, on account of his valor, and for the same
-reason feared among the Mohammedans, and called by
-them Malek-Rik; and so great a terror did this name
-become, that when St. Louis, more than fifty years after,
-led the French to another crusade, they heard the Saracen
-mothers scolding their children, and threatening them
-with punishment by the dreadful Malek-Rik, who had
-never been forgotten. The first of the crusades had been
-inspired by a zealous monk, called Peter the Hermit.
-From the earliest days of Christianity, many pious persons
-had made pilgrimages to Palestine, to visit the
-graves of saints and other places. After a time, these
-pilgrimages had been extended to Jerusalem; and that
-city at length, having fallen into the hands of the Turks,
-the Christian people were treated with cruelty, and many
-of the clergy were imprisoned and even killed. Peter the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-Hermit had been to Jerusalem, and having himself been
-an eye-witness of the cruelties of the Turks towards the
-Christians, he obtained permission of the Pope to go to
-the principal courts in Europe, and exhort all Christian
-warriors to take up arms against the infidels in the Holy
-Land. Peter the Hermit walked from court to court,
-barefoot and clothed in rags. He was listened to as a
-prophet, and succeeded in inspiring many knights and
-crowds of people to enlist in what they considered a
-sacred cause. The symbol of this enlistment was a cross
-of red stuff sewed to the shoulder of the cloak; hence the
-name crusade. France was at this time roused to great
-excitement. The barons sold and pledged their lands to
-obtain the means of joining the expedition. The Pope
-promised a full remission of sins to all who assumed the
-cross; and as the mass of the people were so ignorant in
-those days that the word of the Pope was held to be as
-sacred as a voice from heaven, and his blessing or excommunication
-was regarded by them as powerful enough to
-raise them to Paradise, or call down upon them everlasting
-destruction, thousands of wicked persons, whose sins
-were so many that it would have required years of penance
-to have gained the much-coveted absolvance from
-the Pope, eagerly seized upon this method of winning
-earthly glory, and, as they supposed, heavenly honor. It
-is said that a crowd of more than a million of persons,
-including beggars, women and children, soon pledged
-themselves to this crusade. Three hundred thousand of
-such a motley company started, with Peter the Hermit and
-Walter the Penniless marching at their head. Nearly the
-entire number fell victims to the fury of their assailants
-in the countries through which they passed. This company
-of helpless beggars, women and children, were followed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-by three hundred thousand fighting men, who had
-been preparing in the different kingdoms, mostly in
-France. Of this large host, only a small remnant under
-Godfrey de Bouillon, arrived at Jerusalem, and captured
-that city in 1099, and planted the standard of the cross
-on its walls.</p>
-
-<p>St. Bernard, abbot of Clairvaux, roused the people
-again for the second crusade, for it was discovered that
-the Turks had massacred the Christians in Palestine, and
-that Jerusalem was in danger. King Louis VII. of
-France, and the emperor Conrad III. of Germany,
-espoused the cause. Although Louis and Conrad entered
-the city of Jerusalem and determined upon the siege of
-Damascus, nothing permanent was accomplished. The
-siege of Damascus was abandoned, and the crusade-sovereigns
-returned to their respective kingdoms.</p>
-
-<p>During the forty years’ interval between the end of the
-second and the beginning of the third crusades, the relative
-positions of the West and East, Christian Europe
-and Mussulman Asia, remained much the same. But in
-1187, news again reached Europe of repeated disasters to
-the Christians in Asia. Egypt had become the goal of
-ambition, and Saladin, the most illustrious as well as the
-most powerful of Mussulman sovereigns, being sultan
-of Egypt and Syria, had fought against a Christian army
-near Tiberias. The oriental chronicles thus describe the
-conflict: “The Christian army was surrounded by the
-Saracens, and also, ere long, by the fire, which Saladin
-had ordered to be set to the dry grass which covered the
-plain. The flames made their way and spread beneath
-the feet of men and horses. There the sons of Paradise
-and the children of fire settled their terrible quarrel.
-Arrows hurtled in the air like a noisy flight of sparrows,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-and the blood of warriors dripped upon the ground like
-rain-water. Hill, plain, and valley were covered with
-their dead; their banners were stained with dust and
-blood, their heads were laid low, their limbs scattered,
-their carcasses piled on a heap like stones.” Four days
-after the battle of Tiberias in July, 1187, Saladin took
-possession of St. Jean d’Acre, and in the following September,
-of Ascalon. In the same month he laid siege to
-Jerusalem. The Holy City contained at that time, it is
-said, nearly one hundred thousand Christians, who had
-fled for safety from all parts of Palestine. Saladin’s
-taking of Jerusalem is thus described by Guizot. “On
-approaching its walls, Saladin sent for the principal
-inhabitants, and said to them, ‘I know as well as you
-that Jerusalem is the house of God, and I will not have
-it assaulted if I can get it by peace and love. I will give
-you thirty thousand byzants of gold if you promise me
-Jerusalem, and you shall have liberty to go whither you
-will and do your tillage, to a distance of five miles from
-the city. And I will have you supplied with such plenty
-of provisions that in no place on earth shall they be so
-cheap. You shall have a truce from now to Whitsuntide,
-and when this time comes, if you see that you may have
-aid, then hold on. But if not, you shall give up the city,
-and I will have you conveyed in safety to Christian territory,
-yourselves and your substance.’ ‘We may not yield
-up to you a city where died our God,’ answered the
-envoys, ‘and still less may we sell you.’ The siege
-lasted fourteen days. After having repulsed several
-assaults, the inhabitants saw that effectual resistance was
-impossible, and the commandant of the place, a knight,
-named Balian d’Ibelin, an old warrior who had been at
-the battle of Tiberias, returned to Saladin, and asked for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-the conditions back again which had been at first rejected.
-Saladin, pointing to his own banner already planted upon
-several parts of the battlements, answered, ‘It is too late,
-you surely see that the city is mine.’ ‘Very well, my
-lord,’ replied the knight, ‘we will ourselves destroy our
-city, and the mosque of Omar, and the stone of Jacob,
-and when it is nothing but a heap of ruins, we will sally
-forth with sword and fire in hand, and not one of us will
-go to Paradise without having sent ten Mussulmans to
-hell.’ Saladin understood enthusiasm and respected it,
-and to have had the destruction of Jerusalem connected
-with his name would have caused him deep displeasure.
-He therefore consented to the terms of capitulation
-demanded of him. The fighting men were permitted to
-retreat to Tyre or Tripolis, which cities were in the power
-of the Christians, and the simple inhabitants of Jerusalem
-had their lives preserved, and permission given them to
-purchase their freedom on certain conditions; but, as
-many amongst them could not find the means, Malek-Adhel,
-the sultan’s brother, and Saladin himself, paid the
-ransom of several thousands of captives. All Christians,
-however, with the exception of Greeks and Syrians, had
-orders to leave Jerusalem within four days. When the
-day came, all the gates were closed except that of David,
-by which the people were to go forth, and Saladin, seated
-upon a throne, saw the Christians defile before him.
-First came the patriarch, followed by the clergy carrying
-the sacred vessels and the ornaments of the church of the
-Holy Sepulchre. After him came Sibylla, queen of Jerusalem,
-who had remained in the city, whilst her husband,
-Guy de Lusignan, had been a prisoner at Nablous since
-the battle of Tiberias. Saladin saluted her respectfully,
-and spoke to her kindly. He had too great a soul to take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-pleasure in the humiliation of greatness.” The capture
-of Jerusalem again roused Europe to arms, but the story
-of this third crusade will be more fully narrated, as we
-proceed with the personal history of Richard the Lion-hearted,
-who became the chief and most illustrious figure
-in the annals of this third holy war.</p>
-
-<p>Eleanor, the mother of Richard Cœur de Lion, had
-herself participated in the second crusade. Eleanor’s
-grandfather was duke of Aquitaine, a rich kingdom in
-the south of France. His son, the father of Eleanor, had
-been killed in the first crusade, and the duke of Aquitaine
-determined to resign his kingdom in favor of his
-grand-daughter, and marry her to Prince Louis VII., then
-heir to the throne of France. This was accomplished, and
-King Louis VI. of France, dying soon after the marriage,
-Eleanor became queen of France, as well as duchess of
-Aquitaine. This princess had been well educated for
-those times, and was even celebrated for her learning, as
-she possessed the rare accomplishments of being able to
-read and write, as well as to sing the songs of the Troubadours,
-which was the fashionable music of the courts.
-King Louis VII., her husband, was a very pious man,
-much more fond of devotion than of pleasure, so he determined
-to go on a crusade, and Queen Eleanor, from
-a gay love of adventure, resolved to accompany him.
-Eleanor and her court ladies laid aside their feminine
-attire, and clothed themselves as Amazons, taking good
-care, however, to provide a most cumbersome amount of
-baggage, containing their usual rich costumes and delicate
-luxuries, which proved so great a burden in transportation
-that the king remonstrated against such a
-needless and troublesome excess of useless finery. But
-the ladies carried their point, and the crusading expedition,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-which should have been composed of an army of valiant
-warriors, became an immense train of women and baggage,
-requiring the constant care of the princes, barons,
-and knights, many of them reluctant participants, who
-had been shamed by the taunts of these ladies into joining
-an expedition which had been organized upon so wild
-and heedless a plan as to insure only disaster and failure.
-But the gay ladies exclaimed to any man who dared to
-express any thoughts of remaining at home, “We will
-send you our distaffs as presents. We have no longer
-any use for them, but as you are intending to stay at
-home and make women of yourselves, we will send them
-to you, so that you may occupy yourselves with spinning
-while we are gone.”</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding this apparent zeal which Eleanor and
-her court ladies displayed, their caprices and freaks continued
-to harass and interfere with the expedition, during
-the entire crusade, and Queen Eleanor so displeased
-King Louis by her gay and frivolous conduct, that a long
-and serious quarrel arose between them, and he declared
-that he would obtain a divorce from her. But his ministers
-tried to prevent this, as Eleanor possessed the rich
-kingdom of Aquitaine in her own right, which would be
-lost to Louis by a separation. So they returned from the
-Holy Land to Paris, still as king and queen of France.
-But in about two years after, Eleanor determined to be
-divorced from King Louis of France, so that she might
-marry Prince Henry Plantagenet, who afterwards became
-Henry II., of England. Prince Henry’s father had
-received the name Plantagenet from a habit he had
-of wearing a spray of broom blossom in his cap. The
-French name for this plant is <i>genet</i>, and so he was nicknamed
-Plantagenet, and his son Henry II. was the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-king in that family, also called the House of Anjou. Although
-Henry II. was king of England, by his marriage
-with Eleanor, which took place only a short time after
-she obtained a divorce from King Louis of France, Henry
-gained the great dukedom of Aquitaine, and as he already
-possessed Normandy and Anjou, he really was lord of
-nearly half of France. He ruled England well, but he
-cared more for power than what was right, and he often
-indulged in such exhibitions of fierce rage, that he would
-roll on the floor and bite the rushes with which it was
-strewn. At the time of his marriage with Eleanor, Henry
-was duke of Normandy, and was only twenty years of
-age, while Eleanor was thirty-two; but she was very much
-in love with him, and as she could bring him such a rich
-kingdom, and furnish him men and money to help him secure
-the crown of England, which was at that time held
-by King Stephen, whom Henry declared was a usurper, he
-was willing to accept Eleanor as his wife, although she
-was nearly twice his own age, and was also the divorced
-wife of King Louis. Some historians place the blame of
-the divorce upon Eleanor, some upon Louis; but all unite
-in condemning her previous conduct, for she occasioned
-many scandalous remarks by her undignified, unwifely,
-and even culpable actions. After she became queen of
-England, however, she changed in this respect, and her
-after quarrels with Henry were occasioned by her ambitions
-and his conduct regarding a lady called the Fair
-Rosamond, who afterwards became a nun in a convent
-near Oxford. Some historians think that Henry was in
-reality married to Rosamond before he was persuaded to
-espouse Eleanor, in order to gain her rich possessions.
-Though Eleanor had equally wronged her former husband,
-Louis, she made no excuse for King Henry’s devotion to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-Rosamond, and when she discovered Henry’s affection
-for her, she ordered that she should be shut up in a convent
-out of the way. To this King Henry consented, but
-the jealousy of the queen against her rival was never
-abated, and added great bitterness to the other causes of
-discord between herself and King Henry, which at last
-broke out in the open rebellion of Queen Eleanor and her
-sons against the king, so that Henry would often be
-obliged to raise armies to put down the various disturbances
-caused by first one son, then another, then all together,
-encouraged by their mother Eleanor, who however seemed
-to have inspired more love and devotion in the hearts of
-her sons than their father. Almost all the early years of
-the life of Richard were spent in wars which were waged
-by different members of his father’s family against each
-other. These wars originated in the quarrels between
-King Henry and his sons, in respect to the family property.
-As Henry II. held a great many possessions which
-he had inherited through his father, grandfather, and his
-wife Eleanor, he was duke of one country, earl of a second,
-king of a third, and count of a fourth. Henry had
-five sons, of whom Richard was the third, and he was
-born about three years after Eleanor was crowned queen
-of England, when, upon the death of King Stephen, Henry
-became king of that country. Henry II. was a generous
-father, and as his sons became old enough, he gave them
-provinces of their own. But they were not contented
-with the portions allotted to them, and demanded more.
-Sometimes Henry would yield, at other times resist, when
-the sons would raise armies and rebel against their father,
-and then would follow the shocking spectacle of husband,
-wife, and sons, all fighting against each other. These
-wars continued for many years, the mother usually taking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-sides with her sons, until King Henry shut her up in a
-castle, in a sort of imprisonment, where he kept her confined
-for sixteen years.</p>
-
-<p>It was during the reign of Henry II. that the famous
-archbishop, Thomas à Becket, was murdered, under the
-following circumstances: Thomas à Becket had been one
-of Henry’s most devoted friends and intimate counsellors,
-and Henry had raised him to the office of Chancellor.
-Afterwards Henry made Thomas à Becket bishop of Canterbury,
-but from that time serious differences arose between
-them. The king made many laws, one being, that
-if a priest or monk was thought to have committed any
-crime, he should be tried by civil judges, like other men;
-whereas Becket, in the name of the church, maintained
-that the clergy should be tried only by the bishops.
-This quarrel was so serious that Becket was forced to
-leave England and take refuge with the king of France.
-After six years, a half reconciliation took place, and the
-archbishop of Canterbury returned to England. Thomas
-à Becket soon again incurred the king’s displeasure, and
-Henry exclaimed in anger, “Will no one rid me of this
-turbulent priest?” Whereupon four of his knights who
-had heard this remark, and thought that they would gain
-power over the king by carrying out this wish, immediately
-went to Canterbury, and finding the archbishop in
-the cathedral by the altar, they slew him. At first Henry
-was secretly glad, but the people and priests considered
-Thomas a martyr, and raised such an outcry of indignation,
-that three years after, King Henry went to the cathedral
-of Canterbury, and in order to show his penitence,
-he entered barefoot, and kneeling by the tomb of Thomas
-à Becket, he commanded every priest to strike him with
-a knotted rope upon his bare back. This he endured as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-an act of penance for causing the death of the archbishop.</p>
-
-<p>The first important event of Richard’s childhood was
-his betrothment. When he was about four years of age
-he was formally affianced to Alice, the child of Louis,
-king of France. Alice was three years of age. Another
-of King Louis’ children had been married in the same way
-to Richard’s eldest brother Henry, and the English king
-complained that the dowry of the young French princess
-was not sufficient, and this quarrel was settled by an
-agreement that King Louis should give his other daughter
-Alice to Richard, and with her another province. These
-infant marriages, or betrothments, were made by kings
-in order to get possession of rich territories, for the father
-of the husbands became the guardians of the provinces,
-and received any sum of money agreed upon, which they
-usually appropriated to their own use. This betrothment
-of Richard became the cause of future differences between
-himself and Philip, the brother of Alice, when Richard
-had become king of England, and Philip king of France.
-At length, in the midst of one of the frequent wars between
-the king of England and his sons, his eldest son
-Henry was taken very sick, and being at the point of
-death, he sent to his father to obtain his forgiveness, and
-to beg that he would come to see him. The king, fearing
-it was only some stratagem to get him into the power of
-the rebellious young prince, who had often broken his
-word, did not dare to go, but sent an archbishop to Prince
-Henry, with a ring as a token of his forgiveness. The
-poor prince who was really dying, and very penitent for
-his unfilial conduct, pressed the ring to his dying lips
-with frantic tears of remorse, and commanded his attendants
-to lay him upon a bed of ashes, which he had ordered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-prepared, that he might die there as a sign of his sincere
-repentance. When King Henry heard of the sad death
-of his eldest son, he was moved to tears, and releasing
-his wife Queen Eleanor from her imprisonment, he became
-reconciled to her for a time. But soon again the
-family dissensions arose. Prince Geoffrey, the second
-son of King Henry, was killed in a tournament, and
-Richard, who had now reached manhood, demanded that
-his father should give him the Princess Alice in marriage,
-and with her the lands and money intrusted to his care
-by the king of France. This King Henry refused to do.
-Some said, because he wished to keep the rich lands himself;
-others said, because he himself loved the Princess
-Alice, and that he was determined to seek a divorce from
-Queen Eleanor, so that he might marry the young princess.
-Whatever was his motive, King Henry refused to have
-Richard’s marriage with Alice consummated, and kept
-the princess shut up in a castle. Whereupon Richard
-rebelled against his father, and persuaded his younger
-brother John to espouse his cause. Of course Eleanor
-took sides with her sons, so she was again shut up in a
-castle by King Henry, and Richard and John set off for
-Paris and gained the support of Philip II., of France,
-who was now king, as Louis was dead. King Henry had
-determined to divide his kingdom, and as John was his
-favorite as well as youngest, he resolved to have him
-crowned king of England, leaving his French possessions
-to Richard. Whereupon Richard carried off his young
-brother, and with the help of Philip, raised an army to
-fight against his father. In this war King Henry, who
-was now old and broken-spirited by his many sorrows,
-was so far defeated that he was obliged to submit to
-negotiations for peace. While the terms were being arranged,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-King Henry fell very ill, and when the articles of
-treaty were brought to his bedside, he found that the
-name of his youngest son John, his darling, who had
-never rebelled against him before, now headed the list of
-the princes, barons, and nobles who had gone over to
-Richard’s side. This quite broke his heart, and he exclaimed
-with tears, “Is it possible that John, the child of
-my heart, he whom I have cherished more than all the
-rest, and for love of whom I have drawn down on my own
-head all these troubles, has verily betrayed me? Then,”
-said he, falling back helplessly upon the bed, “let everything
-go on as it will, I care no longer for myself, nor for
-anything else in the world.” The king grew more and
-more excited, until at last he died in a raving delirium,
-cursing his rebellious children with his last breath. Thus
-Richard I. became king of England when he was about
-thirty-two years of age. The sad death of his father occasioned
-some remorse in the heart of Richard, and he
-joined in the funeral solemnities. King Henry had died
-in Normandy, and was buried in an abbey there.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 404px;">
-<img src="images/i-295.jpg" width="404" height="641" alt="RICHARD I" />
-</div>
-
-<p>King Richard now sent at once to England, and ordered
-the release of his mother Queen Eleanor, and invested her
-with power to act as regent there, while he himself remained
-in Normandy to secure his French possessions.
-Queen Eleanor was regent in England for two months,
-and employed her power in a very beneficent manner.
-Her imprisonment and sorrows had no doubt disposed her
-to kindness towards others, and remorse for her past evil
-deeds prompted her to many acts of mercy.</p>
-
-<p>King Richard now arranged with King Philip of France,
-to go upon a crusade. Richard was brave, though he was
-not a good man. His greatest delight was in fighting,
-and as his claims to his own kingdom were now undisputed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-he was eager to enter into a campaign in the Holy
-Land. His brother Prince John was very willing that
-Richard should go, and made no claims to any of the
-provinces of his father, for he hoped that Richard would
-be killed in the Holy War, and thus the rich kingdoms
-of England and Normandy would fall to him. Though
-Richard was brave, he was neither wise nor provident in
-the administration of his government. His one absorbing
-idea was how to gain fresh glory as a valiant knight in
-the war with the Saracens, and he levied heavy taxes
-upon all his dominions to raise the necessary funds required
-for the equipment of his army.</p>
-
-<p>These Holy Wars were very costly expeditions. The
-princes, barons, and knights required very expensive
-armor, and rich trappings for their horses, and ships were
-to be bought and equipped, arms and ammunition provided,
-and large supplies of food purchased. Though the
-pretense was religious zeal in going out to fight for the
-recovery of the Holy Sepulchre, the real motive which
-animated most of the participants in the several crusades,
-was love of glory and display.</p>
-
-<p>Upon King Richard’s arrival in England, he proceeded
-at once to Winchester, where his father had kept his
-treasures. Richard found here a large sum of money,
-rich plate, and precious gems of great value. These he
-placed under the care of trusty officers.</p>
-
-<p>The former adherents of Richard, when he was a prince
-rebelling against the lawful king his father, now supposed
-that they would be held by him in high esteem. But in
-this they were greatly disappointed. King Richard was wise
-enough to know that those who had aided his rebellions,
-might likewise aid others against his own supremacy. So
-he retained his father’s officers and experienced men of
-state.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The day upon which the coronation of Richard I. was
-celebrated by a very magnificent ceremony in Westminster
-Abbey, has become historical not only on that account,
-but in consequence of a great massacre of the Jews, which
-resulted from a riot that broke out in Westminster and
-London immediately after the crowning of the king.
-The Jews had been persecuted by all the Christian nations
-of Europe, and the people imagined that they were serving
-the cause of religion in oppressing them, as they were
-considered little better than infidels and heathen. As
-Philip had banished the Jews from France, and confiscated
-their property, the Jews in England determined to
-send a delegation to conciliate Richard’s favor, and they
-accordingly came to Westminster at the time of his coronation,
-bearing rich presents. As Richard had commanded
-that no Jew or woman should be present at this
-ceremony, when the Jewish deputation came in and offered
-their presents amongst the rest, there was loud murmuring
-throughout the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>King Richard gladly accepted their rich gifts, but as a
-Jew was attempting to enter at the gate, a bystander
-cried out, “Here comes a Jew!” and struck him a blow.
-Others now assailed him, and as he was escaping, bruised
-and bleeding, the cry was raised that the Jews were expelled
-by the king’s orders, and as a riot was now raised
-in the streets, which became a bloody fight between Jews
-and Christians, the rumor went forth that the king had
-ordered all the Jews to be killed. The mob instantly attempted
-to carry out this supposed order, and Jews were
-murdered everywhere, in the streets, in their homes; and
-when they barricaded their dwellings, the mob set fire to
-them, and men, women, and children perished in the
-flames.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The king and his nobles were meanwhile feasting in
-the great banqueting-hall at Westminster, and for a time
-took no notice of the disturbance. At length officers
-were sent to suppress the mob, but it was too late. The
-enfuriated people paid no attention to the few soldiers
-sent to quell them, and only rested from their bloody
-work, from sheer exhaustion, about two o’clock the next
-day.</p>
-
-<p>A few of the men engaged in the riot were afterwards
-brought to trial and punished, but King Richard found
-that so many of his chief men were implicated, that he
-let the matter drop, only issuing an edict, forbidding the
-Jews to be injured any more.</p>
-
-<p>King Richard now entered upon his preparations for
-the crusade, with intense zeal. His great need was
-money, and he seemed to think that the sacred cause was
-an excuse for most unkingly measures. Richard was endowed
-with a sort of reckless lion-like courage, which led
-him to look upon fighting as a sport, and as he had no
-one to fight at home, he espoused eagerly any pretense of
-a sacred cause which would give him the pleasure of
-killing as many men as he pleased, and thereby winning
-not disapprobation from the world, but loud plaudits for
-bravery, and zealous devotion to a holy enterprise.
-Strange delusion! That men should go forth to murder,
-rob, and devastate the land in the name of the meek
-and lowly Christ. Only ignorance and superstition could
-allow the human soul to be so infatuated with not only
-false, but most atrociously wicked, ideas, which were in
-entire opposition to the teachings of the Divine Leader
-whom they professed to follow.</p>
-
-<p>In securing money for the crusade, King Richard resorted
-to many very questionable expedients. He proceeded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-to sell the royal domains which he had inherited
-from his father, and in this manner disposed of castles,
-fortresses, and towns to the highest bidder. When remonstrated
-with for thus diminishing the crown property,
-he replied, “I would sell the city of London itself, if I
-could find a purchaser rich enough to buy it.”</p>
-
-<p>Richard also sold high offices and titles of honor; and
-the historians state that King Richard’s presence-chamber
-became a regular place of trade, where castles, titles,
-offices, and honors were for sale, to whomsoever would
-give the best bargain. But the most disreputable manner
-of raising money was by imposing fines as a punishment
-for crimes, and then endeavoring to fix crimes upon the
-wealthy, so that they would be obliged to pay large sums
-to free themselves. Lastly, Richard sold the nominal
-regency of England to two wealthy courtiers, one a bishop,
-the other an earl. Or if he did not sell it to them outright,
-he arranged that they were to receive the power,
-and were to give him a large sum of money. He, however,
-stipulated that his brother John and his mother should
-have their share of influence in deciding upon measures
-concerning the government.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding Richard’s quarrels with his father, regarding
-his marriage with the Princess Alice when he
-became king, Richard seemed in no hurry to fulfil his engagement,
-and even determined to set it aside altogether,
-for he had met and loved a Spanish princess named Berengaria.
-But, lest this should cause a fresh quarrel with
-Philip, the brother of Alice, Richard resolved to keep his
-plans a secret. So he sent his mother Queen Eleanor to
-Spain to secure Berengaria for his wife, and Eleanor
-having been successful in her mission, the two ladies, with
-a train of barons and knights, set out for Italy, where
-Richard intended to meet them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the two kings, Philip and Richard, had continued
-their preparations for the crusade. As Philip had
-no ships of his own, he made arrangements with the republic
-of Genoa to furnish him with ships, and so he
-departed for that place. Richard, having a large fleet,
-which he had sent round to Marseilles with orders to
-await him there, marched his army across France by land.
-So little reliance did either Philip or Richard place in
-each other, that neither of them would have thought it
-safe to leave his own dominions unless the other had
-been going also. They made a final treaty of alliance
-before starting, that they would defend the life and honor
-of the other upon all occasions; that neither would desert
-the other in time of danger; and that they would respect
-the dominions of each other.</p>
-
-<p>When King Richard reached Marseilles, he found that
-his fleet had not arrived. It had been delayed by a storm.
-Richard, not waiting for his fleet, hired ten large vessels
-and twenty galleys, and embarked with a portion of his
-forces, leaving orders for the remainder to follow in the
-fleet, and to meet him at Messina, in Sicily.</p>
-
-<p>Joanna, the sister of King Richard, had married the
-king of Sicily. He was now dead, and the throne had
-been seized by one Tancred, and Joanna had been shut
-up in a castle. King Richard determined to redress his
-sister’s wrongs, and after arriving at Genoa, where he
-found Philip, Richard set out on his way to Messina,
-stopping at Ostia, Naples, and Salerno, by the way.
-Having arrived at Messina, where Philip had also landed,
-Richard, having met his own fleet on the Italian side of
-the strait, entered the harbor with his ships and galleys
-fully manned and gayly decorated, while musicians were
-stationed on the decks, to blow trumpets and horns as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-fleet sailed along the shore. The Sicilians were quite
-alarmed to behold such a formidable host of foreign soldiers,
-and his allies, the French, did not like this grand
-display any better, for Philip had arrived with disabled
-ships, and immediately began to be very jealous of the
-growing fame of King Richard. Philip determined to
-leave Messina as speedily as possible, and proceed on his
-way towards the Holy Land, but having attempted it, and
-encountered a severe storm, he was obliged to turn back
-again. As winter had now set in, both kings found that
-they must remain there until spring. As soon as Richard
-landed his troops at Messina, he formed a great encampment
-on the seashore near the town, and then sent an
-embassy to Tancred, demanding Joanna’s release. Tancred,
-awed by Richard’s power, immediately complied
-with this demand, and Joanna being safely out of the
-power of her enemy, Richard forthwith attacked the city
-of Messina, and having captured it, Tancred made peace
-with Richard upon the following terms:—</p>
-
-<p>Richard had a nephew about two years of age, named
-Arthur. Tancred had an infant daughter. So it was
-agreed that Arthur and this young daughter of Tancred
-should be affianced, and that Tancred should pay to
-Richard twenty thousand pieces of gold as her dowry.
-Richard was to receive this money as guardian of his
-nephew, and also twenty thousand pieces of gold besides,
-in full settlement of all claims of Joanna.</p>
-
-<p>This treaty was drawn up in due form and signed, and
-sent for safe keeping to the Pope at Rome, and Richard
-having received the money, began immediately to lavish
-it in costly presents to the barons and knights in both
-armies, which gave King Philip cause for suspicions, as
-he thought Richard was endeavoring to buy the allegiance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-of his troops, and soon an open quarrel occurred between
-the two sovereigns. Richard’s use of this trust money
-demonstrates the small regard he had for the just rights
-and claims of others. But the distrust which existed
-between Richard and Philip was no longer concealed.
-Tancred showed Richard a letter, which was said to have
-been written by Philip, in which Richard was bitterly
-denounced as a treacherous foe. Richard indignantly
-showed this letter to Philip, who denied having written it,
-and the two kings were soon in a hot dispute. Philip
-then declared that Richard was endeavoring to break his
-engagement with his sister Alice. Whereupon Richard
-retorted that he would never marry her.</p>
-
-<p>The matter was finally settled by a compromise. Richard
-promised to pay a large sum of money to Philip, who
-agreed to relinquish all claims on the part of Alice.
-So Philip sailed away in March, and Richard selected
-from his fleet a few of his most splendid galleys, and with
-a chosen company of knights and barons, proceeded to
-the port in Italy, where Berengaria was staying, under
-the care of Joanna, Queen Eleanor having returned to
-England; and King Richard conducted the ladies to Messina.
-It being the season of Lent, the marriage was still
-postponed; and Joanna and Berengaria were provided
-with a strong and well-manned ship, and sailed with the
-expedition; it being the purpose of Richard to land at
-some port, after Lent, where the marriage ceremony would
-be performed. King Richard’s fleet consisted of nearly
-two hundred vessels. There were thirteen great ships,
-and over fifty galleys, besides a large number of smaller
-vessels. Richard sailed at the head of his fleet, in a
-splendid galley, called the <i>Sea-Cutter</i>. This fine fleet
-sailed out of the harbor with flying banners, affording the
-Sicilians an imposing spectacle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But storms overtook this brilliant array of ships, and
-soon the fleet was dispersed. Some of the vessels were
-driven to Rhodes; others took refuge in Cyprus. Richard’s
-galley went to Rhodes; but the ship containing
-Berengaria and Joanna was swept onward by the gale to
-the mouth of the harbor of Limesol, the principal port of
-Cyprus. The king of Cyprus, in accordance with the
-custom of those times, had seized upon the wrecks of
-several vessels belonging to Richard’s fleet; and the commander
-of the ship in which the princess and queen had
-sailed, feared to land, lest some harm should come to the
-royal ladies.</p>
-
-<p>After the storm, Richard set out with his part of the
-fleet, to find the missing vessels; and having arrived
-before Cyprus, he found the galley of Berengaria and
-Joanna safe, but learned that the king of Cyprus had
-seized upon several of his wrecked vessels, and claimed
-them as his prize. This was a common practice at that
-time, and the king of Cyprus had acted in accordance
-with a customary law, which, though a violation of the
-real rights of property, gave a person the liberty to confiscate
-wrecked vessels or goods. In later times, this law
-was annulled, but the king of Cyprus had the law upon
-his side; notwithstanding, Richard immediately prepared
-for war, for he was only too glad to find some pretext for
-attacking and capturing the fair isle of Cyprus. Richard’s
-assault upon Limesol was successful; and King
-Richard, having signaled the galley of Joanna to advance,
-the whole army landed, and the ladies were lodged in one
-of the most magnificent of the palaces of the king of
-Cyprus. The daughter of the king of Cyprus was very
-beautiful, and was greatly terrified when she was brought
-into the presence of her father’s conqueror. Richard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-gave her as an attendant to Berengaria, and sent the
-defeated king of Cyprus to Tripoli, in Syria, where he
-was shut up in a dungeon, and secured with chains, which,
-however, in honor of his rank, were made of silver, overlaid
-with gold. But what mattered it to the poor imprisoned
-monarch that his galling chains were of costly
-metals, when he was shut up in a gloomy dungeon, and
-his daughter a prisoner in the hands of his enemy?</p>
-
-<p>This poor king died in captivity, broken-hearted, four
-years after. Now, at last, the marriage of King Richard
-and Berengaria was celebrated with royal splendor. After
-the marriage ceremony, there was a coronation, when
-Richard was crowned king of Cyprus, and Berengaria as
-queen of both England and Cyprus.</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of King Richard and Berengaria on
-this occasion was very striking. King Richard wore a
-rose-colored satin tunic, which was fastened by a jeweled
-belt about his waist. Over this was a mantle of striped
-silver tissue, brocaded with silver half-moons. He wore
-also a costly sword; the blade was of Damascus steel, the
-hilt of gold, and the scabbard was of silver, richly engraved.
-On his head was a scarlet bonnet, brocaded in
-gold, with figures of animals. He carried in his hand a
-truncheon, which was a sort of sceptre, very elaborately
-adorned. He was tall and well-formed, with yellow curls
-and a bright complexion; and when mounted upon his
-magnificent charger, he appeared a perfect model of military
-and manly grace. This horse was named Faunelle,
-and became quite a historical character, acquiring great
-fame by his strength and courage, and by the marvellous
-sagacity he displayed in the various battles in which he
-was engaged with his master. His trappings were very
-rich; the bit, stirrups, and all the metallic mountings of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-the saddle and bridle were of gold, and the crupper was
-adorned with two golden lions. The costume of Queen
-Berengaria was equally magnificent. The veil was fastened
-to her head by a royal diadem, resplendent with
-gold and gems, and was surmounted by a <i>fleur de lis</i>, with
-so much foliage added to it that it had the appearance of
-being a double crown, symbolizing her double queenship,
-both of England and Cyprus.</p>
-
-<p>The chief landing-point for expeditions of crusaders to
-the Holy Land was Acre, called also St. Jean d’Acre.
-It received its name from a military order, known as the
-Knights of St. John, who founded a monastery there for
-the safety and entertainment of pilgrims. This place
-was at this time in the hands of the Saracens; and Philip,
-the French king, who arrived before Richard, had in vain
-tried to capture it. King Richard, having left Cyprus,
-together with his bride and sister, proceeded on his way
-to join Philip at Acre; but he met with one adventure
-which is worthy of note. In sailing along, his fleet fell in
-with a ship of large size. Richard ordered his galleys to
-press on, as the ship seemed to be endeavoring to escape.
-As they came nearer, they perceived that the strange ship
-was filled with Saracens. King Richard thereupon ordered
-his men to board the ship and capture it. The Saracens,
-feeling that escape was hopeless, scuttled the ship, determined
-to sink with her rather than fall into the hands of
-the Christians. Then a dreadful combat ensued. Each
-side fought with ferocious energy; for although the Saracens
-expected to die, they were resolved to first wreak
-their fury upon their foes. The Saracens employed Greek
-fire, which was a celebrated means of warfare in those
-days. It was some kind of combustible matter, which
-was set on fire and thrown at the enemy. Nothing could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-extinguish it, and besides the great heat it produced, it
-threw forth dense volumes of poisonous and stifling gases,
-which soon suffocated those near by. It was thrown on
-the ends of darts and arrows, and even water did not
-extinguish it; so that the sea all around this Saracen
-ship was a mass of lurid flames. Although many of Richard’s
-men were killed, the Saracen ship was captured
-before it had time to sink, and the Christians, rushing on
-board, transferred to their own vessels nearly all of its
-valuable cargo. But their treatment of their Saracen
-foes was barbarous in the extreme. They killed and
-threw into the sea all but about thirty-five men out of
-twelve or fifteen hundred. These were saved, not from
-humanity, but in the hope of securing large sums for their
-ransom. King Richard afterwards defended this brutal
-conduct by declaring that they had found on board the
-Saracen ship large jars filled with poisonous snakes, which
-the infidels were about taking to Acre, to let them loose
-near the crusaders’ camp.</p>
-
-<p>When Richard’s fleet arrived at Acre, the crusaders
-encamped there were much encouraged; for their situation
-was getting very critical, and they had accomplished
-little or nothing.</p>
-
-<p>The crusaders were not as well disciplined as the Saracen
-army, which was united under the command of the
-valiant and powerful Saladin. Among the Christians
-there were constant quarrels, caused by the petty jealousies
-and hostilities of the knights and barons. There was
-one great wrangling over the title of King of Jerusalem,
-which, although it was an empty title (for the city was
-still in the hands of the Saracens), there were many
-claimants for; and each one of them intrigued incessantly
-to gain partisans to his side. A short time after Richard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-landed with his bride and army at Acre, fresh quarrels
-arose between the two kings; and so serious was the difference,
-that when Philip planned an assault, Richard
-would not assist him; and when Richard, likewise, made
-an attack, Philip refused to aid. So that neither assault
-was successful against their common foe, while large
-numbers of their own men were killed.</p>
-
-<p>Although the allies failed to capture Acre by assault,
-the town was at length obliged to surrender to the Christians
-on account of the famine, which caused such distress
-that the Saracens entered into negotiations for surrender,
-which were as follows: “The city was to be
-surrendered to the allied armies, and all the arms, ammunition,
-military stores, and property of all kinds which it
-contained, were to be forfeited to the conquerors. The
-troops and the people of the town were to be allowed to
-go free on payment of a ransom. The ransom by which
-the besieged purchased their lives and liberty was to be
-made up as follows: The wood of the cross on which
-Christ was crucified, which was alleged to be in Saladin’s
-possession, was to be restored. Saladin was to set at
-liberty the Christian captives which he had taken in the
-course of the war from the various armies of crusaders,
-and which he now held as prisoners. The number
-of these prisoners was about fifteen hundred. Saladin
-was to pay two hundred thousand pieces of gold. Richard
-was to retain a large body of men—it was said that
-there were five thousand in all—consisting of soldiers of
-the garrison, or inhabitants of the town, as hostages for
-the fulfilment of these conditions. These men were to be
-kept forty days, or, if at the end of that time Saladin had
-not fulfilled the conditions of the surrender, they were all
-to be put to death.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 423px;">
-<img src="images/i-310.jpg" width="423" height="617" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">RICHARD TEARING DOWN THE AUSTRIAN BANNER.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Saladin was not within the city, but was encamped with
-his army upon the surrounding mountains; and finding
-that he could not aid the besieged inhabitants, he agreed
-to these overbearing terms, which King Philip had in vain
-tried to make more honorable. Although the treaty had
-been made in the names of both the kings, Richard entered
-the city as the conqueror, assigning to Philip a
-secondary place; and having taken possession, Richard
-established himself and Berengaria in the principal palace,
-leaving Philip to secure quarters as best he might. Richard
-also enraged the archduke of Austria, who was also
-one of the crusaders, by pulling down the banner of the
-duke, which he had ventured to place on one of the
-towers.</p>
-
-<p>Now, again, the disputes regarding the title of the
-King of Jerusalem were renewed. Two knights, Guy of
-Lusignan and Conrad of Montferrat, claimed this title,
-and Philip and Richard espoused opposite sides, Philip
-agreeing to help Conrad’s claims, and Richard taking
-part with Guy. This occasioned so much hard feeling
-that Philip, who had been sick, announced that he was
-too ill to remain longer in such an unhealthy climate; and
-leaving ten thousand French troops under the command
-of the duke of Burgundy, King Philip returned to France.</p>
-
-<p>We now come to the barbarous massacre of the five
-thousand Saracen prisoners, by the orders of King Richard,
-which shocking deed has left a dark blot upon the
-fame of Richard, even though he gloried in the act and
-considered it a proof of his zeal in the cause of Christ.
-The writers of those days praised it, and maintained that,
-as the Saracens were the enemies of God, whoever killed
-them did God service. How they could be so blinded by
-ignorance and superstition we cannot understand; and it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-appears very amazing that the religion of love which
-Jesus of Nazareth preached, by his words and his example,
-could have been so misunderstood by the perverted
-minds of men; that such a diabolical spirit of ferocious
-brutality could be esteemed as commendable worship of
-Almighty God.</p>
-
-<p>The time which had been agreed upon for Saladin to
-comply with the stipulations of the surrender of Acre
-having expired, Richard ordered the five thousand prisoners,
-which he held as hostages, to be brutally beheaded;
-and a false rumor having been raised, that Saladin had
-put to death his Christian prisoners, the soldiers of Richard
-were easily infuriated to be willing to execute this
-barbarous order. In the face of Saladin’s humane treatment
-of the inhabitants of Jerusalem, when he captured
-that city, Mussulman though he was, this shocking barbarity
-of the crusading army, while calling themselves
-Christians, was an atrocious crime, which no plea of supposed
-zeal or ignorant superstition can excuse.</p>
-
-<p>Saladin and his army were now retreating towards Jerusalem,
-which city was his chief point to defend. Richard,
-having repaired the walls of Acre, and placed a
-garrison to hold it, proceeded with thirty thousand men
-in pursuit of the Saracens. The recovery of the Holy
-Sepulchre was the great object of the crusaders. All
-their efforts were considered of no avail, if they failed to
-accomplish this important end. Richard’s army were to
-follow the sea-shore to Jaffa, which was a port nearly
-opposite Jerusalem. This band of crusaders presented a
-brilliant appearance. The knights wore costly armor,
-and were mounted on horses richly caparisoned. Some
-of the horses were protected like their riders, with armor
-of steel. The columns were preceded by trumpeters and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-bearers of flags and banners, with very gorgeous decorations.
-When the expedition halted at night, heralds
-passed through the several camps, to the sound of trumpets,
-and at a signal all the soldiers knelt, and the
-heralds exclaimed, “God save the Holy Sepulchre!” and
-all the soldiers shouted, “Amen.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Christian army advanced to Jaffa. The two
-armies, Christian and Saracen, then met on a plain near
-the seashore, called Azotus. Saladin commenced the
-attack upon the wing of Richard’s army, composed of the
-French troops under the command of the duke of Burgundy.
-They resisted and drove the Saracens back.
-Then Richard gave the signal for a charge, and rode forward
-at the head of his troops, mounted on his famous
-charger, and flourishing his heavy battle-axe. This axe
-was a ponderous weapon. Richard had ordered it made
-before leaving England, and it was so immense that few
-men could lift it. But as Richard Cœur de Lion was a
-man of marvellous strength, he wielded this huge weapon
-with prodigious force. When it came down upon the
-head of a steel-clad knight, on his horse, it often crushed
-both man and steed to the ground. The darts and javelins
-of the Mohammedans glanced off from King Richard’s
-steel armor, without inflicting any wound, while Saracen
-after Saracen was felled to the earth by the blows from
-his ponderous battle-axe.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long before Saladin’s army was flying in all
-directions, pursued by the crusaders. After this battle
-Richard established his army in Jaffa. In the meantime
-Saladin was collecting forces for a more vigorous resistance.
-Historians have condemned this inactivity of
-Richard’s army for so many weeks at Jaffa, thus enabling
-Saladin to rally his men and become more determined in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-his defence. During the time while Richard’s army was
-resting and feasting at Jaffa, King Richard and Saladin
-entered upon several negotiations, which were carried on
-through Saphadin, the brother of Saladin, who was provided
-with a safe conduct through the enemies’ lines.
-One of these propositions was that Richard and Saladin
-should cease hostilities and become allies, and that their
-difficulties should be settled by a marriage between Joanna,
-Richard’s sister, the ex-queen of Sicily, and Saphadin, the
-brother of Saladin. But this, and all other propositions,
-at length came to naught, and in November, Richard advanced
-with his army as far as Bethany, with a forlorn
-hope that they might find themselves strong enough to
-attack Jerusalem. But this hope was vain. Richard’s
-men were dying from sickness and famine, caused by a
-large amount of their provisions being spoiled by the fall
-rains which had now set in, and many of the discouraged
-soldiers deserted. These losses so thinned King Richard’s
-ranks, that he was obliged to retreat to Acre. While they
-were at Bethany, a band of crusaders had ascended a
-mountain overlooking Jerusalem. King Richard was
-asked to come and see the holy city in the distance.
-“No,” said he, covering his face with his cloak, “those
-who are not worthy of conquering Jerusalem should not
-look upon it.”</p>
-
-<p>While at Acre, Richard learned that Saladin was besieging
-Jaffa. The historian Guizot thus describes the
-rescue of Jaffa from the Saracens:—</p>
-
-<p>“When King Richard arrived at Jaffa, the crescent
-already shone upon the walls; but a priest who had cast
-himself into the water in front of the royal vessel told
-Richard that he could yet save the garrison, although the
-town was already in the hands of the enemy. The ship<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-had not yet reached the landing-stage, and already the
-king was in the water, which reached to his shoulders,
-and was uttering the war-cry ‘St. George!’ The infidels,
-who were then plundering the city, took fright, and
-three thousand men fled, pursued by four or five knights
-of the cross. The little corps of Christians intrenched
-themselves behind planks of wood, and tuns; ten tents
-held the whole of the army. Day had scarcely dawned,
-when a soldier flew to Richard’s bedside. ‘O king, we
-are dead men!’ he cried; ‘the enemy is upon us.’ The
-king sprang up from his bed, scarcely allowing himself
-time to buckle on his armor, and omitting his helmet and
-shield. ‘Silence!’ he said to the bearer of the bad news,
-‘or I will kill you.’ Seventeen knights had gathered round
-Cœur de Lion, kneeling on the ground, and holding their
-lances; in their midst were some archers, accompanied by
-attendants who were recharging their arquebuses. The
-king was standing in the midst. The Saracens endeavored
-in vain to overawe this heroic little band; not one of them
-stirred. At length, under a shower of arrows, the knights
-sprang on their horses, and swept the plain before them.
-They entered Jaffa towards evening, and drove the Mussulmans
-from it. From the time of daybreak Richard
-had not ceased for a moment to deal out his blows, and
-the skin of his hand adhered to the handle of his battle-axe.”</p>
-
-<p>Still more graphically do the old chronicles thus describe
-this battle:—</p>
-
-<p>“Where the fight was fiercest there rode King Richard,
-and the Turks fell beneath his flashing sword. Then the
-galley-men, fearing for their lives, left the battle and took
-refuge in their boats, and the Turks thought to seize the
-town while the army was fighting in the field. But the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-king, taking with him but two knights and two crossbowmen,
-entered the town and dispersed the Turks who
-had entered, and set sentinels to guard it, and then,
-hasting to the galleys, gathered together the men, and
-encouraging them with his words, brought them back to
-the fight. And as he led them to the field, he fell upon
-the enemy so fiercely, that he cut his way all alone into
-the midst of the ranks, and they gave way before him.
-But they closed around him, and he was left alone, and
-at that sight our men feared greatly. But alone in the
-midst of his enemies he remained unmoved, and all as
-they approached him were cut down like corn before the
-sickle. And there rode against him a great admiral, distinguished
-above all the rest by his rich caparisons, and
-with bold arrogance assayed to attack him, but the king
-with one blow of his sword cut off his head and shoulder
-and right arm. Then the Turks fled in terror at the sight,
-and the king returned to his men, and lo! the king was
-stuck all over with javelins, like the spines of a hedgehog,
-and the trappings of his horse with arrows. The
-battle lasted that day from the rising to the setting sun,
-but the Turks returned to Saladin, and he mocked his
-men, and asked them where was Malek-Rik, whom they
-had promised to bring him. But one of them answered,
-‘There is no knight on earth like Malek-Rik; nay, nor
-ever was from the beginning of the world.’”</p>
-
-<p>King Richard’s forces were now so weakened, that he
-found it would be hopeless to endeavor to take Jerusalem.
-The Archduke Leopold, of Austria, had left the army
-with his men and gone home. This was caused by a
-quarrel between himself and King Richard. Saladin having
-left Ascalon, Richard hastened to repair its fortifications.
-In order to encourage his soldiers, he himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-carried stones to the workers, urging the archduke to do
-the same. “I am not the son of a mason,” replied the
-Austrian, haughtily. Whereupon, Richard, in anger,
-struck him a blow in the face, which indignity so enraged
-the archduke, that he immediately took his forces and returned
-to Austria.</p>
-
-<p>Another event occurred at this time, the blame of which
-some historians lay upon King Richard. Conrad of Montferrat,
-one of the claimants to the title of King of Jerusalem,
-was murdered by two emissaries, sent by the “Old
-Man of the Mountain,” who was a famous chieftain,
-living with his band of bold robbers among the mountains.
-The men under this chieftain were trained to
-obey without any dissent the commands given by their
-leader. A story was spread abroad that these men were
-hired by King Richard to kill Conrad. The friends of
-Richard declared, however, that it was caused by a quarrel
-between Conrad and the Old Man of the Mountain.</p>
-
-<p>Two incidents are related of Saladin’s generosity
-towards Richard, his foe. At one time King Richard
-was very sick with fever, and Saladin supplied him with
-cooling drinks and fresh fruits, thus kindly ministering
-to the comfort of his sick enemy. At another time, during
-a battle with the Saracens, Saladin beheld King
-Richard standing on a little knoll, surrounded by his
-knights. “Why is he on foot?” asked Saladin, for
-Richard’s famous charter had been killed that day in the
-battle. “The king of England should not fight on foot,
-like a common soldier,” exclaimed Saladin, and forthwith
-he sent Richard a splendid horse as a present. When
-the steed was brought to the king, one of his knights
-mounted him to try his speed. Whereupon, the intelligent
-animal immediately turned and ran with his rider to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-the camp of the Saracens. Saladin was so chagrined at
-this unlooked-for occurrence, and fearing lest Richard
-should imagine his kindly present had only been sent as
-a treacherous stratagem, immediately placed the Christian
-knight upon a more gentle horse, and sent with him a
-still handsomer charger, as a present to the English king,
-which Richard gladly received.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 424px;">
-<img src="images/i-319.jpg" width="424" height="618" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">“MOST HOLY LAND, FAREWELL!”</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Disquieting news now reached King Richard from England.
-His brother John, aided by Philip of France, had
-deposed the chancellor, and caused himself to be made
-governor-general of the kingdom. Under these circumstances,
-and the hopelessness of capturing Jerusalem,
-King Richard concluded a truce with Saladin, giving up
-Ascalon to him, but keeping Jaffa, Tyre, and the fortresses
-along the coast, and promising to refrain from any
-hostilities during a period of three years, three months,
-three weeks, three days, and three hours. “Then I will
-come back,” said Richard, “with double the men that I
-now possess, and will reconquer Jerusalem.” Saladin
-answered: “that if the Holy City was to fall into the
-hands of the Christians, no one was more worthy of conquering
-it than Malek-Rik.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 9th of October, 1192, Richard Cœur de Lion
-left Palestine to return to his own kingdom. The queens
-embarked first in their vessel, followed soon after by Richard
-in his war-ship. As the shore of the Holy Land was
-receding from view, Richard gazed upon it from the deck
-of his galley; and stretching out his arms towards it,
-exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<p>“Most holy land, farewell! I commend thee to
-God’s keeping and care. May He give me life and
-health to return and rescue thee from the hands of the
-infidels.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A storm soon arose, and the vessels of King Richard’s
-fleet were separated. The queens arrived safely in Sicily,
-but King Richard was driven to the Island of Corfu. Here
-he hired three small vessels to take him to the head of the
-Adriatic Sea, and then he endeavored to cross through
-Germany by land. He assumed the garb of a merchant,
-lest his many enemies should discover him. Thus he
-travelled through the mountains of the Tyrol. But having
-sent a ring with a messenger to the governor of Goritz,
-seeking a passport, the governor exclaimed, “This ring
-belongs to no merchant, but only to the king of England.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus was King Richard discovered; and he was seized
-by his old enemy, Duke Leopold of Austria, and put
-into prison. Which event, coming to the knowledge of
-the emperor of Germany, he himself claimed the illustrious
-captive, saying, “A duke cannot possibly keep a
-king.”</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 428px;">
-<img src="images/i-323.jpg" width="428" height="633" alt="drawing" />
-</div>
-
-<p>So King Richard was shut up in the castle of Trifels by
-the emperor, where he languished for two years. Meanwhile
-neither his wife nor mother could obtain any trace
-of him; and even after his brother John learned that
-Richard was imprisoned by the emperor of Germany, he
-joined King Philip of France in making propositions to
-the German emperor, promising to pay him large sums of
-money if he would keep the king of England in prison.
-The place of King Richard’s imprisonment was said to
-have been discovered by a celebrated troubadour named
-Blondel, who had known Richard in Palestine, and was
-now travelling through Germany. As he went along in
-front of the castle where Richard was confined, he was
-singing one of the troubadour songs. When he had finished
-one stanza, King Richard, who knew the song, sang
-the next verse through the bars of his prison window.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-Blondel recognized the voice, and perceiving that Richard
-was a prisoner, he made all speed to go to England and
-inform King Richard’s friends of his sad situation. It is
-said that the first news Berengaria received of Richard’s
-fate was by seeing a jewelled belt offered for sale in Rome.
-This belt she recognized as one which King Richard wore
-when he left Acre. But upon inquiry, she could only
-learn that Richard was somewhere in Germany. The
-news that King Richard Cœur de Lion was a prisoner in
-Germany roused great excitement in England and in
-Rome. The Pope excommunicated Duke Leopold for
-having seized Richard, and threatened to excommunicate
-the emperor if he did not release him. Finally the emperor
-agreed to set the king of England free upon the payment
-of a certain sum of money, two-thirds of which were
-to be received before the king should be released. At
-length, in February, 1194, about two years after Richard
-was first imprisoned, the first payment was made, and
-King Richard Cœur de Lion was allowed to go free; and
-he arrived in England in March, when the people gave
-him a magnificent reception. As soon as Richard had
-arranged his affairs, he determined to be crowned a second
-time as king of England, lest the two years of his
-captivity might have weakened his claims. He was accordingly
-recrowned with the greatest pomp and splendor.
-At the request of his mother he pardoned his brother
-John, saying, “I hope that I shall as easily forget the
-injuries he has done me as he will forget my forbearance
-in pardoning him.” But Richard treated Berengaria with
-great unkindness and open neglect, until he was suddenly
-seized with a severe illness, which so alarmed him that he
-called for a great number of monks and priests, and
-began to confess his sins, vowing, if God would spare<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-his life, he would abandon his profligate and wicked habits,
-and treat his wife with kindness. He recovered, and
-he so far kept his vows as to send for his wife, and become,
-outwardly at least, reconciled to her. But the fault
-was all on his side; for poor Berengaria had given him
-no cause for his cruel treatment of her. The reign of
-Richard Cœur de Lion was soon to end, however, and the
-cause was one which shed neither glory nor honor upon
-his fame. A rich treasure had been found by one of his
-vassals, the viscount of Limoges. Richard at once
-claimed it, and the viscount sent him half. But Richard
-determined to secure the whole of it, and accordingly
-went to the castle of Chaluz, where the treasure was, and
-laid siege to the place. It was well defended, but provisions
-becoming short, the garrison wished to capitulate.
-“No,” said Richard, “I will take your place by storm,
-and cause you all to be hanged on the walls.”</p>
-
-<p>While King Richard was examining the point of attack,
-a young archer, named Bertrand de Gourdon, shot an
-arrow at the king, and wounded him upon the shoulder.
-The town was taken and all the garrison were hung.
-King Richard’s wound, through the unskilful handling of
-the surgeons, proved to be fatal. As he was dying he
-sent for Gourdon. “Wretch!” said Richard to the
-archer, “what had I done to you that you should have
-attempted my life?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have put my father and two brothers to death,”
-said Bertrand, “and you wanted to hang me.”</p>
-
-<p>The dying king, at last struck with remorse for his
-many cruel deeds, said, “I forgive you,” and he ordered
-the chains of the archer to be removed, and that he should
-receive one hundred shillings. This humane command,
-however, was not obeyed, and Bertrand was flayed alive.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-Richard Cœur de Lion died on the 6th of April, 1199, at
-the age of forty-two, and was buried, according to his
-request, at the foot of the grave of Henry II., his father,
-in Fontevraud Abbey. The figures in stone of the father,
-mother, and son, who quarrelled so much while living, all
-lie now on one monument. Richard Cœur de Lion was
-well called the Lion-Hearted. His glory consisted in his
-reckless and brutal ferocity. He pretended to be the
-champion and defender of the cause of Christ, but he used
-the sacred name of Christianity only as a means of gratifying
-his own wild ambitions and his inhuman thirst for
-blood. Though he won the fame of a brave and valorous
-knight, his savage barbarity and reckless cruelties tarnished
-all the brightness of his glory, and brought disgrace
-and dishonor upon the sacred cause of true religion,
-of which he pretended to be the most zealous upholder.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>ROBERT BRUCE.<br />
-
-<small>1274-1329 A.D.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“Scots, wha hae wi’ Wallace bled,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Scots, whom Bruce has aften led,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Welcome to your gory bed,</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">On to victorie!”—<span class="smcap">Burns.</span></span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">“BRUCE to the rescue! Bruce to the rescue!” was
-the war-cry of the valiant little band of Scottish
-chiefs who gathered under the banner of Robert Bruce,
-who was the seventh lord of Annandale, and also earl
-of Garrick.</p>
-
-<p>The heroic William Wallace had already endeavored to
-free his country from the yoke of bondage in which they
-were held by the English king, Edward I.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander III., the ninety-fifth king of Scotland, had
-died in 1286, leaving his grand-daughter Margaret, the
-Fair Maid of Norway, heir to the Scottish throne. This
-child-princess was betrothed to the son of the English
-king; but when quite young, as she sailed from her
-father’s castle in Norway to her future home in Scotland,
-she died on the voyage thither. Thus the crown of Scotland
-became the cause of dispute amongst thirteen noblemen,
-descendants of members of the royal family, who
-set up claims to the vacant throne.</p>
-
-<p>There were but two claimants whose pretensions were
-based upon sufficient grounds to insure any prospect of
-success. These were John Baliol and Robert Bruce,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-grandson and son of the two elder daughters of David,
-earl of Huntingdon, who was the younger brother of
-King William, the Lion, who was the ninety-third king
-of Scotland. This Robert Bruce was the grandfather of
-the hero who is the subject of this sketch.</p>
-
-<p>King Edward of England, having been requested by
-the Scots to act as arbitrator amongst all these claimants,
-decided to give the preference to John Baliol, who
-was crowned king in November, 1292, having sworn
-fealty to Edward, king of England. Thus did the wily
-English sovereign place upon the Scottish throne a king
-weak enough to be used as his tool. And poor John
-Baliol soon found, to his sorrow, that he was a king only
-in name; but in reality a slave in the hands of his ambitious
-and powerful neighbor.</p>
-
-<p>Edward, having placed the feeble Baliol upon the
-throne of Scotland, spared him no humiliation. Every
-time any Scottish petitioner appealed to Edward, Baliol’s
-liege lord, regarding any decision of the king of Scotland
-which had failed to satisfy his subject, Edward
-would summon Baliol to appear at his court, to render an
-account of his judgment. This occurred four times the
-first year of his reign. At length Baliol refused to comply
-longer with these demands of Edward, whereupon
-the English king advanced with an army against the
-Scots. After a fearful massacre at Berwick, and the
-capture of several castles by the English, Baliol begged
-for peace, and was sent to the Tower in honorable captivity.
-He subsequently ended his life in his domains in
-Normandy. Robert Bruce at once claimed the crown.
-But Edward exclaimed, angrily, “Do you think that I
-have nothing else to do but to conquer kingdoms for
-you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 422px;">
-<img src="images/i-330.jpg" width="422" height="622" alt="Warrenne (mispelled) drawing" />
-<div class="caption">WARREN, EARL OF SURREY, GOVERNOR OF SCOTLAND UNDER
-EDWARD I.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Scotland was now treated as a conquered country; and
-Warrene, earl of Surrey, was appointed governor, Hugh
-de Cressingham, treasurer, and William Ormesby, chief
-justicier.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Bruce the grandfather, and also Robert Bruce
-the father of our hero, considered it the better part of
-discretion to resign all pretensions to the throne of Scotland.
-They therefore swore fealty to King Edward.</p>
-
-<p>Robert de Bruce, the sixth lord of Annandale, had
-accompanied Edward, when prince of England, and
-Louis I. of France, to the Holy Land, where he acquired
-great renown. A romantic story is told of his courtship
-and marriage.</p>
-
-<p>One day this knight of the crusades was riding
-through the domains of Turnberry. As he was proceeding
-leisurely along through the majestic forests,
-charmed with the beauty of the sylvan scenery, watching
-the glinting sunbeams dance athwart the leaves, and play
-hide-and-seek with the shadows, in the cosey nooks where
-moss-banks nestled, he was startled by the sound of a
-hunting-horn; and shortly a gay cavalcade of lords and
-ladies dashed through the forest on their way to the
-castle near by. One of the ladies, Margaret, countess
-of Garrick, the owner of this castle, and hostess of this
-splendid retinue, being captivated by the lordly bearing
-of the handsome, unknown knight, with the freedom and
-natural courtesy of one who felt her independence upon
-her own domain, reined in her high-bred steed, whose
-wild spirits were curbed by slightest touch of her fair
-fingers, and, bowing to the knight with queenly dignity,
-she invited him to join her visitors, and share her hospitality.
-Robert de Bruce, knowing the high position of
-this gracious lady, and fearing to accept too eagerly such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-an unexpected honor, courteously declined the kind invitation,
-which he supposed had been offered only out of a
-courtly hospitality, as he had been found a stranger
-within her own domains. But the beautiful countess,
-moved by some strange attraction, which she did not
-stop to analyze, gaily laid hold of the reins of his steed,
-and laughingly replied:—</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, noble knight! no trespasser on my grounds ever
-escapes imprisonment in my castle;” and thereupon she
-led him away, like a captive knight, to her castle of
-Turnberry.</p>
-
-<p>For fifteen days he was the honored guest amidst all
-the festivities at the castle, and the first in the chase, by
-the side of the bewitching countess; and, having obtained
-her heart, as well as her hand, they were married, without
-the consent of the king, whose ward she was, or the
-knowledge of her relatives; in consequence of which the
-estates and castle of the young countess were seized by
-the sovereign, and were only saved to her by the payment
-of a large fine to the crown.</p>
-
-<p>The eldest son of this brave knight and beautiful countess,
-who had risked so much for love, and whose marriage
-was as romantic as any described in Scottish tales
-of fiction, was Robert the Bruce, our hero, who was afterwards
-King Robert I. of Scotland. He was born on the
-21st of March, 1274. He spent his early youth at Carrick,
-where he was distinguished for his brave spirit and
-persevering energy.</p>
-
-<p>The grandfather of Robert the Bruce, Robert, lord of
-Annandale, refusing to take the oath of homage to his
-rival, John Baliol, when King Edward of England decided
-in his favor, gave up his Scottish domains in Annandale
-to his son, the earl of Carrick, lest he should hold them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-as Edward’s minion. This proceeding was also followed
-by the earl in 1293, in behalf of his son, Robert the
-Bruce, who was then serving the king of England. Notwithstanding
-the sympathy of young Bruce with the cause
-of Scotland, and his resolve to assert his claims to the
-Scottish crown, he had, during the greater part of the
-reign of his weak rival, adhered to the fortunes of Edward,
-deeming it better policy to yield himself to the
-uncontrollable necessity of circumstances, rather than
-risk his cause by undue haste. Sometimes he appeared
-to assert his own pretensions to the crown, and the independence
-of his country; and then, again, he yielded
-submission to the superior power of the English king,
-whose good-will he wished to keep until a favorable
-opportunity should offer itself of openly asserting his
-rights. Robert might have obtained the crown if he
-would have acknowledged the superior power of England,
-and submitted himself as a vassal to the English
-king, as Baliol had done. But he would not receive it on
-any other terms than as a free crown, which had been
-worn by his ancestors, and of right belonged to him.</p>
-
-<p>When John Baliol was raised to sovereign power, the
-family of Bruce, although looking upon his elevation with
-envy, deemed it prudent to conceal their dissatisfaction,
-and the father of young Robert, who possessed the earldom
-of Carrick, in right of the countess his wife, resigned
-to his son these possessions, who was admitted to do
-homage to Baliol, the Scottish king, and thus became
-earl of Carrick.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 442px;">
-<img src="images/i-335.jpg" width="442" height="580" alt=" BRUCE. ROBERTUS I. REX SCOTORUM. ANNO DOM. MCCCVI." />
-</div>
-
-<p>When John Baliol had rebelled against Edward, king
-of England, young Bruce deemed it unsafe to rank under
-the banner of his natural sovereign, and therefore joined
-the side of Edward. Whereupon, the Scottish king, John<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-Baliol, confiscated his estate of Annandale, as that of a
-traitor, and gave it to one of his followers, Comyn, earl
-of Buchan. Some of the English peers, suspecting the
-fidelity of young Bruce, who had now retired to the family
-estate in England, summoned him to Carlisle to do homage.
-He forthwith obeyed, and swore fidelity to the
-cause of Edward, and in order to show his loyalty, he
-assembled some of his followers, and overran the lands
-of Sir William Douglas, a Scottish patriot, and even
-carried away his wife and children. Stung with remorse,
-however, for this treacherous act, which was really extorted
-from him, young Bruce then joined the Scottish
-army, which Wallace, the brave patriot, together with the
-bishop of Glasgow, and steward of Scotland, had raised.
-The Scottish leaders were too much at variance amongst
-themselves to make a resolute stand. The English,
-knowing of their dissensions, sent messengers to treat
-with them. With the exception of William Wallace, they
-sued for peace, and threw down their arms without striking
-a blow. Bruce deemed it prudent to submit with his
-countrymen to the English king, but such had been the
-inconstancy of this nobleman, that the English demanded
-security for his future fidelity. Whereupon the bishop of
-Glasgow, the lord steward, and Alexander de Lindesay,
-came forward as his securities, until he should deliver
-over his daughter Marjory as an hostage for his loyalty.
-The conduct of young Bruce seems to us vacillating and
-unpatriotic, viewed from the present age; but he must be
-judged by the spirit of those troublesome times, and his
-after heroic deeds in his country’s behalf must soften a
-stern judgment regarding his changeable and uncertain
-conduct at this time. By the side of the staunch patriotism
-of the brave William Wallace, various acts of Robert<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-Bruce, at this period of his life, are thrown into an unfavorable
-light, but his seeming treachery he regarded as
-actuated by a prudent policy. Whether he would have
-gained the deliverance of his country sooner, or suffered
-irretrievable defeat, had he earlier and more steadfastly
-espoused the patriotic cause, we find ourselves at a loss to
-determine, after a careful study of that conflicting epoch.</p>
-
-<p>The history of Robert Bruce would not be complete
-without a brief account of William Wallace, which will
-help to give a clearer idea of the affairs of Scotland at
-that time.</p>
-
-<p>William Wallace was descended from an ancient family
-in the west of Scotland. Having been provoked and insulted
-by an English officer, Wallace had put him to
-death, and therefore was obliged to flee for safety to the
-forests. Here he collected a large band of bold men.
-Some of these were outlawed for crimes; others, on account
-of bad fortune or hatred of the English, were willing
-participants in this daring scheme. William Wallace
-possessed gigantic strength of body as well as heroic
-courage, and so was admirably suited to become a leader
-in such a perilous enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>This little band of Scottish warriors made many successful
-raids upon their English foes, until the fame of
-their exploits became so wide-spread that the English
-were filled with terror, and their enslaved countrymen
-were inspired with hopes of freedom from the galling
-yoke of oppression which fettered their hitherto independent
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Wallace now determined to strike a decisive blow
-against the English government. Warrene, the governor
-of Scotland, had retired to England on account of his
-health, so that the administration of Scotland was left in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-the hands of Ormesby, the justiciary, and Cressingham,
-who held the office of treasurer. Wallace formed a plan of
-attacking Ormesby, at Scone; but the justiciary being informed
-of such intentions, fled in terror to England. All
-the other English officers imitated his example. The
-Scots, encouraged by these events, sprang to arms.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the principal barons, including Sir William
-Douglas, openly countenanced the party of Wallace.
-Meanwhile, Warrene, earl of Surrey, collected an army
-of forty thousand men, in the north of England, and invaded
-Scotland. He suddenly entered Annandale, and
-came up with the enemy at Irvine, before the Scottish
-forces were prepared for battle. Many of the Scottish
-nobles, alarmed at this unforeseen event, submitted to the
-English, and renewed their oaths of fealty, and gave
-hostages for their fidelity, whereupon they received pardon
-for their rebellion. Others, who had not openly declared
-themselves, thought best to side with the English,
-and wait a better opportunity for avowing themselves as
-partisans of the Scottish cause. But Wallace persevered
-in his bold enterprise, and marched northwards and established
-his little army at Cambuskenneth. When Warrene
-advanced to Stirling, he found Wallace on the
-opposite banks of the Forth. Wallace had chosen a
-position near a narrow bridge which spanned the Forth,
-and as the English, with thoughtless precipitation, commenced
-to cross, Wallace attacked them before they were
-fully formed, and put them to rout, gaining a complete
-victory. Among the slain was Cressingham, who was so
-hated by the Scots that they flayed his dead body, and
-made saddle-girths of his skin. Warrene, finding his remaining
-forces much dismayed by this defeat, returned
-again to England.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Wallace was now made regent, or guardian of the
-country, by his enthusiastic followers; and his brave band,
-not content with their past exploits, invaded England,
-and laid waste many counties, returning to their native
-land loaded with spoils, and crowned with glory.</p>
-
-<p>But now factions amongst the Scots themselves caused
-a disaster which deprived them of all they had gained.
-The Scottish nobles were unwilling that Wallace should
-be placed over them in power; and that patriot, to avoid
-jealousies and dissensions, resigned his authority as regent,
-retaining only his command over that body of warriors
-who refused to follow any other leader than the
-brave Wallace, under whose banner they had so often
-been led to victory.</p>
-
-<p>The Scottish army was now divided into three bands.
-The chief power devolved on the steward of Scotland, and
-Comyn of Badenoch. The third band was commanded
-by the valiant Wallace. Edward, having collected the
-entire military force of England, Wales, and Ireland,
-marched into Scotland with an army of nearly one hundred
-thousand men.</p>
-
-<p>When the two forces met in battle at Falkirk, the English
-archers chased the Scottish bowmen off the field, then
-shooting their arrows amongst the pikemen, they were
-thrown into confusion, and the English cavalry soon put
-the Scots to rout, with great slaughter. Some historians
-state that the loss of the Scots, upon this occasion, was
-fifty or sixty thousand men. In this general rout of the
-Scottish army, Wallace’s superior military skill and presence
-of mind enabled him to keep his band together, and
-retiring to the farther bank of a small river called the
-Carron, he marched along its banks protected from the
-enemy. Bruce, who was serving in the English army,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-recognized the valiant Scottish chief, and calling out to
-him, desired a conference. This being granted, he endeavored
-to convince Wallace of the helplessness of his
-rash enterprise, and advised him to submit. But the intrepid
-Wallace replied, that if he had hitherto acted alone
-as the champion of his country, it was because no other
-would assume the place. He exhorted Bruce to espouse
-the cause of his enslaved land, representing to him the
-glory of the enterprise, and hope of opposing successfully
-the power of the English. With enthusiasm he declared
-that he would prefer to give his own life, and the
-existence of the nation, when they could only be preserved
-by receiving the chains of a haughty victor.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 421px;">
-<img src="images/i-342.jpg" width="421" height="618" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">“BRUCE WAS NOT SLOW IN TAKING THE WARNING.”</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Bruce was greatly moved by these sentiments of brave
-patriotism, and regretting his engagements to Edward,
-the enemy of his people, resolved to embrace the cause
-of his oppressed country.</p>
-
-<p>We cannot follow the brave and valiant Wallace through
-his after career, and will but note his sad and unworthy
-fate. He was betrayed into Edward’s hands by Sir John
-Monteith, who had been his friend. Edward ordered
-Wallace to be carried in chains to London, where he was
-tried as a rebel or traitor, though he had never sworn
-fealty to England; and he was executed on Tower Hill.
-This barbarous cruelty of the English king only inflamed
-the Scots to fresh rebellions; and they now again sprang
-to arms, shouting, “Bruce to the rescue!”</p>
-
-<p>Robert Bruce had long resolved to attempt to free his
-enslaved country. The death of William Wallace, and
-the memory of his patriotic exhortation after the battle of
-Falkirk, on the banks of the river Carron, added fresh
-impetus to this resolve; and his open avowal could be no
-longer delayed on account of two incidents which happened
-about this time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Bruce had ventured to disclose this resolve to John
-Comyn, surnamed the Red, a powerful nobleman and
-warm friend. He found Comyn apparently in full accord
-with his avowed sentiments. But that nobleman afterwards
-treacherously revealed the secret to the English
-king. Edward did not immediately seize and imprison
-Bruce, because he desired also to ensnare his three
-brothers, who resided in Scotland. But he placed spies
-over Bruce; and a nobleman, Gilbert de Clare, one of the
-lords in Edward’s court, but also a friend of Robert
-Bruce, having learned of the danger which threatened
-him, and fearing to risk his own position by an open
-warning, sent Bruce a pair of golden spurs and a purse
-of gold by his servant, with this message: “My master
-sent these to thee, and bid me say, that the receiver
-would have sagacity enough to determine quickly to what
-use they should be put.”</p>
-
-<p>Bruce was not slow in taking the warning. Evidently,
-some one at court had betrayed him! Ah, he had it!
-surely it could be no other than the Red Comyn!</p>
-
-<p>There is a story told, that three days previous to this
-event, Robert Bruce was praying at the altar, in a chapel
-where afterwards stood St. Martin’s church. It was midnight,
-and Bruce was alone. With tearful eyes he exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, at the foot of this high altar, I’ll swear forthwith
-to fling the yoke from off me, in spite of hostile man and
-misleading fiend; knowing that if I put trust in, and pay
-obedience to, the King of kings, my triumph shall be sure,
-my victory complete!”</p>
-
-<p>“Amen to that!” whispered a sweet and plaintive
-voice in the ear of the kneeling earl.</p>
-
-<p>Bruce sprang to his feet, exclaiming, “Who art thou?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-But he saw only a muffled figure glide swiftly behind one
-of the pillars. Bruce pursued; but the same soft voice
-replied:—</p>
-
-<p>“I am neither foe to Scotland’s cause, nor shall be to
-him whose it is to see her righted, laggard although he be
-in responding to the urgent call. Farewell to the valiant
-Bruce! We may meet again, yet nevermore in this holy
-place; for even three days must not elapse and find him
-loitering near the stern and subtle Edward, or it will be
-woe to Scotland and to Scotland’s mightiest lord! Let
-the Bruce find his way to the altar, upon which I place
-a token for his keeping and his use—the bugle-horn of
-the immortal Wallace; with which he summoned to his
-standard his faithful countrymen, and led them to victory,
-till he was overcome by treachery and death. Take this
-sacred bugle-horn, and sound the call for Scotland’s
-freedom!”</p>
-
-<p>Ere the astonished Bruce could answer, a figure shot
-past him, and was lost in the darkness. The earl, groping
-his way in the dim light to the altar, found there the
-precious relic promised; and he went forth under the starlit
-midnight sky, vowing to strike a blow for his enslaved
-country. Bruce needed no second warning of his danger,
-but the very night upon which he received the gilt spurs
-and purse of gold, he ordered two of his horses to be
-shod with reversed shoes, so that their course might not
-be traced, as snow had fallen, and the prints of the
-horses’ feet would therefore be plainly visible. Then
-Bruce and one faithful attendant, named Walter Kennedy,
-hastily mounted their horses, and rode out of London
-under cover of the darkness of the night.</p>
-
-<p>As they left the great city behind them, Walter Kennedy
-ventured to say,—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“If I may be so bold, good master, where gang we on
-sic a night? Thou bidst me tell our talkative host at the
-inn, that Garrick’s lord had a love adventure on foot.
-But me thinkst thou art too true a knight for that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well said, my faithful Walter!” replied Bruce.
-“’Tis in truth a love adventure, but concerns no lady
-fair, for my good wife is fairer to me than all other
-women. But ’tis for love of country we go forth,—to
-free our bonny Scotland. Surely that were love adventure
-worthy of both a valiant knight and loyal husband.
-Still it is for sake of lovely woman also; for my sweet
-wife and fair daughters are e’en now in Scotland, and
-I fear me that their liberty, if not their lives, will soon be
-in danger, as I am warned that the wily King Edward
-is my bitter enemy and treacherous spy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! ’tis well spoken, good master!” exclaimed
-Kennedy, with enthusiasm, and lifting his Scotch bonnet
-from his head, he cried aloud, “Bruce to the rescue.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hist, man!” said Bruce, laying his hand upon the
-bridle-rein of his faithful and loyal retainer; “knowest
-thou not that these English forests secrete hostile ears, to
-whom thy wild cry wouldst betray us? Not till I have
-gathered my forces and blown the bugle-horn of the
-valiant Wallace, will it be safe to openly sound that
-war-cry.”</p>
-
-<p>The snow still fell thickly, and it was difficult to follow
-the right route through the blinding storm; but ere long
-the moon shone out with brightness, and seemed to smile
-upon their perilous adventure, and promise success.</p>
-
-<p>After a few days Bruce arrived at Dumfries, in Annandale,
-the chief seat of his family interests. Here he found
-a great number of the Scottish noblemen assembled, and
-among the rest the treacherous John Comyn. These<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-noblemen were astonished at the appearance of Bruce
-amongst them, and still more when he avowed his determination
-to live or die with them in the defence of the
-liberty of Scotland. All the nobles declared their unanimous
-resolution to rise to arms in the cause of their enslaved
-country. Comyn alone opposed this measure.
-Bruce, already sure of his treachery, followed Comyn on
-the dissolution of the assembly, and attacked him in the
-cloisters of the Gray Friars, through which he passed,
-and piercing him with his sword, left him bleeding on the
-ground. As Bruce rushed into the street, pale and agitated,
-Sir Thomas Kirkpatrick, one of his friends, asked
-him if all was well. “I fear I have slain Comyn,” replied
-Bruce, as he hastily mounted his horse.</p>
-
-<p>“Such a matter must not be left to doubt,” exclaimed
-Kirkpatrick; “I’ll mak sicker!”—and dashing into
-the sanctuary, he ran his dagger into the heart of the
-dying Comyn.</p>
-
-<p>This deed of Bruce and his friend, which would be justly
-condemned in the present age, was at that time regarded
-as an act of valiant patriotism and commendable policy.
-The family of Kirkpatrick were so proud of the deed that
-they took for the crest of their arms a hand with a bloody
-dagger, and chose for their motto those words, “I’ll mak
-sicker!” meaning, “I will make sure of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Bruce now raised the standard of independence. Some
-priests and lords gathered round him, and boldly crowned
-him at Scone. On the day of the Annunciation, 1306,
-Scotland received her ninety-seventh king in the person
-of the valiant Robert Bruce; and all Scotland rang with
-the joyful war-cry, “Bruce to the rescue!”</p>
-
-<p>The undertaking of Bruce was one of a gigantic nature.
-Yet amidst all the seemingly insurmountable obstacles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-which surrounded him from English foes and Scottish
-grandees,—who were many of them in league against him,
-for the faction of Baliol and the powerful family of Comyn
-were his avowed enemies,—and though he was subjected
-to frequent perils, dangerous ambuscades and escapes,
-and many individual conflicts of daring courage, Robert
-Bruce persisted firmly in his patriotic design of restoring
-his enslaved country to freedom, and giving protection to
-the people who had formerly called his ancestor their
-king.</p>
-
-<p>Edward I. had now become aged and unwieldly, so that
-he could not readily mount on horseback. When he was
-informed of this daring attempt of Bruce to wrest from
-his power a kingdom which had cost him so much to gain
-and hold, he despatched a messenger to the Pope, praying
-him to issue the thunders of the Vatican against this
-bold traitor and murderer of Comyn, and that he would
-place under interdict all who should endeavor to aid him
-or draw a sword in defence of liberty. This sentence of
-interdict, which the Pope often issued against sovereigns
-for the most trivial offences, involved a nation in the
-greatest misery. The people were deprived of all the services
-of the church; no sacred rite was performed for
-them except the baptism of infants, and the administration
-of the communion to the dying.</p>
-
-<p>The churches were deserted, and the altars were
-stripped of all the sacred ornaments. The dead lay
-uninterred, for the consecrated ground was prohibited;
-and when at last the corpses must be buried, they were
-hurriedly piled up in ditches and covered over, without
-any church service to soothe the surviving mourners
-or hallow the last rites to the dead. The thunders of the
-Roman pontiff, however, fell powerless upon Robert the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-Bruce, for he had previously secured the alliance of the
-Scottish clergy; and as they wished to remain independent
-of the English bishops, they braved the thunders of
-the hierarchy, and persisted in celebrating divine worship,
-notwithstanding its prohibition by the head of the church.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of old age and sickness, King Edward began
-to make extensive preparations for marching personally
-against the Scots. Prince Edward, his son, was twenty-two
-years of age, and having not yet been knighted, the
-king conferred this distinction upon him and bestowed
-upon him his spurs. Whereupon the young knight then
-conferred the same honor upon two hundred and seventy
-young lords who were about to become his comrades in
-arms. All the company then met at a magnificent banquet.
-A golden net was placed upon the table, containing
-two swans, emblems of constancy and fidelity. Then
-the king, placing his hands upon their heads, swore to
-avenge the death of Comyn and to punish the rebels of
-Scotland, without sleeping for two nights in the same
-place, and to start immediately afterwards for Palestine,
-in order to rescue the Holy Sepulchre. The young men
-swore the same oath as the king, and then they started
-for the frontiers, the king following more slowly, as he
-was too feeble to travel except upon a litter.</p>
-
-<p>The earl of Pembroke had been sent by King Edward,
-with a small army, into Scotland while the king was preparing
-his forces. Pembroke met the Scots at Methven,
-where a battle was fought in which the Scots were defeated,
-and many of them killed and taken prisoners;
-these were afterwards put to death with great cruelty by
-Edward’s orders. Bruce retired into the mountains with
-five hundred men. King Edward had only been able to
-proceed as far as Carlisle; but on his dying bed he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-cruelly ordering the Scottish prisoners to be beheaded,
-and still directing the operations of his troops. Bruce
-was living in the forests with a few faithful companions.
-His wife, daughter, and sister shared his adventuresome
-life.</p>
-
-<p>But as winter approached, the ladies were sent to the
-castle of Keldrummie, but they met with a sad fate here.
-The castle was stormed and taken by the English; Nigel
-Bruce, Robert’s younger brother, was cruelly put to death,
-and the queen of Scotland and her daughter, and also the
-sister of Bruce, were sent to England, where the queen
-was imprisoned, and the daughter and sister of King Robert
-were shut up in wooden cages at Berwick and Roxburgh,
-and were exposed to the public gaze.</p>
-
-<p>Bruce’s little band were attacked by Lord Lorn, the
-Red Comyn’s nephew, and therefore a bitter foe. Finding
-that his faithful followers were falling under the
-battle-axes of their enemies, King Robert sounded a retreat;
-and with marvellous bravery Robert Bruce, mounted
-upon his war-horse and clad in armor, took his position in
-the defile and defended the approach alone. At length
-three men, famous for their strength, sprang forward together
-upon the royal champion, who calmly held his long
-sword on guard, and whose bright eyes glittered beneath
-his helmet. One seized the bridle of the horse; but
-Bruce raised his sword, and the arm of the assailant fell
-helpless, his hand being severed. Another fastened himself
-on the leg of the horseman; but the fiery war-horse
-reared, and again the invincible sword split his head open.
-The third now clutched the king’s cloak; but again the
-sword dealt its fatal blow, and the three assailants soon
-lay dead, while the valiant king escaped without a wound.
-Robert Bruce was now obliged to flee, and he took refuge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-in the small island of Rachrin. His retreat was unknown
-to his enemies, and a large reward was offered to whoever
-would give news of “Robert Bruce, lost, strayed, or
-stolen.”</p>
-
-<p>During this time the Scottish king met with many adventures.
-One day, leaving the island of Rachrin, he
-sailed with his little band in some small boats to the isle
-of Arran. On landing they met a woman, of whom the
-king inquired if there had been any military arrivals.</p>
-
-<p>“Surely, sir,” she replied, “I can tell you of some
-who lately blockaded the English governor’s castle. They
-maintain themselves in the woods near by.”</p>
-
-<p>Robert Bruce, thinking that it was of brave Douglas of
-whom she spoke, blew his horn. It was answered by Sir
-James Douglas, who recognized the bugle of his sovereign,
-and when he hastily approached the king, they kissed for
-joy at such fortunate meeting. The small bands of King
-Robert and Douglas now crossed in boats to the opposite
-shore, and concealed themselves in a cavern, called the
-Cave of Colean. Learning that a large party of English
-were settled in the town of Turnberry, Bruce made a bold
-attack upon them, with three hundred men, and put two
-hundred of the English to the sword. The garrison, in
-the castle near by, were afraid to sally forth, as it was a
-dark night, and Bruce carried off the spoil, among which
-were the war-horses and household plate of the governor.
-Bruce now retired with his brave band to a green hill,
-called afterwards the “Weary Neuk.” Here they rested
-for three days, when they returned to the mountains to
-wait for reinforcements. It was then that King Robert
-learned of the sad fate of his wife, daughter, and sister,
-and the cruel death of his brother. But he humanely
-spared the life of every captive who fell into his hands,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-and did not yield to the temptation to revenge himself by
-their death, in retaliation for the wrongs he had suffered.
-In consequence of his privations and exposures, he was
-attacked with a severe sickness, and having found relief
-from a certain medicinal spring, when he had afterwards
-established himself upon his throne, he founded a priory
-of Dominican monks there, and ordered houses to be built
-around the spring for eight lepers, and a certain sum of
-money and meal was settled upon the lands of Fullarton,
-for their support. In compliment to Sir William Wallace,
-the relatives and descendants of that knight were invested
-with the right of placing the lepers upon this establishment,
-known as the “King’s Ease.” This was secured
-by charter, and the leper’s charter-stone, which was
-a large stone of elliptical shape, has been handed down
-to modern times.</p>
-
-<p>King Robert had some very narrow escapes from death.
-It is reported that at one time, Sir Ingram Umfraville
-bribed an inhabitant of Carrick, with his two sons, to kill
-Bruce. These peasants, knowing that the king was accustomed
-at an early hour every morning to retire for
-meditation, accompanied by a single page, who carried
-his bow and arrows, determined to select such time for
-the attack. As the assailants approached, Bruce suspecting
-their design, took his bow and arrows from his
-attendant, bidding him retire to a place of safety, saying,
-“If I vanquish these traitors, you will have a sufficiency
-of arms, and if I fall, you can flee for you life.”</p>
-
-<p>As the peasants drew near, the king discharged an
-arrow, which hit the father in the eye; upon which, the
-son, brandishing his battle-axe, rushed to the combat, but
-missing his blow, he stumbled and fell, and Robert severed
-his head in two at one stroke. The third peasant,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-with spear in hand, then rushed upon the king, but Bruce
-cut off the steel-head of the spear, and laid him also dead
-at his feet. When the page approached, he found the
-king wiping his good sword, while he remarked, “These
-would have been three gallant men had they not fallen
-victims to covetousness.”</p>
-
-<p>At another time, King Robert was surprised by a party
-of two hundred men with bloodhounds. Bruce was accompanied
-by only two men. The king was in a most
-perilous situation, but he stationed himself in a narrow
-gorge and despatched his companions in haste for succor.
-But before his band of brave Scots arrived, King Robert
-had slain with his dreadful sword, fourteen of his enemies,
-who were found piled up in the gorge, men and horses
-above each other.</p>
-
-<p>A party of English, under the command of John Lorn,
-now determined to search for the brave Bruce among the
-mountains of Carrick, where he was intrenched; and in
-order to track the valiant Scottish king, Lorn carried with
-him a sagacious bloodhound which belonged to Bruce.
-This bloodhound proved of great use to Lorn, for it discovered
-his master by its scent, and the English pursued
-him so closely that Bruce divided his men in small bands
-and dispersed them, that they might thus more easily flee.
-Still being pressed sorely by the relentless foe, Robert
-dismissed all his men, each one to look out for his own
-safety; and attended only by his foster-brother, who would
-not leave him, the brave Scottish king fled, still pursued
-by five of Lorn’s men, led on by the bloodhound who
-tracked his master with sure scent. Meanwhile the dog
-was outrun by the five powerful mountaineers, and the
-king and his foster-brother at last stood at bay to receive
-them. Bruce singled three of these assailants, leaving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-his companion to combat with two. As the first approached,
-the king cleft him through the skull with one
-blow of his weapon, and as the other two fell back for a
-moment, stunned by this unexpected disaster, Bruce
-sprang to the assistance of his foster-brother, whom he
-saw was in danger, and severing the head of one of his
-assailants from his body, he quickly laid his other two
-enemies dead, while the fifth was killed by his companion.
-When the king graciously thanked his faithful foster-brother
-for his aid, “It’s like you to say so,” he replied,
-“but you yourself slew four of the five.”</p>
-
-<p>But now the cry of the hound was heard again, for
-Lorn and his band were on the trail. The king and his
-companion hastily entered a small stream near by, to
-break the scent of the hound, and as the dog bounded up
-and down the banks, having lost all scent of his master,
-the foster-brother of King Robert shot him dead with an
-arrow, from their retreat in the forest. They then fled in
-safety from their pursuers, who gave up the chase. But
-King Robert had escaped from the bloodhound only to
-fall into other dangers. Three freebooters, pretending to
-be friends of the Scottish king, joined him and his foster-brother
-in their retreat through the forest. Bruce, suspecting
-these companions, desired them to walk at some
-distance before.</p>
-
-<p>“We seek the Scottish king,” said the strangers: “you
-need not mistrust us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither do I,” replied Robert; “but until we are
-better acquainted, you must walk thus.”</p>
-
-<p>When they came to a ruinous hut, where they rested for
-the night, the king ordered the strangers to remain at the
-other end of the room. But the past fatigues overcoming
-them, at last Bruce and his foster-brother fell asleep.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-The king was roused from his slumbers by the approach
-of the three villanous freebooters, with arms in their
-hands, intent on his assassination. Robert laid hold of
-his sword, and stepping heavily over his foster-brother,
-to awaken him, he rushed upon the assassins. After a
-fierce combat, in which his faithful foster-brother was
-killed, Bruce succeeded in overcoming these three villains,
-and left them dead on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>It was during these wanderings that Bruce was one day
-resting in a ruined hut in the forests. He was lying upon
-a handful of straw, and considering whether he should
-continue this strife to maintain his right to the Scottish
-throne, or if it were best to abandon an enterprise attended
-with such danger, and seeming at times almost
-hopeless, and go to the Holy Land and end his days in
-the wars with the Saracens. While thus musing, his
-attention was arrested by the movements of a spider on
-the roof of the hut above his head. This spider was
-trying to fix its web on the rafters, and was swinging
-itself from one eave to another. The king was amused
-with the patience and energy displayed by the tiny insect.
-It had tried six times to reach one place, and failed.
-Suddenly the thought struck the Scottish monarch, “I
-have fought six times against the enemies of my country.”
-He thereupon resolved that he would be guided in his
-future actions by the failure or success of this indefatigable
-little insect. The next effort of the spider was successful,
-and King Robert then determined that he would
-make the seventh attempt to free his country, feeling
-confident that he should yet achieve the liberty of Scotland.
-It is hence esteemed unlucky for a Bruce to kill a
-spider. Meantime Edward, the brother of Robert Bruce,
-and Sir James Douglas had made many successful raids<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-against the English. They now joined their forces with
-those of King Robert, and they then overran Kyle, Carrick,
-and Cunningham, which places had been in the possession
-of the English.</p>
-
-<p>In 1307 Pembroke advanced against Bruce with three
-thousand men. But though the Scottish king’s band numbered
-but six hundred men, they charged so valiantly with
-their long Scottish spears, that Pembroke’s forces were
-completely routed, and he himself was obliged to flee for
-safety to the castle of Ayr. King Edward was so enraged
-by these events that he determined to march himself
-against this bold foe. But the English king had not proceeded
-three leagues from Carlisle when death met him.
-With his dying breath he ordered his remains to be
-carried with the army, and not to be interred until the
-enemy was conquered. He had previously caused his son
-to swear in the most solemn manner, that when he should
-die, he would boil his body in a caldron and separate the
-flesh from the bones, and having buried the former, the
-bones were to be carried with the army to inspire his men
-with hatred against the Scots, while his heart was to be
-taken to the Holy Land. But Edward II., instead of
-obeying his father’s dying commands, interred his body in
-Westminster; and disbanding the army, the troops returned
-to England. The death of Edward I. gave new
-courage to the Scots. By this inglorious retreat of the
-English king, he lost all the advantages which his father
-had so dearly purchased for him. Edward Bruce, the
-brother of Robert, one of the most chivalrous knights, had
-conquered the English in Galloway, taking, in one year,
-thirteen castles. Meanwhile, Lord Douglas had recovered
-his ancient estate of Douglas from the English and made
-many conquests.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The north and the south being now reduced to obedience,
-the united troops of Bruce and Douglas proceeded
-to the west to subdue the proud lord of Lorn. By a
-series of well-contested engagements in which no ordinary
-degree of skill as a general was displayed, and the greatest
-personal courage, Bruce succeeded in wresting his much-injured
-country from the power of the English. Twice
-had the king of England attempted an expedition to reconquer
-Scotland, but he had returned without result.
-The authority of Bruce was rapidly being established
-throughout his country. The castles of Perth, Dunbar,
-and Edinburgh were in his hands. Many stories are told
-of his heroic bravery in these contests, but we can only
-stop to note the taking of Perth. This was a strongly
-fortified garrison. The fortress was enclosed by a lofty
-wall and towers, surrounded by a deep moat filled with
-water, which set at defiance the efforts of the Scots for
-several weeks. At last, King Robert made a feint of
-raising the siege, struck his tents, and departed to some
-distance. But one night, when least expected, he approached
-unperceived to the foot of the rampart, and
-walking up to his throat in the water, he seized a ladder
-and mounted to the wall’s parapet, where he found a
-Scottish maiden whom the English had imprisoned, and
-who had escaped to the top of the wall, but could get no
-farther, as the frightful moat surrounded her on all sides.</p>
-
-<p>“It is but now to descend by these corded steps,”
-whispered Bruce to the captive maiden, “and I’ll ferry
-you across this muddy water.” But the maiden was as
-brave as she was fair, and knowing that any delay would
-risk the taking of the fortress by the brave Bruce, she
-heroically answered:—</p>
-
-<p>“Please your Grace, no! Allow me the keeping of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-your dagger till you return with further scaling-gear and
-your valiant band. Thus armed, I’ll know how to defend
-myself, and I will watch these enemies till you return.”</p>
-
-<p>So King Robert, leaving the brave girl as a sentinel
-upon the parapet, quickly waded again through the murky
-waters of the moat, and having regained his band, reported
-his experience. Immediately fifty of his most
-daring men, selected for their great height, plunged into
-the dark waters of the moat, led by the valiant Bruce.</p>
-
-<p>“Saw ye ever the like of that?” exclaimed a French
-knight who had lately joined the Scottish patriots.
-“What shall we say to our lords, when so worthy a
-knight and noble a monarch exposeth himself to such
-great peril to win a wretched hamlet?”</p>
-
-<p>With this he gaily threw himself into the water, followed
-by the rest of the Scottish army. When Bruce again
-reached the maiden she said, “The late revellers are now
-in their slumbers; the watchword with them is ‘<i>The Lost
-Standard.</i>’” The brave maiden then aided the king to
-adjust the rope ladders, by which the Scots scaled the
-wall, one by one, until a strong force stood at their side.
-“‘The Lost Standard’ is the word,” said the king; “and
-now for the citadel!” It was, indeed, a <i>Lost Standard</i>
-to the drowsy guards and sleeping revellers. The fortress
-was soon taken, and the captives set free. King Robert
-afterwards besieged the fortress of Stirling, when the
-governor, Sir Philip Mowbray, contrived to make his
-appeals for succor reach the English king. Edward
-roused himself from his natural indolence, and raised
-a large army to march against Scotland. The forces of
-the English amounted to nearly one hundred thousand
-men. This brilliant army, with banners flying and lances
-glistening in the sunlight, presented a grand array.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-Meanwhile, King Robert was concealed in the forests
-with an army of only forty thousand men, nearly all on
-foot, awaiting the enemy, and preparing barriers to check
-the onslaught of the English. On the morning of the
-23d of June, 1313, the two armies met near Bannockburn.
-The night had been passed in prayer in the Scottish camp,
-and in feasting and drunkenness by the English. At daybreak
-the young English king was astonished at the good
-order observed in the Scottish ranks.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think they will fight?” he asked of Sir Ingletram
-d’Umfreville. Just then the abbot of Inchaffray
-appeared before the Scottish troops, holding a crucifix in
-his hand; all bent their knees with uncovered heads.</p>
-
-<p>“They are asking for mercy,” cried King Edward.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sire,” replied Umfreville, with a bitter smile;
-“but of God, not of you, sire. These men will win the
-battle or die at their posts.”</p>
-
-<p>The sight of the vast English army might well cause
-the brave hearts of the small band of Scots to tremble;
-but with the intrepid Bruce at their head, they awaited
-their foes with dauntless courage. So vast were the
-English forces, that it is said the country seemed on fire
-by the brightness of the shields and burnished helmets
-gleaming in the morning light. So vast was the multitude
-of embroidered banners, of standards, of pennons, and
-spears; so apparently endless the crowds of knights, blazing
-in their rich-colored and gemmed surcoats; so large
-the extent of country occupied by their numerous tents,—that
-one might have thought all the warriors of the
-world were marching against this handful of valiant Scots.
-The English had hastened their march and arrived with
-some disorder in front of the Scottish army. King Robert
-Bruce, with a golden crown on his helmet, was riding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-slowly before the line of his troops. As the brave king
-thus rode along upon his favorite palfrey, clad in armor
-and carrying his battle-axe in his hand, encouraging his
-men by his calm voice and brave words, the English king
-took special note of him, and remarked, “Doubtless
-yonder solitary rider is of the foe, although he is almost
-as nigh to our front as to that of the rebels. Canst tell,
-Sir Knight, of what account he is, and wherefore this
-manœuvre?”</p>
-
-<p>“My liege,” replied Sir Giles d’Argentine, to whom
-King Edward had spoken, “he who yonder marshalleth
-the Scottish host was once my frequent associate, and is
-well known to me, as I clearly descry from the jewelled
-diadem which glittereth on his helmet. It is none other
-than Bruce himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“If it is the arch-traitor Bruce,” exclaimed Edward,
-“I marvel that no knight amongst you all is brave enough
-to challenge so audacious a foe.”</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon Sir Henry Bohun, mounted on a magnificent
-war-horse, came dashing against the Scottish monarch,
-whose small palfrey seemed an ill match for so
-strong and large a steed. “See! the foeman coucheth
-his lance and pusheth at full speed against his victim,
-who recklessly advanceth, and now doth take his stand
-motionless as a rock, awaiting the onset of his enemy.
-Breathlessly the Scots and English watch the two
-combatants. On comes the impetuous Bohun. Surely
-some half score more plunges of the superb animal that
-bears him will unhorse the hero-king, unless unwonted
-presence of mind, nimbleness of movement, and dexterity
-of arm shall save him from the onrush of the powerful
-horse and gleaming spear. But the gallant Bruce has
-risen in his stirrups, and as his enemy rushes upon him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-the lance is driven aside by the sweep of his strong arm,
-and the battle-axe, wielded with rare dexterity, stops not
-in its swing of meteor-like speed till down it falls upon
-the helmet of his foe with such true aim and mighty force
-that the weapon shatters the helmet and fractures the
-skull of Sir Henry Bohun, whose fiery steed bears his
-dead body back to the English ranks. Bruce returned
-slowly to his forces, and while some of his friends surrounded
-him, reproaching him for so rashly risking his
-life, the Scottish hero laughingly answered, while looking
-sorrowfully at his notched axe, ‘See! I have spoiled my
-good battle-axe.’”</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 430px;">
-<img src="images/i-361.jpg" width="430" height="619" alt="drwaing of man on hourse looking down on soldiers" />
-<div class="caption">“SEE! I HAVE SPOILED MY GOOD BATTLE-AXE.”</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The battle was commenced by the English at the order
-of King Edward. The shock of the first charge of the
-English cavalry was terrible; and as they were received
-on the spears of the Scottish infantry, the crash was heard
-at a great distance, and many English knights were
-dashed from their saddles by their furious steeds, which
-had been stabbed by the invincible spears of the Scots.
-The centre division, under the gallant Randolph, stood in
-a steady body to receive the charge of the English. These
-compact squares of the Scottish army were well calculated
-to break the masses which were opposed to them, and
-they suffered only from the arrows of the archers. The
-English cavalry charged with the greatest impetuosity,
-and endeavored to pierce through the phalanx of the
-Scottish spearmen; but they received them like a wall of
-iron, while the English receded from the shock like broken
-waves which had spent their fury on the rocks. When
-both armies joined battle, the great horses of England
-rushed upon the Scottish lances as if upon a thick wood,
-and one mighty sound arose from the breaking of the
-lances, the shock of falling horsemen, and the shrieks of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-the dying. The knights sang their war-cries, and rushed
-on to the charge. Groom fought like squire, and squire
-like knight, and yet Scotland’s lion waved proudly over
-her bands, while the English banners rose and fell, and
-many of them were dyed in blood. At last the English
-began to hesitate. “They fly! they fly!” cried the Scots.
-Just then the camp followers of the Scottish army, who
-had been posted on an adjacent hill, excited by the ardor
-of the struggle, began to descend in a mass towards the
-field of battle. The English imagined themselves about
-to be attacked by a fresh army, and began a disorderly
-retreat. Upon which Robert Bruce charged valiantly with
-his reserves, and quickly decided the fate of the day. The
-earl of Pembroke seized the bridle of King Edward’s
-horse and dragged him away from the battle-field. Sir
-Giles d’Argentine accompanied his king out of danger,
-and then rode back fearlessly amidst the conflict, exclaiming,
-“It is not my custom to fly!” This brave knight
-was cut down by the Scots. The victory was complete.
-The fortress of Stirling surrendered immediately. The
-earl of Hereford, who had shut himself up in Bothwell
-castle, offered to capitulate, and was exchanged for the
-wife, daughter, and sister of the king of Scotland, who
-had been imprisoned in England for several years. Thus
-had the independence and freedom of Scotland been obtained
-by the brave Bruce and his dauntless little band of
-patriot warriors. The swords of those who fought at
-Bannockburn were hung up in the halls of their descendants,
-and handed down to modern times as trophies of the
-liberty and independence which they achieved. The beneficial
-effects of this signal victory secured forever the
-independence of Scotland; and when the two kingdoms
-were afterwards united, Scotland received equal rights<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-with England, and the national church of Scotland, with
-her universities and schools, were guaranteed to the people
-of Scotland forever. This famous battle taught the Scottish
-nation a lesson which it never forgot: that a phalanx
-of Caledonian spears, wielded by brave and disciplined
-men on foot, was superior to all the vaunted chivalry of
-the most renowned cavaliers. In 1327 King Edward II.
-of England was dethroned, and his young son was crowned
-in his place. The young prince was but fifteen years of
-age. Scotland had been recovering from her misfortunes
-under the firm and wise government of Robert Bruce.
-The independence of that kingdom had been acknowledged
-by England. The crown jewels, which had been formerly
-seized by Edward I., had been returned, and the little
-princess Joan, who was betrothed to David, the young
-son of Robert Bruce, had been taken to Berwick, accompanied
-by the queen-dowager of England and a splendid
-retinue of attendants. The marriage was soon after celebrated
-with great magnificence. Englishmen and Scots,
-who for half a century had met only as foes upon the
-field of battle, were now joined in friendly courtesies
-through this marriage. King Robert’s wife Elizabeth had
-died before she saw this happy termination of the long
-hostilities.</p>
-
-<p>The Scottish king did not long survive these events.
-He was seized with a severe complaint, then supposed to
-have been leprosy, which at length proved fatal. When
-upon his death-bed he called around him his earls and
-barons, and commended to their care his young son David;
-and the prince was thereupon crowned king of Scotland.
-Robert Bruce, having settled the affairs of his
-kingdom and throne, summoned to his bedside his brave
-and faithful friend and gallant knight, Sir James Douglas,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-and entreated him to take his heart from his body
-after death, and have it embalmed, and carry it to the
-Holy Land, and leave it there in the Holy Sepulchre, in
-obedience to a vow he had made. “When I was hard
-beset,” said the dying king, “I vowed to God that if I
-should live to see an end of my wars and Scotland free, I
-would raise the sacred standard against the enemies of
-my Lord and Saviour. But as I cannot myself accomplish
-this vow, I know no knight more worthy for the mission
-of bearing the heart of King Robert of Scotland to the
-Holy Land.” To this affecting request Lord Douglas replied,
-with tears in his eyes, “Ah, most gentle and noble
-king! A thousand times I thank you for the great honor
-you have done me in making me the bearer of so great
-and precious a treasure. Most faithfully and willingly,
-to the best of my power, shall I obey your commands.”
-Then the dying king answered,—</p>
-
-<p>“Now praised be God! for I shall die in peace, since I
-am assured, by the faith you owe to your God and the
-order of knighthood, that the best and most valiant knight
-of my kingdom has promised to achieve for me that which
-I myself could never accomplish.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus died Robert Bruce, king of Scotland, in the fifty-fifth
-year of his age and the twenty-fourth of his reign.
-His remains were deposited in the church of Dumfermline,
-where he was enshrined under a rich marble monument
-from Paris. The censures of excommunication pronounced
-by the Pope having been removed some time
-before, the religious services at his burial were performed
-by many prelates and bishops.</p>
-
-<p>Many years afterwards his tomb was opened, and the
-lead in which his body had been wrapped was found
-twisted into the shape of a rude crown, covered with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-rich cloth of gold, which had been thrown over it. It
-was ascertained that the breast-bone had been sawn asunder
-in order to fulfil his request of taking out his heart;
-but that proud form, before which the king of England
-had trembled on his throne, had crumbled into dust.
-Robert Bruce, king of Scotland, is one of the most exalted
-warriors to be found in those early times. The virtues
-of his character were formed, and acquired their
-bright polish, in the school of adversity. One of the early
-writers says of him, “If any one should undertake to
-describe his individual conflicts and personal success, those
-courageous and single-handed combats in which, by the
-favor of God and his own great strength and courage, he
-would often penetrate into the thickest of the enemy, now
-becoming the assailant and cutting down all who opposed
-him, at another time acting on the defensive, and escaping
-from inevitable death,—if any writer shall do this, he
-will prove, if I am not mistaken, that he had no equal in
-his own time either in knightly prowess or in strength and
-vigor of body.” The true greatness of Robert Bruce
-appeared in his humanity, moderation, and pity for the
-sufferings of others, which led him in the hour of victory
-to be generous to his prisoners even though he had suffered
-such bitter wrongs at the hands of his English foes.
-His manners were kingly and engaging, his disposition
-singularly gentle, courteous, and without selfishness.
-Yet he was high-spirited, and full of noble energy and
-enthusiasm. In person he was tall and well proportioned,
-being five feet ten inches high. His shoulders were broad,
-his chest capacious, and his limbs powerful and possessing
-marvellous strength. He possessed an open and
-cheerful countenance, shaded by short curled hair. His
-forehead was low, his cheek-bones strong and prominent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-with a wound on his lower jaw. Though the expression
-of his face was usually pleasing and kindly, he could assume
-a look of stern, kingly dignity, which awed his enemies,
-and gained him the necessary respect due to his rank
-and commanding position as Scotland’s king, and also her
-bravest and most valiant knight. He was one of the most
-successful military leaders of the age. Well may Scotland
-boast of her brave Robert Bruce, the most famous of
-all her rulers, the deliverer of her enslaved people, the
-upholder of her liberty, her hero-king and most chivalrous
-knight!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>FERDINAND V. OF SPAIN.<br />
-
-<small>1452-1516 A.D.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="quotec">
-“Every monarch is subject to a mightier one.”—<span class="smcap">Seneca.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">FOR many years after the great Saracen invasion in
-the eighth century, Spain was divided into various
-small states. In the fifteenth century these were so
-united as to form four,—Castile, Aragon, Navarre, and
-the Moorish kingdom of Granada. The province of
-Granada was all that remained to the Moslems of their
-once vast possessions in the peninsula. On the 10th of
-March, 1452, in the little town of Sos, Ferdinand, son of
-King John of Aragon, was born. The early Spanish historians
-note with care the good omens attending this
-event. The sun, which had been obscured with clouds
-during the whole day, suddenly broke forth with unwonted
-splendor. A crown was also beheld in the sky, composed
-of various brilliant colors, like those of a rainbow. All
-which appearances were interpreted by the spectators as
-an omen that the child then born would be the most illustrious
-among men. As this event was also nearly contemporary
-with the capture of Constantinople, it was
-afterwards regarded by the Catholic Church as a providential
-provision in behalf of the religion of which Ferdinand
-became such a staunch supporter, as his zealous life
-might be regarded as an ample counterbalance to the loss
-of the capital of Christendom. One year before this time,
-in the palace of the king of Castile, on the 22d of April,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-1451, a little princess had been born, and christened Isabella.
-This Spanish princess was descended, both on her
-father’s and mother’s side, from the famous John of
-Gaunt, duke of Lancaster.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 428px;">
-<img src="images/i-369.jpg" width="428" height="497" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">FERDINAND OF ARAGON.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But around the cradles of these two royal babies many
-contentions arose, which we cannot stop to note. When
-Isabella was four years of age, her father died, and her
-half-brother Henry became king of Castile; and, as she
-had still another brother, Alfonso, there did not seem to
-be much probability that she would succeed to the throne.
-She retired with her mother to the small town of Arevalo,
-where she was educated with care, and instructed in lessons
-of practical piety, until she reached her fourteenth
-year.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the little Prince Ferdinand, in Aragon, was
-surrounded with constant contentions between his father,
-king of Aragon, and his half-brother Carlos. Joan, the
-mother of Ferdinand, was the second wife of King John.
-She was a proud, ambitious woman, much younger than
-her husband, and was of the blood royal of Castile, being
-the daughter of Don Frederic Henriquez, admiral of that
-kingdom. She hated her step-son Carlos, who was heir
-to the throne, as she regarded him as an obstacle to the
-advancement of her own child, Ferdinand. We cannot
-stop to note all the family broils occasioned by Joan’s
-jealousy. Prince Carlos seems to have been a youth of
-many attractions of mind and body, and was the idol of
-the people. So, when King John, influenced by his wife
-Joan, succeeded in having Carlos arrested, and placed in
-strict confinement, the entire kingdom was thrown into
-excitement. The people sprang to arms, determined to
-release the prince; and they were so threatening that
-King John fled with his wife to Saragossa. The insurrection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-now spread throughout Aragon, Valencia, and
-Navarre, and even into King John’s possessions in Sardinia
-and Sicily. At length, the frightened king saw the
-necessity of releasing his prisoner. Prince Carlos was
-received by the people with wild enthusiasm; and the
-king could only make peace with his subjects by a public
-acknowledgment of Carlos as his rightful heir and successor.
-But Carlos did not long survive this triumph.
-He fell sick of a fever, and died in 1461. Some historians
-hint that the prince was poisoned, to make way for
-the youthful Ferdinand, now ten years of age, and who
-was immediately declared heir to the throne. The queen-mother
-then took Ferdinand to Catalonia, to receive the
-homage of that province; but the Catalonian nobles, who
-were exasperated against the king on account of his treatment
-of Carlos, displayed so much hostility that the young
-prince and his mother were obliged to take refuge in the
-fortress of Gerona. Here they were at last relieved by
-King John. But the Catalans then seceded from the
-authority of the king of Aragon, and they presented the
-crown to the duke of Lorraine, who marched with an
-army of eight thousand men against the old king of Aragon,
-whose treasury was empty, and who had become
-totally blind. In this emergency, the mother of Ferdinand,
-who was a brave woman, placed herself at the head
-of such forces as she could collect; and, with her young
-son Ferdinand riding by her side, she heroically marched
-against the enemies of her husband, and attacked the
-duke of Lorraine with such impetuosity that she drove
-him in confusion from Gerona. In this encounter, young
-Ferdinand came near being taken captive.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 358px;">
-<img src="images/i-373.jpg" width="358" height="513" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">ISABELLA OF CASTILE.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the Princess Isabella was nearly sacrificed
-to the ambition of her half-brother, who was king of Castile.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-The beautiful princess, who had now been brought
-from her retirement in Arevalo to her brother’s court, had
-many suitors for her hand. Her half-brother, King Henry,
-promised his sister in marriage to a rich but wicked old
-nobleman; and great preparations were made for the
-wedding. The anguish of the poor Princess Isabella was
-so great that she shut herself up in her apartment, praying
-to God, with groans and tears, that He would deliver
-her from this impending doom. Still, the wedding preparations
-went on. Meanwhile, the wicked old nobleman
-set out from his palace to claim his youthful and beautiful
-bride. But God had heard the prayers of the afflicted
-princess; and, as the aged bridegroom reached a small
-village, at the end of the first day’s travel, he was suddenly
-seized with an attack of quinsy, which terminated
-his life.</p>
-
-<p>The nobles of Castile now entreated Isabella to allow
-herself to be proclaimed Queen of Castile, in opposition to
-her brother, whom they all hated. Her other brother,
-Alfonso, who would have been heir, had previously died.
-But Isabella was too noble to seek such revenge upon her
-cruel brother; but the nobles forced the king to declare
-her his successor to the throne, and to promise that she
-should not be forced to marry against her will.</p>
-
-<p>The king of Portugal now desired to secure Isabella
-for his bride; and her brother threatened to imprison her
-unless she would yield. As overtures had been made by
-the young and handsome Prince Ferdinand of Aragon for
-the hand of the fair Isabella, and as her heart was also
-inclined towards this handsome prince, she determined, in
-spite of her brother, to accept the proffered hand of Ferdinand.
-The marriage articles were signed on the 7th of
-January, 1469. Isabella was aided by the archbishop of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-Toledo, who raised a regiment of dragoons, and carried
-her in triumph to Valladolid, where she was greeted by
-the people with the wildest enthusiasm. Meanwhile, her
-brother attempted to prevent Ferdinand from entering
-Castile to marry Isabella. As the father of Ferdinand
-was so pressed by a war with his nobles, he could not
-afford his son an armed escort sufficient to secure his
-safety. So Ferdinand resolved to go disguised as a merchant.
-With half a dozen companions, Ferdinand started
-upon this adventuresome expedition to secure his lovely
-bride, in spite of hostile foes. Amidst many perils they
-pressed on their way. One night, at an inn, they lost
-their purse, containing all their money. At length they
-were met by an escort, sent by Isabella for their protection.
-The fair princess, with her little court, was at
-Valladolid. Ferdinand, accompanied by four attendants,
-rode privately to Valladolid, where he was received by the
-bishop of Toledo, and conducted to the presence of Isabella.
-The young prince was very handsome, tall and
-fair, with an intelligent countenance and intellectual brow.
-He was eighteen years of age. He was well educated,
-and of temperate habits. He was graceful and courtly in
-manner, and seemed a fitting mate for the beautiful princess
-of nineteen, of whom a contemporary writer says,
-“She was the handsomest lady whom I ever beheld, and
-the most gracious in her manners.”</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 445px;">
-<img src="images/i-378.jpg" width="445" height="535" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">SEGOVIA: THE ALCAZAR AND CATHEDRAL.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Isabella was highly educated for those times, and spoke
-the Castilian language with grace and purity. After a
-brief lover’s interview of two hours, Ferdinand returned
-to Duenas, where he had left his companions. Preparations
-were immediately made for the marriage, which was
-solemnized at the palace of one of the nobles in Valladolid,
-on the morning of the 19th of October, 1469. Ferdinand,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-having lost his slender purse by the way, was without
-money; and Isabella, being a fugitive from her brother’s
-court, was also without means. But the royal couple
-readily borrowed the money necessary to defray the expenses
-of the wedding. King Henry now determined to
-cast aside Isabella, and place upon the throne Joanna, the
-daughter of his second wife. This was a blow to Isabella,
-for now the court of Castile, aided by the king of France,
-were combined against her. Ferdinand and Isabella held
-their little court at Duenas, in humble style. In 1474,
-the brother of Isabella, Henry IV., king of Castile, died,
-and she was proclaimed queen. Isabella was at that time
-in Segovia. Attended by an imposing retinue, she rode
-upon a beautiful steed, whose bridle was held by two high
-officers of the crown, and she was escorted to her seat
-upon the splendid throne, which had been erected in one
-of the public squares of the city. As the people gazed
-with admiration upon their beautiful queen, a herald
-cried,—</p>
-
-<p>“Castile, Castile, for the king Don Ferdinand, and
-his consort Dona Isabella, queen proprietor of these
-kingdoms!”</p>
-
-<p>The queen took the oath of office, and then repaired to
-the cathedral, to pray at the altar. Ferdinand was at
-this time in Aragon, and when he returned he was greatly
-displeased with the document prepared by the dignitaries
-of Castile, in which Isabella alone was declared heir to
-the throne of Castile, but Ferdinand was associated with
-her in the performance of many acts of royalty. But,
-persuaded by his wife, he agreed to submit.</p>
-
-<p>Alfonso V., the king of Portugal, now invaded Castile.
-Ferdinand and Isabella raised an army and met the foe
-at Toro. The powerful bishop of Toledo, exasperated by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-the independence of opinion which Ferdinand and Isabella
-displayed, whom he had supposed would be pliant
-tools in his hands, joined Alfonso against them. The
-strife was too desperate to last long. There was a hand-to-hand
-fight along the entire line. At length a storm
-arose. A dark night came down upon the conflicting
-hosts. A deluge of rain fell, and the field was flooded
-with mingled blood and water. The Portuguese were
-utterly routed. Ferdinand displayed great humanity to
-his prisoners, furnishing them with food, clothing, and a
-safe return to their own country.</p>
-
-<p>Isabella was awaiting the issue of the battle at Tordisillas,
-twenty miles above on the river. When she received
-tidings of the victory, she ordered a procession to
-the Church of St. Paul, as an expression of her gratitude
-to God, and she herself walked barefoot in the garb
-of a penitent. In a few months, the entire kingdom of
-Castile acknowledged the supremacy of Ferdinand and
-Isabella.</p>
-
-<p>In 1479, the king of Aragon died, leaving the kingdoms
-of Aragon and Navarre to his son Ferdinand. Aragon,
-Castile, and Navarre, being thus united under these two
-illustrious monarchs, the great Spanish monarchy was
-thereby founded.</p>
-
-<p>Ferdinand and Isabella now commenced the enterprise
-of conquering Granada, thus expelling the Moors from
-their last foothold in Spain. Malaga, on the coast of the
-Mediterranean, was one of the principal Moorish towns.
-The Moors were aware of the importance of this position,
-and had strongly fortified it. The Moors were as brave
-as the Christians, and were led by famous chieftains.
-In April, 1487, Ferdinand, at the head of fifty thousand
-men, arrived before Malaga, and commenced its siege.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-There were continual ambuscades, and nightly sallies.
-One day, while Ferdinand was dining in his tent, which
-commanded a view of the field of conflict, he perceived a
-party of Christians, who had been sent to fortify an eminence,
-retreating in confusion, pursued by the Moors.
-King Ferdinand leaped upon his horse, not delaying for
-any defensive armor, rallied his men, and charged against
-the enemy. Having thrown his lance, he endeavored to
-draw his sword from its scabbard. But the sword held
-fast, the scabbard having been by some accident, indented.
-Just then several Moors surrounded him. The king would
-have been slain had not two brave cavaliers rushed to his
-rescue. The nobles remonstrated with the king for so
-risking his life, but Ferdinand unselfishly answered,—</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot stop to calculate chances, when my subjects
-are perilling their lives for my sake.”</p>
-
-<p>After a siege of ten days, one of the outposts of Malaga
-was captured by the Spaniards, who now pressed triumphantly
-forward to assault the city itself. Ferdinand
-first attempted to induce the Moors to capitulate, by generous
-offers, to the commander. But he loyally replied,
-“I am stationed here to defend the place to the last extremity.
-The Christian king cannot offer a bribe large
-enough to induce me to betray my trust.” Ferdinand
-then encompassed the city by sea and by land. Queen
-Isabella joined him, and her presence inspired the Spaniards
-with fresh courage. When she arrived with a brilliant
-train of ladies and cavaliers, an imposing escort was
-sent to meet her, and she was conducted to the encampment
-with great magnificence of parade, and many demonstrations
-of joy.</p>
-
-<p>The assault was now renewed more fiercely than ever.
-Famine at length caused great suffering amongst the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-Moors. They had consumed most of their ammunition,
-while the Spanish army was constantly re-enforced by
-new volunteers. King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella
-maintained strict religious discipline in their camp. Neither
-oaths nor gambling was allowed, and the rites of
-the Roman Catholic Church were performed with imposing
-ceremony. Gradually the Christians gained ground.
-They succeeded in blowing up one of the towers, thereby
-obtaining entrance into the city. The citizens of Malaga,
-suffering from pestilence and famine, had been reduced to
-living upon the flesh of horses, dogs, and cats. Everywhere
-the most appalling misery was seen. Many were
-dying in the streets. In view of their sufferings, Hamet
-Zeli, the Moorish commander, gave the citizens permission
-to make the best terms they could with their conqueror.
-Ferdinand would listen to nothing, however, but unconditional
-surrender. At length the citizens sent a deputation
-to Ferdinand, declaring that they were willing to
-resign to him the city, the fortifications, and all the property,
-if he would spare their lives, and give them their
-freedom. “If these terms are refused,” they added,
-“we will take the six hundred Christian captives, who are
-in our hands, and hang them like dogs on the battlements.
-We will then enclose our old men, women, and children
-in the fortress, set fire to the town, and sell our lives as
-dearly as possible, in the attempt to cut our way through
-our enemies. Thus if you gain a victory, it shall be such
-a one as will make the name of Malaga ring throughout
-the world, to ages yet unborn.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-383.jpg" width="600" height="401" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">THE CATHEDRAL AND PORT OF MALAGA.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In answer, Ferdinand replied, “If a single hair of a
-Christian’s head is harmed, I will put to the sword every
-man, woman, and child in the city.”</p>
-
-<p>The citizens in hopeless despair, cast themselves upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-the mercy of Ferdinand, unconditionally surrendering the
-city.</p>
-
-<p>On the 18th day of August, 1487, the Spanish army,
-headed by Ferdinand and Isabella, with great military and
-ecclesiastical pomp, entered the city, and repaired to the
-cathedral, where the <i>Te Deum</i> was for the first time performed
-within its walls. The Christian captives were
-liberated from the Moorish dungeons. They presented
-a dreadful spectacle, which drew tears from all eyes.
-This band of sufferers, many of whom had languished in
-dark cells for fifteen years, were brought forth, haggard,
-emaciated, and heavily manacled with chains. Being
-freed from their fetters, Ferdinand and Isabella addressed
-to them kind words of sympathy, and dismissed them with
-rich gifts.</p>
-
-<p>The heroic Moorish chieftain, who had so gallantly
-defended the city, was brought loaded with chains before
-his conqueror. Upon being questioned why he had so
-long persisted, he replied, “I was commissioned to defend
-the place to the last extremity. Had I been properly
-supported, I would have died sooner than have surrendered.”</p>
-
-<p>Then came the doom of the Moors. The entire population
-of the city, amounting to about twenty thousand,
-were condemned to slavery. Men, women, and children
-were alike sentenced by the Christians. One-third were
-sent to Africa in exchange for Christians imprisoned
-there. Another portion were sold to the highest bidder,
-to procure money to defray the expenses of the war. The
-Pope at Rome received one hundred Moorish soldiers.
-The Moorish girls were renowned for their great beauty;
-fifty of the most beautiful of these were sent by Isabella
-as a gift to the Queen of Naples, and thirty to the Queen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-of Portugal. All the property of the victims was seized
-by the crown. Cruel as this doom appears to us, it was
-regarded at that time as mild and humane, though now
-one shudders at such unchristian barbarity. But in justice,
-the excuse must be made for Ferdinand and Isabella,
-that they supposed that thereby the Moslem Moors would
-be more likely to become converts to the Christian religion,
-even in slavery. It is said that Isabella was urged by the
-clergy to put all the captured Moors to death, as a warning
-to others. The city of Malaga was now re-inhabited
-by the Spaniards.</p>
-
-<p>In the next year, Ferdinand, with a force of twenty
-thousand men, marched against Granada, the capital of
-the Moorish kingdom. The Christians were driven back
-in confusion into their own territory. The year following,
-King Ferdinand collected an army of ninety-five thousand
-men. The cavalry was composed of the highest nobility
-of the realm. The Christians advanced upon Baza. The
-Moors sallied forth from the city to meet their foes; a
-fierce battle lasted for twelve hours, when the Moors were
-forced to retreat within the city walls. The conflict had
-been so severe, however, that the Spanish generals counselled
-an abandonment of the siege. Ferdinand, relying
-upon the wisdom and great mental endowments of his
-wife, sent dispatches to Jaen, where Isabella then was,
-asking her advice. Her reply was so encouraging that
-the siege was renewed. The summer and winter passed
-away; the Christians suffered much during the floods of
-rain which inundated their camp. The energetic queen,
-however, came to their rescue, and sent six thousand
-pioneers to repair the roads; and she even pawned the
-crown jewels and her own ornaments, to raise money to
-furnish her husband’s forces with supplies. The Moorish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-women within the city displayed heroism equal to that of
-the Christian queen. At length, as the Spanish troops
-began to despond, Ferdinand sent for his brave wife to
-come to the camp, that her presence might inspire them
-with fresh courage. An historian thus describes the
-coming of the queen:—</p>
-
-<p>“On the 7th of November, the queen, accompanied by
-her daughter Isabella, several ladies of honor, a choir of
-beautiful maidens, and a brilliant escort, entered the camp
-of Ferdinand. The inhabitants of Baza crowded their
-walls and towers to gaze upon the glittering pageant as it
-wound its way through the defiles of the mountains and
-emerged upon the plain, with gold-embroidered banners
-and strains of martial music. The Spanish cavaliers
-sallied forth in a body from their camp to receive their
-beloved queen and to greet her with an enthusiastic reception.
-The presence of this extraordinary woman, in whose
-character there was combined with feminine grace so much
-of manly self-reliance and energy, not only reanimated the
-drooping spirits of the besiegers, but convinced the
-besieged that the Spanish army would never withdraw
-until the place was surrendered. Though there was no
-want of food for the beleagured Moors, their ammunition
-was nearly expended, and the garrison was greatly reduced
-by sickness, wounds, and death.”</p>
-
-<p>Soon after the arrival of Isabella, the Moorish garrison
-offered to capitulate. Ferdinand was so anxious to secure
-the place, that he agreed to allow the army to march out
-with the honors of war, and the citizens to retire with
-their property at their pleasure. The fall of Baza secured
-the surrender of many other important strongholds of the
-Moslems. Granada, the capital of the Moorish kingdom,
-was still in the possession of the Moors. Ferdinand, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-1491, having raised another army, encamped within six
-miles of this city. Abdallah, the king of the Spanish
-Moors, was in personal command at Granada. The city
-possessed a population of two hundred thousand people.</p>
-
-<p>The situation of Granada was exceedingly picturesque.
-A wild, rugged mountain range, whose summits were
-crowned with snow, protected the city upon the south.
-On the north was a beautiful plain, blooming with flowers,
-and beyond, groves and vineyards reached for thirty
-leagues. But upon this lovely spot occurred scenes of
-blended heroism and revolting carnage, which have made
-the fall of Granada famous for all time.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes a company of Moors, clad in armor, and
-mounted upon their fiery Arabian chargers, would ride
-forth from the gates, while bugle-blasts rang shrill upon
-the air, and challenge an equal number of Christian
-knights to combat. Promptly the defiance was met. All
-the citizens of Granada crowded the house-tops, battlements,
-and towers of the city, to watch the exciting conflict.
-Both armies rested upon their arms, breathlessly
-awaiting the issue. Again, some brave Christian knight
-would ride forth alone and challenge a Moorish cavalier
-to combat. The ladies of the two hostile courts cheered
-their respective champion with their fair presence and
-encouraging smiles; and never did knight or cavalier fight
-more valiantly to win the prize of victory. The memory
-of these brilliant but deadly tourneys still inspires the
-songs of the Castilians. Spanish ballads glow with
-thrilling descriptions of these knightly tourneys; and the
-prowess of Moslem, as well as Christian warriors, sheds
-undying glory over the conquest of Granada.</p>
-
-<p>Queen Isabella took an active part in all the military
-operations of the Spanish army. She often appeared upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-the field, encased in full armor, mounted upon a splendid
-steed; and her presence always inspired her troops to
-fresh deeds of valor. Isabella occupied in the camp
-a pavilion, richly draped with silken hangings. One
-night, a gust of wind blew the fringes of one of the curtains
-into the flame of a lamp, and soon the entire pavilion
-was in a blaze. The conflagration spread to other tents,
-and it was only with great difficulty that the entire camp
-was preserved from destruction. The queen and her
-children were in great danger of being destroyed. In
-consequence of this accident, Ferdinand, to prevent a like
-occurrence, ordered a city of substantial houses to be built
-upon the spot occupied by his army. In three months,
-a large and stately city arose. The soldiers wished to
-call it Isabella, in honor of their idolized queen, but she
-named it Santa Fé, in recognition of her faith in Providence.
-The city still stands.</p>
-
-<p>The Moors were now convinced that their Spanish foes
-were determined to remain until the Crescent should give
-place to the Cross. The citizens of Granada were suffering
-from famine. Abdallah, therefore, surrendered
-Granada to the Christians on the second day of January,
-1492.</p>
-
-<p>This last great act in one of the sublimest of historical
-dramas—the invasion of Spain by the Moors—was performed
-with the most imposing martial and religious rites.
-The Alhambra was first taken possession of by veteran
-Christian troops, including the body-guard of the king.
-Ferdinand, surrounded by a very brilliant <i>cortège</i> glittering
-in polished armor, took his station near an Arabian
-mosque, now called the hermitage of St. Sebastian. At
-a short distance in the rear the queen Isabella took her
-position, accompanied by a no less splendid retinue, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-high-born warriors proudly displaying the armorial bearings
-of their families. The immense column of the Christian
-army commenced its march up the Hill of Martyrs
-into the city. Abdallah, accompanied by fifty cavaliers,
-passed them, descending the hill to make the surrender
-of himself to Ferdinand. The heart-broken Moor threw
-himself from his horse, and would have seized the hand
-of Ferdinand to kiss it in token of homage, but the Christian
-king magnanimously spared him the humiliation, and
-threw his arms around the deposed monarch in a respectful
-and affectionate embrace. Abdallah then presented
-the keys of the Alhambra to the conqueror, saying,—</p>
-
-<p>“They are thine, O king, since Allah so decrees it.
-Use thy success with clemency and moderation.”</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 430px;">
-<img src="images/i-391.jpg" width="430" height="647" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">PATIO DE LOS LEONES (COURT OF LIONS), ALHAMBRA.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>He then, not waiting for the words of consolation which
-the king was about to utter, rode on to offer the same acts
-of submission and homage to Queen Isabella. In the
-mean time the Castilian army, winding slowly up the hill
-and around the walls, entered the city by the gate of Los
-Molinos. The large silver cross which Ferdinand had
-ever borne with him in his crusade against the Moors was
-now elevated upon the Alhambra, while the banners of
-the conqueror were proudly unfurled from its towers.
-“It was the signal for the whole army to fall upon its
-knees in recognition of that providence which had granted
-them so great a victory. The solemn strains of the <i>Te
-Deum</i>, performed by the choir of the royal chapel, then
-swelled majestically over the prostrate host. The Spanish
-grandees now gathered around Isabella, and kneeling,
-kissed her hand, in recognition of her sovereignty as queen
-of Granada.”</p>
-
-<p>Abdallah, however, did not remain as a sad witness of
-these scenes. With a small band he took his way to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-mountains. From one of the rocky eminences he sorrowfully
-gazed upon the beautiful realms over which his
-ancestors had reigned for more than seven hundred years.
-With eyes filled with tears he exclaimed, “Alas! when
-were woes ever equal to mine!”</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon his mother cruelly replied, “You do well to
-weep as a woman for what you could not defend like a
-man!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus “The Last Sigh of the Moor,” and the cruel yet
-Spartan-like heroism of the Moorish queen-mother, have
-passed into the romantic annals of history.</p>
-
-<p>While Ferdinand and Isabella were at Santa Fé, Columbus
-arrived at their camp. We have not space to give
-here a history of Christopher Columbus. We can but
-note a few important incidents. The Atlantic Ocean was
-then unexplored. Columbus, who was employed in the
-construction of maps and charts, became convinced that
-countries existed upon the other side of the globe. He
-was laughed at as an enthusiast, and when he declared
-that the world was round, one of the sages of the fifteenth
-century replied, “Can any one be so foolish as to believe
-that the world is round, and that there are people on the
-side opposite to ours who walk with their heels upward
-and their heads hanging down, like flies clinging to the
-ceiling? that there is a part of the world where trees grow
-with their branches hanging downwards, and where it
-rains, hails, and snows upwards?”</p>
-
-<p>The doctrine of Columbus was not only regarded as
-absurd, but it was thought to be heretical. Columbus,
-fully convinced of the truth of his ideas, appealed first to
-the king of Portugal for means to fit out a fleet to start
-out on a voyage of discovery. Meeting with refusal, he
-visited the Spanish court in 1487. At this time Ferdinand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-and Isabella were with the army, encamped before
-Malaga. The war with the Moors continuing, the Spanish
-sovereigns declared that they could give the matter no
-attention until the conclusion of the war. Disheartened,
-Columbus was about to apply to the king of France, when
-the prior of the convent of La Rabida, at Palos, who
-firmly believed in the scheme of Columbus, and who had
-formerly been confessor to Isabella, wrote to the queen,
-urging that Spain might not lose so great an opportunity.
-Isabella was so much impressed by the letter of the worthy
-prior that she immediately requested that Columbus
-should come to Santa Fé, where she was then residing, as
-the Spanish army were still besieging Granada. Columbus
-arrived there just as the Moorish banner was torn
-down, and the flag of Spain was unfurled upon the towers
-of the Alhambra. In the midst of these rejoicings Columbus
-presented his plans. “I wish,” said he, “for a
-few ships and a few sailors to traverse between two and
-three thousand miles of the ocean, thus to point out a new
-and short route to India, and reveal new nations, majestic
-in wealth and power. These realms are peopled by
-immortal beings, for whom Christ has died. It is my mission
-to search them out, and to carry to them the Gospel
-of salvation. Wealth will also flow in from this discovery.
-With this wealth we can raise armies, and rescue
-the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem from the hands of the
-infidels. I ask only in return that I may be appointed
-viceroy over the realms I discover, and that I shall receive
-one-tenth of the profits which may accrue.”</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 379px;">
-<img src="images/i-395.jpg" width="379" height="509" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">COLUMBUS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Spanish courtiers were astonished at what they
-deemed audacious demands, and persuaded the queen to
-refuse. Whereupon, Columbus sadly saddled his mule to
-retrace his steps, and to offer his services to the king of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-France. Isabella was troubled, as she thought over these
-offers and requests of Columbus, and she expressed to
-Ferdinand her perplexities. He replied, “The royal
-finances are exhausted by the war. We have no money
-in the treasury for such an enterprise.” The queen then
-enthusiastically exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<p>“I will undertake the enterprise for my own crown of
-Castile; and I will pledge my private jewels to raise the
-necessary funds.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus the discovery of a continent hung upon the vanity,
-or heroism, of a woman! But the character of Isabella
-was equal to the emergency. The matter was quickly
-settled. A courier was sent to overtake the disappointed
-Columbus, who was pursuing his weary way through the
-sand, overwhelmed with gloom. For eighteen years he
-had been in vain endeavoring to carry out his cherished
-plans. Joyfully he returned to Santa Fé, where the queen
-received him with great kindness, and assented to his
-demands. Columbus succeeded in obtaining three small
-vessels,—two furnished by the Spanish government, and
-one by Martin Alonzo Pinzon, a wealthy Spaniard. The
-total number who joined the expedition was one hundred
-and fifty.</p>
-
-<p>The enterprise was deemed so hazardous that it was
-with great difficulty that a crew could be obtained. This
-was in the fifteenth century. In view of the marvellous
-progress in knowledge, discovery, invention, and an
-enlightened Christianity, in the past four hundred years,
-in comparison with the ignorance and superstitions of preceding
-epochs, any student of history will be led most
-emphatically to exclaim, Surely the world was never so
-advanced in knowledge, true civilization, and pure religion
-as to-day! With all the wickedness at the present time,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-the study of history reveals the fact, that the world was
-never so good, pure, and Christian as now.</p>
-
-<p>On the 3d of August, 1492, the small squadron unfurled
-its sails for the momentous voyage. At the close of a
-week they arrived at the Canary Islands, which were on
-the frontiers of the known world. On the 6th of September,
-they again set sail.</p>
-
-<p>Day after day passed; but no land came in sight.
-Sixty-seven days had now passed since the Highlands of
-Spain had disappeared from their view. They had met
-with indications which made them hope that land was
-near. A branch of a shrub, with leaves and berries upon
-it, had been picked up; and a small piece of wood, curiously
-carved, had been found drifting upon the water. It
-was the 11th of October. As the sun went down, and the
-stars appeared, Columbus took his stand upon the poop of
-his vessel. About ten o’clock, he was startled by the
-gleam of what seemed to be a torch far in the distance.
-For a moment it blazed, then disappeared. Was it a
-meteor, or a light from the land? Not an eye was closed
-on the ships that night. At two o’clock in the morning,
-a sailor at the mast-head shouted, “Land, land, land!”
-The day dawned; and a glimpse of paradise seemed to
-have been unveiled before their enraptured gaze. A
-beautiful island was spread out, luxuriously green, and
-adorned with every variety of tropical vegetation. The
-boats were lowered, and manned. The banner of Spain,
-emblazoned with the cross, floated from every prow.
-Columbus, richly attired in a scarlet dress, entered his
-boat, and was rowed towards the shore, where multitudes
-of the natives stood, gazing, spell-bound, upon the strange
-sight. Columbus leaped upon the shore, and, falling
-upon his knees, gave thanks to God. With imposing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-ceremony, the banner of Spain was planted upon the soil;
-and the island was called San Salvador, in recognition of
-the protecting care of Providence. We have not space
-to note the other discoveries of Columbus upon this voyage.
-Continuing his explorations in that part of the
-country, he discovered the islands of Exuma, Yuma, and
-Cuba. Of Cuba, Columbus wrote, “It is the most beautiful
-island that eyes ever beheld.” During a short tour
-up one of the picturesque streams of Cuba, Columbus met
-with a bulbous root, about as large as an apple, which the
-natives used as food, roasting it in the ashes. They
-called it <i>batatas</i>. Columbus and his men were hunting
-for gold; but this discovery of the indispensable potato
-has proved a much richer prize to mankind. Here, also,
-he saw the natives rolling up in their hands dried leaves
-of a certain plant, which they lighted and smoked. These
-leaves they called tobacco. This discovery has proved a
-curse, rather than a blessing, to the world.</p>
-
-<p>After discovering the islands of the Nativity and
-Hayti, or Saint Domingo, Columbus determined to return
-to Spain, to secure a more efficient fleet. The return voyage
-was extremely tempestuous. During the gloomy
-hours of storm and danger, fearing that they should never
-see land again, Columbus wrote an account of his discoveries
-upon parchment, wrapped it in waxed cloth, and,
-enclosing it in a water-tight cask, set it adrift. A copy,
-similarly prepared, was kept upon the ship. On the 15th
-of March, not quite seven months and a half from the
-time of his departure, Columbus, with his little crew,
-entered the harbor of Palos. Ferdinand and Isabella
-were at Barcelona. They immediately wrote to Columbus,
-requesting him to repair to their court. His journey
-thither was a triumphal march. Ferdinand and Isabella<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-were seated beneath a silken canopy, to receive him with
-the most imposing ceremonies of state. As a remarkable
-act of condescension, both Ferdinand and Isabella rose,
-upon the approach of Columbus, and offered him their
-hands to kiss. The Indians and other trophies from the
-New World which he had brought back with him, occasioned
-the greatest surprise. Then Columbus narrated
-to the Spanish sovereigns the story of his voyage. But
-we are obliged to give an account of the shame, as well
-as glory, of the Spanish court. Ferdinand and Isabella
-were rigid Catholics; so much so, that Ferdinand is called
-in history “Ferdinand the Catholic,” and Isabella received
-also the same title. The Inquisition, which had existed
-somewhat mildly before, was re-established by them. We
-cannot give the details of those persecutions here, which
-we narrate more fully when the Inquisition appears with
-greater cruelty and ferocity in the life of Philip II.
-During the reign of Ferdinand, the persecution fell mostly
-upon the Jews. Just as the Spanish sovereigns were
-about entering into engagements with Columbus to send
-him in search of a new world, that Christianity might be
-carried to the heathens there, the unchristian and cruel
-edict was issued for the expulsion of the Jews from Spain.
-We have not space to describe the heart-rending sufferings
-of this persecuted people.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 435px;">
-<img src="images/i-401.jpg" width="435" height="648" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">PRISON OF THE INQUISITION AT BARCELONA.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>While at Barcelona, in 1492, Ferdinand narrowly escaped
-being killed by an assassin. King Ferdinand had
-not much intellectual culture; and Isabella was far superior
-to her husband in literary attainments. But Ferdinand
-was a capable man in the military and practical
-affairs of his kingdom. The children of Ferdinand and
-Isabella received unusual education for those times, and
-acquired rare attainments. Prince John, heir to their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-throne, was reared with the greatest care. But just after
-the marriage of the young prince to Princess Margaret,
-daughter of the Emperor Maximilian of Austria, which
-was celebrated with great magnificence, Prince John was
-stricken with a fever, and died. Thus perished their only
-son. Their eldest daughter, Isabella, who had married
-the king of Portugal, died soon after the death of her
-brother, Prince John. This daughter left a babe, who
-thus became heir to Portugal, Aragon, and Castile; but
-ere a year had passed the infant also sank into the grave.
-Their daughter Joanna was married to the archduke
-Philip, son and heir of Maximilian. This unhappy princess
-was the mother of Charles V. of Spain. But her life
-was clouded with gloom, occasioned by her husband’s
-neglect, which at last caused her insanity. The youngest
-daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella, Catharine of Aragon,
-afterwards had the misfortune to marry the infamous
-Henry VIII. of England. Thus, the last days of these
-illustrious sovereigns were overshadowed with heart-rending
-sorrows. We can barely note the subsequent discoveries
-of Columbus. Before his second voyage, while at
-Barcelona, he was invited by the grand cardinal of Spain
-to dine with him. An envious guest inquired of Columbus
-if he thought that there was no man in Spain capable
-of discovering the Indies, if he had not made the discovery.
-Columbus, without replying to the question, took
-an egg from the table, and asked if there was any one who
-could make it stand on one end. They all tried, but
-failed. Whereupon Columbus, by a slight blow, crushed
-the end of the egg, and left it standing before them,
-saying, “You see how easy it is to do a thing after some
-one has shown you how.”</p>
-
-<p>In his second voyage he discovered the island of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-Jamaica and several other islands. Ferdinand and Isabella
-received him with kindness upon his return; but two
-years passed before he could obtain another squadron.
-It was during this third voyage that complaints reached
-Isabella that Columbus was enslaving the inhabitants of
-Hayti. An officer named Bobadilla was sent to Hayti to
-investigate the matter. He was unscrupulous and envious;
-and, falsely using his official authority, he ordered
-Columbus to be sent back to Spain in chains. These outrages,
-inflicted upon a man so illustrious, roused indignation
-throughout the world. Ferdinand and Isabella were
-shocked and alarmed upon hearing of this outrageous
-treatment, and sent in the greatest haste to release him
-from his fetters, and to express their sympathy and regret
-for the indignities he had suffered. Some months after,
-Columbus started upon his fourth and last voyage. After
-encountering storms and perils, Columbus reached the
-continent at what is now called Central America, near
-Yucatan. Notwithstanding the importance of having at
-last touched the American continent, this voyage was a
-series of disappointments and disasters. He was detained
-for a year on the island of Jamaica, on account of the
-loss of his ships, which were wrecked in the storms. At
-length, two vessels arrived at the island, and Columbus
-embarked for his return to Spain. When he at last
-reached that country, he was broken down by old age,
-sickness, and mental suffering. Poverty stared him in
-the face. Isabella was upon her death-bed; and Ferdinand
-was heartless, and would not offer him any relief.
-After all his achievements in behalf of mankind, Columbus
-thus sadly writes to his son: “I live by borrowing.
-Little have I profited by twenty years of service, with
-such toils and perils, since at present I do not own a roof<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-in Spain. If I desire to eat or sleep, I have no resort but
-an inn, and for the most times have not wherewithal to
-pay my bill.” In the midst of such sorrow and poverty,
-the heroic Columbus passed his last days on earth. He
-was buried in the Convent of St. Francisco, at Seville.
-Thirty years afterwards, his remains were removed to St.
-Domingo, on the island of Hayti. Upon the cession of
-the island to the French, in 1795, they were transferred
-by the Spanish authorities to the Cathedral of Havana, in
-Cuba.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 437px;">
-<img src="images/i-406.jpg" width="437" height="647" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">TOMB OF FERDINAND AND ISABELLA IN THE CATHEDRAL
-OF GRANADA.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Queen Isabella was now broken in health, from her
-many domestic sorrows. She died in November, 1504.
-The last years of Ferdinand afford a sad contrast to his
-early life and brilliant manhood. As the death of Queen
-Isabella took from Ferdinand the crown of Castile, Philip,
-the husband of the poor crazy Joanna, daughter of Ferdinand
-and Isabella, seized upon the throne of Castile. A
-bitter family quarrel ensued. In order to secure the help
-of France, Ferdinand, though it was only eleven months
-after the death of his deeply loved wife, was married to
-the princess Germaine, a gay and frivolous girl of eighteen,
-daughter of one of the sisters of Louis XII.</p>
-
-<p>“It seemed hard,” says one writer, “that these nuptials
-should take place so soon, and that, too, in Isabella’s own
-kingdom of Castile, where she had lived without peer, and
-where her ashes are still held in as much veneration as
-she enjoyed while living.” The marriage ceremony took
-place at Duenas, where, thirty-six years before, he had
-pledged his faith to Isabella. In 1513 the health of Ferdinand
-began to fail. Dropsy and partial paralysis made
-his life a torment. Hoping to gain relief, he travelled
-southward; but, having reached the small village of Madrigalejo,
-he was unable to proceed farther. On the 22d<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-of January, 1516, in the sixty-fourth year of his age,
-Ferdinand breathed his last. He died in a small room
-in an obscure village. “In so wretched a tenement did
-the lord of so many lands close his eyes upon the world.”
-Thus ended the lives of Ferdinand and Isabella, shrouded
-with gloom and disappointment.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 6em;">“A crown! What is it?</span></div>
-<div class="verse">It is to bear the miseries of a people,</div>
-<div class="verse">To hear their murmurs, feel their discontents,</div>
-<div class="verse">And sink beneath a load of splendid care.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 391px;">
-<img src="images/i-410.jpg" width="391" height="650" alt="Philip II. King of Spain." />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>PHILIP II. OF SPAIN.<br />
-
-<small>1527-1598 A.D.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“Princes who would their people should do well,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Must at themselves begin, as at the head;</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">For men, by their example, pattern out</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Their imitations and regard of laws:</span></div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">A virtuous court a world to virtue draws.”—<span class="smcap">Ben Jonson.</span></span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CHARLES V. of Spain, the father of Philip II., was
-the grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella. Through
-his father he inherited the Netherlands and part of Burgundy,
-and at the age of nineteen became emperor of
-Germany. He had received the throne of Spain when
-sixteen years of age. When his son Philip had attained
-sufficient age to assume the throne, Charles V. abdicated
-in his favor, and retired to a convent, where he died in
-1558 in the fifty-ninth year of his age. Philip II., his
-son, was born at Valladolid in 1527. His mother, Isabella,
-was the daughter of Emanuel, king of Portugal.
-Philip was but twelve years old at the time of his mother’s
-death. In 1543 Philip married Mary, daughter of the
-king of Portugal. Both bride and bridegroom were
-eighteen years of age. Mary died in a short time, leaving
-an infant son named Don Carlos. Catharine of Aragon,
-the youngest daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella,
-married King Henry VIII. of England. Their daughter
-Mary became the second wife of King Philip II. of Spain.
-She was eleven years older than Philip, and was unattractive
-in person and a bigot in religion. Her cruelty in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-persecuting those whom she regarded as heretics has
-given her in history the name of “Bloody Mary.”</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 447px;">
-<img src="images/i-413.jpg" width="447" height="650" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">QUEEN MARY PLIGHTING HER TROTH TO PHILIP.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The marriage contract was signed before either of them
-had seen each other. As the son of an emperor, Philip
-set out in royal state to obtain his bride. The marriage
-ceremony was performed in the cathedral at Winchester.
-Philip was dressed in a suit of white satin, the gift of
-Mary. It was richly decorated with golden embroidery,
-and encrusted with precious stones. Mary’s wedding
-dress was also white satin embroidered with gold. It
-was thickly studded and fringed with costly jewels.</p>
-
-<p>As Mary was at this time queen of England, her marriage
-was celebrated with the greatest magnificence. The
-pompous rites of the wedding ceremony occupied four
-hours, during which time Philip and Mary were seated
-upon a throne draped with a royal canopy. The vast
-edifice was thronged with the nobility of England, Flanders,
-and Spain. After a few days, devoted to public
-festivities in Winchester, Philip and Mary went to London,
-and were received by the people and court with
-great demonstrations of rejoicing. Her father, King
-Henry VIII., had quarrelled with the Pope at Rome, but
-Mary and Philip were zealous Catholics, and desired to
-re-establish the relations of the English Church with
-Rome. Parliament met at Whitehall. Mary, the queen
-of England, sat with Philip under a canopy. By her side
-sat the Pope’s legate. A petition was presented by the
-chancellor of the realm, praying for reconciliation with
-the Papal See. The whole assembly knelt before the
-Pope’s legate, who pronounced upon them absolution and
-a benediction. Then began the fires of persecution.
-Many who would not consent to become Catholics were
-burned at the stake.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Philip, who had now wearied of his elderly and unattractive
-wife, and also of being regarded as only the
-husband of the queen, was rejoiced at the summons of his
-father, Charles V., who desired him to return to Spain to
-receive the kingdom, that Charles might retire into convent
-life. By the abdication of Charles V., Philip II.
-became one of the most powerful monarchs in the world.
-He was king of united Spain; he was also king of Naples
-and Sicily, and duke of Milan; he was sovereign of the
-Low Countries; and as husband of the queen of England,
-who was devotedly attached to him, he had great influence
-in the affairs of that nation. The Cape Verde Islands
-and the Canaries were under his sway. A large portion
-of the Mediterranean coast in Africa was under his dominion;
-also the Philippine and Spice Islands, in Asia.
-He inherited those islands which Columbus had conferred
-upon Spain in the West Indies, and also the vast realms
-of Mexico and Peru.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the immense power now placed in the hands
-of this young prince not yet thirty years of age. Philip
-II. established his court at Madrid, and from his palace
-there sent forth his edicts over his wide domains. In
-1558 Queen Mary of England died, being succeeded by
-her half-sister Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>Philip’s only regret for his wife was, no doubt, the loss
-of his hold upon the English crown. Before a year had
-elapsed he was married to the daughter of the king of
-France. This young princess, Elizabeth,—called in Spain,
-Isabella,—was only fourteen years of age, and had been
-previously betrothed to the son of Philip, Don Carlos,
-who was of the same age.</p>
-
-<p>The death of this young prince a few years afterwards,
-under very suspicious circumstances, caused many to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-think that he had been poisoned by the command of his
-father, who had imprisoned the prince at the time. Don
-Carlos and his father had frequent quarrels, and at last
-Carlos was said to have confessed to a priest that he desired
-to kill his father, and he asked absolution, which the
-priest refused to grant. The king was informed of all
-this. The young prince was thereupon imprisoned, with
-a strong guard to watch him, and he was reported to be
-mad. In the course of a few months Don Carlos died.</p>
-
-<p>Two stories regarding that event were told. Some historians
-consider Philip innocent of any attempt upon the
-life of his son, but others state that the physician of the
-prince was informed that it was very desirable that the
-death of Carlos should appear to result from natural
-causes; and that medicine was administered to the unsuspecting
-patient in such doses as slowly to accomplish the
-desired end. Philip II. was a fanatic in religion, and the
-terrible persecution of the Protestants during his reign has
-filled the world with horror, as the shocking stories have
-been told.</p>
-
-<p>Philip had not forgotten his father’s command to punish
-heretics with the utmost rigor. The Reformation had
-been silently and rapidly advancing in Spain. Now the
-terrible persecutions of the Inquisition were turned against
-this heroic little band of fearless Christians by those professing
-to worship the same merciful God, and to be
-followers of the same loving and sinless Christ. How
-such awful crimes could have been perpetrated in the
-sacred name of religion seems at the present day incomprehensible,
-and we shudder at the recital of such savage
-barbarity, more especially when committed by the enlightened
-and civilized nations of the world less than four
-centuries ago.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The bigoted Philip issued an edict “that all who
-bought, sold, or read prohibited works were to be burned
-alive.” Every person suspected of heresy was arrested
-and thrown into prison. In Seville alone, eight hundred
-were arrested in one day. The accused were then dragged
-from their dungeons and subjected to the horrors of the
-most merciless tortures to induce them to give up their
-Protestant faith; and these shocking deeds were performed
-in the name of religion. The awful details of
-those barbarous crimes are too horrible to relate. What
-must the reality have been to the poor victims of this inhuman
-persecution!</p>
-
-<p>The first act of burning, under the decrees of the Pope,
-Philip II., and the Spanish inquisitor-general, Valdés,
-took place in May, 1559, at Valladolid. This terrible
-ceremony was called <i>auto de fé</i>, or act of faith; and so
-common did they at length become, that Catholics would
-engage to meet each other at the <i>“auto de fé,”</i> as in
-modern times appointments are made to meet at the
-theatre, opera, or other place of public gathering. One
-of the historians thus describes the second <i>auto de fé</i> in
-Valladolid, in October, 1559: “The Pope wished to invest
-the scene with all the terrors of the Day of Judgment.
-That he might draw an immense crowd, an indulgence of
-forty days was granted to all who should be present at
-the spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>“The tragedy was enacted in the great square of the
-city. At one end of the square a large platform was
-erected, richly carpeted and decorated, where seats were
-arranged for the inquisitors. A royal gallery was constructed
-for the king and his court. Two hundred thousand
-spectators surrounded the arena. At six o’clock in
-the morning all the bells of the city began to toll the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-funeral knell. A solemn procession emerged from the
-dismal fortress of the Inquisition. A body of troops led
-the van. Then came the condemned. There were two
-classes: the first consisting of those who were to be punished
-with confiscation and imprisonment; and the second,
-of those who were to suffer death. The latter were covered
-with a loose gown of yellow cloth, and wore upon
-the head a paper cap of conical form. Both the gown
-and cap were covered with pictures of flames fanned and
-fed by demons. Two priests were by the side of each
-one of the victims, urging him to abjure his errors. Those
-who were merely to endure loss of property and to be
-thrown into the dungeons of the Inquisition were clothed
-in garments of black. A vast concourse of dignitaries of
-state, and of the common people, closed the procession.
-The fanaticism of the times was such, that probably but
-few of the people had any sympathy with the sufferers.
-The ceremonies were opened with a sermon by the bishop
-of Zamora. Then the whole assembled multitude took an
-oath, upon their knees, to defend the Inquisition and the
-purity of the Catholic faith, and to inform against any
-one who should swerve from the faith. Then those who,
-to escape the flames, had expressed penitence for their
-errors, after a very solemn recantation, were absolved
-from death. But heresy was too serious a crime to be
-<i>forgiven</i>, even upon penitence. All were doomed to the
-confiscation of property, and to imprisonment—some for
-life—in the dungeons of the Inquisition. Their names
-were branded with infamy, and in many cases their immediate
-descendants were rendered ineligible to any public
-office. These first received their doom, and under a strong
-guard were conveyed back to prison.</p>
-
-<p>“And now all eyes were turned to the little band of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-thirty, who, in the garb of ignominy, and with ropes
-around their necks, were waiting their sentence. Many
-of these were men illustrious for rank, and still more renowned
-for talents and virtues. Their countenances
-were wan and wasted, their frames emaciated, and many
-of them were distorted by the cruel ministry of the rack.
-Those who were willing to make confession were allowed
-the privilege of being strangled before their bodies were
-exposed to the torture of the fire. After being strangled
-by the <i>garrote</i>, their bodies were thrown into the flames.
-Enfeebled by suffering, all but two of them thus purchased
-exemption from being burned alive.</p>
-
-<p>“One of these, Don Carlos de Seso, was a Florentine
-noble. He had married a Spanish lady of high rank, and
-had taken up his residence in Spain, where he had adopted
-the principles of the Reformation. For fifteen months,
-with unshaken constancy, he had suffered in the dungeons
-of the Inquisition. When sentence of death at the stake
-was pronounced upon him, he called for pen and paper in
-his cell. His judges supposed that he intended to make
-confession. Instead of that he wrote a very eloquent
-document, avowing his unshaken trust in the great truths
-of the Reformation. De Seso had stood very high in the
-regards of Philip’s father, Charles V. As he was passing
-before the royal gallery to be chained to the stake, he
-looked up to Philip, and said, ‘Is it thus that you allow
-your innocent subjects to be persecuted?’ The king replied,
-‘If it were my own son, I would fetch the wood to
-burn him, were he such a wretch as thou art.’</p>
-
-<p>“He was chained to the stake. As the flames slowly
-enveloped him in their fiery wreaths, he called upon the
-soldiers to heap up the fagots, that his agonies might
-sooner terminate. Soon life was extinct, and the soul of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-the noble martyr was borne on angel wings to heaven.
-The fellow-sufferer of De Seso was Domingo de Rexas,
-son of the marquis of Posa. Five of this noble family,
-including the eldest son, had been victims of the Inquisition.
-De Rexas had been a Dominican monk. In accordance
-with usage, he retained his sacerdotal habit until
-he stood before the stake. Then in the midst of the jeers
-of the populace his garments were one by one removed,
-and the vestments of the condemned, with their hideous
-picturings, were placed upon him. He attempted to address
-the spectators. Philip angrily ordered him to be
-gagged. A piece of cleft wood was thrust into his mouth,
-causing great pain. He was thus led to the stake and
-burned alive. The cruel exhibition occupied from six
-o’clock in the morning until two o’clock in the afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>Such were some of the shocking and barbarous scenes
-connected with the notorious Spanish Inquisition. This
-persecution raged year after year. So fiercely did these
-fires of persecution burn throughout all Spain, that nearly
-all traces of the Protestant religion were eradicated from
-the kingdom. The Spaniards degenerated into semi-barbarism.
-Education was discouraged, all human rights
-were trampled upon, and Spain became one of the most
-debased, impoverished, and miserable nations in Europe.
-Thus had religious fanaticism turned this fair province of
-Philip’s into a desert. In regard to the blame which rests
-upon Philip II., for this deplorable state of things, his
-own words will answer. He wrote to his sister, whom he
-had appointed his regent in the Netherlands, thus:—</p>
-
-<p>“I have never had any object in view than the good of
-my subjects! In all that I have done I have trod in the
-footsteps of my father, under whom the people of the
-Netherlands must admit that they lived contented and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-happy. As to the Inquisition, whatever people may say
-of it, I have never attempted anything new. With regard
-to the edicts, I have been always resolved to live and
-die in the Catholic faith. I could not be content to have
-my subjects do otherwise. Yet I see not how this can
-be compassed without punishing the transgressors. God
-knows how willingly I would avoid shedding a drop of
-Christian blood; but I would rather lose a hundred thousand
-lives, if I had so many, than allow a single change
-in matters of religion.”</p>
-
-<p>In the Netherlands persecutions and rebellions caused
-constant strife. Scarcely forty years had elapsed since
-Luther had publicly burned the papal bull at Wittenburg.
-Since that time his doctrines had been received in Denmark
-and Sweden. In England, under Queen Elizabeth,
-Protestantism had become the established religion of the
-state. The Reformation had reached the hills and valleys
-of Scotland, and tens of thousands had gathered to hear
-the preaching of Knox. The Low Countries, or Netherlands,
-which now constitute Holland and Belgium, were
-the “debatable land,” on which the various sects of
-reformers, the Lutherans, the Calvinists, and the English
-Protestants, contended for mastery over the Roman Catholic
-Church. Calvinism was embraced by some of the
-cantons of Switzerland, and had also spread widely
-through France, where the adherents to the Protestant
-faith were known as the Huguenots. The cry of the
-Reformation had passed the Alps, and was heard even
-under the walls of the Vatican, and had crossed the
-Pyrenees.</p>
-
-<p>The king of Navarre declared himself a Protestant, and
-the spirit of the Reformation, as we have related, had
-also secretly spread into Spain. But there already the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-terrible Inquisition, with Philip II. at its head, had crushed
-out Protestantism from Spain. It was not to be expected
-that Philip, having exterminated heresy in one part of
-his dominions, would tolerate its existence in any other,
-least of all in so important a country as the Netherlands.
-So the persecutions commenced there. During the latter
-part of the fifteenth century, and the beginning of the
-sixteenth, the pontifical throne had been filled by a succession
-of popes, notorious for their religious indifference,
-and the carelessness and profligacy of their lives. This
-was one of the prominent causes of the Reformation.
-But before the close of the sixteenth century, a line of
-popes had arisen, of stern and austere natures, without a
-touch of sympathy for the joys and sorrows of mankind,
-and entirely devoted to the work of regaining the lost
-powers of the Roman Catholic Church. Pope Pius the
-Fifth was such a pontiff. He wrote to Philip, urging him
-not to falter in the good cause, and to allow no harm to
-the Catholic faith, but to march against his rebellious
-vassals at the head of his army, and wash out the stain of
-heresy in the blood of the heretic. To him Philip replied:
-that the Pope might rest assured that the king would consent
-to nothing that could prejudice the service of God,
-or the interests of religion. He deprecated force, as that
-would involve the ruin of the country. Still he would
-march in person, without regard to his own peril, and employ
-force, though it should cost the ruin of the provinces;
-but he would bring his vassals to submission. “For he
-would sooner lose a hundred lives, and every rood of empire,
-than reign a lord over heretics.”</p>
-
-<p>With such a pope, and such a king, no wonder that the
-Inquisition flourished.</p>
-
-<p>The situation of the Netherlands was such that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-various opinions of the surrounding nations were easily
-transferred to their shores. On the south were the
-Lutherans of Germany; on the west, the French Huguenots;
-while by the ocean, they held communication with
-England and the nations of the Baltic. The soldier quartered
-on their territory, the seaman who visited their
-shores, the trader who trafficked in their towns, brought
-with them different forms of the “<i>New Religion</i>.” As
-most of the people were able to read, books from France
-and Germany were circulated amongst them. Philip II.
-understood the importance of his position. His whole
-life proves that he felt it to be his especial mission
-to restore the tottering fortunes of Catholicism, and stay
-the torrent which was sweeping away the Roman Catholic
-faith. Philip had made his half-sister, Margaret, regent
-in the Netherlands.</p>
-
-<p>In order to a clearer understanding of the revolt in the
-Netherlands, a brief sketch of William, prince of Orange,
-will be necessary. He was descended from ancestors who
-had given an emperor to Germany; William’s parents
-were both Lutherans, and he was educated in that faith.
-But Charles V. obtained the consent of his parents to
-remove him to Brussels, when in his twelfth year, and he
-was brought up in the family of the Emperor’s sister. In
-this household, the young prince was instructed in the
-Catholic faith. When fifteen years of age, William
-became the page of Charles V. On the abdication of that
-monarch, he commended William to Philip II., who at
-first received the prince of Orange with much favor.
-William married for his second wife, Anne, the daughter
-of Maurice, the great Lutheran champion; and though he
-did not openly espouse the cause, but continued in the
-service of Philip, a writer of the times says of him: “The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-prince of Orange passed for a Catholic among Catholics,
-and a Lutheran among Lutherans.” But this portrait of
-him was by an unfriendly hand, and a truer declaration is
-that of Prescott, “that he possessed a spirit of toleration,
-the more honorable that in that day it was so rare. He
-condemned the Calvinists as restless and seditious, and
-the Catholics for their bigoted attachment to a dogma.
-Persecution, in matters of faith, he totally condemned,
-for freedom of judgment in such matters he regarded as
-the inalienable right of man. These conclusions, at which
-the world, after an incalculable amount of human suffering,
-has been three centuries in arriving, must be allowed
-to reflect great credit on the character of William, prince
-of Orange.”</p>
-
-<p>There was now formed in the Netherlands a league
-called “The Gueux.” Some of this party of confederates
-demanded entire liberty of conscience; others would
-not have stopped short of a revolution, that would enable
-the country to shake off the Spanish yoke. Though this
-party was a political rather than a religious organization,
-they joined hands with the Lutherans and Calvinists, and
-became, for a time, a great aid to the Reformation. The
-origin of their name, which became the fanatical war-cry
-of the insurgents, happened thus: Two or three hundred
-of these confederates went to Brussels, to petition Margaret,
-the regent, to mediate with Philip in their behalf,
-that they should have more political liberty, and be freed
-from the edicts and the Inquisition. During the week
-spent by the league in Brussels, a banquet was given,
-where three hundred of the confederates were present.
-During the repast, Brederode, one of their number,
-described the manner in which their petition had been
-received by the regent. “She seemed at first disconcerted,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-he said, “by the number of the confederates,
-but was reassured by Barlaimont, who told her that ‘they
-were nothing but a crowd of beggars.’”</p>
-
-<p>Some of the company were much incensed at this
-treatment, but Brederode, taking it good-humoredly, said,
-“that he and his friends had no objection to the name,
-since they were ready at any time to become beggars for
-the service of their king and country.” This witty sally
-was received by the company with great applause, who
-shouted, “<i>Vivent les Gueux!</i>”—“long live the beggars!”
-Brederode, finding the jest took so well, left the room,
-and soon returned with a beggar’s wallet and a wooden
-bowl, such as were used by the mendicant fraternity in the
-Netherlands. Then pledging the company in a bumper,
-he swore to devote his life and fortune to the cause. The
-wallet and the bowl went round the table, and as each of
-the merry guests drank, the shout arose, “<i>Vivent les
-Gueux!</i>” In every language in which the history of these
-acts has been recorded, the French term, Gueux, is employed
-to designate this party of malcontents in the
-Netherlands.</p>
-
-<p>The league now adopted the dress and symbols of mendicants.
-They affected their garments as a substitute for
-their family liveries, dressing their retainers in the ash-gray
-habiliments of the begging friars. Wooden bowls,
-spoons, and knives became in great request, though they
-were richly inlaid with silver, according to the wealth of
-the possessor. Pilgrims’ staffs were carried, elaborately
-carved. Medals resembling those stuck by the beggars
-in their bonnets were worn as a badge. The “Gueux
-penny,” as it was called, a gold or silver coin, was hung
-from the neck, bearing on one side the effigy of Philip,
-with the inscription, “<i>Fideles au roi</i>,” and on the other,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-two hands grasping a beggar’s wallet, and the words,
-“<i>jusques a porter la besace</i>,”—“Faithful to the king,
-even to carrying the wallet.” The war-cry of “<i>Vivent
-les Gueux</i>” soon resounded through the Netherlands.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 422px;">
-<img src="images/i-427.jpg" width="422" height="650" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">DESTROYING STATUES, ETC., IN THE CATHEDRAL AT ANTWERP.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Philip paid little or no attention to the frequent appeals
-of Margaret, his regent, that he should come to some
-concessions which should satisfy the people and bring the
-rebellion to an end. But while Philip was procrastinating,
-the Iconoclasts rose in fury, and inspired by a false zeal,
-committed many terrible, sacrilegious outrages, which cast
-dishonor upon the upholders of the Reformation. These
-Iconoclasts, or image-breakers, were simply armed mobs
-of ignorant people, who imagined they were doing a service
-to God by breaking into the Catholic churches, and
-ruthlessly destroying everything they could lay their hands
-on. Prescott thus describes the destruction caused by
-this band of rioters in Antwerp:—</p>
-
-<p>“When the rest of the congregation had withdrawn,
-after vespers, the mob rushed forward, as by a common
-impulse, broke open the doors of the chapel, and dragged
-forth the image of the Virgin. Some called on her to cry,
-‘<i>Vivent les Gueux!</i>’ while others tore off her embroidered
-robes and rolled the dumb idol in the dust, amidst the
-shouts of the spectators.</p>
-
-<p>“This was the signal for havoc. The rioters dispersed
-in all directions on the work of destruction. High above
-the great altar was an image of the Saviour, curiously
-carved in wood, and placed between the effigies of the two
-thieves crucified with him. The mob contrived to get a
-rope round the neck of the statue of Christ, and dragged
-it to the ground. They then fell upon it with hatchets
-and hammers, and it was soon broken into a hundred
-fragments. The two thieves, it was remarked, were
-spared, as if to preside over the work of rapine below.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Their fury now turned against the other statues,
-which were quickly overthrown from their pedestals.
-The paintings that lined the walls of the cathedral were
-cut into shreds. Many of these were the choicest specimens
-of Flemish art, even then, in its dawn, giving
-promise of the glorious day which was to shed a lustre
-over the land. But the pride of the cathedral and of
-Antwerp was the great organ, renowned throughout the
-Netherlands, not more for its dimensions than its perfect
-workmanship. With their ladders the rioters scaled the
-lofty fabric, and with their implements soon converted it,
-like all else they laid their hands on, into a heap of
-rubbish.</p>
-
-<p>“The ruin was now universal. Nothing beautiful,
-nothing holy, was spared. The altars—and there were
-no less than seventy in the vast edifice—were overthrown
-one after another, their richly embroidered coverings
-rudely rent away, their gold and silver vessels appropriated
-by the plunderers. The sacramental bread was
-trodden under foot, the wine was quaffed by the miscreants,
-in golden chalices, to the health of one another,
-or of the Gueux, and the holy oil was profanely used to
-anoint their shoes and sandals. The sculptured tracery
-on the walls, the costly offerings that enriched the shrines,
-the screens of gilded bronze, the delicately carved woodwork
-of the pulpit, the marble and alabaster ornaments,
-all went down under the fierce blows of the Iconoclasts.
-The pavement was strewed with the ruined splendors of
-a church, which in size and magnificence was perhaps
-second only to St. Peter’s among the churches of
-Christendom.</p>
-
-<p>“As the light of day faded, the assailants supplied its
-place with such light as they could obtain from the candles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-which they snatched from the altars. It was midnight
-before the work of destruction was completed. The
-whole number engaged in this work is said not to have
-exceeded a hundred, men, women, and boys.</p>
-
-<p>“When their task was completed, they sallied forth in
-a body from the doors of the cathedral, roaring out the
-fanatical war-cry of “<i>Vivent les Gueux!</i>” Flushed with
-success, and joined on the way by stragglers like themselves,
-they burst open the doors of one church after
-another, and by the time morning broke, the principal
-temples in the city had been dealt with in the same ruthless
-manner as the cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>“No attempt, all this time, was made to stop these
-proceedings, on the part of the magistrates or citizens.
-As they beheld from their windows the bodies of armed
-men hurrying to and fro, by the gleam of their torches,
-and listened to the sound of violence in the distance, they
-seem to have been struck with a panic. The Catholics
-remained within doors, fearing a general uprising of the
-Protestants. The Protestants feared to move abroad,
-lest they should be confounded with the rioters. For
-three days these dismal scenes continued.... The fate
-of Antwerp had its effect on the country. The flames of
-fanaticism, burning fiercer than ever, quickly spread over
-the northern as they had done over the western provinces....
-In Holland, Utrecht, Friesland,—everywhere in
-short, with a few exceptions on the southern borders,—mobs
-rose against the churches.”</p>
-
-<p>Cathedrals, chapels, monasteries, and nunneries, and
-even hospitals, were destroyed by these ignorant fanatics.
-The great library of Vicogne, one of the noblest collections
-in the Netherlands, perished in the flames kindled
-by the mob. Four hundred churches were sacked by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-insurgents in Flanders alone. The damage to the cathedral
-at Antwerp was said to amount to four hundred
-thousand ducats. The whole work of this terrible devastation,
-occupied less than a fortnight. This wholesale
-destruction, perpetrated by the Iconoclasts, cannot be
-estimated. It is a melancholy fact that they pretended
-to be actuated by a zeal for the Reformation, thus dishonoring
-the great and glorious cause, by their ignorant
-fanaticism. An irreparable loss was occasioned by the
-destruction of manuscripts, statuary, and paintings.
-But the misguided Iconoclasts, ruthless as was their terrible
-destruction of magnificent cathedrals and priceless
-gems of art, must in justice have this excuse offered in
-their behalf, that they had been enfuriated by the infamous
-Inquisition which had turned Spain into one great
-<i>auto de fé</i> of burning martyrs, and which threatened,
-through the bigotry of Philip II., to invade their own land
-with its fiendish cruelties. Compared with the Inquisition,
-with its scarlet hands reeking with the life-blood of its
-tortured victims, the retaliation of the Iconoclasts is
-scarcely to be wondered at.</p>
-
-<p>The tidings of the tumult in the Netherlands was received
-by Philip with the greatest indignation, and he
-exclaimed: “It shall cost them dear; by the soul of my
-father, I swear it, it shall cost them dear!”</p>
-
-<p>These troubles in the Netherlands caused a change in
-the mind of William, prince of Orange. He saw the workings
-of Catholicism under a fearful aspect. He beheld
-his countrymen dragged from their firesides, driven into
-exile, thrown into dungeons, burned at the stake; and all
-this for no other cause than because they dared to dissent
-from the dogmas of the Romish Church. His
-parents had been Lutherans, his wife also was a Protestant,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-and William of Orange embraced the doctrines of
-the Reformation. We cannot follow his career. After
-quelling a mob at Antwerp, which threatened to destroy
-the city, realizing that he could place no reliance upon
-Philip, or Margaret his regent, and as they now looked
-upon him with suspicion, William of Orange determined
-to retire to his estates in Germany. He there occupied
-himself with studying the Lutheran doctrine, and making
-himself acquainted with the principles of the glorious
-Reformation of which he was one day to become the
-champion. The regency of Margaret continued in the
-Netherlands from 1559 to 1567; and in the last years she
-succeeded in putting down the revolt. Philip, through
-his regent, and the aid of the Pope, had now, by several
-successful contests in the Netherlands, quelled the rebellion,
-and the party of reform had disappeared, and its
-worship was everywhere proscribed. On its ruins the
-Catholic party had risen in greater splendor than ever.
-Margaret now resigned the regency, and the duke of Alva
-was appointed in her place. He created a new tribunal,
-which is known in history by the terrible name it received
-from the people, as the “Council of Blood.”</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 413px;">
-<img src="images/i-433.jpg" width="413" height="650" alt="portrait" />
-<div class="caption">PHILIP II., KING OF SPAIN.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In order to justify his cruel proceedings against the
-Netherlands, Philip now submitted the case to the Inquisition
-at Madrid, and that ghostly tribunal came to the
-following decision: “All who had been guilty of heresy,
-apostasy, or sedition, and all, moreover, who, though professing
-themselves good Catholics, had offered no resistance
-to these, were, with the exception of a few specified
-individuals, thereby convicted of treason in the highest
-degree.” This sweeping judgment was followed by a
-royal edict, dated on the same day, in which, after reciting
-the language of the Inquisition, the whole nation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-with the exception above stated, was sentenced, without
-distinction of sex or age, to the penalties of treason,—death
-and confiscation of property; and this, the decree
-went on to say, “without any hope of grace whatever,
-that it might serve for an example and a warning to all
-future time!”</p>
-
-<p>Then followed the awful work of the “Council of
-Blood.” Men, women, and children were dragged to the
-gallows. Blood ran through the streets of the cities like
-a red river. The poor martyrs were tortured with horrible
-contrivances even at the scaffold, that their dying
-cries might cause merriment for their fiendish foes.</p>
-
-<p>And thus Philip II. vindicates his conduct during this
-reign of terror: “What I have done has been for the
-repose of the provinces, and for the defence of the Catholic
-faith. If I had respected justice less, I should have
-despatched the whole business in a single day. No one
-acquainted with the state of affairs, will find reason to
-censure my severity. Nor would I do otherwise than I
-have done, though I should risk the sovereignty of the
-Netherlands,—no, though the world should fall in ruins
-around me!”</p>
-
-<p>The young Queen Isabella having died, Philip II. married
-for his fourth wife, Anne of Austria, who had also
-been affianced to his son Carlos. Then came the rebellions
-of the Moriscoes, who were the descendants of
-the Moors in southern Spain. In 1569, the Moriscoes
-rose in a general insurrection against the Christians.
-Many a Moor had perished in the flames of the Inquisition,
-and they now retaliated with bloodthirsty ferocity.
-The horrors which ensued cannot be described. Before
-these Moors had been goaded by the cruel edicts of
-Philip, they had been kind neighbors. The cruelties committed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-by the Spanish troops sent against the Moors,
-were as shocking as the deeds of the barbarians. The
-Spanish army, before entering into a battle, knelt in
-prayer, invoking God’s blessing; and after a victory, reeking
-with the blood of their victims, they marched, under
-the banner of the cross, to the cathedrals, and chanted the
-<i>Te Deum</i>. Thus was religion turned into a mockery of
-a merciful God, and a cloak for the vilest of crimes.</p>
-
-<p>Philip brought his fourth bride, Anne of Austria, to the
-magnificent palace or monastery of the Escurial. She
-lived ten years. Her children all died in infancy, except
-one son, who lived to succeed his father on the throne as
-Philip III. Spain was now rapidly on the decline. Civil
-war, persecution, banishment and emigration, were fast
-depopulating the country. The population diminished
-from ten to six millions.</p>
-
-<p>As Queen Elizabeth of England had warmly espoused
-the Protestant cause, there was enmity between that nation
-and Spain. In 1558, Philip II., of Spain, who had
-been for three years preparing the famous Spanish Armada,
-ordered the fleet to sail against England. This
-splendid armada set sail from Lisbon with high hopes.
-But next day they met with a violent storm, which scattered
-some of the ships, and sunk others, and forced the
-rest to take shelter in the Groine. After the damages
-had been repaired, the armada again set forth. The fleet
-consisted of one hundred and thirty vessels, and many of
-them were of greater size than had ever before been employed
-in Europe. The plan of the king of Spain was,
-that the fleet should sail to the coast opposite to Dunkirk
-and Newport, and having joined the fleet of the duke of
-Parma, should make sail to the Thames, and having
-landed the whole Spanish army, complete at one blow the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-conquest of England. The armada reached Calais.
-Here the English admiral practised a stratagem upon the
-Spaniards. He took eight of his smaller vessels and
-filled them with combustibles, and setting them on fire,
-sent them amongst the Spanish fleet. In the confusion
-caused by this incident, the English fell upon the Spanish,
-and captured or destroyed twelve of their ships. The
-Spanish admiral thereupon started to return home. A
-violent tempest overtook the armada after it passed the
-Orkneys. The ships were driven upon the western isles
-of Scotland, and coast of Ireland, and were miserably
-wrecked. Thus was the famous Spanish armada destroyed.
-It was almost a death blow to the Spanish monarchy.
-At length Philip II., with a bankrupt treasury, while his
-mind was filled with gloom and his body tortured with a
-loathsome and terrible disease, died on the 13th of September,
-1598. In view of his great opportunities, vast
-power, and the hopeful promise of his early career, and
-the miserable ending of his wrecked life, brought upon
-himself by his barbarous cruelties and religious bigotry
-and superstitions, we are reminded of the saying quoted
-at the commencement of the sketch, and are more fully
-convinced that no people can be prosperous unless their
-rulers are humane and virtuous. In the light of such
-shocking events as we have just been describing, and of
-such barbarous deeds performed in the name of religion,
-it seems to be an indisputable fact that the world has
-surely made vast progress in an enlightened civilization
-and in true Christianity.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS.<br />
-
-<small>1594-1632 A.D.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="quotec">
-“Ay, every inch a king!”—<span class="smcap">Shakespeare.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE oldest account of the nations of Europe in the far
-north is that given by Pytheas, who lived three hundred
-and fifty years before the Christian Era. His voyages
-carried him to the shores of Britain and Scandinavia.
-The Goths were the most ancient inhabitants of Scandinavia,
-occupying the south, and were earlier in Sweden
-than the Sueones. These two tribes were at war for
-many years, but finally united and formed the Swedish
-nation. During twelve centuries after the visit of Pytheas
-to northern countries, nothing was known of the Scandinavian
-people in their own homes, although wild tribes
-from the north overran southern Europe, and were known
-as the Cimbri, Teutons, Germans, and Goths. But in
-the time of Alfred the Great, two travellers from Scandinavia
-visited the court of the English king. From the
-account they gave of their travels, King Alfred wrote a
-brief history and made a chart of modern Europe. In
-this book Scandinavia was described.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 382px;">
-<img src="images/i-439.jpg" width="382" height="650" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of the three Scandinavian countries, Sweden did not
-become known to the nations of southern Europe as soon
-as Denmark and Norway. Like the Danes, the Swedes
-traced the descent of their early kings back to Odin.
-Olaf was the first Christian king of Sweden, and received
-Christian baptism about the year 1000 <span class="smcap">A.D.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span></span></p>
-
-<p>The son and successor of Charlemagne, Louis le Débonnaire,
-took an ardent interest in sending Christian
-missionaries to the pagans of the north. The union of
-the kingdoms of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway was
-consummated in 1387. In 1523 the union with Denmark
-was dissolved, and Gustavus Vasa was proclaimed king
-of Sweden. This king was one of the ablest of the monarchs
-of the sixteenth century. He was the grandfather
-of Gustavus Adolphus. Charles IX., the father of Adolphus,
-came to the throne of Sweden in 1604. During the
-reigns of the elder brothers of Charles, there had been
-constant conflicts with Denmark. Charles IX. died in
-1611, leaving an unfinished war with Denmark to be completed
-by his illustrious son, Gustavus Adolphus, then
-seventeen years of age. His father, Charles, had entered
-into friendly alliances with all the principal Protestant
-powers, and for the first time Sweden had been brought
-into important political relations with the more influential
-European nations. Gustavus Adolphus was born at the
-royal palace in Stockholm, Dec. 9, 1594. His mother,
-Christine, was the daughter of Adolphus, duke of Schleswig-Holstein,
-and grand-daughter of Frederic I., king of
-Denmark.</p>
-
-<p>Tycho Brahe, the famous astronomer, had announced,
-when a comet appeared in 1572, that there would spring
-up in Finland a prince destined to accomplish great
-changes in Germany, and deliver the Protestant people
-from the oppression of the popes. His countrymen applied
-to Gustavus this prediction of the Danish astronomer.
-Gustavus possessed a vigorous constitution, which was
-rendered robust by his childish experiences and manner of
-life. His early years were passed in the midst of constant
-wars between Sweden and Denmark. This account<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-is given of the education and boyhood of Gustavus Adolphus:—</p>
-
-<p>“To be the tutor of the prince was appointed Master
-John Skytte, and Otto von Mörner his chamberlain.
-The last named was marshall of the court of Charles IX.,
-and born of noble parents in Brandenburg. He had acquired
-extensive learning and distinguished manners in
-the numerous countries in which he had travelled. John
-Skytte, after having employed nine years in visiting foreign
-lands, had become one of the secretaries of the
-king’s government. Gustavus received all the instructions
-necessary to a prince destined to reign. Skytte
-directed him in the study of Latin, of history, and of the
-laws of his country.</p>
-
-<p>“As Charles was a strict ruler and martial prince, and
-as Christine had, besides her beauty, the soul proud and
-courageous, the education of the prince was free from
-softness. He was habituated to labor. At times in his
-early youth, particularly after he had arrived at his tenth
-year, he was more and more allowed by his father to attend
-the deliberations of the Council. He was habituated
-also to be present at the audiences of the foreign embassies,
-and was finally directed by his royal father to answer
-these foreign dignitaries in order thus to accustom him to
-weighty affairs and their treatment.</p>
-
-<p>“As it was a period of warlike turmoils, there was much
-resort to the king’s court, especially by officers,—not
-only Swedes, but also Germans, French, English, Scots,
-Netherlanders, and some Italians and Spaniards,—who,
-after the twelve years’ truce then just concluded between
-Spain and Holland, sought their fortune in Sweden.
-These often waited upon the young prince by the will and
-order of the king. Their conversation relating to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-wars waged by other nations, battles, sieges, and discipline,
-both by sea and land as well as ships and navigation,
-did so arouse and stimulate the mind of the young
-prince, by nature already thus inclined, that he spent
-almost every day in putting questions concerning what
-had happened at one place and another in the wars. Besides,
-he acquired in his youthful years no little insight
-into the science of war, especially into the mode and
-means,—how a regular war, well directed and suited to
-the circumstances of Sweden, should be carried on, having
-the character and rules of Maurice, prince of Orange,
-as a pattern before his eyes. By the intercourse and
-converse of these officers, in which each told the most
-glorious acts of his own nation, the young prince was enkindled
-to act like others, and if possible, to excel them.
-In his early years he gained also a complete and ready
-knowledge of many foreign languages; so that he spoke
-Latin, German, Dutch, French, and Italian as purely as
-a native, and besides had some knowledge of the Russian
-and Polish tongues. When he was of the age of sixteen
-years, his father made him grand duke of Finland, and
-duke of Esthonia and Westmanland, and presently bestowed
-upon him the town of Vesteras, with the principal
-portion of Westmanland, over which was placed John
-Skytte to be governor.”</p>
-
-<p>It is also stated that Gustavus knew Greek, and read
-Xenophon in that tongue, of whom he said “that he knew
-of no writer better than he for a true military historian.”</p>
-
-<p>For some years after Gustavus ascended the throne, he
-is said to have devoted an hour each day to reading, preferring
-to all others the works of Grotius, especially his
-treatise on “War and Peace.”</p>
-
-<p>Young Gustavus possessed great courage, to which was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-joined striking benignity of character which he did not
-inherit from his parents. King Charles was stern and
-somewhat heartless, and he was persuaded by his wife,
-the mother of Adolphus, to great acts of cruelty towards
-the victims of his civil wars, which obscured his nobler
-qualities. The mother of Gustavus, though possessed of
-a strong and positive character, was too tyrannical to be
-attractive, and too unrelenting to exert a loving influence
-in her household, and the severity of both husband and
-wife came often in collision. Adolphus was the only
-member of the royal family who dared attempt to pacify
-his father when he was angry. Though Gustavus inherited
-the strong characteristics of his parents, and possessed
-his father’s failing of a quick temper, his nature was so
-sympathetic and unselfish that his winning manners attracted
-the hearts of all as much as the unrelenting sternness
-of his parents repelled. Their sternness became in
-the household only exacting selfishness; whereas all the
-severity of his character manifested itself only in unflinching
-allegiance to the right and true, and the steadfast upholding
-of high and noble principles of state or religion.
-Gustavus was scarcely fifteen years of age when he requested
-to be placed in command of troops in the war
-against Russia. But his father, deeming him too young,
-refused. When he was seventeen years of age, war having
-been declared with Denmark, young Gustavus was
-pronounced in the Diet—as the assembly of the Swedish
-nobles was called—fit to bear the sword, and he was,
-according to ancient custom, invested with this dignity
-with most splendid ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>In this expedition young Gustavus endured his first
-trial of warfare, being present at all the remarkable
-encounters, holding chief command in most of them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-For during this war King Charles died, and the command
-was left to Gustavus, then seventeen years of age. In
-the first month of his eighteenth year, he received the
-crown in the presence of all the representatives of the
-estates of Sweden, at the Diet of Nyköping. He took
-the title of his father,—king-elect and hereditary prince
-of Sweden, of the Goths, and of the Wends. Since the
-death of Gustavus Vasa, his grandfather, a period of
-more than fifty years, Sweden had not enjoyed a single
-year of peace.</p>
-
-<p>When Gustavus Adolphus ascended the Swedish throne,
-in 1611, being then in his eighteenth year, he found an
-exhausted treasury, an alienated nobility, and not undisputed
-succession, and, with all this, no less than three
-wars upon his hands,—one with Denmark then raging,—also
-the seeds of two other wars, with Russia and with
-Poland, which soon after burst forth. The first fifteen
-years of his reign were occupied in bringing these wars to
-a conclusion; and in these struggles he won an experience
-which afterwards proved of great service in making him
-illustrious upon a more conspicuous battle-field. We
-have not space to describe at length the wars between
-Sweden and Denmark, nor her conflicts with Russia and
-Poland, but must pass on to the more important period of
-the history of Gustavus Adolphus, which gives him a
-place in the foremost ranks of leadership, and places his
-name with Napoleon I., Alexander the Great, Julius
-Cæsar, and Charlemagne. It was not so much what he
-himself personally accomplished,—though that was much,
-for death met him long before the glorious end was
-reached,—but it was on account of the vast and momentous
-train of circumstances he set in motion, because he
-stood forth, the only man capable of taking the helm of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-the great ship of the Reformation, which, but for him,
-aided by the almighty ruling of an Omniscient Providence,
-seemed to the finite vision of mankind doomed to destruction.
-It was not as a conqueror of vast empires,
-like Alexander, Julius Cæsar, and Napoleon, that Gustavus
-Adolphus is illustrious; but it is because, through the
-providence of God, he was made the instrument in helping
-to achieve the more important conquest of gaining
-spiritual liberty of soul from the bondage of bigotry and
-superstition. As the champion of the Reformation, the
-name of Gustavus Adolphus must be placed amongst the
-foremost of the famous rulers of the world.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 464px;">
-<img src="images/i-447.jpg" width="464" height="589" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS, FROM A PICTURE BY VAN DYCK.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Gustavus was now thirty-four years of age. He had
-prosecuted wars with Denmark, Russia, and Poland, and
-secured advantageous terms of peace with these nations.
-Before he had reached his twentieth year, he had driven
-back the invaders of his country, and gained independence
-for Sweden. In four years more, his victories over
-his eastern enemies enabled him to declare, “Russia cannot
-now, without our consent, launch a single boat on the
-Baltic.”</p>
-
-<p>For twelve years Gustavus had watched the bloody
-strife between the defenders of the Reformed Faith in
-Germany and the powers of the Catholic league of the
-Empire and of Spain. What Philip II. of Spain was to
-the Catholics as a leader and upholder of the infamous Inquisition,
-such a power did Gustavus Adolphus become,
-in behalf of the Protestants, as a leader and defender of
-the Reformation. Holland, England, and France had
-earnestly pressed him to conclude the Polish wars; for
-the eyes of the suffering adherents of the Reformed Faith
-in Germany were turned in hope toward the youthful king
-of Sweden as their deliverer. In setting out upon this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-distant enterprise, Gustavus Adolphus encountered the
-gravest obstacles, which he himself did not fail to realize;
-for when his resolution was fully formed, and the consent
-of his Estates obtained, he exclaimed, “For me there remains
-henceforth no more rest but the eternal.”</p>
-
-<p>Though he left Sweden full of hope and courage, it was
-with the sure presentiment that he would never return.
-Gustavus had married Marie Eleonore, daughter of the
-elector of Brandenburg; and at the time of his German
-expedition left a little daughter behind him, only four
-years of age, who was sole heir to the Swedish throne.
-Gustavus Adolphus was one of the most skilful commanders
-of his age. Napoleon I. was wont to set him
-among the eight greatest generals whom the world has ever
-seen, placing him in the same rank with Alexander the
-Great, Hannibal, Julius Cæsar, in the ancient world,
-with Turenne, Prince Eugene, Frederic the Great, and
-himself, in the modern.</p>
-
-<p>Before his time, the only artillery brought into the open
-field consisted of huge, heavy guns, slowly dragged along
-by twelve, sixteen, or twenty horses or oxen, which, once
-placed, could only remain in one position, even though
-the entire battle had shifted elsewhere. Gustavus was
-the first who introduced flying artillery, capable of being
-rapidly transferred from one part of the field to another.
-At a siege, this valiant Swedish king would in the same
-day “be at once generalissimo, chief engineer to lay out
-the lines, pioneer, spade in hand and in his shirt digging
-in the trenches, and leader of a storming party to dislodge
-the foe from some annoying outwork. If a party of the
-enemy’s cavalry were to be surprised in a night attack,
-he would himself undertake the surprise. He, indeed,
-carried this quite too far, obeying overmuch the instinct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-and impulses of his own courageous heart. And yet there
-was also a true humility in it all,—a feeling that no man
-ought to look at himself as indispensable. ‘God is
-immortal,’ he was wont to reply, when remonstrated with
-on this matter, and reminded of the fearful chasm, not to
-be filled by any other, which his death would assuredly
-leave.” Richelieu said of him, “The king of Sweden
-is a new sun which has just risen, young, but of vast
-renown. The ill-treated or banished princes of Germany
-in their misfortunes have turned their eyes towards him as
-the mariner does to the polar star.”</p>
-
-<p>Gustavus was admitted by the ablest statesmen of
-Europe to be the ablest general of his time. He was
-familiar with the military tactics of ancient and modern
-times, and he devised a more effective system of warfare
-than his predecessors had known. In answer to the question,
-Why did Gustavus Adolphus enter into the religious
-contests of Germany, and assume the commanding place
-he filled in that terrible struggle known as the “Thirty
-Years’ War”? an able writer gives thus briefly the
-reason:—</p>
-
-<p>“First, a deep and genuine sympathy with his co-religionists
-in Germany, and with their sufferings, joined to
-a conviction that he was called of God to assist them in
-this hour of their utmost need.</p>
-
-<p>“Secondly, a sense of the most real danger which
-threatened his own kingdom, if the entire liberties, political
-and religious, of northern Germany were trodden out,
-and the free cities of the German Ocean, Stralsund and
-the rest, falling into the hands of the emperor, became
-hostile outposts from which to assail him. He felt that
-he was only going to meet a war which, if he tarried at
-home, would sooner or later inevitably come to seek him
-there.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And, lastly, there was working in his mind, no doubt,
-a desire to give to Sweden a more forward place in the
-world, with a consciousness of mighty powers in himself,
-which craved a wider sphere for their exercise.”</p>
-
-<p>In answer to John Skytte, who remarked that war put
-his monarchy at stake, he responded: “All monarchies
-have passed from one family to another. That which
-constitutes a monarchy is not men, it is the law.”</p>
-
-<p>At length, in 1630, Gustavus landed on the island of
-Usedom, at the mouth of the Oder.</p>
-
-<p>“So we have got another kingling on our hands,” the
-emperor exclaimed in scorn, when the news reached
-Vienna. Little did the enemies of the Reformation then
-imagine what a terrible and irresistible foe this despised
-“kingling” would prove to be. The army of Gustavus
-consisted of only fifteen thousand men; but, if his army
-was small, the material was indeed valuable. Gustavus
-said of his staff of officers, “All these are captains, and
-fit to command armies.” And when his early death left
-them without a leader, these same officers led the Swedish
-armies so successfully that, even after France had become
-her ally, Sweden was not obscured, but still held a prominent
-place in the mighty contest. Gustavus had determined
-not to hazard a battle until he was joined by German
-allies. As soon as they landed on the island of Usedom,
-Gustavus, having leaped first upon the shore, at once fell
-upon his knees, and sought the aid and blessing of God;
-and then the working and the praying went hand in hand.
-He was the first to seize a spade; and, as the troops
-landed, one half were employed in raising intrenchments,
-while the other half stood in battle array, to repel any
-attacks of the enemy. It was a long time before any
-German ally appeared; for, though gallant little Hesse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-Cassel boldly announced its allegiance, it was a power too
-small and too distant to count for much. The two most
-powerful of the German Protestant princes were his
-brother-in-law, the elector of Brandenburg, and the elector
-of Saxony. John George of Saxony was a great hunter,
-having killed with his own hand or seen killed 113,629
-wild animals. He was, however, such a great drunkard
-that he was called the Beer King. But this bold Nimrod,
-who could fight wild animals so courageously, was too
-cowardly to come forward against the enemies of his
-country, and only joined Gustavus when the terrors of
-the Catholic league forced him to seek safety in such an
-alliance.</p>
-
-<p>As to the brother-in-law of Gustavus, little was to be
-obtained from him. He was so vacillating in character
-and in politics that Carlyle says of him, “Poor man, it
-was his fate to stand in the range of these huge collisions,
-when the Titans were hurling rocks at one another, and
-he hoped by dexterous skipping to escape share of the
-game.”</p>
-
-<p>The arrival of Gustavus Adolphus in Germany was at
-first looked upon with indifference by the imperial court.
-The emperor Ferdinand said carelessly, “We have another
-little enemy before us.” At Vienna they made sport of
-Gustavus and of his pretensions to require himself to be
-called “Your majesty,” like the other kings of Europe.
-“The snow-king will melt as he approaches the southern
-sun,” they exclaimed derisively. But the valiant Swedes
-worked on at their fortifications at Pomerania, indifferent
-to the sneers of their foes, inspired by the example of
-their loved leader, whose watchword was, “to pray often
-to God with all your heart is almost to conquer.” In a
-short time, the army was enclosed in an intrenched camp,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-defended by cannon. The king of Sweden then addressed
-these stirring words to his soldiers:—</p>
-
-<p>“It is as much on your account as for your religious
-brethren in Germany that I have undertaken this war.
-You will there gather imperishable glory. You have
-nothing to fear from the enemy; they are the same whom
-you have already conquered in Prussia. Your bravery
-has imposed on Poland an armistice of six years; if you
-continue to fight as valiantly, I hope to obtain an honorable
-peace for your country and guaranties of security for
-the German Protestants. Old soldiers, it is not of yesterday
-you have known war; for you have shared with
-me all the chances of fortune. You must not lose courage
-if you experience some wants. I will conduct you to
-an enemy who has enriched himself at the expense of that
-unhappy country. It is only with the enemy you can find
-money, abundance, and all which you desire.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus did Gustavus appeal to their courage, their patriotism,
-their religious enthusiasm, and their personal necessities,
-and inspire his soldiers with irresistible valor.</p>
-
-<p>The severe discipline of the Swedish troops excited not
-less admiration than the personal virtue of their king.
-Richelieu, in his memoirs, says, “As to the king of Sweden
-personally, there was seen in his actions but an inexorable
-severity towards the least excess of his soldiers, an
-extraordinary mildness towards the people, and an exact
-justice on all occasions.”</p>
-
-<p>It was at the time of the landing of the Swedes that the
-noted general Wallenstein had fallen into disgrace with
-the German emperor, and had been discharged from the
-imperial service. His place was filled by Tilly, a military
-chieftain of high renown. Tilly had made himself the
-terror of the Protestants by his bigoted zeal for the Catholic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-religion and his fierce spirit of persecution towards
-the Reformed Faith; but his military insight made him
-just enough to thus generously describe his famous antagonist:—</p>
-
-<p>“The king of Sweden is an enemy both prudent and
-brave, inured to war, and in the flower of his age. His
-plans are excellent, his resources considerable, his subjects
-enthusiastically attached to him. His army,—composed
-of Swedes, Germans, Livonians, Finlanders, Scots,
-and English,—by its devoted obedience to their leader, is
-blended into one nation. He is a gamester, in playing
-with whom not to have lost is to have won a great deal.”</p>
-
-<p>Gustavus was beginning to make a strong position in
-northern Germany, when he received an envoy from the
-elector of Brandenburg, urging him to consent to an armistice,
-the elector offering himself as a mediator between
-the Swedish king and the Catholic league. Gustavus
-thus answered this weak and cowardly advice of the
-elector:—</p>
-
-<p>“I have listened to the arguments by which my lord
-and brother-in-law would seek to dissuade me from the
-war, but could well have expected another communication
-from him; namely, that God having helped me thus far,
-and come, as I am, into this land for no other end than
-to deliver its poor and oppressed estates and people from
-the horrible tyranny of the thieves and robbers who have
-plagued it so long, above all, to free his highness from
-like tribulation, he would rather have joined himself with
-me, and thus not failed to seize the opportunity which
-God has wonderfully vouchsafed him. Or does not his
-highness yet know that the intention of the emperor and
-of the league is this,—not to cease till the evangelical
-religion is quite rooted out of the empire, and that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
-himself has nothing else to look forward to than to be
-compelled either to deny his faith or to forsake his land?
-For God’s sake, let him bethink himself a little, and for
-once grasp manly counsels. For myself, I cannot go back....
-I seek in this work not mine own things, no profit at
-all except the safety of my kingdom; else have I nothing
-from it but expense, weariness, toil, and danger of life
-and limb.... For this, I say plainly beforehand, I will
-hear and know nothing of neutrality; his highness must
-be friend or foe. When I come to his borders, he must
-declare himself hot or cold. The battle is one between
-God and the devil. Will his highness hold with God, let
-him stand on my side; if he prefer to hold with the devil,
-then he must fight with me.”</p>
-
-<p>The elector of Brandenburg still vacillating, the king of
-Sweden was as good as his word, and advanced with his
-army, with loaded cannon and matches burning, to the
-gates of Berlin. Whereupon, the treaty of alliance was
-quickly signed by the elector of Brandenburg; and not
-long after, the outrages of the imperial commander obliged
-the elector of Saxony also to join the Swedish king.
-During the first year in Germany, the Swedes had captured
-Greiffenhagen and Gartz; and soon after New
-Brandenburg, Loitz, Malchin, and Demmin were in
-their power. We have no space to note the particulars
-regarding these important conquests, and can only mention
-the taking of Demmin. The Imperialists had placed
-the garrison here under the command of Duke Savelli,
-who had been ordered to defend the place three weeks,
-when Tilly had promised to come to his aid. Among the
-Imperialists was Del Ponte, a man who had been deep in
-a conspiracy to assassinate the king of Sweden, which
-had come near being successful. As Del Ponte feared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-the vengeance of the king whose life he had thus sought,
-he left the fortress secretly, leaving his baggage and
-wealth behind him. Savelli offered to capitulate, on condition
-that he might pass out with arms and baggage. As
-Gustavus was now on the eve of meeting Tilly, he did
-not think best to prolong the siege, and so agreed to
-the proposal of Savelli. The entire garrison passed out
-with ensigns flying, followed by the baggage train. As
-Savelli, brilliantly and carefully dressed, passed the Swedish
-king, Gustavus addressed him: “Tell the emperor
-I make war for civil and religious liberty. As to you,
-duke, I thank you for having taken the trouble to quit the
-splendid feasts of Rome to combat against me, for your
-person seems to me more in its place at courts than in
-the camps.” After the Italian general passed, Gustavus
-remarked to his officers, “That man reckons much on the
-good nature of the emperor; if he was in my service, he
-would lose his head for his cowardice.”</p>
-
-<p>As the baggage of the treacherous Del Ponte was
-noticed in the train, some of the Swedish officers suggested
-that it would be well to retain what belonged to
-that traitor, to which Gustavus responded, “I have given
-my word, and no one shall have the right to reproach me
-for having broken it.” As to the energy and bravery of
-Gustavus, one of his Scotch officers thus testifies: “I
-serve with great pleasure such a general, and I could find
-with difficulty a similar man who was accustomed to be
-the first and the last where there is danger; who gained
-the love of his officers by the part he took in their troubles
-and fatigues; who knew so well how to trace the rules of
-conduct for his warriors according to times and circumstances;
-who cared for their health, their honor; who
-was always ready to aid them; who divined the projects<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-and knew the resources of his enemies, their plans, their
-forces, their discipline, likewise the nature and position of
-the places they occupied. He never hesitated to execute
-what he had ordered. He arrested an officer who, while
-the fortifications of Settin were being repaired, stated
-that the earth was frozen. In affairs which had relation
-to the needs of the war, he did not admit of excuses.
-The lack of good charts and the great importance he attached
-to knowledge of the ground, caused him to go <i>en
-reconnaissance</i> in person, and expose himself very near to
-danger, for he was short-sighted.”</p>
-
-<p>At the siege of Demmin he had gone to reconnoitre,
-and held a spy-glass in hand, when he plunged half-leg
-deep in the marsh, in consequence of the breaking of
-the ice. The officer nearest to him prepared to come to
-his aid. Gustavus made a sign to him to remain tranquil,
-so as not to draw the attention of the enemy who, not
-less, directed his fire upon him. The king raised himself
-up in the midst of a shower of projectiles, and went to
-dry himself at the bivouac fire of the officer, who reproached
-him for having thus exposed his precious life. The king
-listened to the officer with kindness and acknowledged his
-imprudence, but added, “It is my nature not to believe
-well done except what I do myself; it is also necessary
-that I see everything by my own eyes.” Gustavus now
-advanced boldly into the heart of Germany, and met the
-forces of the Catholic League on the plains of Leipsic.
-As the Swedes drew up in line of battle, Gustavus rode
-from point to point, encouraging his soldiers, telling them
-“not to fire until they saw the white of the enemies’
-eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the Swedish king rode to the centre of his line,
-halted, removed his cap with one hand and lowered his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-sword with the other. His example was followed by all
-near him. Gustavus then offered this brief prayer in a
-powerful voice, which enabled him to be heard by a large
-number of his army:—</p>
-
-<p>“Good God, thou who holdest in thy hand victory
-and defeat, turn thy merciful face to us thy servants.
-We have come far, we have left our peaceful homes to
-combat in this country for liberty, for the truth, and for
-thy gospel. Glorify thy holy name in granting us victory.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the Swedish king sent a trumpeter to challenge
-Tilly and his army. The battle ensued, in which Gustavus
-defeated Tilly, the victor on more than twenty battle-fields.
-The king of Sweden so shattered and scattered
-the Catholic army in this conflict, that for a while all
-Germany was open to him. Gustavus was now everywhere
-hailed by the down-trodden Protestants of Germany,
-whose worship he re-established, and whose churches he
-restored to them, as their saviour and deliverer. The
-very excess of their gratitude would sometimes make him
-afraid. Only three days before his death he said to his
-chaplain, “They make a god of me; God will punish me
-for this.”</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of Gustavus at this time is thus described:
-“He was one ‘framed in the prodigality of
-nature.’ His look proclaimed the hero, and at the same
-time, the genuine child of the North. A head taller than
-men of the ordinary stature, yet all his limbs were perfectly
-proportioned.” Majesty and courage shone out
-from his clear gray eyes; while, at the same time, an air
-of mildness and <i>bonhommie</i> tempered the earnestness of
-his glance. He had the curved eagle nose of Cæsar, of
-Napoleon, of Wellington, of Napier,—the conqueror’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
-nose as we may call it. His skin was fair, his hair blonde,
-almost gold-colored, so that the Italians were wont to call
-him, <i>Re d’oro</i> or the Gold-king. In latter years he was
-somewhat inclined to corpulence, though not so much as
-to detract from the majesty of his appearance. This made
-it, however, not easy to find a horse which was equal to
-his weight.</p>
-
-<p>Gustavus now carried his victorious arms to the banks
-of the Rhine, where there still stands, not far from Mayence,
-what is known as the Swedish column. On the
-banks of the Lech he again met Tilly, who would have
-barred the way. Some of the officers in the Swedish
-army counselled that the king should not meet Tilly, but
-should march to Bohemia.</p>
-
-<p>The Lech was deep and rapid, and to cross it in the
-face of an enemy was very hazardous. In case of failure
-the entire Swedish army would be lost. But Gustavus exclaimed,
-“What! have we crossed the Baltic, the Oder,
-the Elbe, and the Rhine, to stop stupefied before this mere
-stream, the Lech? Remember that the undertakings the
-most difficult are often those which succeed best, because
-the adverse party regard them as impossible.”</p>
-
-<p>Gustavus threw over the Lech a bridge under the crossfire
-of seventy-two pieces of cannon. The king stimulated
-his troops by his own example, making with his own
-hand more than sixty cannon discharges. The enemy
-did their utmost to destroy the works, and Tilly was undaunted
-in his exertions to encourage his men, until he
-was mortally wounded by a cannon-ball, and victory soon
-was on the side of the heroic Swedes.</p>
-
-<p>This crossing of the Lech in the face of an enemy is esteemed
-the most signal military exploit of Gustavus.
-The emperor was now forced to recall Wallenstein to lead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-the hard-pressed Imperialists against this invincible Swedish
-king.</p>
-
-<p>But with the battle of Lützen, where the Swedes encountered
-the Imperialists under Wallenstein, we come
-also to the lamentable but heroic death of Gustavus
-Adolphus. We cannot recount the further conflicts of
-the Thirty Years’ War.</p>
-
-<p>The work of Gustavus Adolphus in Germany was continued
-by his able generals and allies, until at length the
-treaty, concluded at Westphalia in 1648, gave security
-and permanence to the work which the king of Sweden
-and his brave soldiers had in a large degree achieved
-before his death. A wound which Gustavus had received
-in his Polish wars, made the wearing of armor very painful
-to him, and upon the morning of the day upon which
-the battle of Lützen was fought, when his armor was
-brought to him, he declined to put it on, saying, “God is
-my armor.”</p>
-
-<p>His death is thus described. Learning that the centre
-of the Swedish lines were wavering, Gustavus hastened
-thither. “Arriving at the wavering centre, he cried to
-his troops, ‘Follow me, my brave boys!’ and his horse
-at a bound bore him across the ditch. Only a few of his
-cavaliers followed him, their steeds not being equal to
-his. Owing to his impetuosity, perhaps also to his nearsightedness
-and the increasing fog, he did not perceive
-to what extent he was in advance, and became separated
-from the troops he was so bravely leading. An imperial
-corporal, noticing that the Swedes made way for an advancing
-cavalier, pointed him out to a musketeer, saying,
-he must be a personage of high rank, and urged him to
-fire on him. The musketeer took aim, his ball broke the
-left arm of the king, causing the bone to protrude, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-the blood to run freely. ‘The king bleeds!’ cried the
-Swedes near him. ‘It is nothing; march forward my
-boys!’ responded the wounded hero, seeking to calm
-their disquietude by assuming a smiling countenance.
-But soon overcome by pain and loss of blood, he requested
-Duke Lauenburg, in French, to lead him out of
-the tumult without being observed, which was sought to
-be done by making a <i>détour</i>, so as to conceal the king’s
-withdrawal from his brave Smolanders he was leading to
-the charge. Scarcely had they made a few steps, when
-one of the imperial regiment of cuirassiers encountered
-them, preceded by Lieut.-Col. Falkenberg, who, recognizing
-the king, fired a pistol shot, hitting him in the
-back. ‘Brother,’ said he to Lauenburg, with a dying
-voice; ‘I have enough. Look to your own life.’ Falkenberg
-was immediately slain by the equerry of the duke of
-Lauenburg. At the same moment the king fell from his
-horse, struck by several more balls, and was dragged
-some distance by the stirrups. The duke of Lauenburg
-fled. Of the king’s two orderlies, one lay dead and the
-other wounded. Of his attendants, only a German
-page, named Leubelfing, remained by him. The king
-having fallen from his horse, the page jumped from his
-own, and offered it to the dying hero. The king stretched
-out his hands, but the young man had not strength sufficient
-to lift him from the ground. Meanwhile the imperial
-cuirassiers hastened forward, and demanded the
-name of the wounded officer. The loyal page would not
-reveal it, and received wounds from which he died soon
-after. But the dying Gustavus bravely answered, ‘I am
-the king of Sweden.’ Whereupon his cruel enemies shot
-a ball through his head, and thrust their swords through
-his bleeding body. His hat, blackened with the powder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-and pierced with the ball, is still to be seen in the arsenal
-at Vienna; his bloody buff coat as well. More is not
-known of the final agony, except that, when the tide
-of battle had a little ebbed, the body of the hero-king
-was found with the face to the ground, despoiled and
-stripped to the shirt, trodden under the hoofs of horses,
-trampled in the mire, and disfigured with all these
-wounds.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 397px;">
-<img src="images/i-463.jpg" width="397" height="594" alt="painting of battle" />
-<div class="caption">DEATH OF GUSTAVUS AND HIS PAGE.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Such was the end of the imposing and kingly bodily
-presence; but this was not the end of the accomplishment
-of that heroic soul. When the horse of the fallen
-Gustavus, with its empty saddle covered with blood,
-came running amongst the Swedish troops, they knew
-what had happened to their king. Duke Bernhard, riding
-through the ranks, exclaimed, “Swedes, Finlanders, and
-Germans! your defender, the defender of our liberty, is
-dead. Life is nothing to me if I do not draw bloody
-vengeance from this misfortune. Whoever wishes to
-prove he loved the king, has only to follow me to avenge
-his death.” The whole Swedish army, fired by a common
-enthusiasm nerved by desperation, advanced to the attack,
-and so valiantly did they fight, that their gallant charge
-completed the victory of Lützen. Thus died the “Gold-king
-of the North”; but his dying hours were gilded by
-the sunset glories of immortal fame, and the “Snow-king,”
-of Sweden, leaves a name as pure and glistening
-as the starry snow-flakes.</p>
-
-<p>“Great men, far more than any Alps or coliseums, are
-the true world-wonders, which it concerns us to behold
-clearly, and imprint forever on our remembrance. Great
-men are the fire-pillars in this dark pilgrimage of mankind;
-they stand as heavenly signs, ever-living witnesses
-of what has been,—prophetic witnesses of what may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
-still be; the revealed embodied possibilities of human
-nature, which greatness he who has never with his whole
-heart passionately loved and reverenced, is himself forever
-doomed to be little.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>LOUIS XIV. OF FRANCE.<br />
-
-<small>1638-1715 A.D.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“To do what one pleases with impunity,</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">That is to be King.”—<span class="smcap">Sallust.</span></span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE reign of Louis XIV., whether regarded politically,
-socially, or morally, was undoubtedly the most striking
-which France has ever known. The splendor of his
-court, the successes of his armies, and the illustrious
-names that embellished the century over which he ruled,
-drew the attention of all Europe to the person of the
-monarch who, every inch a king, assumed the authority
-and power of regality as well as its mere visible attributes.
-All Europe looked to France, all France to Paris, all
-Paris to Versailles, all Versailles to Louis XIV.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/i-467.jpg" width="300" height="468" alt="drawing Louis XIV." />
-</div>
-
-<p>The centre of all attraction, he, like the eagle, embraced
-the whole glory of the orb upon which he gazed; and
-seated firmly upon the throne of France, ruling by the
-“right divine,” he ushered in the golden age of literature,
-himself the theme and gaze and wonder of a dazzled
-world.</p>
-
-<p>The morning of the 5th of September, 1638, dawned
-bright and clear. In the forest of St. Germain, the birds
-sang merrily in the trees, and the timid deer sought shelter
-in the deepest shade, all unconscious that ere the setting
-of the sun a royal prince would look upon it for the
-first time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The park and palace were filled with an eager and excited
-throng; earls, princes, dukes, and bishops anxiously
-awaited the announcement that an heir was born to the
-crown of France. In the grand salon of Henry IV.,
-King Louis XIII., the Duke d’Orleans, the bishops of
-Lisieux, Meaux, and Beauvais, impatiently awaited the
-long-expected tidings. And now the folding-doors are
-thrown back, and the king is greeted with the welcome
-intelligence that he is the father of a <i>dauphin</i>. Tenderly
-he takes the child, and stepping upon the balcony, exhibits
-him to the crowd, exclaiming joyfully, “A son, gentlemen!
-a son!” and park and palace re-echo with the
-shouts of “<i>Vive le Roi!</i>” “<i>Vive le Dauphin!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Thus this baby prince, when first he saw the light, was
-greeted by the homage of a court—an homage which,
-during a life of seventy-seven years, he ever exacted
-and received, until as Louis XIV., the <i>Grand Monarque</i>,
-in obedience to Him who is King of kings and Lord of
-lords, he laid aside his sceptre and his crown, and slept
-with his fathers in the royal vaults of St. Denis. The
-birth of the dauphin afforded Louis XIII. such delight
-that for a time he threw aside his melancholy manner;
-but his health, never robust, failed rapidly, and on the
-20th of April, 1643, feeling that his end could not be far
-distant, he declared the regency of the queen, and desired
-the christening of the dauphin. It accordingly took place
-on the following day with much pomp in the chapel at St.
-Germain. The king desired he should be called Louis,
-and after the ceremony, when the little prince was carried
-to his bedside in order to ascertain if his wishes had been
-fulfilled, he demanded, “What is your name, my child?”
-And the little dauphin replied promptly, “I am Louis
-XIV.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Not yet, my son, not yet!” said the dying king;
-“but I pray to God that it may soon be so.”</p>
-
-<p>From this time his health failed rapidly, and on the 14th
-of May, 1643, he expired, having reigned thirty-three
-years.</p>
-
-<p>The little dauphin early displayed that haughtiness and
-self-will which were to be the ruling principles of his life.
-His education had been grossly neglected, and through
-this came many of his after faults; and though he excelled
-in every punctilio of court etiquette, and was the
-very essence of politeness, yet in other things he was far
-behind the other youths of his age. This was exactly as
-Cardinal Mazarin intended that it should be, that by thus
-dwarfing the intellect of the king, he might the longer
-grasp the reins of government. The wily cardinal fully
-understood the character of the young prince with whom
-he had to deal, and upon one occasion, when some one
-remonstrated with him concerning the course he had
-adopted toward the king, he replied, “Ah, you do not
-know His Majesty! he has the stuff in him to make four
-kings and an honest man.”</p>
-
-<p>The hatred and dislike of Louis for the cardinal increased
-day by day. The state affected by him jarred
-upon his natural haughtiness, and, boy as he was, it was
-impossible that he could contrast the extreme magnificence
-of his mother’s minister with his own neglected condition
-without feeling how insultingly the cardinal had
-profited by his weakness and want of power. On one
-occasion at Compiègne, as the cardinal was passing with
-a numerous suite along the terrace, the king turned away,
-saying contemptuously, without any attempt to lower his
-voice, “There is the Grand Turk going by.”</p>
-
-<p>A few days afterwards, as he was traversing a passage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-in which he perceived one of the cardinal’s household
-named Bois Fermé, he turned to M. de Nyert, who was
-following him, and observed, “So the cardinal is with
-mamma again, for I see Bois Fermé in the passage. Does
-he always wait there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sire,” replied Nyert; “but in addition to Bois
-Fermé there is another gentleman upon the stairs and two
-in the corridor.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is one at every stride, then,” said the young;
-king dryly.</p>
-
-<p>But the boy-king was not the only one who found the
-arrogance of the haughty cardinal unbearable. There
-had gradually sprung up a deadly feud between the court
-and Mazarin on one side, and the Parliament on the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>The people of Paris were in sympathy with the Parliament;
-and nobles, even of royal blood, out of enmity to
-Mazarin, joined the popular cause.</p>
-
-<p>Thus commenced the famous civil war of the Fronde;
-for as the cardinal contemptuously remarked, “The
-Parliament are like school-boys <i>fronding in the Paris
-ditches</i>,” and the Parliament of Paris accepted the title,
-and adopted the <i>Fronde</i>, or sling, as the emblem of their
-party. There were riots in Paris, and affairs grew
-threatening. Mazarin and the court party were alarmed
-and fled to St. Germain.</p>
-
-<p>Thus there were two rival courts in France,—the one at
-St. Germain, where all was want and destitution; the
-other at the Hotel de Ville in Paris, where all was splendor,
-abundance, and festive enjoyment. The court and
-Mazarin soon tired of the life at St. Germain, and the
-king; sent a herald to the Parliament. The Parliament
-refused to receive the herald, but sent a deputation to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-king, and at last, after a lengthy conference, a not very
-satisfactory compromise was agreed upon, and on the 5th
-of April, 1650, the royal fugitives returned to Paris.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus ended the first act of the most singular, bootless,
-and we are almost tempted to add, burlesque war, which
-in all probability, Europe ever witnessed. Through its
-whole duration society appeared to have been smitten with
-some moral hallucination. Kings and cardinals slept on
-mattresses; princesses and duchesses on straw; market-women
-embraced princes; prelates governed armies;
-court-ladies led the mob, and the mob in its turn ruled
-the city.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 5th of September, 1651, the minority of the
-dauphin ceased, he had now entered upon his fourteenth
-year, and, immature boy as he was, he was declared to be
-the absolute monarch of France. On the seventh of the
-month, the king held his bed of justice. The ceremony
-was attended with all the pomp the wealth of the empire
-could furnish. The young king left the Palais Royal
-attended by a numerous and splendid retinue. Observed
-of all observers, “handsome as Adonis, august in majesty,
-the pride and joy of humanity,” he sat his splendid steed;
-and when the horse, frightened by the long and enthusiastically
-prolonged cries of, “<i>Vive le Roi!</i>” reared and
-plunged with terror, Louis managed him with a skill and
-address which called forth the admiration of all beholders.
-After attending mass, the young king took his seat in the
-Parliament. Here the boy of thirteen, covering his head
-while all the notabilities of France stood before him with
-heads uncovered, repeated the following words:—</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen, I have attended my Parliament in order
-to inform you that, according to the law of my kingdom,
-I shall myself assume its government. I trust<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-that by the goodness of God it will be with piety and
-justice.”</p>
-
-<p>The chancellor then made a long address, after which
-the oath of allegiance was taken by all the civil and ecclesiastical
-notabilities. The royal procession then returned
-to the gates of the Palais Royal. Thus, a stripling, who
-had just completed his thirteenth year, was accepted by
-the nobles and by the populace as the absolute and untrammelled
-sovereign of France. “He held in his hands,
-virtually, unrestrained by constitution or court, their liberties,
-their fortunes, and their lives.” Two years later, in
-1653, the coronation of the king took place at Rheims.
-France at this time was at war with Spain, and, immediately
-after the coronation, the king, then sixteen years of
-age, set out from Rheims to place himself at the head of
-the army. He went to Stenay, on the northeastern frontier
-of France. This ancient city, protected by strong
-fortifications, was held by the Prince de Condé. The
-royal troops were besieging it. There were marches and
-counter-marches, battles and skirmishes. The young king
-displayed intrepidity which secured for him the admiration
-of the soldiers. Turenne and Fabert fought the
-battles and gained the victories. Stenay was soon taken,
-and the army of the Prince de Condé driven from all its
-positions. “There is nothing so successful as success;”
-and the young king, a hero and a conqueror, returned to
-Paris to enjoy the congratulation of the populace, and to
-offer public thanksgiving in the cathedral of Nôtre Dame.
-Though the king was nominally the absolute ruler of
-France, still there was the influence of his mother, Anne
-of Austria, which up to this time had exerted over him a
-great control; but this was soon to end.</p>
-
-<p>Henrietta Maria, the widowed queen of the unfortunate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-Charles I., was then residing at the French court. Her
-daughter Henrietta, as grand-daughter of Henry IV. and
-daughter of Charles I., was entitled, through the purity
-of her royal blood, to the highest consideration at the
-court. When, then, at a ball given for these unfortunate
-guests, the music summoned the dancers upon the floor,
-and the king, in total disregard of his young and royal
-cousin, advanced, according to his custom, to lead out the
-Duchesse de Mercœur, the queen was shocked at so gross
-a breach of etiquette, and, rising hastily, she withdrew his
-hand from that of the duchess, and said in a low voice,
-“You should dance first, my son, with the princess of
-England.”</p>
-
-<p>Louis replied sullenly, “I am not fond of little girls.”</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 438px;">
-<img src="images/i-475.jpg" width="438" height="626" alt="drawng" />
-<div class="caption">ANNE OF AUSTRIA AND CARDINAL MAZARIN.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Both Henrietta and her daughter overheard this discourteous
-remark. The English queen hastened to Anne
-of Austria, and entreated her not to attempt to constrain
-the wishes of his majesty. The position was exceedingly
-awkward for all parties; but the proud spirit of Anne of
-Austria was aroused. Resuming her maternal authority,
-she declared that if her niece, the princess of England,
-remained a spectator at the ball, her son should do the
-same. Thus constrained, the king very ungraciously led
-out the English princess upon the floor. After the departure
-of the guests, the mother and son had their first
-serious quarrel. Severely Anne of Austria rebuked the
-king for his shameful and uncourteous conduct. Louis
-faced his mother haughtily. “Madam, who is lord of
-France, Louis the king or Anne of Austria? Too long,”
-he said, “I have been guided by your leading strings.
-Henceforth, I will be my own master; and do not you,
-madam, trouble yourself to criticise or correct me. I
-am the king.” And this was no idle boast; for from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-that tearful evening of the queen’s ball to the day of his
-death, sixty-one years after, Louis of Bourbon, called
-The Great, ruled as absolute lord over his kingdom of
-France; and the boy who could say so defiantly, “Henceforth,
-I will be my own master,” was fully equal to that
-other famous declaration of arrogant authority, made years
-after in the full tide of his power, “<i>I am the state!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>But Anne of Austria was not the only one destined to
-feel the imperious will of the young sovereign. The Parliament
-of Paris refused to register certain decrees of the
-king. Louis heard of it while preparing to hunt in the
-woods of Vincennes. He leaped upon his horse, and
-galloped to Paris. At half-past nine o’clock in the morning,
-the king entered the Chamber of Deputies, in full
-hunting dress. He heard mass, and, whip in hand, addressed
-the body: “Gentlemen of the Parliament, it is
-my will that in future my edicts be <i>registered</i>, and not
-discussed. Should the contrary occur, I shall return, and
-enforce obedience.”</p>
-
-<p>The trumpet sounded, and the king and his courtiers
-galloped back to the forest of Vincennes. The decrees
-were registered. Parliament had ventured to try its
-strength against Cardinal Mazarin, but did not dare to
-disobey its king.</p>
-
-<p>The marriage of the king was a matter of much importance,
-and was much talked of. The aspirants for his
-hand and the throne of France were numberless. Maria
-Theresa, the daughter of the king of Spain, was very
-beautiful. Spain and France were then engaged in petty
-and vexatious hostilities, and a matrimonial alliance would
-secure friendship.</p>
-
-<p>So negotiations were begun; and on the 10th of June,
-1660, Louis, then in the twenty-second year of his age,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-was joined in marriage, at the Isle of Pheasants, to Maria
-Theresa, infanta of Spain. On the 26th of August, the
-king and his young bride made their public entry into
-Paris. Triumphal arches spanned the thoroughfares, garlands
-of flowers and hangings of tapestry covered the
-fronts of the houses, and sweet-scented herbs strewed the
-pavements, upon which passed an apparently interminable
-procession of carriages, horsemen, and footmen; and in
-the midst of the clangor of trumpets, the boom of cannon,
-and the shouts and acclamations of the multitude, came
-the chariot of the young queen, who, radiant and sparkling
-with brilliant gems, beheld from her lofty height all
-Paris striving to do her honor. By her side rode the
-king. His garments, of velvet richly embroidered with
-gold, and covered with jewels, had been prepared at an
-expense of over a million of dollars. The gorgeousness of
-this gala day lived long in the minds of the splendor-loving
-Parisians. For succeeding weeks and months,
-the court luxuriated in one continued round of gayety.
-“There was a sound of revelry by night” in the <i>salons</i>
-of the Louvre and the Tuileries, while lords and ladies
-trod the floors in the mazy evolutions of the dance. And
-yet, to maintain all this state, all this splendor, all this
-reckless extravagance, thousands of the peasantry of
-France were compelled to live in mud hovels, to wear
-the coarsest garb, to eat the plainest food, while their
-wives and daughters toiled barefoot in the fields.</p>
-
-<p>The Cardinal Mazarin was old and dying. For eighteen
-years he had been virtually monarch of France.
-Avaricious and penurious to the last degree, he had
-amassed enormous wealth. Cursed by the peasantry
-whom he had ground to the earth, hated by the king
-whom he had tried to rule, despised by the court which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-he had attempted to humble, on the 9th of March, 1661,
-at his Chateau Mazarin, the cardinal breathed his last.
-From that moment until the day of his death, Louis XIV.
-sat all-powerful upon his throne. And when the president
-of the Ecclesiastical Assembly inquired of the king to
-whom he must hereafter address himself on questions of
-public business, the emphatic and laconic response was,
-“<i>To myself</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>M. Fouquet, the Minister of the Treasury, was rolling
-in ill-gotten wealth. His palace of Vaux le Vicomte,
-upon which he had expended fifteen millions of francs,
-eclipsed in splendor the royal palaces of the Tuileries
-and Fontainebleau. The king disliked him. He knew
-he was robbing the treasury, and it was more than his
-self-love could endure, that a subject should live in state
-surpassing that of his sovereign. Fouquet most imprudently
-invited the king and all the court to a fête at the
-chateau. No step could have been more ill-advised; for
-the king was little likely to forget, as he looked upon the
-splendors of Vaux le Vicomte, by which St. Germain and
-Fontainebleau were utterly eclipsed, that its owner had
-derived all his wealth from the public coffers; and at a
-time, too, when he was himself in need of the funds here
-lavished with such reckless profusion. Every one in
-France, who bore a distinguished name, was bidden to
-the princely festival, which was destined to be commemorated
-by La Fontaine and by Benserade, by Pelisson and
-by Molière. Fouquet met the king at the gates of the
-chateau, and conducted him to the park. Here, notwithstanding
-all he had heard of the splendors of Vaux le
-Vicomte, the king was unprepared for the scene of magnificence
-which burst upon his view. The play of the
-fountains, the beauty of the park, and the splendor of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-the chateau were long remembered by the guests at this
-princely festival. But to Louis XIV. it was gall and
-wormwood; and when he took leave of his obsequious
-host, he remarked bitterly: “I shall never again, sir,
-venture to invite you to visit me. You would find yourself
-inconvenienced.”</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/i-481.jpg" width="450" height="650" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">LOUIS XIV. TAKING LEAVE OF FOUQUET.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fouquet felt the keen rebuke, and turned pale. The
-king and his courtiers returned to Paris, but in the mind
-of Louis XIV. there loomed up distant visions of the
-palaces of Versailles and the great hydraulic machine at
-Marly. On the 8th of January, 1666, Anne of Austria
-died. It was a gloomy winter’s night when the remains
-of her who had been both queen and regent of France
-were borne to their last resting-place in the vaults of St.
-Denis. In his previous campaigns, Louis had taken
-Flanders in three months, and Franche-Comté in three
-weeks. Alarmed by these rapid conquests, Holland,
-Switzerland, and England entered into an alliance to
-resist further encroachments, should they be attempted.
-That such a feeble state as Holland should think of limiting
-his conquests, aroused the anger of the <i>Grand Monarque</i>.
-Armies were mustered, munitions of war got
-together, and ships prepared; and on the 12th of June,
-1672, at the head of an army of one hundred and thirty
-thousand men, Louis crossed the Rhine, and made his
-triumphal entry into the city of Utrecht. Then, indeed,
-Holland trembled; Amsterdam trembled; Louis was at
-the gates. But, rising in the frenzy of despair, they
-pierced the dikes, which alone protected the country from
-the sea. In rushed the flood, and Amsterdam rose like a
-mighty fortress in the midst of the waves, surrounded by
-ships of war, which found depth to float where ships
-never floated before. Thus suddenly Louis XIV. found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-himself checked in his proud career. Chagrined at seeing
-his conquest at an end, he left his army under the
-command of Turenne, and returned to his palaces in
-France.</p>
-
-<p>Louis XIV. had never recovered from the mortification
-he had experienced at the fête at Vaux. He resolved to
-rear a palace so magnificent that no subject, whatever
-might be his resources, could approach it; so magnificent
-that, like the pyramids of Egypt, it should be a lasting
-monument of the splendor of his reign. In 1664, Louis
-selected Versailles as the site for this stupendous pile of
-marble, which, reared at a cost of thousands of lives, and
-two hundred millions of money, decorated by the genius
-of Le Notre, of Mansard, and Le Brun, twenty-five years
-after its commencement, was ready to receive its royal
-occupants; and, resting proudly upon its foundations,
-presented to admiring Europe the noblest monument of
-the reign of Louis XIV. The splendors of the fêtes
-which attended the completion of this palace transformed
-it into a scene of enchantment, and filled all Europe with
-wonder.</p>
-
-<p>The most magnificent room in the palace, the Gallerie
-des Glaces, called the Grand Gallery of Louis XIV., is
-two hundred and forty-two feet long, thirty-five feet
-broad, and forty-three feet high. Germany, Holland,
-Spain, Rome even, bend the knee in the twenty-seven
-paintings which ornament this grand gallery. But to
-whom do they bow? Is it to France? No; it is to
-Louis XIV.</p>
-
-<p>“Louis XIV. and his palace not only afforded conversation
-for Europe, but their fame penetrated the remote
-corners of Asia. The emperor of Siam sent him an
-embassy. Three o’pras, high dignitaries of the empire,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-eight mandarins, and a crowd of servitors landed at
-Brest, charged with magnificent presents and a letter
-from the emperor. Arrived at Versailles, they were
-fêted with unheard-of splendor. The day of their public
-audience, the fountains played in the gardens; flowers
-were strewn in the paths; the sumptuous Gobelin carpets
-were paraded, as well as the richest works of the goldsmith.
-The <i>cortège</i> of ambassadors was received with
-the most refined forms of etiquette, and led through
-apartments filled with the court, glittering in diamonds
-and embroidery, and at length reached the end of the
-grand gallery, where Louis XIV., clad in a costume that
-cost twelve millions, stood on a throne of silver placed on
-an estrade elevated nine steps above the floor, and covered
-with Gobelin carpets and costly vases. There the Siamese
-prostrated themselves three times, with hands clasped,
-before the Majesty of the West, and then lifted their
-eyes to him.”</p>
-
-<p>Louis spent millions on Versailles, millions on his
-pleasures, millions on his pomps, millions in his wars; he
-lavished gold on his favorites, his generals, and his
-lackeys. And all ended in national bankruptcy.</p>
-
-<p>Let us, then, in imagination look upon the grand <i>gallerie</i>
-of Louis XIV. during one of those gorgeous fêtes which
-attracted the attention of all Europe. Before us is the
-grand <i>salon</i>, with its glittering candelabra and thousand
-brilliant lights, reflected in prismatic rays from the costly
-mirrors which line the walls. Under foot, a pavement of
-variegated marble, shining and polished as a floor of
-glass; and overhead the gorgeous frescoes of Le Brun,
-setting forth in glowing colors the great achievements
-of the <i>Grand Monarque</i>. The highest nobility of the
-realm, the <i>grande noblesse</i> of France, throng this splendid
-gallery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The costly costumes of the cavaliers and the gorgeous
-robes of the <i>Grande Dames</i>, the waving plumes and
-flashing jewels, all conspire to render the scene of marvellous
-magnificence. And now, as the impatient throng
-turn their gaze in the direction of the Salon of War, in
-expectation of the approach of royalty, the folding-doors
-are thrown back, and the stentorian voice of the usher
-resounds throughout the gallery: “His Majesty the
-King!” and upon the threshold, in a costume resplendent
-with sparkling gems, stands Louis XIV., the <i>Grand
-Monarque</i>. As a <i>parterre</i> of blooming flowers bends low
-before a rushing gust of wind, so bow these titled lords
-and ladies before his piercing glance; while Louis, full
-conscious of his kingly majesty, walks slowly, and with
-measured step, all down the long and glittering lines,
-pausing ever and anon to address those whose rank
-entitles them to this inestimable boon.</p>
-
-<p>“It was not only on festive occasions that Versailles
-wore an air of grand gala. It was its habitual aspect.
-At Vaux, nature had contributed quite as much as art, to
-the marvellous beauty of the scene. At Versailles, she
-had done nothing, and Louis’ pleasure was the greater, in
-that he considered it the unrivalled creation of his own
-genius. Versailles, with its palace, its gardens, its
-fountains, its statues, and water-works, Trianon, and
-appendages, was a work of art to gaze upon with wonder.
-Let us ascend; for, in whatever place you may be, it
-is necessary to mount, to reach this palace; at whatever
-point you may stand to look at it, you see its roofs,
-apparently touching the clouds. It crowns the hill like a
-diadem. If you come from Paris, it rises above the
-town, which lies prostrate at the feet of its majesty; if
-you approach from the park, it lifts itself above the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-gigantic trees, above the terraces which pile themselves
-up towards it, above the jets of water which surround
-it; the groves seem to support it upon their tall heads,
-and the whole forest serves as its footstool. Let us
-ascend, for the doors are open; people are going and
-coming. The ladies smile, the mirrors reflect them, the
-chandeliers light them, the ceilings throw their golden
-coloring upon them. The courtiers stare in the midst of
-the riches of this magnificent dwelling; but, amid all this
-stir, all these surprises, all these wonders, only one man is
-calm,—this man Louis XIV.</p>
-
-<p>“He feels as much at ease in this palace as in a vestment
-made for him; and, contemplating the work to which his
-pride gave birth, he exclaims, in the fulness of his satisfaction,
-‘Versailles is myself!’</p>
-
-<p>“Yet, upon a bright spring day, or soft summer
-evening, when Louis, disposed for one of those long
-promenades he was accustomed to take sometimes twice
-a day, descended to the gardens from the grand terrace
-of the palace, followed by his numerous court, the <i>coup
-d’œil</i> from a distance must have been charmingly effective.
-And, when enlivened by sauntering, chatting,
-flirting, laughing groups of picturesquely dressed ladies
-and gentlemen of the court,—a numerous retinue of
-lackeys following, no less resplendent in dress than their
-masters,—the admirable fitness of the gardens and
-grounds of Versailles for the purpose which Louis, no
-doubt, had in his mind when the designs were approved,
-must have been very striking. In the centre of this
-throng of feathers and swords, satins and laces, flashing
-jewels, fans and masks, solemnly paced the magnificent
-Louis, with the air of lord of the universe, monarch of all
-he surveyed, and of all who surveyed him; for his courtiers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
-lived only in the light of his countenance. Yet the
-countenance of this god was grandly cold, serene, and
-unchangeable, as that of any of the marble deities that
-presided over his fountains. It was no mean advantage
-to him that nature had kindly exalted him, at least, three
-inches above almost every other man of his court. The
-French were not generally a fine race of men; but the
-dress of the period—the high heels, the wig, the lofty
-plume, and the looped-up, broad-brimmed hat—gave to
-the <i>grandees</i> an appearance of height, which, as a rule,
-they had not. And above them all towered their king,
-like Jupiter, in Olympus, in the midst of the inferior gods,
-or as the sun, with lesser lights revolving around him,
-and shining only in the refulgence of his rays.</p>
-
-<p>“Red-heeled boots, slashed doublets, and flowing wigs,
-cordeliers of pearls, Moorish fans, masques, patches and
-paint, monumental head-dresses, and the thousand other
-items indispensable to the toilets of the lords and ladies
-of the Louis XIV. period, have a charmingly picturesque
-effect, seen through the long vista of two centuries, and
-heightened by the glamour of <i>la grande politesse, et la
-grande galanterie</i> of the <i>Grand Monarque</i> and his court.
-Life seems to have been with them, one long fancy-dress
-ball, a never-ending carnival, a perpetual whirl, an endless
-succession of fêtes and carousals.”</p>
-
-<p>Louis XIV. now found nearly all Europe in arms
-against him. He sent twenty thousand men, under
-Marshal Turenne, to encounter the forces of the emperor
-of Germany; and forty thousand, under the Prince de
-Condé, to assail William, prince of Orange. In his
-defence of the frontiers of the Rhine, Turenne acquired
-a reputation which has made his name famous in military
-annals. With twenty thousand men, he defeated and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-dispersed the Imperial army of seventy thousand; and it
-adds not a little to his celebrity, that, following his own
-judgment, he achieved the victory in direct opposition to
-the orders from the minister of war. A merciless warrior,
-he allowed no consideration of humanity to interfere
-with his military operations. He laid in ashes the beautiful
-country of the Palatinate, embracing, on both sides of
-the Rhine, about sixteen hundred square miles, and having
-a population of over three hundred thousand souls, in
-order that the armies of his enemies might be deprived
-of sustenance; while the wail of widows and orphans
-rose over the smouldering ruins of their dwellings, over
-the bleak and barren fields.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 421px;">
-<img src="images/i-489.jpg" width="421" height="614" alt="Drawing" />
-<div class="caption">DEATH OF TURENNE.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the 27th of June, 1675, a cannon ball struck
-Turenne, and closed, in an instant, his earthly career.
-Few men have ever lived who have caused such wide-spread
-misery. For two years the war continued, with
-sometimes varying success, but with unvarying blood and
-misery. At last, on the 14th of August, 1678, peace,
-the peace of Nimegeun, was made. Louis XIV. dictated
-the terms.</p>
-
-<p>Now, at the height of his grandeur, having enlarged
-his dominions by the addition of Franche-Comté, Dunkirk,
-and half of Flanders, worshipped by his courtiers
-as a demi-god, the court of France conferred upon him,
-with imposing solemnities, the title of <i>Louis le Grand</i>.
-In 1685, the Queen, Maria Theresa, breathed her last.
-Amiable, unselfish, warm-hearted, from the time of her
-marriage she devoted herself to the promotion of her
-husband’s happiness. His neglect caused her to shed
-many tears. The king could not be insensible to her
-many virtues, and perhaps remorse, mingled with the
-emotions which compelled him to weep bitterly over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-her death, caused him to exclaim, as he gazed upon the
-lifeless remains, “Kind and forbearing friend, this is
-the first sorrow you have caused me throughout twenty
-years.” For ten days the royal corpse lay in state at
-Versailles, and perpetual masses were performed for the
-soul of the departed. On the day of the funeral, the
-king, in the insane endeavor to obliterate from his mind
-all thoughts of death and burial, ordered out the hounds,
-and plunged into the excitement of the chase. His horse
-pitched the monarch over his head into a ditch of
-stagnant water, dislocating one of his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>In 1685, also died Jean Baptiste Colbert, the king’s
-minister of finance. As superintendent of buildings, arts,
-and manufactures, he had enlarged the Tuileries and the
-Louvre, completed gorgeous Versailles, reared the magnificent
-edifice of the Invalides, and founded the Gobelins.
-As minister of finance, he had furnished the king with the
-money he needed for his expensive wars and luxurious
-indulgence. Now old, forgotten, exhausted by incessant
-labor, he was on his dying bed. The heavy taxes he had
-imposed upon the people rendered him unpopular. The
-curses and imprecations of a starving peasantry rose
-around his dying couch. The king condescended in courtesy
-to send a messenger inquiring after the condition of
-his minister, but the dying sufferer turned away his face,
-saying, “I will not hear that man spoken of again. If
-for God I had done what I have for him, I should have
-been saved ten times over. What my fate now may be, I
-know not.”</p>
-
-<p>And so worn out by toil, anxiety, and grief, he died.
-On the following day, without any marks of honor, his
-remains were conveyed to the church of St. Eustache.</p>
-
-<p>Genoa had offended the king by giving assistance to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-the Algerines. He seized, by a <i>lettre de cachet</i>, the
-Genoese ambassador, and plunging him into one of the
-dungeons of the Bastile, sent a fleet of fifty vessels to
-chastise those who had offended him, with terrible severity.
-On the 19th of May, 1684, the ships entered the harbor
-of Genoa, and immediately opened upon the city a terrific
-fire, so that in a few hours, a large portion of those marble
-edifices, which had given to the city the name of
-“Genoa the Superb,” were crumbled into powder. The
-city was threatened with total destruction, and in terror
-the authorities implored the clemency of the conqueror.
-Haughtily the <i>Grand Monarque</i> demanded that the doge
-of Genoa, and four of his principal ministers, should repair
-to the palace of Versailles, and humbly implore his
-pardon. Utterly powerless, the doge was compelled to
-submit to these humiliating terms.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 437px;">
-<img src="images/i-493.jpg" width="437" height="481" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">JEAN BAPTISTE COLBERT.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the 15th of May, 1685, Louis ordered his throne to
-be placed at the end of the grand gallery, by the side of
-the “Salon of Peace.” The doge entered with four
-senators Genoa had sent to accompany him. He was
-dressed in red velvet, with a cap of the same. In order
-to preserve all the dignity his misfortune allowed him,
-the doge remained covered until he entered the presence
-of the king. The king allowed the princes to remain
-covered during the audience. The doge discharged his
-sad mission with a firmness that created astonishment.
-His bearing was more impressive than his discourse. A
-few days after he attended the levee, dined with the king,
-was shown the park and all the fountains, and was present
-at a ball given in the grand apartment. Afterwards he
-had his audience of leave-taking, and when one of the
-senators asked him what surprised him most at Versailles,
-he replied with an air of more chagrin than usual,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-“At seeing myself there.” The doge and senators did
-not stay long in France. They saw in haste the wonders
-shown them, and then returned to Genoa. Arrived at
-home, they talked over the things they had seen. One
-senator spoke of the dazzling spectacles, the vast apartments,
-the sumptuous ornaments; and said no mind was
-powerful enough to carry away the remembrance of all the
-riches of the palace, its paintings, its statues, its tapestry,
-its ceilings, its gold, and its marble. The doge replied,
-there was more than its exterior magnificence, and luxury
-of its interior; that the palace was the whole French
-monarchy. You read the origin of the monarchy in the
-chateau built by Louis XIII. The architects wished to
-pull it down; the king replied, that, if it would not last,
-they must take it down, but reconstruct it on its first plan.
-He wished the work of his father to remain, to contrast
-with the edifice he was going to erect. One part of the
-building only projects immensely in the long outline,
-that is where the master dwells. The king walks alone
-in the first rank, the courtiers follow, and support the
-train of the royal mantle. If you mount by the grand
-staircase, you find a suite of immense <i>salons</i>, covered
-with beautiful paintings. The Salon of Plenty, then
-Venus, then Diana, then Mars, then Mercury, and then
-Apollo. Of what use are they? The master does not
-inhabit them. But go on farther, pass through empty
-galleries, you will at length find his apartments. All this
-suite of magnificent <i>salons</i>, all these galleries, serve as
-an ante-chamber only to the place in which he dwells.
-Mars and Apollo, gods formerly, are nothing now but
-lackeys to the king of France.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1598, King Henry IV., feeling the need of
-the support of the Protestants to protect his kingdom from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
-the perils by which it was surrounded, and having himself
-been educated a Protestant, had granted to the Protestants
-the world-renowned edict of Nantes. By this edict, Protestants
-were allowed liberty of conscience; were permitted,
-in certain designated places, to hold public worship;
-were declared to be eligible to offices of state, and in certain
-places, were allowed to publish books. Louis XIV.
-was a Catholic, a bigoted Catholic; hoping in some
-measure to atone for his sins, by his supreme devotion to
-the interests of the church, and while assuring the Protestant
-powers of Europe that he would continue to respect
-the edict of Nantes, he commenced issuing a series of ordinances
-in direct opposition to that contract. In 1680
-he excluded Protestants from all public offices, whatsoever.
-A Protestant could not be employed as a physician,
-lawyer, apothecary, bookseller, printer, or even as a
-nurse.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 426px;">
-<img src="images/i-497.jpg" width="426" height="613" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">REVOCATION OF THE EDICT OF NANTES.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In some parts of the kingdom, the Protestants composed
-nearly the entire population. Here it was impossible
-to enforce the atrocious decree. Riots and bloodshed
-followed. Affairs went from bad to worse, and on the
-18th of October, 1685, the king, yielding to the wishes of
-his confessor and other high dignitaries of the Church,
-signed the <i>Revocation of the Edict of Nantes</i>. In this
-act of revocation, it was declared that, “the exercise of
-the Protestant worship should nowhere be tolerated in the
-realm of France. All Protestant pastors were ordered to
-leave the kingdom within fifteen days, under pain of
-being sent to the galleys. Parents were forbidden to instruct
-their children in the Protestant religion. Every
-child in the kingdom was to be baptized and educated by
-a Catholic priest. All Protestants who had left France,
-were ordered to return within four months, under penalty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
-of confiscation of their possessions. Any Protestant man
-or woman who should attempt to emigrate, incurred the
-penalty of imprisonment for life.”</p>
-
-<p>This infamous ordinance caused an amount of misery
-which can never be gauged, and inflicted upon the prosperity
-of France the most terrible blow it had ever received.
-Only one year after the revocation, Marshal
-Vauban wrote, “France has lost one hundred thousand
-inhabitants, sixty millions of coined money, nine thousand
-sailors, twelve thousand disciplined soldiers, six hundred
-officers, and her most flourishing manufactures.”</p>
-
-<p>The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes was the great
-blot upon the reign of Louis XIV. From that hour the
-fortunes of the <i>Grand Monarque</i> began manifestly to
-decline.</p>
-
-<p>Louvois, minister of war, had for a long time been all-powerful
-at court. Through his influence, the king had
-been induced to revoke the Edict of Nantes, and to order
-the utter devastation of the Palatinate. But that influence
-was upon the wane. The king had become weary
-of his haughty assumptions, and the conflagration of the
-Palatinate had raised a cry of indignation that even he
-could not fail to hear. Treves had escaped the flames.
-Louvois solicited an order to burn it. The king refused.
-Louvois insolently gave the order himself, and entering
-the royal presence, exclaimed calmly, “Sire, I have commanded
-the burning of Treves, in order that I might
-spare your Majesty the pain of issuing such an edict.”</p>
-
-<p>Louis was furious; and springing up, with flashing
-eyes, forgetful of all the restraints of etiquette, he seized
-the tongs from the fireplace, and would have broken the
-head of his minister, had not Madame de Maintenon
-rushed between them. The king despatched a messenger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
-to countermand the order, and declared that if but a
-single house were burned, the head of the minister should
-be the forfeit. Treves was saved.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion, when Louis XIV. went to examine
-the progress of the building of the Trianon, accompanied
-by Louvois, he remarked that a particular window was
-out of proportion, and did not harmonize with the rest;
-but the minister, jealous of his dignity as controller of
-the royal works, would not admit the objection, but maintained
-that it was similar to the others.</p>
-
-<p>The king desired Le Notre to declare his opinion as to
-the size of the disputed window. Le Notre, fearful of
-offending either the monarch or his minister, endeavored
-to give an evasive answer. Upon which, Louis commanded
-him to measure it carefully, and he was reluctantly
-compelled to obey. The result of the trial proved
-that the king was right, the window was too small; and
-the monarch had no sooner ascertained the fact, than he
-turned angrily to his minister, exclaiming, “M. Louvois,
-I am weary of your obstinacy. It is fortunate that I
-myself have superintended the work of building, or the
-façade would have been ruined.”</p>
-
-<p>As this scene had taken place not only in the presence
-of the workmen, but of all the courtiers who followed the
-king upon his promenade, Louvois was stung to the
-quick; and on entering his own house, he exclaimed
-furiously, “I am lost if I do not find some occupation for
-a man who can interest himself in such trifles. There is
-nothing but a war which can divert him from his building,
-and war he shall have. I will soon make him abandon
-his trowel.”</p>
-
-<p>He kept his word: and Europe was once more plunged
-into a general war, because a window had been made a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-few inches too narrow, and a king had convicted a minister
-of error.</p>
-
-<p>In 1691, the French were besieging Mons. The
-haughty minister, unintimidated even by the menace of
-the tongs, ventured to countermand an order which the
-king had issued. The lowering brow of the monarch
-convinced him that his ministerial reign was soon to close.
-The health of the minister began rapidly to fail. A few
-subsequent interviews with the king satisfied him that his
-disgrace and ruin were decided upon; and about the middle
-of June, meeting the monarch in his council-chamber,
-although he was unusually complaisant, Louvois so thoroughly
-understood him, that he retired to his residence in
-utter despair. He ordered that his son, the Marquis de
-Barbesieux, might be requested to follow him to his
-chamber. In five minutes the summons was obeyed, but
-it was too late; for when the marquis entered the room,
-his father had already expired. Louvois had judged
-rightly, for the king had already drawn up the <i>lettre de
-cachet</i> which was to consign him to the <i>oubliettes</i> of the
-Bastile.</p>
-
-<p>“Civil war was now also desolating unhappy France.
-The Protestants, bereft of their children, robbed of their
-property, driven from their homes, dragged to the gallows,
-plunged into dungeons, broken upon the wheel,
-hanged upon scaffolds, rose in several places in insurrectionary
-bands; and the man who was thus crushing beneath
-the iron heel of his armies the quivering hearts of
-the Palatinate, and who was drenching his own realms
-with tears and blood, was clothed in purple, and faring
-sumptuously, and reclining upon the silken sofas of
-Marly and Versailles.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 1st of November, 1700, Charles II. of Spain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
-died, having no heirs. Urged by the Pope, he left the
-throne to the children of the dauphin of France. As the
-duke de Bourgoyne was direct heir to the throne of
-France, the dauphin’s second son, the duke d’Anjou, was
-proclaimed king of Spain, under the title of Philip V.
-On the 14th of the month, Louis XIV. summoned the
-Spanish ambassador to an audience at Versailles. The
-king presented his grandson to the minister, saying,
-“This, sir, is the duke d’Anjou, whom you may salute
-as your king.” Then, contrary to his custom, he ordered
-the folding doors of his cabinet to be thrown back, and
-the crowd of courtiers assembled in the grand gallery
-poured into the apartment.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish ambassador dropped upon his knee before
-the young prince with expressions of profound homage;
-while the king, embracing the neck of his grandson with
-his left arm, and pointing to him with his right hand, presented
-him to the assembled court, exclaiming, “Gentlemen,
-this is the king of Spain. His birth calls him to
-the crown. The late king has recognized his right by his
-will. All the nation desires his succession, and has entreated
-it at my hands. It is the will of heaven, to which
-I conform with satisfaction.”</p>
-
-<p>To his grandson he added, “Be a good Spaniard, but
-never forget that you were born a Frenchman. Carefully
-maintain the union of the two nations. Thus only can
-you render them both happy.”</p>
-
-<p>Preparations were immediately made for the departure
-of the boy-king to take possession of the Spanish throne.
-The <i>Grand Monarque</i> regarded it as a signal stroke of
-policy, and a great victory on his part, that notwithstanding
-the remonstrances of other nations, he had placed a
-French Bourbon prince upon the throne of Spain. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-saw the domain of France extending far southward to the
-Straits of Gibraltar.</p>
-
-<p>“Henceforth,” exclaimed Louis XIV., exultingly,
-“there are no more Pyrenees!”</p>
-
-<p>Louis XIV. reigned everywhere,—over his people,
-over his age, often over Europe,—but nowhere did he
-reign so completely as over his court. Never were the
-wishes, the defects, and the vices of a man so completely
-a law to other men, as at the court of Louis XIV. during
-the whole period of his long life. When near to him in
-the palace at Versailles, men lived, hoped, trembled,
-everywhere else in France, even at Paris, men vegetated.
-The existence of the nobles was concentrated in the court
-about the person of the king; and so abject was their
-submission, that Louis XIV. looked on all sides for a
-great lord, and found about him only courtiers.</p>
-
-<p>When the king learned that certain of the nobility
-affected to despise the plebian genius of the great dramatist,
-Molière, he invited the comedian to his table; and
-when at the <i>grande entrée</i> the nobles thronged the apartment,
-he turned to them haughtily, exclaiming, “Gentlemen
-of the court, you see me breakfasting with Molière,
-whom my nobles do not consider worthy of their notice.”
-It was enough. From that moment the great dramatist
-found all the nobility of France at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>Never did man give with better grace than Louis XIV.,
-or augment so much in this way the price of his benefits.
-Never did man sell to better profit his words, even his
-smiles,—nay, his looks.</p>
-
-<p>Never did disobliging words escape him; and if he had
-to blame, to reprimand, or correct, which was very rare,
-it was nearly always with goodness, never with anger or
-severity. Never was man so naturally polite, or of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-politeness so measured, so graduated, so adapted, to person,
-time, and place. Towards women his politeness was
-without parallel. Never did he pass the humblest petticoat
-without raising his hat. For ladies he took his hat
-off completely, but to a greater or less extent; for titled
-people half off, holding it in his hand, or against his ear,
-some instants. He took it off for the princes of the blood
-as for the ladies. If he accosted ladies, he did not cover
-himself until he had quitted them. His reverences, more
-or less marked, but always light, were incomparable for
-their grace and manner. As, after the battle of Seneff,
-fought Aug. 11, 1674, against William of Orange, Monsieur
-le Prince, le Grand Condé, was walking slowly,
-from the effects of gout, up the grand staircase at Versailles,
-he exclaimed to the king, who awaited him upon
-the landing above, “Sire, I crave your majesty’s pardon,
-if I keep you waiting;” to which Louis replied, “Do not
-hurry, my cousin; no one could move more quickly who
-was so loaded with laurels as you are.” It was the language
-of the court; and again, when in May, 1706, Marshal
-Villeroi returned worsted at the battle of Ramillies,
-in his encounter with Marlborough and Prince Eugene,
-the <i>Grand Monarque</i> gave utterance to one of those delicate
-remarks he knew so well how to make, and which
-sounded almost like a compliment: “Ah, Monsieur le
-Marshal,” exclaimed the king, when he presented himself
-at Versailles, “at our age one is no longer fortunate.”</p>
-
-<p>“The king loved air and exercise very much, as long
-as he could make use of them. He had excelled at dancing,
-at tennis, and at mall. On horseback he was admirable,
-even at a late age. He liked to see everything done
-with grace and address. To acquit yourself well or ill
-before him was a merit or a fault. He was very fond of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
-shooting, and there was not a better or more graceful shot
-than he. He was very fond, also, of stag-hunting, but in
-a <i>caléche</i>, since he broke his arm while hunting at Fontainebleau,
-immediately after the death of the Queen. He
-rode alone in a species of “box,” drawn by four little
-horses, and drove himself with an accuracy and address
-unknown to the best coachmen. He liked splendor, magnificence,
-and profusion in everything; you pleased him
-if you shone through the brilliancy of your houses, your
-clothes, your table, and your equipages. As for the king
-himself, nobody ever approached his magnificence.”</p>
-
-<p>Old age had crept fast upon Louis XIV. For seventy-two
-years he had proudly sat upon the throne of his ancestors;
-but the time was near at hand when he must lay aside
-his sceptre and his crown. Still the more deeply he became
-conscious of his physical weakness, the more determined
-and extraordinary were his efforts to preserve intact
-the interests of the state.</p>
-
-<p>Richard, in his war-tent on the bloody field of Bosworth,
-never contemplated a train of more appalling shadows
-than those evoked by the memory of Louis XIV., as he
-sat, supported by cushions and pillowed upon velvet, in
-his sumptuous apartment. Maria Theresa, the Queen; the
-grand-dauphin; his son, the duke de Bourgoyne; and
-last of all, the duke de Berri, the sole prop to that throne
-which must soon be empty, dead, all dead, save a frail
-infant,—such were the thoughts that crowded upon his
-last reveries; and well might the poor old man in his
-solitary moments bend down that proud head which had
-no longer strength to bear a crown, and laying aside the
-arrogance of those years in which he had assumed the
-bearing of a demi-god, confess to his own heart that he
-was but human.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the third of May, 1715, the king rose at an early
-hour, to witness an eclipse of the sun. Strange coincidence
-that he, who had taken for his emblem a rising sun,
-should witness the eclipse of that brilliant orb, while he
-himself was sinking toward the grave. In the evening
-he retired early, complaining of extreme fatigue. The
-advanced age of the king and his many infirmities rendered
-even a slight indisposition alarming. The report
-spread rapidly that the king was dangerously sick. The
-foreign ambassadors promptly despatched the news to
-their respective courts,—a circumstance which soon
-reached the ears of the monarch, who, indignant at such
-indecent precipitancy, and to prove, not only to the court,
-but to all Europe, that he was still every inch a king, commanded
-that preparations should forthwith be commenced
-for a grand review of the household troops at Marly. On
-the twentieth of June this magnificent exhibition took
-place, when for the last time the troops of gendarmes and
-light-horse, in their splendid uniforms, defiled before the
-terrace of Marly; which they had no sooner done, than
-the monarch appeared at the principal entrance of the
-palace, habited in the costume of his earlier years; and,
-descending the marble steps, mounted his horse, and for
-four long hours sat proudly in his saddle, under the eyes
-of those foreign envoys who had announced his approaching
-death to their sovereigns. It was the expiring effort
-of his pride. During the whole of the last year of his life,
-it had been the study of Louis XIV. to deceive himself,
-and, above all, to deceive others, as to the extent of the
-physical debility induced by his great age. He rose at a
-late hour, in order to curtail the fatigues of the day; received
-his ministers, and even dined, in his bed; and
-once, having prevailed upon himself to leave it, passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
-several hours in succession in his cushioned chair. In
-vain his physician urged upon him the necessity of exercise,
-in order to counteract his tendency to revery and
-somnolency; the swollen state of his feet and ankles rendered
-it impossible for him to rise from his chair without
-severe pain, and he never attempted to do so until all his
-attendants had left the room, lest they should perceive
-the state of weakness to which he was reduced. Great,
-therefore, had been the effort we have described, when
-the monarch had for a time conquered the man, and where
-pride had supplied the place of strength. The only exercise
-which he ultimately consented to take was in the
-magnificent gardens of Versailles, where he was wheeled
-through the stately avenues, which he had himself planted,
-in a bath-chair; a prey to pain, which was visibly depicted
-upon his countenance, but which he supported with
-cold and silent dignity, too haughty to complain. The
-king grew daily worse. The disease was mortal, and he
-felt he was beyond the power of human aid. Bitterly
-Louis XIV. upon his death-bed expiated the faults and
-excesses of his past life. He wept over the profligacy of
-his youth, deplored the madness of his ambition, by which
-he had brought mourning into every corner of his kingdom.
-On the twenty-sixth of August, the king commanded
-all the great dignitaries and officers of the
-household to meet in his apartment, and addressed them
-in a firm voice, saying, “Gentlemen, I die in the faith
-and obedience of the Church. I desire your pardon for
-the bad example which I have set you. I have greatly to
-thank you for the manner in which you have served me,
-and request from you the same zeal and the same fidelity
-toward the dauphin. Farewell, gentlemen; I feel that
-this parting has affected not only myself, but you also.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
-Forgive me. I trust that you will sometimes think of me
-when I am gone.”</p>
-
-<p>How sad the scene! “The gray-haired king, half-sitting,
-half-lying, in his gorgeous bed, whose velvet hangings,
-looped back with their heavy ropes and tassels of
-gold, were the laborious offering of the pupils of St. Cyr;
-the groups of princes in their gorgeous costumes, dispersed
-over the vast apartment; the gilded cornices, the priceless,
-the tapestried hangings, the richly-carpeted floor, the
-waste of luxury on every side, the pride of man’s intellect
-and of man’s strength; and in the midst, decay and death,
-a palsied hand and a dimmed eye.” For a few moments
-there was unbroken silence. The king then requested his
-great-grandchild, who was to be his successor, to be
-brought to him. A cushion was placed at the bedside,
-and the little prince, clinging to the hand of his governess,
-knelt upon it. Louis XIV. gazed for a moment
-upon him with mingled anxiety and tenderness, and then
-said impressively, “My child, you are about to become
-a great king; do not imitate me, either in my taste for
-building, or in my love of war. Endeavor, on the contrary,
-to live in peace with the neighboring nations; render
-to God all that you owe him, and cause his name to
-be honored by your subjects. Strive to relieve the burdens
-of your people, in which I have been unfortunate
-enough to fail; and never forget the gratitude that you
-owe to Madame de Ventadour.”</p>
-
-<p>Louis XV. caused these last words, addressed to him
-by his grandfather, to be inscribed on vellum, and
-attached to the head-cloth of his bed. Words to which
-his life for fifty years was but a hollow mockery. The
-following days were ones of agony to the expiring king.
-His intervals of consciousness were rare and brief. Mortification<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
-extended rapidly, and toward midday, on the
-31st of August, his condition became so much exasperated
-that it was found necessary to perform the service
-for the dying without further delay. The mournful ceremony
-aroused him from his lethargy, and his voice was
-heard, audibly and clearly, mingled with those of the
-priests. At the termination of the prayers, he recognized
-the Cardinal de Rohan, and said calmly, “These
-are the last favors of the Church.” He then repeated
-several times, “<i>Nunc et in hora mortis</i>”; and finally he
-exclaimed, with earnest fervor, “O, my God, come to my
-aid, and hasten to help me!” He never spoke again;
-his head fell back upon the pillow, one long-drawn sigh,
-and all was over. The spirit of Louis XIV. had passed
-the earthly veil, and entered the vast unknown. An
-immense concourse had assembled in the marble court
-at Versailles, anticipating the announcement of his death.
-The moment he breathed his last, the captain of the body-guard
-approached the great balcony, threw open the
-massive windows, and, looking down upon the multitude
-below, raised his truncheon above his head, broke it in
-the centre, and, throwing the fragments down into the
-court-yard, he cried sadly, “The king is dead!” Then,
-instantly seizing another staff from the hands of an
-attendant, he waved it joyfully above his head, and
-shouted triumphantly, “Long live the king, Louis XV.!”
-And a multitudinous echo from the depths of the lately-deserted
-apartment answered as buoyantly, “Long live
-the king!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus, on the 1st of September, 1715, in his palace,
-at Versailles, died “one of the world’s most powerful
-monarchs, Louis of Bourbon, Louis the Great, Louis the
-God-given, Louis the <i>Grand Monarque</i>, Louis the worn-out,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
-unloving, and unloved old man, of magnificent
-Versailles.” And when Massillon, called to preach the
-funeral sermon of Louis XIV., as he looked upon the
-magnificent draperies and insignia of royalty around
-him, and thought of the title the deceased king had
-borne during his life, he began his discourse, with the
-simple and striking words, which amazed the pleasure-loving
-courtiers of Versailles, “God alone is great, my
-brothers.” And now, after two hundred years have
-rolled away, at this present time, in this nineteenth
-century, after the scaffold of Louis XVI., after the
-downfall of Napoleon, after the exile of Charles X.,
-after the flight of Louis Philippe, after the French
-Revolution,—in a word, that is to say, after this renewal,
-complete, absolute, prodigious, of principles, opinions,
-situations, influences, and facts; standing upon the terrace
-of magnificent Versailles, and looking upon those
-scenes, where, for so many years, he was the central
-light and figure,—we bid a last adieu to Louis XIV.,
-the <i>Grand Monarque</i>, greatest of all the Bourbons.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>PETER THE GREAT.<br />
-
-<small>A.D. 1672-1725.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“No true and permanent fame can be founded, except in labors</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">which promote the happiness of mankind.”</span></div>
-<div class="sig"><span class="smcap">Charles Sumner.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ONE thousand years ago, Russia was inhabited by
-disunited, Slavonic tribes, who were frequently at
-war with each other. Then Scandinavian tribes were
-called in, and the Russian nation grew from the two
-centres of Novgorod and Kíef. Christianity was introduced
-from Constantinople. Trade had been commenced
-with the west of Europe, when the whole country was
-over-run by the Mongols and Tartars, and the people
-were obliged to submit to their yoke. The country had
-been divided into various Russian states, which were not
-ruled directly by the Mongols, but became vassals.
-These states were each governed by its own prince,
-who were all subject to Tartary. One state after another
-was at length swallowed up by the Grand Duchy of
-Moscow, and the autocracy was established; which, after
-freeing Russia from the Mongol yoke, reached its highest
-development, under Iván the Terrible, in 1533. The
-death of Iván gave a blow to autocracy, and brought the
-nobility into power. In 1598, nearly the whole of the
-Russian people were reduced to serfdom, which was an
-institution then first legally established. Then came
-a period, called the Troublous Time, when pretender<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
-vied with pretender, and the son of the king of Poland
-was crowned Czar of Moscow. Finally, the Poles were
-turned out, and young Michael Románof was elected
-Czar. Then followed continual wars with Poland and
-Sweden. In the reign of Alexis, in 1645-76, an arbitrary
-government was formed. Henceforth, the Czar managed
-all matters, both great and small, according to his own
-will and pleasure. The Czar Alexis was of a gentle
-and amiable nature, and was called by his subjects,
-“The most Debonnair.” But his good qualities, in the
-end, rendered him one of the worst sovereigns of Russia;
-for he was entirely in the hands of wicked men, who, as
-his favorites, exercised all the power, and, in reality,
-governed the country.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 407px;">
-<img src="images/i-513.jpg" width="407" height="650" alt="drawing PIERRE I." />
-</div>
-
-<p>Then arose the dissent in the Russian Church. The
-Patriarch, Nikon, undertook the correction of all the
-printed and manuscript copies of the liturgy; and by a
-decree of an Ecclesiastical Council, the corrected books
-were ordered to be the only ones used, and the command
-was given that all others should be destroyed. This
-measure excited the greatest hostility. It seems strange
-that passions should be roused, and people be found
-willing to suffer martyrdom, for such seemingly unimportant
-questions,—as to whether the name of Jesus
-should be pronounced, “Isus,” or “Yisus”; whether,
-in a certain portion of the morning service, the word
-“Hallelujah” should be repeated twice or thrice; and
-whether the sign of the cross should be made with the
-two fore-fingers extended, or with the fore-fingers and the
-thumb, as denoting the Trinity. But such was the case;
-and so great was the commotion, that arms were resorted to
-by the Court, at Moscow, to enforce these innovations; and
-some of the most obstinate opposers were even executed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
-In the east of Russia, the inhabitants of whole villages
-shut themselves up in their houses, and setting fire to
-them, perished in the flames, rather than accept a new,
-and what they called a diabolical, religion. The government
-was at length successful, however, and revised
-service-books were introduced into the churches.</p>
-
-<p>At the present day, nearly one-half of the Russians belong
-in spirit, if not openly, to the Dissenters; and the
-reconciliation between them and the official church has only
-been accomplished by relaxing the rigor of the laws of persecution.
-During the reign of Alexis, the father of Peter
-the Great, much importance was attached to the length
-and fulness of the Czar’s title. An accidental omission of
-a single word or letter from this long and cumbrous official
-title was considered an act of personal disrespect to
-the prince, almost equal to high treason, and was punished
-far more severely than many terrible crimes. The shortest
-title of the Czar that could possibly be used, and which it
-was necessary to repeat every time that the Czar’s name
-was mentioned in document, petition, or discourse, was
-“The Great Lord Czar and Grand Duke Alexis Micháilovitch,
-of all Great and Little and White Russia Autocrat.”
-The complete title contained one hundred and twenty-three
-words, which we have not space to give. Alexis, having
-lost his first wife, in 1669, married for his second wife
-Natalia Narýshkin, who was a ward of Matvéief, the
-chief minister of the Czar. Their meeting was in this
-manner: One evening, when the Czar was at Matvéief’s
-house, the wife and pretty ward of the prime minister
-came into the room, bringing the usual refreshments of
-cups of <i>vodka</i>, the caviare, and smoked fish, which are
-eaten by the Russians before dinner or supper. The widowed
-Czar was struck by the pretty face of the tall,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span>
-shapely, black-eyed girl, and, on going away, said to
-Matvéief that he would find a bridegroom for his pretty
-ward. It was the custom, when the Czar was in want of
-a bride, for all the Russian maidens, of suitable position
-and beauty, to assemble at the palace on a certain day,
-that a bride might be chosen from their number for the
-prince. Word was now sent to Natalia Narýshkin to
-appear with the other maidens, and it was soon reported
-that she was the chosen bride. The daughters of the
-Czar objected to so young a step-mother; but, in spite of
-opposition, both political and from his family, Alexis was
-married to Natalia, on the 1st of February, 1671. The
-Czar had several daughters of his first wife still living,
-and two sons, Theodore, who was very infirm and sickly,
-and John, or Iván, who was almost blind, and had a defect
-of speech, and was nearly an idiot. But his favorite
-child was Peter, the son of his second wife, Natalia, who
-was born June 9, 1672. The birth of Peter was hailed
-with great joy, and Alexis ordered a most splendid ceremonial
-in honor of the event. Then came the christening.
-The ceremony was performed at the Cathedral of
-the Annunciation; and the infant Peter was borne to the
-church in a cradle placed on wheels, while the priest most
-venerated for his sanctity sprinkled the path with holy
-water. The next day after the christening the feast
-occurred. The expense and account books, which have
-been preserved, show that on this occasion the tables were
-loaded with large pieces of sugar-work, representing
-eagles, swans, and other birds, larger than life; also representations
-of the Muscovite arms and a model of the
-Krémlin, the palace of the Czar, and also a large fortress
-with cannon. One of the first ceremonies after the birth
-of a Russian prince was what was called “taking his measure.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
-The measure of Peter was taken on the third day
-after his birth, and was performed in this manner: a
-board of either cypress or linden-wood was cut the exact
-length and breadth of the child, which in his case was
-nineteen and a quarter inches long and five and a quarter
-inches broad. Upon this board a picture, representing the
-Holy Trinity, together with the Apostle Peter, was painted
-by a famous artist. This birth-measure of Peter was
-carefully preserved, and now hangs over his tomb in the
-Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul, in the fortress at St.
-Petersburg. A nurse and governess were then selected
-for the infant Peter; and he had a special staff of dwarfs
-who should be his companions and servants. The infant
-prince had his own apartments, some of which were hung
-with leather, stamped with silver, and others with fine red
-cloth; while the furniture was covered with crimson, embroidered
-with blue and yellow, and the walls and ceilings
-were decorated with paintings.</p>
-
-<p>The curious books of accounts enumerate some of the
-articles ordered for him in the first years of his childhood.
-Among them were “cradles covered with gold-embroidered
-Turkish velvet; sheets and pillows of white silk;
-coverlets of gold and silver stuffs; coats, caps, stockings,
-and shoes of velvet, silk, and satin, embroidered with gold
-and pearls; buttons and tassels of pearls and emeralds;
-a chest for his clothes, covered with dark blue velvet,
-ornamented with mother-of-pearl; and a miniature carriage,
-drawn by ponies, in which he was taken out to
-drive. Among his toys were musical instruments of various
-kinds, and all sorts of military equipments.” Peter
-grew rapidly. He was able to walk when six months old.
-Being the pet of his parents, he accompanied them in all
-their excursions and visits. When he was three years of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-age, he was presented with a small carriage drawn by four
-ponies, in which he was driven by the court dwarfs, and
-he began to take part in the public processions of the
-court. One scene is thus described: “Immediately after
-the carriage of the Czar, there appeared from another
-gate of the palace the carriage of the Czarina. In front
-went the chamberlains with two hundred runners, after
-which twelve large snow-white horses, covered with silk
-housings, drew the Czarina. Then followed the small
-carriage of the youngest prince, all glittering with gold,
-drawn by four dwarf ponies. At the side of it rode four
-dwarfs on ponies, and another one behind.” The presentation
-of Peter at court is thus described:—</p>
-
-<p>“The door on one side suddenly opened, and Peter,
-three years old, a curly-headed boy, was seen for a moment,
-holding his mother’s hand, and looking at the
-reception.”</p>
-
-
-<p>At this time, there were a dozen princesses living at the
-palace,—the sisters and the aunts and the six daughters
-of the Czar Alexis. All were unmarried. They were
-forbidden to marry any below their own rank; and since
-the Tartar invasion, only two attempts had been made to
-marry a Russian princess to a foreigner. None of these
-princesses, except Sophia, who had shared the lessons of
-her brother Theodore, had more than the rudiments of an
-education. Most of the princesses were disposed of by
-placing them in convents. Natalia, the mother of Peter,
-having been brought up by a Scotchwoman, had seen
-more of society than the other royal ladies; and she was
-allowed a greater degree of freedom than had been vouchsafed
-to her predecessors, who had been rigidly secluded
-within their own apartments.</p>
-
-<p>In 1676, the Czar Alexis died, and the throne descended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-to his eldest son, Theodore. It was the custom in Russia
-for the relations of the Czar’s wife to have great power at
-court; and when Theodore came to the throne, the
-Miloslávsky family, who were his mother’s relations,
-assumed great power, while the family of Peter’s mother,
-the Czarina Natalia, lost their influence for the time.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-520.jpg" width="600" height="385" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">THE KRÉMLIN OF MOSCOW.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Both Theodore and Iván were feeble and sickly children,
-while Peter was strong and robust. But the law of
-descent was inexorable, and on the death of Alexis, Theodore
-became Czar. As he was only fourteen years of age,
-the administration of the government was left to the ministers
-of state. Now his sister, the Princess Sophia, who
-was very ambitious, formed schemes for getting the power
-into her own hands. She therefore so devoted herself to
-the care of Theodore, who was sick most of the time, that
-she gained complete ascendency over him; and she met
-all the courtiers, who came to visit the sick Czar, with
-such affable manners, and showed such intelligence, that
-she won a strong party of the nobles over to her support.
-There was in Russia, at this time, a very powerful body
-of troops, which had been organized by the emperors as
-an imperial guard. These troops were called the Streltsi.
-The Princess Sophia paid great attention to the officers of
-these guards, and thus gained their good-will. Theodore
-soon after died, and named Peter as his successor, passing
-over his brother Iván, as his many infirmities rendered it
-impossible for him to reign. It is probable that it was
-through the influence of some of the nobles who were opposed
-to Sophia, that Theodore was induced to name
-Peter as his successor. Peter, although but ten years of
-age, was proclaimed emperor by the nobles, immediately
-after Theodore’s death. Sophia now determined to resist
-the transfer of the supreme power to Peter. She secretly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-engaged the Streltsi, or guards, on her side. She caused
-a report to be spread, that the late emperor had been
-poisoned, and that the Narýshkins had murdered the
-Czarewitz Iván, and that the Narýshkins wished to kill all
-the royal family. Thus were the relations of the Czarina
-Natalia, the mother of Peter, accused of desiring the
-death of all the children of the first wife of Alexis, that
-Peter might gain the throne. Such was the falsehood
-that the Princess Sophia is said to have originated in
-order to secure the power. The cry then arose, “To
-arms! Punish the traitors! To the Krémlin! Save the
-Czar!” A general alarm was sounded. The Streltsi,
-fully armed, advanced from all sides towards the Krémlin,
-and surrounded the palace, demanding the Czarewitz Iván.
-The Czarina Natalia was advised to go out on the red
-staircase with the Czar Peter and the Czarewitz Iván,
-that the Streltsi might be convinced of the falsity of the
-rumor. Trembling with terror, Natalia took by the hand
-her son and stepson, and accompanied by the nobles,
-went out upon the red staircase. “Here is the Czar
-Peter and the Czarewitz Iván!” cried the nobles, to the
-mob below. “There are no traitors in the royal family!”
-The Streltsi placed ladders against the rails, and some of
-them climbed up to the platform where the little Czar
-stood. Peter looked at them without blanching, or showing
-any signs of fear. But even this did not quiet the
-disturbance, and the Streltsi burst into the palace. Natalia
-took Peter and fled for safety to the monastery of
-the Trinity. The soldiers pursued her even into the
-sanctuary, and to the foot of the altar; but there the
-sacredness of the spot arrested their vengeance, and they
-left their victims with sullen oaths. In the meantime, the
-commotion in the city continued for several days, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-brother of the Empress Natalia, and others of her friends,
-were slain. At last a compromise was effected, and it
-was agreed that Iván should be proclaimed Czar in conjunction
-with his brother Peter, and that the Princess
-Sophia should be regent. Sophia, knowing that Iván,
-the poor idiot, would be but a tool in her hands, endeavored
-in every way possible to prevent her half-brother
-Peter from becoming so intelligent and energetic
-that he would take the power away from her. She therefore
-caused his teacher to be dismissed, and commenced
-to carry out her plan to ruin the bright and talented boy,
-by taking away from him all restraint, and indulging him
-in every pleasure and whim. Peter was now established
-in a household of his own, at a palace in a small village
-some distance from Moscow, and Sophia selected fifty
-boys to live with him as playmates. These boys were
-provided with every possible means of indulgence, subject
-to little restraint. It was the intention of Sophia that
-they should do just as they chose, so that they would all
-grow up idle, vicious, and good-for-nothing; and she had
-also the hope that Peter might so impair his health as to
-bring him to an early grave.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-523.jpg" width="600" height="423" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">PETER SAVED FROM SLAUGHTER BY HIS MOTHER.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But Peter had already been too well instructed, or possessed
-too much native good sense, to fall into this snare,
-and instead of giving up his studies, he even contrived to
-turn his companions into scholars also. He organized
-a kind of military school, where they practised the evolutions
-and discipline necessary in a camp. He caused
-himself to be taught to drum, so that he could execute all
-the signals used in camp and on the battle-field. He
-studied fortification, and set the boys to work with him to
-construct a battery in a regular and scientific manner.
-He learned the use of tools, and the wheelbarrow he used
-in making the fortification was one he made himself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As he grew older, he continued to introduce higher
-branches of military art into the school, and he adopted
-the uniforms and equipments for the pupils, such as were
-used in the military schools of other nations of Europe.
-The result was, that when he was eighteen years of age,
-and the time came for him to leave the place, the institution
-had become a well-organized and well-appointed
-military school, and it continued in successful operation
-for a long time afterwards. So this wicked plan of the
-ambitious Sophia had completely failed. The energy and
-talent that Peter had displayed caused many of the leading
-nobles to attach themselves to his cause, by which means
-he was finally enabled to depose Sophia from her regency,
-and to take the power into his own hands. But before
-this took place, we must note a still more wicked and evil
-design of the ambitious princess.</p>
-
-<p>The party of nobles who now espoused Peter’s cause
-thought it expedient that he should marry, and the councillors
-accordingly chose for his wife, Eudoxia Lopúkhin,
-a young lady of noble birth. The Princess Sophia did all
-in her power to prevent this match, but she was unsuccessful,
-and the marriage took place in February, 1689.
-It was thought that a good stay-at-home wife would be
-likely to keep him from taking his long excursions for
-military manœuvres, and for ship-building, of which he
-was so fond. But he had scarcely been married two
-months before he started off again for his boat-building
-on Lake Plestchéief. Here he immediately set to work
-with his carpenters to complete the boats, and he wrote to
-his mother as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“To my most beloved and, while bodily life endures,
-my dearest little mother, Lady Tsaritsa and Grand
-Duchess Natalia Kirílovna. Thy little son, now here at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
-work. Petrúshka, I ask thy blessing, and desire to hear
-about thy health; and we, through thy prayers, are all
-well, and the lake is all got clear from the ice to-day, and
-all the boats, except the big ship, are finished, only we are
-waiting for ropes; and therefore I beg your kindness that
-these ropes, seven hundred fathoms long, be sent from
-the artillery department without delaying, for the work
-is waiting for them, and our sojourn here is being prolonged.”</p>
-
-<p>And again he writes:—</p>
-
-<p>“Hey! I wish to hear about thy health, and beg thy
-blessing. We are all well, and about the boats, I say
-again that they are mighty good, and Tíkhon Nikítitch
-will tell you about all this himself. Thy unworthy
-Petrus.”</p>
-
-<p>Peter with his young wife resided in a country palace
-a few miles from Moscow. This place was called Obrogensko.
-Meanwhile, the Russian government had been
-engaged in the Crimean War.</p>
-
-<p>The Poles, having become involved in a war with the
-Turks, proposed to the Russians, or Muscovites as they
-were often called, that they should aid them in an attempt
-to conquer the Crimea. In this war occurred the incident
-relating to the famous Mazeppa, whose frightful
-ride through the tangled thickets of a wild country, bound
-naked to an untamed horse, was so graphically described
-by the poet Byron. Mazeppa was a Polish gentleman,
-and having offended a Polish nobleman, he was thus
-cruelly punished by his enemy. Some Cossack peasants
-rescued the poor Mazeppa from his terrible position, and
-he afterwards became a chieftain amongst them. He distinguished
-himself in these campaigns in the Crimean war,
-fought by the Muscovites against the Turks and Tartars<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
-during the regency of the Princess Sophia. This war
-was not successful, and Prince Golítsyn, who led the
-Russian forces, was obliged to retreat; but fearing to
-have the state of the case known, he sent word to Moscow
-that he had been successful, and was received by
-Sophia upon his return with great honors. But the young
-Peter, who had been studying military tactics, was so displeased
-and disgusted with the military operations of
-Golítsyn that, when that general was received by Sophia
-at Moscow with great state, the rewards could not then be
-read, as Peter had refused to sign them. He, however,
-was afterwards persuaded to grant them. But this unfortunate
-campaign of Golítsyn’s was the turning point in
-the struggle between the aristocratic party which espoused
-the side of Peter, and the government of Sophia. Now
-there was formed a dark and wicked plot, and some historians
-accuse Sophia of being a party to it, if she did not
-even propose it. This was the assassination of the young
-Czar Peter.</p>
-
-<p>The commander of the Streltsi selected a band of six
-hundred of the imperial guards to go with him to Obrogensko.
-Their plan was to seize Peter at night while in
-his bed. This plot was, however, frustrated by two of
-the soldiers who revealed it to Peter. He could not at
-first believe that Sophia would resort to such a terrible
-crime, and messengers were sent to the city to learn the
-truth of the matter. These messengers met the imperial
-guards when they had gone half-way to Moscow; and,
-concealing themselves by the wayside until the troops had
-passed, they hastened back by a shorter route to inform
-Peter of his impending danger. Peter had just time to
-flee with his wife and mother to the monastery of the Trinity,
-when the Streltsi reached his palace, and sought him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-in vain. They returned, discomfited and alarmed, to the
-Princess Sophia, and reported that Peter had escaped.
-From his retreat in the monastery, Peter sent a message
-to Sophia, charging her with having sent the imperial
-guards to take his life. The princess, greatly alarmed,
-denied her guilt. The excitement increased. The leading
-nobles flocked to the monastery to declare their adherence
-to Peter. Sophia endeavored to keep the Streltsi upon
-her side, but they at last went over to Peter, and he demanded
-that the leader of the band who attempted his
-assassination should be delivered into his hands. This
-Sophia was obliged to do; and the man was put to the
-torture, and revealed the plot. He said that the design
-had been to kill Peter himself, his mother, and several
-other near relations. The Princess Sophia was accused
-of being the originator of the plot, and many other persons
-were also implicated, including Prince Golítsyn, the
-commander of the Russian forces in the Crimean War.
-The leader of the band of guards who thus attempted the
-life of Peter was beheaded, Prince Golítsyn and his family
-were banished to Siberia, and many others implicated
-were put to death, imprisoned for life, or banished. Thus
-ended this conspiracy against the young Czar Peter. The
-Princess Sophia was shut up in a convent, where she was
-imprisoned for fifteen years, when she died. Iván, the
-brother-Czar with Peter, was too feeble and inefficient to
-take any part in the government, and he died about seven
-years after this time. The aristocratic party now filled
-the offices of state, and administered the government.</p>
-
-<p>As Peter was yet so young, he left everything in the
-hands of his counsellors, and for several years took
-merely a formal part in the administration. He employed
-himself in military exercises and boat-building, and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
-the indulgence of his mechanical tastes. As Peter
-grew older, and took more direction of the affairs of the
-government, he made choice of two very able men, whom
-he afterwards raised to positions of great honor. The
-name of one of these statesmen was Le Fort, and the
-other was Menshikóf. Le Fort was the son of a merchant
-of Geneva. He had from childhood evinced a strong
-desire to be a soldier; but his father preferred that he
-should become a merchant, and he was taken into the
-counting-house of one of the great merchants of Amsterdam.
-This merchant was constantly sending vessels to
-different parts of the world, and Le Fort was sent in
-charge of the cargo of one vessel to Copenhagen. At
-this time, an ambassador was to be sent from Denmark to
-Russia; and, as Le Fort knew something of the Russian
-language, he secured the place of interpreter in the suite
-of the ambassador, and went with him to Moscow. On
-one occasion, when the Czar Peter was dining at the
-house of the ambassador, he noticed Le Fort, and observed
-that he spoke the Russian language remarkably for
-a foreigner. He was at once interested in him, and soon
-secured Le Fort as his own interpreter, as he found that
-he also spoke other languages. Le Fort became a great
-favorite of the emperor’s, and continued in his service
-until his death. The first improvement which Le Fort
-introduced into Russia related to the dress and equipment
-of the troops. The imperial guards had been accustomed
-to wear an old-fashioned Russian uniform, consisting of
-a long outer coat or gown, which much impeded their
-movements. In conversing with the Czar, Le Fort suggested
-that the dress of the soldiers of the western nations
-was more convenient for military use. Peter at once
-desired to see it; and Le Fort immediately repaired to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
-the tailor of the Danish ambassador, and ordered him to
-make two military suits in the style worn by the royal
-guards at Copenhagen, one for an officer and the other for
-a soldier in the ranks. Peter was so pleased with these
-suits, when they were shown to him, that he said he should
-like to have a company of guards dressed and equipped
-in that manner, and drilled according to the western style.
-Le Fort undertook the task of organizing and equipping
-such a band. When this company was completed, and
-clothed in the new uniform, and had been properly drilled,
-Le Fort placed himself at their head, and marched them,
-with drums beating and colors flying, before the palace
-gates. The Czar came to the window to see them
-pass, and was so pleased that he said he would join the
-company himself. He accordingly ordered a dress to be
-made for his own use, and he took his place in the ranks,
-and drilled as a common soldier. From this beginning,
-the entire imperial army was reformed. The Czar now
-proposed to Le Fort to make arrangements for bringing
-into the country a great number of mechanics and artisans
-from Denmark, Germany, France, and other European
-countries, in order that their improved methods
-might be introduced into Russia. To accomplish this end,
-the tariff of duties on the products and manufactures of
-foreign countries was greatly reduced. This increased
-the importation of goods from foreign countries, and promoted
-the intercourse of the Russians with foreign merchants,
-manufacturers, and artisans, and accustomed the
-people to a better style of living by improving their dress,
-furniture, and equipages. Also, the new system greatly
-increased the revenues of the empire. Among other
-reforms instituted by Peter, was that of the dress of his
-people. The Russians had been accustomed to wear long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
-gowns, similar to those worn now in Oriental countries.
-As this costume was inconvenient for soldiers, workmen,
-and artisans, Peter required it to be changed. This description
-is given of one strange style of dress among the
-ancient Russian ladies:—</p>
-
-<p>“They wore a sort of dress, of which the sleeves were
-ten or twelve yards long. These sleeves were made very
-full, and were drawn up upon the arm, in a sort of puff;
-it being the fashion to have as great a length of sleeve as
-could possibly be crowded on, between the shoulder and
-the wrist. The customary salutation between ladies and
-gentlemen in society, when this dress was in fashion, was
-performed through the intervention of the sleeves. On the
-approach of the gentleman, the lady, by a sudden and dexterous
-motion of her arm, would throw off the end of her
-sleeve to him. The sleeve, being so very long, could be
-thrown in this way half across the room. The gentleman
-would take the end of the sleeve which represented, we are
-to suppose, the hand of the lady, and, after kissing and
-saluting it in a most respectful manner, he would resign
-it, and the lady would draw it back again upon her arm.”</p>
-
-<p>Peter required the people to change this dress, and he
-sent patterns of the coats worn in Western Europe, to all
-parts of the country. He, however, met with a good deal
-of difficulty in inducing the people to follow these new
-fashions, especially regarding the shaving of their mustaches
-and beards. He thereupon assessed a tax upon
-beards, requiring every gentleman who wore one to pay
-a hundred rubles a year; and if any peasant entered the
-city wearing a beard, he was stopped at the gates, and rerequired
-to pay a fine of a penny. The officers of the customs,
-who were stationed at the gates of the towns, were
-ordered to stop every man who wore a long dress, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
-compel him to pay a fine of fifty cents, or else kneel down,
-and have all the part of his coat which lay upon the ground
-cut off with a pair of big shears. The Czar first set an
-example also, of rapid motion through the streets. It had
-been the custom for all the nobles to move about attended
-by a vast retinue; and as it was considered more stately to
-move slowly, and as all those lower in rank must stand,
-with uncovered heads, in the presence of their masters,
-the streets were often blocked in the snow and rain
-by these vast cavalcades of royalty; and crowds were
-obliged to stand in the cold and wet, with bare heads
-exposed to the inclemency of the weather. Peter the
-Great was attended, therefore, only by a few persons,
-when going out in carriage or sleigh, and his coachman
-was ordered to drive at a quick pace; and he limited the
-attendants of his nobles to a certain number. This story
-is told of the manner in which the Czar’s attention was
-attracted to young Menshikóf, who became one of his
-chief officers. Alexander Menshikóf was the son of a
-laboring man, in the service of a monastery, on the banks
-of the Volga. Young Menshikóf afterwards went to
-Moscow, and was there employed in a pastry-cook’s
-shop. It was his part of the work to go out in the
-streets and sell pies and cakes. In order to attract
-customers, he often sang songs. At one time Peter was
-passing, and stopped to listen to the songs of the young
-pastry-boy. Finally, the Czar asked him what he would
-take for his whole stock of cakes and pies, basket and all.
-The boy promptly stated the sum he would take for his
-wares, but as for the basket, as it belonged to his master,
-he could not sell it; but he dryly added: “Still, everything
-belongs to Your Majesty, and Your Majesty has,
-therefore, only to give me the command, and I shall
-deliver it up to you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This reply so pleased the Czar, that he took the boy
-into his service. When Peter the Great first became the
-sole ruler of Russia, after the downfall of Sophia, he was
-about twenty years of age. His word was law. Life
-and death hung upon his will. His dominions extended
-so far, that, when he wished to send an ambassador to
-one of his neighbors—the emperor of China—it took
-the messenger more than eighteen months of constant
-travelling to go from the capital to the frontier. As to
-Peter’s character, he was talented, ambitious, energetic,
-and resolute; but he was also quick-tempered, imperious,
-merciless, towards his enemies, and possessed an indomitable
-will. Peter thus describes his first trial of the open
-sea:—</p>
-
-<p>“For some years I had the fill of my desires on Lake
-Pereyaslávl, but finally it grew too narrow for me. I
-then went to the Kúbensky Lake, but that was too shallow.
-I then decided to see the open sea, and began often
-to beg the permission of my mother to go to Archangel.
-She forbade me such a dangerous journey, but, seeing my
-great desire, and my unchangeable longing, allowed it, in
-spite of herself.”</p>
-
-<p>So, in 1693, Peter set out from Moscow, with a suite
-of a hundred persons, to go to Archangel. Having
-arrived there, the smell of the salt water was too inviting
-to be resisted; and Peter put out to sea on a little yacht,
-called St. Peter, which had been built for him. His
-mother, who had exacted a promise that he would not
-go to sea, hearing that he had gone on a sea journey, was
-much alarmed, and wrote to him, urging his return. She
-even had a letter written to him, in the name of his little
-son, Alexis, then three years old, begging him to come
-back. To this he replied:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 427px;">
-<img src="images/i-536.jpg" width="427" height="650" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">CATHEDRAL OF ST. PETER AND PAUL IN THE FORTRESS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“By thy letter I see, oh! oh! that thou hast been
-mightily grieved, and why? Why dost thou trouble thyself
-about me? Thou hast deigned to write that thou
-hast given me into the care of the Virgin. When thou
-hast such a guardian for me, why dost thou grieve?”</p>
-
-<p>While at Archangel, besides the time which Peter gave
-to the study of commerce and ship-building, he found
-leisure for inspecting various industries and for practising
-both at the forge and at the lathe. A chandelier made of
-walrus teeth, turned by him, hangs now over his tomb in
-the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul, at St. Petersburg;
-and carved work in bone and wood, and iron bars
-forged by him at this time, are still preserved. Besides
-the balls and dinners which he attended at Archangel, to
-which he had also been much given at Moscow, he frequently
-attended a neighboring church, where he himself
-read the Epistle, sang with the choir, and made great
-friends with the archbishop. In 1694 his mother Natalia
-died, and soon he repudiated his wife Eudoxia and shut
-her up in a convent, where he kept her confined all the
-rest of her life. Peter had only married this wife to
-please his mother and his nobles, and having never loved
-her, soon tired of her. She had been brought up in the
-old-fashioned Russian way, and was very ignorant; but
-as she appeared to love him devotedly, his treatment of
-her was wicked and cruel, and in his after domestic life
-there is much to condemn. Although he did much for
-the advancement of Russia, and his public enterprise and
-achievements are greatly to be admired, in character he
-was brutal and selfish, and his tastes were low and vicious.
-He was fond of drunken carousals, and sank the dignity
-of his rank in his associations with inferior and profligate
-companions. As a man, there is little to admire in him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
-but as a public benefactor of his country, he is greatly to
-be commended. As an artisan, statesman, and general,
-he introduced wise and good reforms into his realms, and
-raised his people from semi-barbarism to rank with the
-other civilized nations of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Though he was not a scholar, he encouraged learning.
-There was, about this time, a second attempt made to
-assassinate the Czar. As Peter was often accustomed to
-attend conflagrations in Moscow, these conspirators
-formed the plan of setting fire to some building near the
-royal palace, and when the emperor, as was his wont,
-should come out to help extinguish the flames, he was to
-be assassinated. They then determined to go to the convent
-where Sophia was confined, release her, and proclaim
-her empress. This plot was, however, revealed to the
-Czar, and he thereupon ordered a small body of men to
-attend him, and he went at once to the houses of the various
-conspirators and arrested them. They were afterwards
-executed in a most barbarous manner. The criminals
-were brought out one by one. First their arms were
-cut off, then their legs, and finally their heads. The amputated
-limbs and heads were then hung upon a column
-in the market-place in Moscow, where they were left as a
-bloody warning to others, as long as the weather remained
-cold enough to keep them frozen. Thus ended the second
-conspiracy against the life of Peter the Great. In
-1695 the Czar, in conjunction with other European powers,
-declared war again against the Turks and Tartars.
-Peter acquired great renown throughout Europe for his
-successful siege against Azof, to obtain which was one of
-the chief objects of the campaign. This success also increased
-Peter’s interest in the building of ships. He
-determined to establish a large fleet on the Black Sea,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-and in order to ascertain the best modes of ship-building,
-Peter resolved to make a journey to Western Europe.</p>
-
-<p>That he might not be burdened by fêtes and ceremonies,
-he adopted a disguise. Macaulay said of this journey,
-“It is an epoch in the history, not only of his own
-country, but of ours and of the world.”</p>
-
-<p>Various reasons have been given by different writers for
-this step of the Czar. Pleyer, the secret Austrian agent,
-wrote to the Emperor Leopold that the whole embassy was
-“merely a cloak for the freedom sought by the Czar, to
-get out of his own country and divert himself a little.”
-A document in the archives at Vienna states that the
-“cause of the journey was a vow made by Peter, when in
-danger on the White Sea, to make a pilgrimage to the
-tombs of the apostles St. Peter and St. Paul at Rome.”
-Voltaire said, “He resolved to absent himself for some
-years from his dominions, in order to learn how better to
-govern them.” Napoleon said, “He left his country to
-deliver himself for a while from the crown, so as to learn
-ordinary life, and remount by degrees to greatness.” But
-later writers say, “Peter went abroad, not to fulfil a vow,
-not to amuse himself, not to become more civilized, not
-to learn the art of government, but simply to become a
-good shipwright.”</p>
-
-<p>His mind was filled with the idea of creating a navy on
-the Black Sea, and his tastes had always been mechanical.
-In order to give the Czar greater freedom of action,
-the purpose of his journey was concealed by means of a
-great embassy, which should visit the chief countries of
-western Europe. In the suite of the ambassadors were
-twenty nobles and thirty-five called volunteers, who were
-going for the study of ship-building. Among these was
-the Czar himself. These volunteers were chiefly young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
-men who had been comrades of Peter in his play-regiments
-and boat-building. During the absence of the Czar
-the government was intrusted to a regency of three persons,
-the uncle of the Czar and two princes. We have
-not space to describe this journey in full, and can only
-mention certain incidents. The Czar is thus described
-by the electress of Hannover and her daughter, whom
-Peter met at Koppenbrügge:—</p>
-
-<p>“My mother and I began to pay him our compliments,
-but he made Mr. Le Fort reply for him, for he seemed
-shy, hid his face in his hands, and said, ‘<i>Ich kann nicht
-sprechen</i>.’ But we tamed him a little, and then he sat
-down at the table between my mother and myself, and
-each of us talked to him in turn. Sometimes he replied
-with promptitude, at others, he made two interpreters
-talk, and assuredly he said nothing that was not to the
-point on all subjects that were suggested. As to his
-grimaces, I imagined them worse than I found them, and
-some are not in his power to correct. One can see also
-that he has had no one to teach him how to eat properly,
-but he has a natural unconstrained air which pleases me.”</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 461px;">
-<img src="images/i-542.jpg" width="461" height="622" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">PETER THE GREAT IN THE DUTCH SHIPYARD.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Her mother also wrote: “The Czar is very tall, his
-features are fine, and his figure very noble. He has great
-vivacity of mind, and a ready and just repartee. But,
-with all the advantages with which nature has endowed
-him, it could be wished that his manners were a little less
-rustic. I asked him if he liked hunting. He replied
-that his father had been very fond of it, but that he himself,
-from his earliest youth, had had a real passion for
-navigation and for fireworks. He told us that he worked
-himself in building ships, showed us his hands, and made
-us touch the callous places that had been made by work.
-He has quite the manners of his country. If he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>
-received a better education, he would be an accomplished
-man, for he has many good qualities, and an infinite
-amount of native wit.”</p>
-
-<p>The Czar proceeded to Holland, and in the little town
-of Saardam, not far from Amsterdam, may still be seen
-the shop which Peter occupied while there. The historians
-say, he entered himself as a common ship-carpenter,
-at Amsterdam, and worked for several months among the
-other workmen, wearing the same dress they wore. In
-moments of rest, the Czar, sitting down on a log, with his
-hatchet between his knees, was willing to talk to any one
-who addressed him simply as carpenter Peter, but turned
-away without answering if called Sire or Your Majesty.
-Peter’s curiosity was insatiable. He visited workshops,
-factories, cabinets of coins, anatomical museums, botanical
-gardens, hospitals, theatres, and numerous other
-places; and inquired about everything he saw, until he
-was recognized by his usual questions, “What is that for?
-How does that work? That will I see.” He made himself
-acquainted with Dutch home and family life. Every
-market day he went to the Botermarkt, mingled with the
-people, and studied their trades.</p>
-
-<p>He took lessons from a travelling dentist, and experimented
-on his servants. He mended his own clothes, and
-learned enough of cobbling to make himself a pair of
-slippers. He visited Protestant churches, and did not
-forget the beer-houses. The frigate upon which Peter
-worked so long, was at last launched, and proved a good
-ship. He had seen some English ships which pleased him
-so much, that he determined to set out for England, which
-he did in 1698, leaving his embassy in Holland.</p>
-
-<p>King William of England made Peter a present of an
-English yacht, with which he was much delighted. Peter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
-spent much of his time in England, looking for suitable
-persons to employ in arts and mechanics in Russia. He
-avoided all court pomp and etiquette during this journey,
-and travelled incognito, as much as possible. He visited
-also the mint in England, for he was pleased with the
-excellence of the English coinage, and he designed recoining
-the Russian money, which he afterwards accomplished,
-coining copper, silver, and gold to the extent of
-$18,000,000 in the space of three years, to replace the bits
-of stamped leather formerly used. At length he returned
-to Amsterdam, where his embassy awaited him. When
-Peter the Great was excited by anger or emotion, the ugly
-aspect of his countenance and demeanor was greatly
-aggravated by a nervous affection of the head and face,
-which attacked him, particularly when he was in a passion,
-and which produced convulsive twitches of the muscles,
-that drew his head by jerks to one side, and distorted his
-face in a manner dreadful to behold. It was said that
-this disorder was first induced in his childhood, by some
-one of the terrible frights through which he passed. This
-distortion, together with the coarse and savage language
-he employed when in a passion, made him appear at times
-more like some ugly monster of fiction than like a man.
-He disliked court etiquette, and avoided pompous ceremonies.
-Of course there was much curiosity to see him
-in the various cities he visited, but he generally avoided
-the crowds; and when his splendid embassy entered a city
-in royal state, and the people collected in vast numbers to
-behold the famous Czar, while they were straining their
-eyes, and peering into every carriage of the royal procession
-in hopes of seeing him, Peter himself would slip into
-the city by some quiet street, in disguise, and meeting the
-merchants, with whom he delighted to associate, he would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span>
-go to some inn and indulge in his pipe and beer, leaving
-his embassy to represent royalty. At last his disguise
-was discovered, and then the news was circulated that the
-Czar could be easily recognized by his great height,—nearly
-seven feet,—by the twitching of his face, by his
-gesturing with his right hand, and by a small mole on the
-right cheek. His appearance is thus described by one
-who saw him at this time:—</p>
-
-<p>“He is a prince of very great stature, but there is one
-circumstance which is unpleasant. He has convulsions,
-sometimes in his eyes, sometimes in his arms, and sometimes
-in his whole body. He at times turns his eyes so
-that one can see nothing but the whites. I do not know
-whence it arises, but we must believe that it is a lack of
-good breeding. Then he has also movements in the legs,
-so that he can scarcely keep in one place. He is very
-well made, and goes about dressed as a sailor, in the
-highest degree simple, and wishing nothing else than to
-be on the water.”</p>
-
-<p>But the Cardinal Kollonitz, primate of Hungary, gives
-a more flattering picture of Peter the Great:—</p>
-
-<p>“The Czar is a youth of from twenty-eight to thirty
-years of age, is tall, of an olive complexion, rather stout
-than thin, in aspect between proud and grave, and with a
-lively countenance. His left eye, as well as his left arm
-and leg, were injured by the poison given him during the
-life of his brother; but there remain now only a fixed and
-fascinated look in his eye, and a constant movement of
-his arm and leg, to hide which, he accompanies this forced
-motion with continual movements of his entire body,
-which, by many people in the countries which he has
-visited, has been attributed to natural causes, but really it
-is artificial. His wit is lively and ready; his manners<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span>
-rather civil than barbarous, the journey he has made
-having improved him, and the difference from the beginning
-of his travels and the present time being visible,
-although his native roughness may still be seen in him;
-but it is chiefly noticeable in his followers, whom he holds
-in check with great severity. He has a knowledge of
-geography and history, and, what is most to be noticed,
-he desires to know these subjects better; but his strongest
-inclination is for maritime affairs, at which he himself
-works mechanically, as he did in Holland; and this work,
-according to many people who have to do with him, is
-indispensable to divert the effects of the poison, which
-still very much troubles him. In person and in aspect, as
-well as in his manners, there is nothing which would distinguish
-him or declare him to be a prince.”</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 316px;">
-<img src="images/i-547.jpg" width="316" height="367" alt="engraving" />
-<div class="caption">PETER I., CZAR OF RUSSIA.<br />
-
-(From Original Copperplate Engraving.)</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>During his visit to Paris, the Czar often astonished the
-polite Parisians. “On one occasion he went with the
-duke of Orleans to the opera, where he sat on the front
-bench of the large box. During the performance the
-Czar asked if he could not have some beer. A large
-goblet on a saucer was immediately brought. The regent
-rose, took it, and presented it to the Czar, who, with a
-smile and bow of politeness, took the goblet without any
-ceremony, drank, and put it back on the saucer, which the
-regent kept holding. The duke then took a plate with
-a napkin, which he presented to the Czar, who, without
-rising, made use of it, at which scene the audience seemed
-astonished.”</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding his rough manners, the history, character,
-and achievements of the Czar, together with his
-exact knowledge in so many directions, and his interest
-in everything that was scientific and technical, made a
-deep impression upon those who met him. St. Simon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span>
-thus describes him: “He was a very tall man, well made,
-not too stout, with a roundish face, a high forehead, and
-fine eyebrows, a short nose—but not too short—large at
-the end; his lips were rather thick, his complexion a ruddy
-brown; fine black eyes, large, lively, piercing, and well
-apart; a majestic and gracious look when he wished,
-otherwise severe and stern, with a twitching which did not
-often return, but which disturbed his look and his whole
-expression, and inspired fear. That lasted but a moment,
-accompanied by a wild and terrible look, and passed away
-as quickly. His whole air showed his intellect, his reflection,
-and his greatness, and did not lack a certain grace.
-He wore only a linen collar, a round brown peruke
-without powder, which did not touch his shoulders; a
-brown, tight-fitting coat, plain, with gold buttons; a waistcoat,
-breeches, stockings, no gloves nor cuffs; the star of
-his order on his coat, and the ribbon underneath, his coat
-often quite unbuttoned; his hat on a table, and never on
-his head even out of doors. With all this simplicity, and
-whatever bad carriage or company he might be, one could
-not fail to perceive the air of greatness that was natural
-to him.”</p>
-
-<p>While at Vienna, Peter learned of another revolt of the
-Streltsi, and thereupon hastened back to Moscow to put
-down the insurrection. The rebellion was soon quelled;
-but the tortures and executions which followed were barbarous.
-Some were beheaded; some were broken on the
-wheel, and then left to die in horrible agonies; many
-were buried alive, their heads only being left above the
-ground. It is said that Peter took such a savage delight
-in these punishments that he executed many of the victims
-with his own hand. At one time, when half intoxicated,
-at a banquet, he ordered twenty prisoners to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span>
-brought in, and between his drinks of brandy cut off their
-heads himself, being an hour in cutting off the twenty
-heads.</p>
-
-<p>As Peter thought Sophia was implicated in this revolt,
-he ordered the arm of the ringleader of the plot to be cut
-off, and an address which he found, written to Sophia, to
-be placed in the stiffened hand, and by his order this
-ghastly relic was fastened to the wall in Sophia’s apartment.
-When the trials were over, a decree was issued,
-abolishing the Streltsi; and they were all sent into
-exile. Peter was now involved in a war with Sweden for
-the possession of the eastern shore of the Baltic Sea.
-At first, the Swedes were victorious; but in about a year
-the Czar gained possession of a considerable portion of
-the Baltic shore, and he thereupon determined to build a
-new city there, with the view of making it the naval and
-commercial capital of his kingdom. This plan was successfully
-carried out, and the building of the great city of
-St. Petersburg was one of the most important events in
-the reign of Peter the Great.</p>
-
-<p>At length, Charles XII., king of Sweden, began to be
-alarmed at the increasing power of the Czar in that part
-of the country, and he invaded Russia with an army.
-The famous battle of Pultowa, by which the invasion of
-the Swedes was repelled, was fought in 1709; and this
-was almost the only serious danger from any foreign source
-which threatened the dominions of Peter the Great during
-his reign.</p>
-
-<p>Peter, having been previously privately married to
-Catherine, determined, in 1712, to have a public ceremony.
-Peter’s first wife had one son, Alexis, who occasioned
-his father the most serious trouble. Alexis was
-indolent and most vicious in his habits of life; and so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>
-outrageous was his conduct that at last his father caused
-him to be imprisoned. It was then discovered that Alexis
-had been planning a revolt, and Peter referred his case
-to a grand council of civil authorities, and also a convocation
-of the clergy to determine upon the sentence to be
-pronounced upon this rebellious son. The council declared
-that he was worthy of death, and the Czar confirmed the
-judgment of the council, and a day was appointed on
-which Alexis was to be arraigned in order that sentence
-of death might be solemnly pronounced upon him. But
-before the appointed day arrived, Alexis was attacked
-with convulsions, caused by his terror; and the Czar visited
-him in the fortress where he was dying.</p>
-
-<p>The dying prince besought forgiveness of his father
-with such prayers and tears that Peter and his ministers
-were overcome with emotion. The Czar gave Alexis his
-forgiveness and his blessing, and took his leave with tears
-and lamentations. Soon after, Alexis expired. The
-funeral rites were performed by the Czar and his family
-with much solemnity. At the service in the church a
-funeral sermon was pronounced by the priest from the
-appropriate text, “O Absalom! my son! my son Absalom!”
-Thus ended this dreadful tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>The heir to the throne was now the little son of Catherine,
-Peter Petrowitz. The birth of this son, which occurred
-about three years before the death of Alexis, was
-such a delight to Peter the Great that he celebrated the
-event with public rejoicings. At the baptism of the babe,
-two kings—those of Denmark and of Prussia—acted as
-godfathers. The christening was attended with most
-gorgeous banquets. Among other curious contrivances
-were two enormous pies,—one served in the room of the
-gentlemen and the other in that of the ladies. From the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>
-ladies’ pie, there stepped out, when it was opened, a
-young dwarf, very small, and clothed in a fantastic manner.
-The dwarf brought out with him from the pie some
-glasses and a bottle of wine, and he walked around the
-table, drinking to the health of the ladies, who were intensely
-amused by his droll manners. In the gentlemen’s
-room the pie was similar, from which a female dwarf
-stepped forth and performed the same ceremony. Peter
-the Great was much attached to his wife Catherine, whose
-romantic life we have not space to describe. Her influence
-over the Czar was most beneficial.</p>
-
-<p>About a year after the death of Alexis, the little Peter
-Petrowitz, the idolized son of the Czar, also died. Peter
-the Great was completely overwhelmed with grief at this
-new calamity. Even Catherine, who usually had power
-to soothe his fits of frenzy, anger, or grief, and whose
-touch would often stop the contortions of his face, could
-not comfort him now; for the sight of her only reminded
-him more keenly of his loss. It was feared at this time
-that grief would kill the Czar; for he shut himself up
-alone, and would not allow any one to come near him for
-three days and nights. Peter the Great, however, lived
-sixteen years after this event. During these last years
-he continued the reforms in his empire and increased the
-power and influence of his government among surrounding
-nations. As both of his sons were dead, he determined
-to leave the government in the hands of Catherine,
-and she was crowned empress with most imposing ceremonies.
-In less than a year after this event, the Czar was
-attacked with a sudden illness during the ceremonies of
-rejoicings connected with the betrothal of one of his
-daughters to a foreign duke. His death took place on
-the 28th of January, 1725. Another of his daughters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span>
-having died a short time after her father, their bodies
-were interred together. The funeral obsequies were so
-protracted, and were conducted with so much pomp and
-ceremony, that six weeks elapsed before the remains of
-Peter the Great were finally committed to the tomb. The
-fame of Peter the Great differs from that attained by
-other famous rulers of the world; for it was not consequent
-upon renowned foreign conquests, but the triumph
-which Peter achieved was the commencement of a work of
-internal improvement and reform which now, after a century
-and a half has passed, is still going on.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>FREDERICK THE GREAT.<br />
-
-<small>A.D. 1712-1786.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“Kings are like stars,—they rise and set, they have</div>
-<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The worship of the world, but no repose.”—<span class="smcap">Shelley.</span></span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse"><br /><span style="margin-left: 5em;">“A man’s a man;</span></div>
-<div class="verse">But when you see a king, you see the work</div>
-<div class="verse">Of many thousand men.”—<span class="smcap">George Eliot.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CARLYLE accused Schiller of “oversetting fact,
-disregarding reality, and tumbling time and space
-topsy-turvy.” That there is great danger of doing the
-latter, in condensing such a life as that of Frederick the
-Great into the small space allotted to these sketches, cannot
-be denied; but fiction itself could scarcely overstate
-the facts connected with this weird but most fascinating
-glimpse of historical events. Carlyle says: “With such
-wagon-loads of books and printed records as exist on the
-subject of Frederick, it has always seemed possible, even
-for a stranger, to acquire some real understanding of him;
-though practically, here and now, I have to own it proves
-difficult beyond conception. Alas! the books are not
-cosmic; they are chaotic.”</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 379px;">
-<img src="images/i-555.jpg" width="379" height="619" alt="left" />
-<div class="caption">FREDERICK II., KING OF PRUSSIA, ÆT. 58.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>True it is, it is not want of material, but the overwhelming
-multiplicity of documents, which renders it difficult to
-trace out a clear-cut sketch of Frederick the Great; and
-that we may do it more concisely, and yet entertainingly,
-a series of panoramic pictures will perhaps be the best
-method of achieving the desired end.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“About one hundred years ago there used to be seen
-sauntering on the terraces of Sans Souci for a short time
-in the afternoon—or you might have met him elsewhere
-at an earlier hour, riding or driving in a rapid business
-manner on the open roads, or through the scraggy woods
-and avenues of that intricate, amphibious Potsdam region—a
-highly interesting, lean little old man, of alert though
-slightly stooping figure, whose name among strangers was
-<i>King Friedrich the Second</i>, or Frederick the Great of Prussia,
-and at home among the common people, who much
-loved and esteemed him, was <i>Vater Fritz</i>, Father Fred.</p>
-
-<p>“He is a king, every inch of him, though without the
-trappings of a king. He presents himself in a Spartan
-simplicity of vesture: no crown but an old military
-cocked hat, generally old, or trampled and kneaded into
-absolute softness if new; no sceptre but one like Agamemnon’s—a
-walking-stick cut from the woods, which
-serves also as a riding-stick; and for royal robes a mere
-soldier’s blue coat with red facings, coat likely to be old,
-and sure to have a good deal of Spanish snuff on the breast
-of it; rest of the apparel dim, unobtrusive in color or cut,
-ending in high over-knee military boots, which may be
-brushed, but are not permitted to be blackened or varnished.</p>
-
-<p>“The man is not of god-like physiognomy, any more
-than of imposing stature or costume: close-shut mouth
-with thin lips, prominent jaws and nose, receding brow,
-by no means of Olympian height; head, however, is of
-long form, and has superlative gray eyes in it; not what
-is called a beautiful man, nor yet, by all appearance, what
-is called a happy. The face bears evidence of many sorrows,
-of much hard labor done in this world. Quiet stoicism,
-great unconscious, and some conscious, pride, well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>
-tempered with a cheery mockery of humor, are written on
-that old face, which carries its chin well forward in spite
-of the slight stoop about the neck; snuffy nose rather flung
-into the air, under its old cocked hat, like an old snuffy
-lion on the watch, and such a pair of eyes as no man, or
-lion, or lynx, of that century bore elsewhere. Those eyes,
-which, at the bidding of his great soul, fascinated you
-with seduction or with terror; most excellent, potent,
-brilliant eyes, swift-darting as the stars, steadfast as the
-sun; gray, we said, of the azure-gray color; large enough,
-not of glaring size; the habitual expression of them vigilance
-and penetrating sense, and gives us the notion of a
-lambent outer radiance springing from some great inner
-sea of light and fire in the man. The voice, if he speak
-to you, is clear, melodious, and sonorous; all tones are
-in it: ingenuous inquiry, graceful sociality, light-flowing
-banter up to definite word of command, up to desolating
-word of rebuke and reprobation.”</p>
-
-<p>Such is the picture of Frederick the Great in his later
-days; but now we will turn back our panoramic views,
-and behold the setting of his early years: and, to a clearer
-understanding of those events, an aid may be found in
-glancing at his native country, Prussia. For many centuries
-the country on the southern coasts of the Baltic Sea
-was inhabited by wild tribes of barbarians, almost as savage
-as the beasts which roamed in their forests. After a
-time the tribes, tamed and partly civilized, produced a
-race of tall and manly proportions, fair in complexion,
-with flaxen hair, stern aspect, great physical strength,
-and most formidable foes in battle. Centuries passed, of
-which history notes only wars and woes, when from this
-chaotic barbarism order emerged. Small states were organized,
-and a political life began. In 1700 one of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
-petty provinces was called the Marquisate of Brandenburg,
-whose marquis was Frederick, of the family of
-Hohenzollern. To the east of this province was a duchy,
-called Prussia, which was at length added to the domains
-of Frederick, the marquis of Brandenburg, and he obtained
-from the emperor of Germany the recognition of
-his dominions as a kingdom, and assumed the title of
-Frederick I. of Prussia. On the 16th of November, 1700,
-his ambassador returned triumphantly from Vienna. “The
-Kaiser has consented; we are to wear a royal crown on
-the top of our periwig.” Thus Prussia became a kingdom.
-When Frederick was crowned king of Prussia, most
-gorgeous was the pomp, most royal was the grandeur, of
-the imposing ceremonies. Carlyle says:—</p>
-
-<p>“The magnificence of Frederick’s processionings into
-Konigsburg, and of his coronation ceremonials there, what
-pen can describe it! what pen need! Folio volumes with
-copper-plates have been written on it, and are not yet all
-pasted in band-boxes or slit into spills. ‘The diamond
-buttons of his majesty’s coat’ (snuff-colored or purple, I
-cannot recollect) cost £1,500 apiece. By this one feature
-judge what an expensive Herr. Streets were hung with
-cloth, carpeted with cloth, no end of draperies and cloth;
-your oppressed imagination feels as if there was cloth
-enough of scarlet and other bright colors to thatch the
-Arctic Zone; with illuminations, cannon-salvos, fountains
-running wine. Frederick himself put the crown on his
-head, ‘King here in my own right, after all,’ and looked
-his royalest, we may fancy,—the kind eyes of him, almost
-fierce for moments, and the ‘cheerfulness of pride’
-well blending with something of awful.”</p>
-
-<p>And now we must hang up the picture of Frederick the
-grandfather, for there has another Frederick come to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span>
-claim our attention. “Courage, poor old grandfather!
-Poor old man! he got his own back half broken by a
-careless nurse letting him fall, and has slightly stooped
-ever since, much against his will, for he would fain have
-been beautiful. But here is a new edition of a Frederick,
-the first having gone off with so little effect. This one’s
-back is still unbroken. Who knows but Heaven may be
-kinder to this one? Heaven was much kinder to this one.
-Him Heaven had kneaded of a more potent stuff; a
-mighty fellow, this one, and a strange; of a swift, far-darting
-nature this one, like an Apollo clad in sunbeams
-and in lightnings, and with a back which all the world
-could not succeed in breaking.”</p>
-
-<p>Between the old grandfather and this famous Frederick
-there hangs the picture of still another Frederick, only a
-little less famous,—Frederick Wilhelm, crown prince of
-Prussia when his famous son was born, afterwards second
-king of Prussia, and withal most ferocious in his nature,
-part bear and part maniac; his picture is thus graphically
-sketched.</p>
-
-<p>“The new monarch, who assumed the crown with the
-title of Frederick William, not with that of Frederick II., to
-the utter consternation of the court dismissed nearly every
-honorary official of the palace, from the highest dignitary
-to the humblest page. His flashing eye and determined
-manner were so appalling that no one ventured to remonstrate.
-A clean sweep was made, so that the household
-was reduced to the lowest footing of economy consistent
-with the supply of indispensable wants. Eight servants
-were retained at six shillings a week. His father had
-thirty pages; all were dismissed but three. There were
-one thousand saddle-horses in the royal stables; Frederick
-William kept thirty. Three-fourths of the names were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span>
-struck from the pension list. For twenty-seven years this
-strange man reigned. He was like no other monarch.
-Great wisdom and shrewdness were blended with unutterable
-folly and almost maniacal madness. Though a man
-of strong powers of mind, he was very illiterate. ‘For
-spelling, grammar, penmanship, and composition, his semi-articulate
-papers resemble nothing else extant,—are as
-if done by the paw of a bear; indeed, the utterance generally
-sounds more like the growling of a bear than anything
-that could be handily spelled or parsed. But there
-is a decisive human sense in the heart of it, and such a
-dire hatred of empty bladders, unrealities, and hypocritical
-forms and pretenses, which he calls wind and humbug, as
-is very strange indeed.’</p>
-
-<p>“His energy inspired the whole kingdom, and paved
-the way for the achievements of his son. The father
-created the machine with which the son attained such
-wonderful results. He commuted the old feudal service
-into a fixed money payment. He goaded the whole realm
-into industry, compelling even the apple-women to knit
-at the stalls.</p>
-
-<p>“The crown lands were farmed out. He drained bogs,
-planted colonies, established manufactures, and in every
-way encouraged the use of Prussian products. He carried
-with him invariably a stout rattan cane. Upon the slightest
-provocation, like a madman, he would thrash those
-who displeased him. He was an arbitrary king, ruling at
-his sovereign will, and disposing of the liberty, the property,
-and the lives of his subjects at his pleasure. Every
-year he accumulated large masses of coin, which he deposited
-in barrels in the cellar of his palace. He had no
-powers of graceful speech, but spent his energetic, joyless
-life in grumbling and growling. He would allow no drapery,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span>
-no stuffed furniture, no carpets in his apartments. He
-sat upon a plain wooden chair. He ate roughly of roast
-beef, despising all delicacies. His dress was a close military
-blue coat, with red cuffs and collar, buff waistcoat
-and breeches, and white linen gaiters to the knee. His
-sword was belted around his waist. A well-worn, battered
-triangular hat covered his head. He walked rapidly
-through the streets which surrounded his palaces at
-Potsdam and Berlin. If he met any one, he would abruptly
-inquire, ‘Who are you?’ When his majesty took
-a walk, every human being fled before him, as if a tiger
-had broken loose from a menagerie. If he met a lady
-in the street, he gave her a kick, and told her to go
-home and mind her children. If he saw a clergyman
-staring at the soldiers, he admonished the reverend gentleman
-to betake himself to study and prayer, and enforced
-his pious advice by a sound caning administered on the
-spot. But it was in his own house that he was most unreasonable
-and ferocious. His palace was hell, and he
-the most execrable of fiends.”</p>
-
-<p>And now we will turn this unlovely picture of the bearish
-Frederick William to the wall, while we examine a portrait
-of the young Fritz, afterwards Frederick the Great.</p>
-
-<p>In the palace of Berlin, on the 24th of January, 1712,
-a small infant opened its eyes upon this world. Though
-small, he was of great promise and possibility, “and thrice
-and four times welcome to all sovereign and other persons
-in the Prussian court and Prussian realms in those cold
-winter days. His father, they say, was like to have stifled
-him with his caresses, so overjoyed was the man, or at
-least to have scorched him in the blaze of the fire, when
-happily some much suitabler female nurse snatched this
-little creature from the rough paternal paws, and saved it
-for the benefit of Prussia and mankind.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then they christened this wee fellow, aged one week,
-with immense magnificence and pomp of ceremony, Karl
-Frederick; but the Karl dropped altogether out of practice,
-and Frederick (<i>Rich in Peace</i>) became his only title;
-until his father became king of Prussia, and Fritz stepped
-into the rank of crown prince, and subsequently became
-the most renowned sovereign of his nation, and took his
-place in the foremost rank of the famous rulers of the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>Frederick William had married, when eighteen years of
-age, his pretty cousin, Sophie Dorothee, daughter of
-George I. of England. Little Fritz had an elder sister,
-named Wilhelmina. There were several younger children
-afterwards, but our story mostly concerns Fritz and his
-sister Wilhelmina, for whom he showed greater affection
-than for any other person.</p>
-
-<p>Frederick William was very desirous that Fritz should
-be a soldier, but the beautiful laughing Fritz, with his
-long golden curls and sensitive nature, was fonder of
-books and music than of war and soldiering, which much
-offended his stern father; and so great was his abhorrence
-of such a feminine employment as he esteemed music, that
-little Fritz and Wilhelmina must needs practice in secret;
-and had it not been for the aid of their mother, the Queen
-Sophie Dorothee, they would have been denied this great
-pleasure. But the music-masters were sent to the forests
-or caves by the queen, and there the prince Fritz and
-Wilhelmina took their much-prized music-lessons. But
-one day the stern king found Fritz and Wilhelmina marching
-around together, while the laughing prince was proudly
-beating a drum, much to his own and sister’s delight.
-The king was so overjoyed at this manifestation of supposed
-military taste in his son, that he immediately called<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>
-the queen to witness the performance, and then employed
-an artist to transfer the scene to canvas. This picture
-still hangs upon the walls of the Charlottenburg Palace.</p>
-
-<p>When Fritz was but six years old, a military company
-was organized for him, consisting of about three hundred
-lads. This band was called “The Crown Prince Cadets.”
-Fritz was very thoroughly drilled in his military duties,
-and a uniform was provided for him. An arsenal was
-built on the palace grounds at Potsdam, where he mounted
-batteries and practised gunnery with small brass ordnance.
-Until Fritz was seven years of age, his education had
-been under the care of a French governess; but at that
-age he was taken from his lady teachers and placed under
-tutors. These tutors were military officers of great renown.</p>
-
-<p>The following directions were drawn up by Frederick
-William, regarding his son’s education:—</p>
-
-<p>“My son must be impressed with love and fear of God,
-as the foundation of our temporal and eternal welfare.
-No false religions or sects of Atheist, Arian, Socinian, or
-whatever name the poisonous things have, which can
-easily corrupt a young mind, are to be even named in his
-hearing. He is to be taught a proper abhorrence of
-Papistry, and to be shown its baselessness and nonsensicality.
-Impress on him the true religion, which consists
-essentially in this: that Christ died for all men. He is
-to learn no Latin, but French and German, so as to speak
-and write with brevity and propriety. Let him learn
-arithmetic, mathematics, artillery, economy, to the very
-bottom; history in particular; ancient history only
-slightly, but the history of the last one hundred and fifty
-years to the exactest pitch. He must be completely master
-of geography, as also of whatever is remarkable in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span>
-each country. With increasing years you will more and
-more, to an especial degree, go upon fortification, the
-formation of a camp, and other war sciences, that the
-prince may from youth upward be trained to act as officer
-and general, and to seek all his glory in the soldier profession.”</p>
-
-<p>Frederick William took little Fritz with him from early
-childhood on all his military reviews, and in going from
-garrison to garrison the king employed a common vehicle
-called a sausage-car. This consisted of a mere stuffed
-pole, some ten or twelve feet long, upon which they sat
-astride. It rested upon wheels, and the riders, ten or a
-dozen, were rattled along over the rough roads through
-dust and rain, in winter’s cold and summer’s heat. This
-iron king robbed his child even of sleep, saying, “Too
-much sleep stupefies a fellow.” Sitting astride of this
-log carriage, the tender and delicate Fritz, whose love
-was for music, poetry, and books, was forced to endure
-all kinds of hardship and fatigue. When Fritz was ten
-years of age, his exacting father made out a set of rules
-which covered all the hours of this poor boy’s life. Not
-even Saturday or Sunday was left untrammelled by his
-stern requirements.</p>
-
-<p>Fritz was a remarkably handsome boy, with a fine figure,
-small and delicate hands and feet, and flowing blonde
-hair. His father, despising all the etiquette and social
-manners of life and dress, ordered his beautiful hair to be
-cut off, and denied him every luxury of the toilet and
-adornment. Frederick William early displayed an aversion
-for his handsome son, which soon amounted to actual
-hatred. As Wilhelmina and the mother of Fritz both took
-his part against the angry and brutal king, the wrath of
-that almost inhuman monster was also meted out to them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When Fritz was fourteen years of age, he was appointed
-by his father as captain of the Potsdam Grenadier
-Guards. This regiment was the glory of the king,
-and was composed entirely of giants. The shortest of
-the men were nearly seven feet high, and the tallest
-nearly nine feet in height. Frederick William did not
-scruple to take any means of securing these coveted
-giants, and his recruiting officers were stationed in
-many places for the purpose of seizing any large men, no
-matter what their nationality or position. When the
-rulers of neighboring realms complained at this unlawful
-seizure of their subjects, the Prussian king pretended that
-it was done without his knowledge. If any young woman
-was found in his kingdom of remarkable stature, she was
-compelled to marry one of the king’s giants. This guard
-consisted of 2,400 men.</p>
-
-<p>The queen-mother, Sophie Dorothee, had set her mind
-upon bringing about a double marriage, between Wilhelmina
-and her cousin Fred, son of the king of England,
-and Fritz and his cousin, the princess Amelia, the sister
-of Fred. But though all her schemes came to naught,
-they occasioned much trouble in her family, and brought
-down upon the heads of poor Wilhelmina and Fritz much
-brutal persecution from their inhuman father.</p>
-
-<p>Frederick William took his son Fritz to visit Augustus,
-king of Poland. This king was an exceedingly profligate
-man, and the young Fritz learned vicious habits at this
-court, which lured him into evil ways which ever after left
-their blot upon his character and morals. This fatal visit
-to Dresden occurred when Fritz was sixteen years of age,
-and the dissipation of those four weeks introduced the
-crown prince to habits which have left an indelible stain
-upon his reputation, and which poisoned his life. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span>
-king’s previous dislike to his son was now converted into
-contempt and hatred, as he became aware of his vicious
-habits; for though the iron king was a maniac in temper,
-and cruel as a savage, he had no weakness towards an
-immoral life. King Frederick William was now confined
-to his chair with gout, and poor Wilhelmina and Fritz
-were the victims upon whom his severest tyrannies fell.
-The princess Wilhelmina was very beautiful, and had it
-not been for his love for this sister, upon whom the whole
-weight of his father’s resentment would then fall, Fritz
-would have escaped from his home and the terrible ill-treatment
-he there received.</p>
-
-<p>We have not space to give the pictures of the family
-broils in this unhappy household. Now the crabbed old
-man would snatch the plates from the table at dinner and
-fling them at the heads of his children, usually at hapless
-Wilhelmina or Fritz; then, angered at Wilhelmina because
-she refused to take whatever husband her cruel
-father might select, irrespective of her inclination or
-wishes, he shut the poor princess up in her apartment,
-and tried to starve her into submission; for, as she writes,
-“I was really dying of hunger, having nothing to eat but
-soup made with salt and water and a ragout of old bones,
-full of hairs and other dirt.” At last she yielded to her
-father’s demands; but then she incurred the anger of her
-mother, who had set her heart upon the match with the
-prince of Wales.</p>
-
-<p>So the poor princess’ days were full of bitterness. But,
-fortunately, the prince of Baireuth, whom she married,
-turned out to be a kind husband; but as he was absent
-most of the time on regimental duty, and had but his
-small salary, and the old marquis of Baireuth, her husband’s
-father, was penurious, irascible, and an inebriate,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span>
-she often suffered for the necessaries of life. The home
-of her step-parents was unendurable, and the home of her
-childhood was still more so. Unhappy princess! and
-yet, in the midst of all this misery, her bright and graphic
-letters form one of the greatest delights to students of
-history, and give true pictures of the home of Frederick
-the Great, which can be found nowhere else.</p>
-
-<p>Fritz had now so seriously offended his father, that the
-king openly exposed him to contempt. He even flogged
-the prince with his rattan in the presence of others; and the
-young heir-apparent to the throne of Prussia, beautiful in
-person, high-spirited, and of superior genius, was treated
-by his father with studied insult, even in the presence of
-monarchs, of lords and ladies, of the highest dignitaries
-of Europe; and after raining blows upon his head, he
-exclaimed in diabolical wrath, as if desirous of goading
-his son to suicide: “Had I been so treated by my father,
-I would have blown my brains out. But this fellow has
-no honor. He takes all that comes.”</p>
-
-<p>But at last Fritz decided not to take longer all that
-came, and so he prepared for flight. On the 15th of July,
-1730, the king of Prussia set out with a small train,
-accompanied by Fritz, to take a journey to the Rhine.
-When near Augsburg, Fritz wrote to Lieutenant Katte,
-one of his profligate friends, stating that he should embrace
-the first opportunity to escape to the Hague; that
-there he should assume the name of the Count of Alberville.
-He wished Katte to join him there, and to bring
-with him the overcoat and the one thousand ducats which
-he had left in his hands. Just after midnight the prince
-stole out to meet his valet, who had been commanded to
-bring some horses to the village green. But as Keith, the
-valet, appeared with the horses, he was accosted by one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span>
-of the king’s guard; and the prince, although disguised
-with a red overcoat, was recognized and forced to withdraw
-to his own quarters and give up the attempt for that
-time. The king was informed of these things, and now
-the poor prince was put in the care of three of the guard,
-and they were informed if the prince was allowed to
-escape, death would be their doom. Upon the king’s
-arrival at Wesel, he ordered his culprit son to be brought
-before him. A terrible scene ensued. As the king would
-give no assurance that his friends who had aided him
-should be pardoned, the crown prince evaded all attempts
-to extort from him confessions which would implicate
-them. “Why,” asked the king, furiously, “did you attempt
-to desert?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wished to escape,” the prince boldly replied, “because
-you did not treat me like a son, but like an abject
-slave.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are a cowardly deserter,” the father exclaimed,
-“devoid of all feelings of honor.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have as much honor as you have,” the son replied;
-“and I have only done that which I have heard you say a
-hundred times you would have done yourself, had you been
-treated as I have been.”</p>
-
-<p>The infuriated king was now beside himself with rage.
-He drew his sword and seemed upon the point of thrusting
-it through the heart of his son, when General Mosel
-threw himself before the king, exclaiming, “Sire, you may
-kill me, but spare your son.” The prince was then placed
-in a room where two sentries watched over him with fixed
-bayonets. As the prince had held the rank of colonel in
-the army, his unjust father declared he was a deserter,
-and merited death. Frederick William, whose brutal
-cruelty exceeds our powers of belief, then sent a courier
-with the following despatch to his wife:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I have arrested the rascal Fritz. I shall treat him as
-his crime and his cowardice merit. He has dishonored
-me and all my family. So great a wretch is no longer
-worthy to live.”</p>
-
-<p>His Majesty is in a flaming rage. He arrests, punishes,
-and banishes where there is trace of co-operation with
-deserter Fritz and his schemes. It is dangerous to have
-spoken kindly to the crown prince, or even to have been
-spoken to by him. Doris Ritter, a young girl who was a
-good musician, and whom the unfortunate Fritz had presented
-with music and sometimes joined in her singing in
-the presence of the girl’s mother, is condemned to be
-publicly whipped through the streets by the beadle, and
-to be imprisoned for three years, forced to the hard labor
-of beating hemp. The excellent tutor of the crown prince
-is banished, the accusation against him being that he had
-introduced French literature to the prince, which had
-caused him to imbibe infidel notions. The wicked old
-king never seemed to think that his own brutal conduct
-might have influenced the prince to be indifferent to the
-religion which he hypocritically professed to believe, but
-so poorly practised.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the crown prince was conveyed from Wesel
-to the castle of Mittenwalde, where he was imprisoned in
-a room without furniture or bed. Here Grumkow, one
-of the king’s ministers, was sent to interrogate him.
-Though the cruel old minister threatened the rack of torture
-to force him to confess, Fritz had the nerve to
-reply:—</p>
-
-<p>“A hangman, such as you, naturally takes pleasure in
-talking of his tools and of his trade, but on me they will
-produce no effect. I have owned everything, and almost
-regret to have done so. I ought not to degrade myself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span>
-by answering the questions of a scoundrel such as you
-are.”</p>
-
-<p>The next day the crown prince was sent to the fortress
-of Cüstrin, about seventy miles from Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>“The strong, dungeon-like room in which he was incarcerated
-consisted of bare walls, without any furniture,
-the light being admitted by a single aperture so high that
-the prince could not look out of it. He was divested of
-his uniform, of his sword, of every mark of dignity.
-Coarse brown clothes of plainest cut were furnished him.
-His flute was taken from him, and he was deprived of all
-books but the Bible and a few devotional treatises. He
-was allowed a daily sum amounting to twelve cents for
-his food,—eight cents for his dinner and four for his
-supper. His food was purchased at a cook-shop near by
-and cut for him. He was not permitted the use of a
-knife. The door was opened three times a day for ventilation,—morning,
-noon, and night,—but not for more
-than four minutes each time. A single tallow candle was
-allowed him; but that was to be extinguished at seven
-o’clock in the evening.”</p>
-
-<p>For long months this prince of nineteen was imprisoned
-in absolute solitude, awaiting the doom of his merciless
-father. But the savage king had reserved still greater
-torture for the unfortunate Fritz. By the order of the
-king, Fritz, who also had been condemned to die, was
-brought down into a lower room of the fortress, and there
-compelled to witness the execution of Lieutenant Katte,
-his friend, whom the king had condemned as guilty of
-high treason. As Fritz was led into the lower apartment
-of the fortress, the curtains which concealed the window
-were drawn back, and Fritz, to his horror, beheld the
-scaffold draped in black placed directly before the window.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span>
-The frantic young prince was in an agony of despair, and
-exclaimed, with eyes full of tears, “In the name of God, I
-beg you to stop the execution till I write to the king! I am
-ready to renounce all my rights to the crown if he will
-pardon Katte.” But the attendants knew the iron will
-of the merciless monarch, and his cries and tears were
-unheeded. As the condemned was led by the window to
-ascend the scaffold, Fritz cried out to him, in tones of
-deepest anguish, “Pardon me, my dear Katte, pardon
-me! Oh, that this should be what I have done for you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Death is sweet for a prince I love so well,” replied
-the heroic Katte with calm fortitude, and ascending the
-scaffold, the bloody execution was performed, while four
-grenadiers held Fritz with his face to the window so that
-he must perforce look upon the ghastly scene. But as
-Katte’s gory head rolled upon the scaffold, the prince
-fainted.</p>
-
-<p>When the poor tortured prince regained his consciousness,
-his misery plunged him into a fever, and in his
-wild delirium he sought to take his life. When the fever
-abated, he sank into hopeless despair, looking forward to
-nothing but a like horrible death.</p>
-
-<p>With strange inconsistency, the ferocious king, who
-could thus torture the body and mind of the prince, expressed
-the greatest anxiety for the salvation of his soul.
-It is not strange that the example of such a father staggered
-the faith of his son, and failing to see that the
-religion professed by his father was bigoted fanaticism
-instead of the religion of the pure and saving truths inculcated
-by a sinless Christ, the crown prince became in
-after-life an infidel.</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with a promise made by the king that
-his life should be spared if he would acknowledge his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span>
-guilt, which word was brought to the lonely captive by
-Chaplain Müller, the crown prince took an oath of submission
-to the king, and soon after wrote this letter to his
-father:—</p>
-
-<p>“All-serenest and All-graciousest Father,—To your
-royal majesty, my all-graciousest father, I have, by my
-disobedience as their subject and soldier, not less than by
-my undutifulness as their son, given occasion to a just
-wrath and aversion against me. With the all-obedientest
-respect I submit myself wholly to the grace of my most
-all-gracious father, and beg him most all-graciously to
-pardon me, as it is not so much the withdrawal of my
-liberty in a sad arrest as my own thoughts of the fault I
-have committed that have brought me to reason, who,
-with all-obedientest respect and submission, continue till
-my end my all-graciousest king’s and father’s faithfully-obedient
-servant and son, Frederick.”</p>
-
-<p>Though the prince had been brought by his terrors and
-sorrows to make such an humble appeal, his father’s anger
-was not entirely removed. The prince was still forced to
-dwell in the town of Cüstrin, in a house poorly furnished;
-and though allowed to wear his sword, his uniform was
-forbidden him. He was debarred all amusements, and
-was forbidden to read, write, or speak French, and was
-denied his flute, of which he was exceedingly fond. Three
-persons were appointed constantly to watch him. His
-only recreation was the order to attend the sittings of the
-Chamber of Counsellors in that district. At last, through
-the intercession of his sister Wilhelmina, the king consented
-to allow Fritz to come home.</p>
-
-<p>In March, 1732, the crown prince was betrothed to
-Princess Elizabeth, the daughter of the duke of Bevern.
-The sufferings of this unhappy princess cannot now be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>
-related. The queen of Prussia received her with bitter
-hatred because this match would crush her cherished plans
-of marrying her son to Princess Amelia of England; and
-Fritz himself, forced to be betrothed against his will,
-treated her with utter neglect.</p>
-
-<p>In June, 1733, the crown prince was married to Elizabeth,
-she being eighteen, and he twenty-one years of age.</p>
-
-<p>Frederick I. of Prussia had reared a very magnificent
-palace in Berlin; and in spite of all his stinginess in his
-household, Frederick William added masses of silver to
-the ornamentation of this palace, for he prided himself on
-his army and his money, as giving him power and influence
-in Europe. He had stored away many barrels of
-money in the vaults of his palace, and as there do not
-seem to have been banking institutions in his realms in
-those days, he ordered vast quantities of silver to be
-wrought into chandeliers, mirror-frames, and balconies,
-which gave him a great reputation for wealth, and could
-at any time be converted into money. This hoarded
-wealth saved his son from ruin, when involved in after
-wars which exhausted his treasury.</p>
-
-<p>The crown prince having married a niece of the emperor
-of Germany, and being also of age, his father lost
-much of his control over him. Frederick was now the
-rising sun, and his father the setting luminary. All the
-courts of Europe were anxious to gain the favor of the
-coming king of Prussia. The king allowed his son a petty
-income, but the crown prince borrowed large sums of
-money from the empress of Germany, from Russia, and
-from England, who were quite ready to supply his wants,
-being assured of payment when he should receive the
-throne. Fritz did not forget his sister Wilhelmina, but
-gave her money to relieve her wants. War now broke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span>
-out between France and Germany, and Frederick William
-became an ally of the emperor.</p>
-
-<p>The crown prince accompanied the king of Prussia to
-the siege of Philipsburg. The campaign continued for
-some time, but the prince saw little of active service. The
-king of Prussia being broken down in health by gout and
-intemperance, now became very ill, and was obliged to
-return home.</p>
-
-<p>Though Frederick returned from this campaign neither
-socially nor morally improved, he had become very ambitious
-of high intellectual culture and of literary renown.
-He was now living at the village of Reinsburg, in a castle
-which the king had purchased and assigned to his son.
-He here gathered around him a number of scholarly men,
-and commenced and persevered in a severe course of
-study, devoting his mornings to his books, and the remainder
-of the day to recreation and music. The old king
-grumbled at his son’s studies and his recreations, but Frederick
-was now a full-grown man, whose heirship to the
-crown made him a power in Europe; and the snarling old
-king was confined to his room with dropsy and gout,
-growling away his last hours. The companions of Frederick’s
-hours of recreation were gay and profligate young
-men, who scoffed at religion and every virtue. No wonder
-that with such godless companions, and with such an inconsistent
-and irreligious example in his father, even while
-professing the most fanatical devotion to the church and
-religion, the mind of the talented young prince should have
-been turned into the wandering wilds of unbelief. Voltaire
-was at this time about forty years of age. His renown
-as a man of genius already filled Europe. Frederick
-became an ardent admirer of Voltaire, and a correspondence
-was commenced between them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 446px;">
-<img src="images/i-577.jpg" width="446" height="551" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">FREDERICK THE GREAT.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But now the grim old king of Prussia is forced to meet
-a still grimmer antagonist, who will not take “no” for an
-answer. He has fought the world, fought all human affections,
-fought all feelings of humanity, fought every good
-spirit within his heart except a brutal fanaticism, which he
-ignorantly and superstitiously called religion; fought gout,
-dropsy, and manifold complaints of the flesh; fought his
-wife, fought his children, tried to fight the devil, but
-ended in being his slave; but he cannot fight grim Death,
-which now clutches him in his ghastly grasp. But not to
-be outdone, even by <i>this enemy</i>, while the death-gurgle
-was even rattling in his throat, he solemnly <i>abdicated</i> in
-favor of his son Frederick, and with his fingers trembling
-with the chill of the grave, he signed the deed, and falling
-back, expired. So the obstinate old king was determined
-that <i>his will</i>, not <i>death</i>, should hand over the crown of
-Prussia, which he could no longer clutch with his own
-cruel hands.</p>
-
-<p>Voltaire said of his reign, “It must be owned Turkey
-is a republic in comparison to the despotism exercised by
-Frederick William.”</p>
-
-<p>Frederick the Great was twenty-eight years of age when
-he became king of Prussia. He was very handsome and
-of graceful presence. In rapid succession the young king
-announced certain sentiments which were so amazing in
-the eyes of the rulers of that age as to be considered phenomena.
-The day after his accession to the throne he
-summoned his ministers and declared, “Our grand care
-will be to further the country’s well-being, and to make
-every one of our subjects contented and happy.”</p>
-
-<p>Strange ideas! when all sovereigns had hitherto thought
-only of their own contentment. Next, he abolished the
-use of <i>torture</i> in criminal trials. More wonderful still,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span>
-the world said. Soon he issued this marvellous edict,
-which struck consternation in the midst of the upholders
-of bigotry and fanatical superstition:—</p>
-
-<p>“All religions must be tolerated, and the king’s solicitor
-must have an eye that none of them make unjust encroachments
-on the other; for in this country every man
-must get to heaven his own way.”</p>
-
-<p>Europe was electrified, priests trembled, bigotry and
-religious persecution hung their heads and slunk away.
-But more surprises! “The press is free!” thundered
-forth this powerful young Frederick the Great; and all
-these phenomena accomplished in the first year of his reign.
-No wonder Europe turned their eyes to the rising monarch.
-Sad pity that he did not continue in this line of
-action, bringing blessings instead of woes upon mankind.
-But the angel of wise reform was soon driven from his
-heart and mind by the subtle and poisonous demon of
-selfish ambition.</p>
-
-<p>The young king soon abolished the Giant Guards. He
-no longer coveted fine clothes, no longer indulged in the
-luxury of slippers and French dressing-gown, which had
-raised the ire of his ease-hating father. His hours were
-rigidly counted, and various duties assigned them, in regular
-routine.</p>
-
-<p>Though he treated his nominal wife, Queen Elizabeth,
-politely in company, he utterly neglected her in his domestic
-life, and in later years rarely ever addressed a word
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>On the south-west frontier of Prussia was an Austrian
-realm, Silesia. For more than a century it had been a
-portion of the Austrian kingdom. Maria Theresa had
-inherited the crown of Austria. Frederick, wishing to
-enlarge his own domains, determined to invade Silesia.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span>
-History has severely condemned this unprovoked invasion.
-In January, 1741, the Prussian army were encamped
-before Neisse. On Sunday morning, Jan. 15,
-the deadly fire of shot and shell was opened upon the
-crowded city, where women and children, wounded and
-bleeding, ran to and fro, frantic with terror. For five
-days the deadly missiles rained down upon the city almost
-without intermission.</p>
-
-<p>Not wishing entirely to destroy the city, Frederick then
-converted the siege into a blockade, and leaving his troops
-before the place, returned to Berlin. Frederick, in this
-six weeks’ campaign, had let loose the dogs of war, and
-he must now meet the consequences. The chivalry of
-Europe were in sympathy with the young and beautiful
-Austrian queen. Every court in Europe was aware of
-the fact that it was owing to the intervention of the father
-of Maria Theresa that the life of Frederick was spared,
-and that he was rescued from the scaffold, when the exasperated
-and ferocious Frederick William had condemned
-his own son to death. France had no fear of Prussia,
-but France did fear the supremacy of Austria over Europe;
-therefore, France was leaning towards the side of Frederick.
-England was the foe of France, therefore England
-sympathized with Austria. The puerile king of England,
-George II., hated his nephew, Frederick of Prussia, which
-hatred Frederick vigorously returned. Spain was at war
-with England and ready for alliance with her foes. The
-father of the infant czar of Russia was the brother of
-Frederick’s neglected wife Elizabeth. Russia had not
-yet displayed her partisanship to either side. Minor
-powers might be constrained by terror or led by bribes.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the heroic Maria Theresa was resolved not
-to part with one inch of her territory, and the patriotism<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span>
-of the Austrian court, inspired by her, determined them
-to seek to drive the Prussians out of Silesia. A rumor
-comes that England, Poland, and Russia are contemplating
-invasion of the Prussian realms. Frederick immediately
-despatched a force to Hanover to seize upon that
-continental possession of the king of England upon the
-slightest indication of hostility. This menace alarmed
-George II. Young Prince Leopold had assaulted and
-captured Glogau from the Austrians, which Frederick
-considered an important achievement, and sent Prince
-Leopold a present of ten thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p>Frederick next proceeded to push the siege of Neisse,
-but upon nearing that place, he found that General Neipperg,
-with a large force of Austrians, were coming against
-him. The siege of Neisse was abandoned, and the entire
-Prussian army gathered around the king. The night
-before the contemplated battle, Frederick wrote to his
-brother, Augustus William,—who, as Frederick had no
-children, was heir to the throne and crown prince of Prussia,—informing
-him of his danger, of the coming battle,
-and bidding farewell to himself and his mother in case of
-his death. No word of affectionate remembrance was
-sent to his neglected wife.</p>
-
-<p>On the morrow, which was Sunday, a snow-storm
-raged so furiously that neither army could move. On
-Monday the battle began. The Prussians advanced
-boldly with waving banners and martial music, and
-valiantly charged the enemy. But the Austrians returned
-the charge with such fury that the Prussian right wing,
-where Frederick himself commanded, was routed and
-put to flight. Frederick, struck with terror, lost his
-presence of mind, and ingloriously fled with the rest. As
-with his little band of fugitives he rushed into the gloom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span>
-of night, he exclaimed in despair, “O my God, my God,
-this is too much!”</p>
-
-<p>But as the crestfallen king waits under the shelter of a
-mill, a courier rides up and cries, <i>“The Prussian army has
-gained the victory!”</i> Thus the Prussian king had been
-galloping from the battle-field in fear and terror, while
-his valiant troops were achieving the victory. This incident
-caused unlimited merriment amongst the sarcastic
-foes of Frederick, and he himself was never known to
-allude to this humiliating adventure. The picture of the
-heroic and intrepid Maria Theresa encouraging her troops
-to patriotism and valor in the very face of her foes, and
-that of the terror-stricken Frederick rushing from the
-field of battle, do not form a comparison very flattering
-to the bravery of the young Prussian king. But as some
-actors on the stage who have had the worst stage-frights
-have afterwards made the most brilliant stars, so the
-ignominious flight of the king did not prevent him from
-becoming one of the greatest generals of the world.
-Gradually the secret alliance of France, Bavaria, and
-Prussia was made known. Under the threatening danger
-which menaced ruin, Maria Theresa, urged by her
-council and by the English court, consented to propose
-terms of compromise to Frederick. To the English ministers,
-sent from Vienna to offer a million dollars to the
-Prussian king if he would consent to relinquish this enterprise
-and retire from Silesia, Frederick answered:
-“Retire from Silesia, and for money? Do you take me
-for a beggar? Retire from Silesia in the conquest of
-which I have expended so much blood and treasure! No,
-sir, no! I am at the head of an army which has already
-vanquished the enemy, and which is ready to meet the
-enemy again. The country which alone I desire is already<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</a></span>
-conquered and securely held. If the queen do not now
-grant me all I require, I shall in four weeks demand four
-principalities more. I now demand the whole of Lower
-Silesia, Breslau included. With that answer you can
-return to Vienna.”</p>
-
-<p>These tidings caused consternation in the Austrian
-council. Again the high-spirited queen was forced by
-her circumstances and influenced by her council and England
-to accede to the compromise, and she agreed to surrender
-the whole of Lower Silesia to Frederick. But
-when such word was brought to the Prussian camp, the
-king replied, “I will not see the minister; the time has
-past. I will not now listen to a compromise.” Now
-followed a dark and deceitful manœuvre on the part of
-Frederick, which even the stratagems of war cannot warrant.
-He entered into secret negotiations with Austria
-that if Silesia was delivered to him, he would form an
-alliance with them against the French, whose armies were
-already joined with his own; at the same time apparently
-keeping faith with the French, but promising to betray
-them to the Austrians, meanwhile stating that he must
-keep up sham attacks to deceive the French.</p>
-
-<p>Frederick now invested Neisse, and pretending a sham
-attack, he really so vigorously assaulted it that it surrendered,
-and having thus obtained the last fortress in Silesia,
-he caused himself to be crowned sovereign duke of
-Lower Silesia, and returned to Berlin in triumph.</p>
-
-<p>Having by this stratagem obtained Silesia, he assured
-the French of his unchanging fidelity, and denied that he
-had ever entered into any arrangements with Austria. In
-commencing this war he had said, “Ambition, interest,
-and the desire to make the world speak of me vanquished
-all, and war was determined on.” He had indeed made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</a></span>
-the world speak of him. All Europe spoke of him. Some
-extolled him, others denounced his amazing perfidy.
-Admiration for his sagacity and fear of his power made
-many courts of Europe seek his alliance. Carlyle thus
-comments on these events:—</p>
-
-<p>“Of the political morality of this game of fast-and-loose,
-what have we to say, except that the dice on both
-sides seem to be loaded; that logic might be chopped
-upon it forever; that a candid mind will settle what
-degree of wisdom (which is always essential veracity) and
-what of folly (which is always falsity) there was in Frederick
-and the others; and, in fine, it will have to be
-granted that you cannot work in pitch and keep hands
-evidently clean. Frederick has got into the enchanted
-wilderness populous with devils and their work. Alas! it
-will be long before he get out of it again; his life waning
-toward night before he get victoriously out.”</p>
-
-<p>This selfish rapacity of the Prussian king set the example
-to others. The whole world sprang to arms. Macaulay
-says: “On the head of Frederick is all the blood
-which was shed in a war which raged during many years,
-and in every quarter of the globe,—the blood of the
-column of Fontenoy, the blood of the brave mountaineers
-who were slaughtered at Culloden. The evils produced
-by this wickedness were felt in lands where the name of
-Prussia was unknown. In order that he might rob a
-neighbor whom he had promised to defend, black men
-fought on the coast of Coromandel, and red men scalped
-each other by the great lakes of North America.”</p>
-
-<p>In the winter of 1742 Frederick was engaged in a campaign
-to deliver Moravia, which was overrun by the Austrians.
-But in this he was not successful. On the
-morning of the 17th of May, 1742, Frederick again faced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</a></span>
-the Austrians at the battle of Chotusitz. In this famous
-battle Frederick was victorious, and the Austrians, under
-Prince Charles, were obliged to retreat. It required nine
-acres of ground to bury the dead after this bloody conflict.</p>
-
-<p>Frederick did not pursue the Austrians after this victory,
-and on the 11th of June the treaty of Breslau was
-signed. By this treaty Silesia was ceded to Frederick,
-and he agreed to withdraw from the French alliance and
-enter into friendly relations with Maria Theresa. In
-1744, however, Maria Theresa, having been joined by
-England, had been achieving so many victories on the
-field, that Frederick, deciding that she was gathering her
-forces to reconquer Silesia, again entered into an alliance
-with France and took the field against the Austrians.
-But in this campaign Frederick himself narrowly escaped
-being taken prisoner, and returned a defeated monarch,
-leaving a shattered army behind him. He had already
-exhausted nearly all the resources which his father had
-accumulated. Already the sumptuous chandeliers and
-silver balconies had been melted up. His disastrous
-Bohemian campaign had cost him three hundred and fifty
-thousand dollars a month. The least sum with which he
-could commence a new campaign for the protection of
-Silesia was four million five hundred thousand dollars.
-In spite of these apparently insurmountable difficulties,
-the administrative genius of Frederick made a way by
-which he succeeded in raising another army. On the 4th
-of June, 1745, the battle of Hohenfriedberg was fought,
-by which victory Frederick escaped utter destruction, and
-the Austrians were forced sullenly to retire. All Europe
-was now in war, caused by the personal ambition of one
-man, who did not pretend that it involved any question of
-human rights. Frederick had openly avowed that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</a></span>
-drew his sword and led his hundred thousand soldiers to
-death and destruction that he might enlarge his territories
-and achieve renown. All the nations of Europe wished
-to borrow. None but England had money to lend, and
-England was fighting Frederick, and supplying his foes
-with aid and money. Frederick realized that Maria
-Theresa, whom he had despised as a woman, was fully
-his equal in ability to raise and direct armies and in
-diplomatic intrigue. Berlin was almost defenceless. All
-Saxony was rising behind Frederick. In this hour of
-peril, with an army of twenty-six thousand men, Frederick
-was obliged to meet his foes at Sohr. Defeat to Frederick
-would have been utter ruin; but the brave determination
-of the Prussian king animated his troops with
-desperate valor to conquer or die. And conquer they did,
-and the victory of Frederick was complete.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 436px;">
-<img src="images/i-588.jpg" width="436" height="626" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">ARREST OF VOLTAIRE BY ORDER OF FREDERICK.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the 25th of December, 1745, the peace of Dresden
-was signed. The demands of Frederick were acceded to.
-Augustus III. of Saxony, Maria Theresa of Austria, and
-George II. of England became parties to the treaty.
-Frederick now entered upon a period of ten years of
-peace. The Prussian king now constructed for himself a
-beautiful villa, on a pleasant hilltop near Potsdam, which
-he called <i>Sans Souci</i>, which Carlyle quaintly translates
-“No Bother.” He had three other palaces, far surpassing
-Sans Souci in magnificence,—Charlottenburg, at Berlin,
-the new palace at Potsdam, and his palace at
-Reinsberg.</p>
-
-<p>Voltaire made a long visit to the Prussian king. Frederick
-had been for many years greatly fascinated with
-that talented writer, but gradually Voltaire lost favor
-with the king. Frederick prided himself upon his literary
-abilities, and at first Voltaire flattered him; but on one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[427]</a></span>
-occasion, when the king had sent him a manuscript to
-revise, he sarcastically exclaimed to the royal messenger,
-“When will his Majesty be done with sending me his
-dirty linen to wash?”</p>
-
-<p>This speech was repeated to the king. Frederick did
-not lose his revenge. Voltaire had been made chamberlain.
-His duties were to give an hour a day to the Prussian
-king, and, as Voltaire said, “to touch up a bit his
-works in prose and verse.”</p>
-
-<p>But Voltaire used his sarcastic pen against the king,
-and especially against the president of the academy
-founded by the king at Berlin. A bitter pamphlet, entitled
-<i>La Diatribe du Docteur Akakia</i>, appeared, and the
-satire was so scathing that the Prussian king ordered all
-copies to be burned. Voltaire, though allowing the whole
-edition to be destroyed before his eyes, managed to send
-a copy to some safe place, where it was again published,
-and arrived at Berlin by post from Dresden. People
-fought for the pamphlet. Everybody laughed; the satire
-was spread over all Europe. Frederick was enraged, and
-Voltaire thought it safe to leave Prussia. The king had
-previously presented him with a copy of his own poems,
-and fearing that Voltaire had him now in his power—as
-this volume contained some very wicked and licentious
-burlesques, in which Frederick had scoffed at everything
-and everybody—he ordered Voltaire to be arrested at
-Frankfort, and the book of poems recovered. Either by
-Frederick’s malice or the stupidity of his agent, Freytag,
-Voltaire and his friends were subjected to an imprisonment
-for twelve days in a miserable hostelry. The intimacy
-between Frederick and Voltaire was thus destroyed,
-and a lasting friendship made impossible.</p>
-
-<p>In 1756 Frederick invaded Saxony. Thus was commenced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[428]</a></span>
-the Seven Years’ War, which proved to be one
-of the most bloody and cruel strifes ever waged. It
-gave Frederick the renown of being one of the ablest
-generals of the world. In 1757 France, Russia, Austria,
-Poland, and Sweden were combined against Frederick.
-The entire force of the Prussian king did not exceed
-eighty thousand men. There were marching against him
-combined armies amounting to four hundred thousand
-men. On the battle-field of Leuthen Frederick met and
-conquered his foes.</p>
-
-<p>But still, peace was out of the question without further
-fighting. England, at last alarmed at the growing power
-of France, came to the aid of Frederick. But France,
-Austria, Sweden, and Russia prepared for a campaign
-against him.</p>
-
-<p>On Aug. 25, 1758, occurred the bloody battle of
-Zorndorf, between the Russians and the Prussians. It
-was an awful massacre. The stolid Russians refused to
-fly. The Prussians sabred them and trampled them beneath
-their horses’ feet. It is considered the most bloody
-battle of the Seven Years’ War, and some claim it was
-the most furious ever fought. Frederick was again victorious.
-But in October, 1758, on the field of Hochkirch,
-Frederick was defeated by the Austrians. Just after the
-dreadful defeat came the tidings of the death of his sister
-Wilhelmina. Thus ended the third campaign in clouds
-and darkness for the Prussian king.</p>
-
-<p>The destinies of Europe were now held in the hands of
-three women: Maria Theresa, who by common consent
-had good cause for war, and was fighting in self-defence;
-Madame de Pompadour, who, virtually sovereign of
-France, by reason of her supreme control of the infamous
-Louis XV., as Frederick had stung her by some insult,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[429]</a></span>
-did not hesitate to deluge Europe in blood; and Catherine
-II., empress of Russia, who was also Frederick’s foe on
-account of personal pique.</p>
-
-<p>Frederick himself was undeniably an unscrupulous aggressor,
-and some call him “a highway robber.”</p>
-
-<p>The cause of Maria Theresa alone could have been
-called honorable. In the fourth campaign of 1759 the
-terrible battle of Kunersdorf was fought in August. At
-first the Prussians were victorious, but the Russians at
-length routed them with fearful loss. So great was the
-despair of Frederick that it is said he contemplated suicide.</p>
-
-<p>For a year the struggle continued. The Prussian army
-left in Silesia was utterly destroyed by the Austrians.
-But at length the tide turned, and Frederick routed the
-Austrians at the battle of Liegnitz. But the position of
-Frederick was still most hazardous. He was in the heart
-of Silesia, surrounded by hostile armies, three times larger
-than his own. Weary weeks of marching, fighting, blood,
-and woe, passed on. Sieges, skirmishes, battles innumerable,
-ensued.</p>
-
-<p>At length the allies captured Berlin; whereupon Frederick
-marched quickly to the rescue of his capital. At his
-dread approach the allies fled. Frederick followed the
-Austrians.</p>
-
-<p>We have no space to give details of the end of the
-bloody war. Frederick attacked the Austrians, under
-Marshal Daun, at Torgan, saying to his soldiers:—</p>
-
-<p>“This war has become tedious. If I beat him, all his
-army must be taken prisoners or drowned in the Elbe.
-If we are beaten we must all perish.”</p>
-
-<p>After a day of hard fighting the Prussians held the
-field. Frederick, who was a very profane man, replied
-to a soldier, who inquired if they should go into winter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[430]</a></span>
-quarters, “By all the devils I shall not till we have taken
-Dresden.” But Dresden he did not take at that time, and
-went into winter quarters at Leipsic. The fifth campaign
-of the Seven Years’ War closed with the winter of 1760.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 436px;">
-<img src="images/i-593.jpg" width="436" height="601" alt="drawing of man on horseback" />
-<div class="caption">EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF FREDERICK THE GREAT, ÆT. 73.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Russians and Austrians had concentrated in Bohemia.
-The summer and autumn wore away with little accomplished;
-the allies feared to attack Frederick, and
-the Russians retreated for winter quarters. But the Austrians
-captured Schweidnitz and so could winter in Silesia.
-This was a terrible blow to Frederick, but no word betrayed
-the anguish of the hard-pressed Prussian king.
-Taking his weary, suffering troops to Breslau, Frederick
-sought shelter for the winter of 1761-62. At this dark
-time he wrote:—</p>
-
-<p>“The school of patience I am at is hard, long-continued,
-cruel; nay, barbarous. I have not been able to
-escape my lot. All that human foresight could suggest
-has been employed, and nothing has succeeded. If Fortune
-continues to pursue me, doubtless I shall sink. It
-is only she that can extricate me from the situation I am
-in. I escape out of it by looking at the universe on the
-great scale like an observer from some distant planet.
-All then seems to me so infinitely small, and I could
-almost pity my enemies for giving themselves such trouble
-about so very little.”</p>
-
-<p>Poor blinded Frederick! He could not even see that
-his own selfish ambition had tempted him to commence
-an unjust war, and thus to bring upon his own head all
-these sorrows.</p>
-
-<p>On the 24th of November, 1762, the belligerents entered
-into an armistice until the 1st of March. All were exhausted.
-On the 15th of February, 1763, peace was
-concluded. The bloody Seven Years’ War was over, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[431]</a></span>
-its immense result was, <i>Frederick the Great had captured
-and retained Silesia</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The expense of the war had been eight hundred and fifty-three
-thousand lives, which had perished on the battle-field.
-Of the hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children
-who had died from exposure, famine, and pestilence,
-no note is taken. The population of Prussia had diminished
-five hundred thousand. The world had run red with
-blood. The air had resounded with wails and cries and
-groans. Prussia was laid waste by the ravages of the
-war; and what had been accomplished? Frederick had
-achieved his renown; he had made himself <i>talked of</i>.
-Silesia had been captured, and Frederick the Great had
-been placed in the foremost ranks of the world’s generals.</p>
-
-<p>Compared with the achievements of Gustavus Adolphus,
-whose victories had laid the foundation for the success
-of the Reformation, how petty had been the prize!
-One, a Christian king, upholding liberty of conscience
-and religious freedom; the other, an infidel king fighting
-in an unjust war for his own glory and aggrandizement.
-But the world applauded. Berlin blazed with illuminations
-and rang with the shouts of rejoicing. For twenty-three
-years Frederick the Great still lived to bear his
-honors. He must have the credit of endeavoring, during
-the remainder of his life, to repair the terrible desolation
-and ruin which his wars had brought upon Prussia.</p>
-
-<p>We have but space to glance at his last hours. Dark
-was the gloom which shrouded his closing days. His
-worst enemies were the scoffing devils of unbelief he had
-let loose within his own soul. No Christian hopes illuminated
-the vast unknown into which he must so soon
-pass. To him the grave was but the awful portal to the
-direful abyss of annihilation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[432]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To his patient, cruelly neglected wife, he penned these
-last cold words: “Madam, I am much obliged by the
-wishes you deign to form, but a heavy fever I have taken
-hinders me from answering you.”</p>
-
-<p>With no companions near him but his servants and his
-dogs, he awaited the coming of his last despairing end.
-And thus this lonely, hopeless old man fought his last
-battle of life; and on the 17th of August, 1786, the
-fight was ended, the battle lost, and Frederick the Second—Frederick
-the Great—was carried to the tomb, and
-laid by the side of his father. What a warning to the
-world! What a warning to parents! The inconsistent,
-brutal life of his father made him an infidel.</p>
-
-<p>His own selfish ambition made him more of a curse
-than a blessing to mankind. In the eyes of the Great
-and Just Judge of the world, both lives were <i>terrible
-failures</i>.</p>
-
-<p>History has decreed that Frederick the Great gained a
-foremost place amongst the famous rulers of the world,
-and that his name stands in the first rank of the world’s
-conquerors.</p>
-
-<p>But history has also written over his career the verdict,—He
-was an ambitious aggressor in an unjust war, which
-plunged all Europe into the horrors of famine, pestilence,
-bloody conflicts, and desolated battle-fields piled up with
-heaps of ghastly corpses, above which rose the direful
-wails of anguished hearts and the relentless flames of
-ruined homes.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[433]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>NAPOLEON I.<br />
-
-<small>1769-1821 A.D.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="poetry2">
-<div class="verse">“He doth bestride the narrow world like a Colossus.”</div>
-<div class="sig"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot2">
-
-<p>“Fame comes only when deserved, and then is as inevitable as
-destiny; for it is destiny.”—<span class="smcap">Longfellow.</span></p></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was not physical force, it was the magnetic majesty
-of mind, which looked forth from those awe-inspiring
-eyes, and gave him Jovesque grandeur and dignity
-and sovereign pre-eminence among mankind. No merely
-mortal man stands beside him upon the same level on
-the heights of fame. Upon the highest mountain peak
-of human achievement and earthly greatness he stands
-alone, looking with calm, deep eyes and eagle glance
-upon the rolling centuries which preceded his marvellous
-career.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of all the contradictory views which have been
-presented of Napoleon; in spite of hostile historians
-who have stigmatized him as a usurper; in spite of foes
-who have denounced him as a tyrant, inexorable as Nero;
-in spite of calumny which has proclaimed him a blood-thirsty
-monster; in spite of English literature and English
-criticism, which have denounced him as a scourge of the
-race, as a “<i>cook</i> roasting whole continents and populations
-in the flames of war”; in spite of many a Judas,
-such as Bourrienne, Augereau, Marmont, Berthier, Bernadotte,
-Moreau, and others among those whom his own
-genius had lifted into prominence and power; in spite of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[434]</a></span>
-obstacles, such as no other mortal man ever conquered,
-Napoleon the Great stands forth the most amazing phenomenon
-of human achievement, personal magnetism, and
-mortal greatness.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 447px;">
-<img src="images/i-601.jpg" width="447" height="599" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">NAPOLEON.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“A man who raised himself from obscurity to a throne;
-who changed the face of the world; who made himself
-felt through powerful and civilized nations; who sent the
-terror of his name across seas and oceans; whose will
-was pronounced and feared as destiny; whose donatives
-were crowns; whose ante-chamber was thronged by submissive
-princes; who broke down the awful barrier of
-the Alps, and made them a highway; and whose fame
-was spread beyond the boundaries of civilization to the
-steppes of the Cossack and the deserts of the Arab,—a
-man who has left this record of himself in history has
-taken out of our hands the question whether he shall be
-called great. All must concede to him a sublime power
-of action, an energy equal to great effects.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whether we think of his amazing genius, his unparalleled
-power of embracing vast combinations, while he lost
-sight of none of the details necessary to insure success,
-his rapidity of thought and equally sudden execution, his
-tireless energy, his ceaseless activity, his ability to direct
-the movements of half a million of soldiers in different
-parts of the world, and at the same time reform the laws,
-restore the finances, and administer the government of
-his country, or whether we trace his dazzling career from
-the time he was a poor, proud charity boy at the military
-school of Brienne to the hour when he sat down on the
-most brilliant throne of Europe, he is the same wonderful
-man,—the same grand theme for human contemplation.”</p>
-
-<p>In this short sketch we have no space for arguments;
-nor does Napoleon need arguments to substantiate his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[435]</a></span>
-claims to greatness. Facts only can prove the supremacy
-of his fame, and <i>facts</i> proclaim him unparalleled in history.
-<i>Lies</i> only defame him and make him out a tyrant. That
-he was without fault or blemish we would not maintain;
-that sad mistakes brought upon him evil consequences
-which he himself was the first to trace to their source, we
-do not deny. But that amongst all these famous rulers of
-the world, his is the greatest name, unprejudiced history
-has decreed.</p>
-
-<p>Of all these mighty conquerors of the world, Napoleon
-stands second to none.</p>
-
-<p>“When the sword of Alexander overthrew the Persian
-throne and subjugated the East as far as the Indus, he
-did but extend the civilization of Athens. The refinement
-of the age of Pericles, the acquirements of Attica,
-the philosophy of the academy and the lyceum, followed
-in the train of his victories.</p>
-
-<p>“When Cæsar subjugated Parthia and Germany, and
-carried the Roman eagles from the summit of Caucasus to
-the hills of Caledonia; when he passed from Gaul to
-Italy, from Rome to Greece, from the plains of Pharsalia
-to the shores of Africa, from the ruins of Carthage to the
-banks of the Nile and the Euxine; when he traversed the
-Bosphorus and the Rhine, the Taurus and the Alps, the
-Atlas and the Pyrenees,—in all these triumphal courses
-lie propagated under the protection of his personal glory,
-the name, the language, and manners of civilized Rome.
-If Alexander carried with him the Age of Pericles, and
-Cæsar that of Augustus, if they were accompanied in
-their triumphs by the genius of Homer and of Sophocles,
-of Plato and Aristotle, of Virgil and Horace, Napoleon
-carried with him an age that the arts, sciences, and philosophy
-have rendered equally illustrious, and his enterprise
-is no less than that of his predecessors.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[436]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Though the aristocracy of Europe denounced him as an
-odious despot and an insatiable conqueror, in the hearts
-of his people—the artisan, the laborer, and the soldier—he
-is still cherished as the “Man of the people, as the
-personification of that spirit of equality which pervaded
-both his administration and the camp.” His name is still
-religiously respected by the peasant in his cottage. His
-tomb is still cherished as the most sacred spot on earth
-by the French people. Never did mortal man inspire
-such love and adoration in the hearts of his soldiers.
-This unprecedented idolatry of a nation is the best refutation
-of the malign accusations of his enemies, “that
-Napoleon <i>usurped</i> the sovereignty of France; that having
-attained the supreme power, he was a tyrant, devoting
-that power to the promotion of his own selfish aggrandizement;
-that the wars in which he was incessantly engaged
-were provoked by his arrogance.”</p>
-
-<p>Should the testimony of disappointed sycophants, whose
-pens are dipped in the venom of thwarted ambition and
-vanity, or the accusations of bitter foes, whose opinions
-are biassed by political intrigues, be believed against the
-character of Napoleon, rather than his own noble utterances,
-and the testimony of his incorruptible friends?</p>
-
-<p>That his invasion of Egypt was aggressive and unjust,
-we will admit; but should England be the one to make
-the loudest outcry against this expedition, when it was
-only following her own policy when she increased her
-possessions by her conquests in India? And even the
-superiority of English literature and English writers
-should not make us blind to the unjust prejudices of
-English critics. Had Napoleon not quelled the insurrection,
-and given the final death-blow to the Revolution, how
-can any monarchy in Europe be certain that all thrones<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[437]</a></span>
-in Europe might not have tottered and fallen; that all
-European kingdoms might not have had to face a revolution?
-Had Napoleon died upon the throne of France,
-even his English foes, who feared the lonely exile, whom
-their duplicity and treachery had banished to the dreary
-rock of St. Helena, more than they feared any European
-monarch, would doubtless have joined the plaudits of the
-world in honor of the <i>Hero of Success</i>, irrespective of
-methods or motives. It is only because Napoleon outlived
-his marvellous and almost miraculous success that
-the world condemns, and his enemies malign him. Had
-our own Washington been unsuccessful, then would he
-have been hung as a rebel, and our own glorious Revolution
-would have been called a rebellion, and none would
-have been so loud in the outcry against us as England.</p>
-
-<p>But our success has compelled her recognition, and our
-marvellous growth in strength, power, and resources has
-gained her reluctant admiration. It is hardly to be expected
-that England should ever forget how Napoleon
-made her tremble, and how near she came to being the
-conquered rather than the conqueror.</p>
-
-<p>From an earthly point of view, his was the greatest life
-of mortal man; but from a heavenly standpoint, even his
-greatness crumbles into dust, and his own higher nature
-was true enough to realize and acknowledge the instability
-of earthly renown, and the failure of even such phenomenal
-greatness as his own, to satisfy the higher cravings
-of the immortal soul.</p>
-
-<p>To properly estimate the genius of Napoleon, and his
-achievements in behalf of France, a glance must be given
-to the bloody background of the Revolution, which rises
-up with all its ghastliness and horrors. The rights and
-liberties of the French people had been trampled under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[438]</a></span>
-foot by despotic and profligate kings and nobles; and
-then brute force arose against oppression; and brute
-force for a time conquered.</p>
-
-<p>Mobs surge like a mighty ocean through the streets of
-Paris. Men, women, and children are turned into wild
-beasts of fury, thirsting only for blood. And blood they
-get—till Paris runs red like a river, and all the demons
-of hades seem to have been let loose upon the world.
-Such was the hydra-headed monster of bloody, lawless
-license and ignorant defiance which confronted the dawning
-manhood of Napoleon Bonaparte. Such was the
-ferocious fury which the genius of this small, slender,
-pale-faced, smooth-cheeked youth of twenty-five encountered
-with such dauntless courage and quelled by
-his irresistible foresight and execution.</p>
-
-<p>The monarchy of France had been dethroned. Louis
-XVI. and Marie Antoinette had paid with their lives the
-forfeit of oppression which was not all their own. The
-Royalists and the Jacobins had joined the howling mob of
-insurgents, and all together were rushing onward to attack
-the Convention, which was the only representative of
-government then in France. The troops of the Convention
-had been sent to meet the mob, but retired in fear
-and panic. The mob advanced with demoniacal shouts
-of menace. The Convention trembled. In the midst of
-the terror and confusion one member exclaims,—</p>
-
-<p>“I know the man who can defend us if any can. It is a
-young Corsican officer, Napoleon Bonaparte.” The Convention
-immediately sent for him. All expected to see a
-stalwart soldier, of gigantic frame and imperious bearing.
-Their surprise was unbounded, when a young slender man
-of boyish presence appeared before them. The astonished
-president incredulously inquired,—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[439]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Are you willing to undertake the defence of the Convention?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” was the laconic and calm reply. With half-disdainful
-contempt the president continued,—</p>
-
-<p>“Are you aware of the magnitude of the undertaking?”</p>
-
-<p>Sweeping the assembly with his magnetic glance, and
-fixing his eagle eye upon the president, Napoleon replied,
-“Perfectly; and I am in the habit of accomplishing
-what I undertake.”</p>
-
-<p>And accomplish he did. But how? By the same measures
-he had declared should have been taken when, a
-short time before, he had watched the furious mob rush
-unrestrained through the palace of the imprisoned monarch.
-Then he had exclaimed, “They should have swept
-down the first five hundred with grapeshot, and the rest
-would have soon taken to flight.” And his own successful
-quelling of the insurgents proved the correctness of
-his plans and the marvellous executive force of his
-genius. So Napoleon established the new government of
-France called the Directory. We have space only for a
-glance at his boyhood. He was born upon the island of
-Corsica, on the 15th of August, 1769. His father died
-while Napoleon was quite young, and his mother, Madame
-Letitia Bonaparte, was left with small means to provide
-for eight children,—Joseph, Napoleon, Lucien, Louis,
-Jerome, Eliza, Pauline, and Caroline.</p>
-
-<p>When Napoleon was about ten years of age, Count
-Marbœuf obtained his admission to the military school at
-Brienne, near Paris. Regarded as a charity student by
-his companions, he was here subjected to neglects and
-taunts which stung his sensitive nature to the quick.
-When Napoleon was fifteen, he was promoted to the military<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[440]</a></span>
-school at Paris. On one occasion a mathematical
-problem of great difficulty was given to his class. Napoleon
-secluded himself in his room for seventy-two hours
-and solved the problem. Napoleon did not blunder into
-greatness. His achievements were not accidents. That
-he possessed native genius cannot be denied; but he also
-possessed that perseverance and application which alone
-can win the success which genius aspires to, but which
-only energy and perseverance can make possible. When
-Napoleon was sixteen years of age, he was examined for
-an appointment in the army. At the close of this examination,
-one of the professors wrote opposite the signature
-of Napoleon, “This young man will distinguish
-himself in the world, if favored by fortune.”</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon secured the position of second lieutenant in a
-regiment of artillery. He was ordered to Lyons with his
-regiment. While there, the Academy at Lyons offered a
-prize for the best dissertation upon the question, “What
-are the institutions most likely to contribute to human
-happiness?” Napoleon won the prize. The English, uniting
-with the Royalists of France, had seized Toulon, a
-naval depot and arsenal of France. The Convention, the
-revolutionary government, promoted Napoleon to the
-rank of brigadier-general, and gave him the command of
-the artillery train at Toulon. It was here that his military
-abilities were noticed by the member of the Convention
-who afterwards proposed him as being the only man
-who could defend them against the mob, as we have
-already narrated. After quelling this formidable insurrection,
-Napoleon was enthusiastically received by the
-Convention. Five Directors were now chosen by the
-Convention, who should constitute the new Directory,
-and the Convention dissolved itself, surrendering the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[441]</a></span>
-government into the hands of the Directory. Napoleon
-was appointed by them commander-in-chief of the Army
-of the Interior, and intrusted with the military defence
-and government of the metropolis. Having attained this
-high dignity, Napoleon placed his mother and the rest of
-his family in comfort.</p>
-
-<p>Famine was great in Paris. The Revolution had left
-all industries paralyzed. The poor were perishing.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon immediately organized the National Guards,
-established order, and distributed wood and bread to the
-perishing citizens. It was at this time that he met his
-future wife, Josephine. She was a widow with two children.
-Her husband, the Viscount Beauharnais, had perished
-on the scaffold during the Revolution. On the 6th
-of March, 1796, Napoleon and Josephine were married.
-Napoleon was twenty-six years of age, Josephine being
-two years older. This marriage was one of ideal love.
-When Napoleon was crowned Emperor, he was privately
-married again by Cardinal Fesch, in accordance with the
-forms of the Church, which the Emperor had re-established.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon turned with disgust from the profligacy and
-dissipation which ever disgrace an army. To the defamations
-of his enemies who endeavored to malign his
-character, by accusing him of immorality, let his own
-words answer: “When I took command of the army of
-Italy, my extreme youth rendered it necessary that I
-should evince great reserve of manners and the utmost
-severity of morals. My supremacy could be retained
-only by proving myself a better man than any other man
-in the army. Had I yielded to human weaknesses, I
-should have lost my power.”</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon was temperate in the extreme, and manifested<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[442]</a></span>
-the strongest disapproval for gaming. Napoleon’s first
-campaign in Italy was one of self-defence on the part of
-the French. France had renounced a monarchy and
-established a republic. The kings of Europe trembled.
-England was hovering around the coasts of France assailing
-every available point. Austria had marched an army
-of nearly two hundred thousand men to the banks of the
-Rhine. She had called into requisition her Italian possessions,
-and in alliance with the British navy the armies
-of the king of Sardinia together with the legions of Naples
-and Sicily, prepared to attack the French Republic.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 460px;">
-<img src="images/i-611.jpg" width="460" height="638" alt="drawing" />
-<div class="caption">NAPOLEON IN THE PRISON OF NICE, 1794.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Directory said to the young commander-in-chief:
-“We can furnish you only men. The troops are destitute
-of everything, but we have no money to provide
-supplies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give me only men enough,” replied the undaunted
-Napoleon; “I will be answerable for the result.”</p>
-
-<p>Leaving his bride in Paris, Napoleon hastened to Nice,
-the headquarters of the army of Italy.</p>
-
-<p>Now the first of those wonderful proclamations rings
-out in the ears of the astonished troops. “Soldiers, you
-are hungry and naked; the government owes you much,
-and can pay you nothing. I come to lead you into the
-most fertile plains the sun beholds. There you will find
-abundant harvests, honor, and glory. Soldiers of Italy,
-will you fail in courage?”</p>
-
-<p>This apparent stripling then assembles his generals, all
-war-worn chiefs. Amazed and speechless, they listen to
-his plans.</p>
-
-<p>“The time has passed in which enemies are mutually
-to appoint the place of combat, advance, hat in hand,
-and say, ‘<i>Gentlemen, will you have the goodness to fire?</i>’
-The art of war is in its infancy. Experienced generals<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[443]</a></span>
-conduct the troops opposed to us. So much the better,
-so much the better. It is not their experience which will
-avail against me. Mark my words: they will soon burn
-their books on tactics and know not what to do. Yes,
-gentlemen, the first onset of the Italian army will give
-birth to a new epoch in military affairs. As for us, we
-must hurl ourselves on the foe like a thunderbolt, and
-smite it. Disconcerted by our tactics, and not daring to
-put them into execution, they will fly before us as the
-shades of night before the uprising sun.”</p>
-
-<p>And fly before him they did at the battle of Montenotte,
-regarding which Napoleon afterwards proudly said, “My
-title of nobility dates from the battle of Montenotte.”</p>
-
-<p>The Austrians fled in one direction, the Sardinians in
-another, before this invincible conqueror, and Europe,
-amazed, inquired, Who is this young general who has
-blazed forth in such sudden and appalling splendor?</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Napoleon issues this stirring proclamation:—</p>
-
-<p>“Soldiers, you have gained in fifteen days six victories,
-taken one-and-twenty standards, fifty-five pieces of cannon,
-many strong places, and have conquered the richest
-part of Piedmont. You have gained battles without
-cannon; passed rivers without bridges; made forced
-marches without shoes; bivouacked without bread. The
-phalanxes of the republic, the soldiers of liberty, were
-alone capable of such services.”</p>
-
-<p>The humiliated king of Sardinia sued for peace. It
-was the evening of the 10th of May, 1796. The Austrians
-had intrenched themselves on the banks of the River Po.
-As the French were making the terrible passage of the
-bridge of Lodi, in the face of the enemies’ fire, Napoleon
-seized a standard, shouting to his men, “Follow your
-general!” and plunging through the blinding smoke, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[444]</a></span>
-led his bleeding column forward, and the bridge was
-carried.</p>
-
-<p>“This beardless youth,” said an Austrian general,
-indignantly, “ought to have been beaten over and over
-again; for whoever saw such tactics! The blockhead
-knows nothing of the rules of war. To-day he is in our
-rear, to-morrow on our flank, and the next day again in
-our front. Such gross violations of the principles of war
-are insufferable.”</p>
-
-<p>And more insufferable still would his enemies find the
-tactics of the invincible Napoleon. Some of the veterans
-of the army jocosely promoted Napoleon to the rank of
-corporal, in honor of his bravery at the bridge of Lodi.
-When their general next appeared before his army, he was
-greeted with the shouts, “<i>Long live our little corporal!</i>”
-and even in the dignity of consul and emperor, Napoleon
-never lost this affectionate nickname amongst his troops,
-of whom he was the idol.</p>
-
-<p>We have no space for details; the battles of Castiglione,
-Arcola, and the bloody conflict of Rivoli had been fought.
-The imperial court had sent out five armies against the
-French Republicans, and had encountered defeat and destruction
-at the hands of the beardless general, who they
-had disdainfully declared knew nothing about war tactics.
-Mantua had fallen, and the Austrians were driven from
-Italy. The Pope implored the clemency of the conqueror.
-But the Italian people everywhere hailed him as their deliverer.
-Still Austria refused to make peace with republican
-France, and the march to Vienna was commenced.
-Again one of those soul-stirring, inspiring proclamations
-was issued to his troops.</p>
-
-<p>“Soldiers, the campaign just ended has given you imperishable
-renown. You have been victorious in fourteen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[445]</a></span>
-pitched battles and seventy actions. You have taken
-more than a hundred thousand prisoners, five hundred
-field-pieces, two thousand heavy guns, and four pontoon
-trains. You have maintained the army during the
-whole campaign. In addition to this, you have sent six
-millions of dollars to the public treasury, and have enriched
-the National Museum with three hundred masterpieces
-of the art of ancient and modern Italy, which it
-has required thirty centuries to produce. You have conquered
-the finest countries of Europe. The French flag
-waves for the first time upon the Adriatic, opposite to
-Macedon, the native country of Alexander. Still higher
-destinies await you. I know that you will not prove unworthy
-of them. Of all the foes that conspired to stifle
-the Republic in its birth, the Austrian emperor alone remains
-before you. To obtain peace we must seek it in
-the heart of his hereditary state. You will there find a
-brave people, whose religion and customs you will respect,
-and whose property you will hold sacred. Remember
-that it is liberty you carry to the brave Hungarian
-nation.”</p>
-
-<p>As he had to the Italian people, so also to the Austrian
-people Napoleon issued one of his glowing proclamations,
-assuring them that he was fighting not for conquest but for
-peace; that the <i>people</i> of Austria would find in him a protector,
-who would respect their religion and defend all
-their rights.</p>
-
-<p>All was consternation in Vienna. The people clamored
-for peace, and the Austrian emperor sent ambassadors to
-Napoleon. A treaty was signed, and Austria was conquered.
-Not a year had elapsed since this nameless
-young man of twenty-six, with thirty thousand ragged,
-starving troops, had dauntlessly undertaken this seemingly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[446]</a></span>
-impossible enterprise. Now Italy was at his feet. Austria
-was forced to come to terms. All his foes were
-stunned into terror-stricken inaction.</p>
-
-<p>Before the treaty of Campo Formio was signed, every
-possible endeavor was made to bribe Napoleon to make
-terms which should conduce to the advantage of his foes.
-The wealth of Europe was laid at his feet. Millions upon
-millions of gold were offered to him, but his noble spirit
-could not thus be tarnished.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon arrived in Paris on the 7th of December,
-1797, having been absent about eighteen months. The
-Directory, jealous of Napoleon’s power and popularity,
-were forced by the enthusiasm of the people to prepare a
-triumphal festival for the delivery of the treaty of Campo
-Formio.</p>
-
-<p>The magnificent palace of the Luxembourg was adorned
-for this gorgeous show. The walls were hung with glittering
-trophies; the vast galleries were crowded with
-those illustrious in rank; martial music rang out upon the
-air, and the thunders of the cannon mingled with the enthusiastic
-shouts of the rejoicing multitudes. Napoleon
-was introduced by Talleyrand in an eloquent speech.
-Calmly the great hero stood before the assembled multitude.
-His imposing presence required not the trappings
-of the bedecked and bejewelled grandees of the court.
-Majestic was his calm dignity as he addressed the people:—</p>
-
-<p>“Citizens! the French people in order to be free had
-kings to combat. To obtain a constitution founded on
-reason, it had the prejudices of eighteen centuries to overcome.
-Priestcraft, feudalism, despotism, have successively,
-for two thousand years, governed Europe. From
-the peace you have just concluded dates the era of representative<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[447]</a></span>
-governments. You have succeeded in organizing
-a great nation, whose vast territory is circumscribed
-only because Nature herself has fixed its limits. You
-have done more. The two finest countries in Europe—formerly
-so renowned for the arts, the sciences, and the
-illustrious men whose cradle they were—see with the
-greatest hopes genius and freedom issuing from the tomb
-of their ancestors. I have the honor to deliver to you
-the treaty signed at Campo Formio, and ratified by the
-emperor. Peace secures the liberty, the prosperity, and
-the glory of the Republic. As soon as the happiness of
-France is secured by the best organic laws, the whole of
-Europe will be free.”</p>
-
-<p>A wild burst of enthusiasm filled the air as Napoleon
-ceased speaking. The people shouted, “Live Napoleon,
-the conqueror of Italy, the pacificator of Europe, the
-saviour of France!”</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon now laid aside the dress of a soldier. He
-attended constantly the meetings of the Institute, and
-immediately assumed a pre-eminence amongst those distinguished
-scholars as marked as he had already attained
-as a general.</p>
-
-<p>Republican France was now at peace with all the
-world, England alone excepted. The Directory raised an
-army for the invasion of England, and gave Napoleon the
-command. Republicans all over Europe, England included,
-adored Napoleon as the great champion of popular
-rights. England trembled. It was necessary that
-the people should be taught to hate this man whom
-they now worshipped. The English press came to the
-rescue of the English government. The most malign and
-atrocious lies were published regarding Napoleon. He
-was represented as a demon in human form; a monster of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[448]</a></span>
-profligacy and tyrannical ambition; a robber, plundering
-the nations for his own selfish aggrandizement. Regarding
-these bitter and false libels Napoleon said:
-“There is not one which will reach posterity. When I
-have been asked to cause answers to be written to them,
-I have uniformly replied, ‘My victories and my works
-of public improvement are the only response which it
-becomes me to make.’ When there shall not be a trace
-of these libels to be found, the great monuments of
-utility which I have reared, and the code of laws that I
-have formed, will descend to the most remote ages, and
-future historians will avenge the wrongs done me by my
-contemporaries.” Napoleon deeming an attack upon
-England too hazardous, the project was abandoned.</p>
-
-<p>Then followed Napoleon’s expedition into Egypt. Volumes
-could be written upon each one of Napoleon’s marvellous
-campaigns, but we can merely give a slight outline.
-The famous battle of the Pyramids made Napoleon
-the undisputed conqueror of Egypt. “Soldiers!”
-he exclaimed, as he rode along the ranks, “from those
-summits forty centuries contemplate your actions.”</p>
-
-<p>The name of Napoleon became suddenly as renowned
-in Asia and Africa as it had previously become in
-Europe. But twenty-one days had elapsed since he
-landed at Alexandria, and now he was sovereign of
-Egypt. The Egyptians welcomed him as a friend and
-liberator. He disclaimed all sovereignty over Egypt, and
-organized a government to be administered by the people
-themselves. In the mean time Lord Nelson learned
-that the French had landed in Egypt. He immediately
-proceeded thither. The famous battle of the Nile followed,
-in which the English were victorious. The French
-fleet had been destroyed, and Napoleon was cut off from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[449]</a></span>
-Europe. All monarchical Europe rejoiced; all republican
-Europe mourned. Napoleon now undertook the
-Syrian expedition. With ten thousand men he commenced
-his march over the desert. We cannot describe
-their weary march through the burning sands, their sufferings
-from want, and the dreadful plague which soon broke
-out in the army. We can only note the siege of Acre.
-The subjugation of this fortress would have made Napoleon
-master of Syria. Sir Sidney Smith conducted the
-defence with the combined English and Turkish troops.
-It was here that the marvellous affection of Napoleon’s
-soldiers for their general was tested. Sir Sidney Smith
-circulated a proclamation, offering to convey every French
-soldier safely to France who would desert Napoleon. It
-is not known that a single man was false to Napoleon,
-whom all adored as a being seemingly more than
-mortal.</p>
-
-<p>The siege had continued for sixty days. Napoleon had
-lost three thousand men by the sword and the plague.
-At this time fresh Turkish troops arrived to join his enemies;
-and deeming the enterprise hopeless, Napoleon
-abandoned the siege. Napoleon was as great in defeat
-as in success. Speaking of his power to endure trials, he
-said: “Nature seems to have calculated that I should
-endure great reverses. She has given me a mind of
-marble. Thunder cannot ruffle it. The shaft merely
-glides along.”</p>
-
-<p>At midnight, on the 25th of July, 1799, Napoleon, with
-six thousand men, arrived within sight of the camp of the
-Turks, upon the shores of the Bay of Aboukir. Napoleon
-knew that the Turks were awaiting the arrival of the
-Mameluke cavalry from Egypt and of re-enforcements
-from Acre and other parts of Syria. Defeat to Napoleon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[450]</a></span>
-now would have been utter ruin. But the terrific conflict
-which followed was not a defeat, but a victory so complete
-that the whole Turkish army was destroyed. Sir
-Sidney Smith fled in terror to his ships. Not a foe remained.
-In the enthusiasm of the moment, Kleber, who
-had just arrived with a division of two thousand men, for
-whom Napoleon had not waited, threw his arms around
-the neck of his adored chieftain, exclaiming, “Let me
-embrace you, my general; you are great as the universe!”</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon now learned that France was in a terrible
-state of confusion. The imbecile government was despised.
-Plots, conspiracies, and assassinations filled the
-land. Napoleon determined to return to France. As he
-had no fleet, he could not take his army. The matter was
-therefore concealed from them. With a small retinue,
-Napoleon embarked, and sailed to France. Then followed
-the overthrow of the Directory. France had tried
-republicanism, and the experiment had failed. The people
-were too ignorant to govern themselves. The next
-morning after the overthrow of the Directory, the three
-consuls, Napoleon, Sièyes, and Ducos, met in the palace
-of the Luxembourg.</p>
-
-<p>There was but one arm-chair in the room. Napoleon
-had seated himself in it. Sièyes exclaimed, “Gentlemen,
-who shall take the chair?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bonaparte, surely,” said Ducos; “he already has
-it. He is the only man who can save us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, gentlemen,” said Napoleon, promptly;
-“let us proceed to business.”</p>
-
-<p>And important business he soon despatched. The
-revolutionary tribunals had closed the churches and prohibited
-the observance of the Sabbath. Napoleon recalled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[451]</a></span>
-the banished priests, opened the churches, and
-restored religious worship. The treasury was bankrupt.
-Napoleon replenished it. The army was starving and
-ragged. Napoleon addressed them with his thrilling
-words of sympathy, and clothed and fed them. The
-navy was dilapidated. In every port in France, at the
-magic word of this magnetic man, the sound of the ship-hammer
-was heard, and a fleet was prepared to send
-to Egypt to convey to France his soldiers left there. The
-Constitution was framed and adopted, and Napoleon was
-elected First Consul of France. Civil war was now at an
-end. Napoleon wrote two letters, one to the king of
-England, and the other to the emperor of Germany, endeavoring
-to arrange a general peace. Austria was inclined
-to listen to this appeal, but England demanded
-war. She would have no peace while France continued
-a republic. So Napoleon was forced to prepare for war.</p>
-
-<p>“Moreau was sent with a magnificent army into
-Swabia, to drive back the Austrians towards their capital;
-Massena was appointed over the army of Italy, while
-Napoleon himself swept down from the heights of San
-Bernard, upon the plains of Lombardy.</p>
-
-<p>“At the fierce-fought battle of Marengo he reconquered
-Italy, while Moreau chased the vanquished Austrians
-over the Danube. Victory everywhere perched on the
-French standards, and Austria was ready to agree to an
-armistice, in order to recover from the disasters she had
-suffered. The slain at Montibello, around Genoa, on the
-plains of Marengo, in the Black Forest, and along the
-Danube are to be charged over to the British government,
-which refused peace in order to fight for the philanthropic
-purpose of giving security to governments.</p>
-
-<p>“Austria, though crippled, let the armistice wear away,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[452]</a></span>
-refusing to make a treaty because she was bound for
-seven months longer to England. Bonaparte, in the
-mean time, was preparing to recommence hostilities.
-Finding himself unable to conclude a peace, he opened
-the campaign of Hohenlinden, and sent Macdonald across
-the Splugen. Moreau’s victorious march through Austria,
-and the success of the operations in Italy, soon brought
-Austria to terms, and the celebrated peace of Luneville,
-of 1801, was signed. The energy and ability, and above
-all, the success of the First Consul had now forced the
-continental powers to regard him with respect, and in
-some cases with sympathy, while England, by her imperious
-demands, had embroiled herself with all the northern
-powers of Europe.”</p>
-
-<p>At length a general peace was concluded at Amiens,
-and the world was at rest. Napoleon was now the idol
-of France. Although his title was only that of First Consul,
-and France was nominally a republic, yet he was in
-reality the most powerful monarch in Europe. He ruled
-in the <i>hearts</i> of forty millions of people. In 1803 the
-peace of Amiens was broken, and all impartial historians
-admit, and even English writers cannot deny the responsibility
-of this rupture rests with England. In that treaty
-it was expressly stipulated that England should evacuate
-Egypt and Malta, while France was to evacuate Naples,
-Tarento, and the Roman States. Napoleon had fulfilled
-his part of the agreement within two months after the
-peace. But the English were still in Alexandria and
-Malta. Napoleon was right, and England was entirely
-wrong. If a violation of a solemn treaty is a just cause
-for war, Napoleon was free from blame. England now
-drew Russia into this new alliance, then Austria and Sweden.
-Prussia refused to join the alliance, and sided with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[453]</a></span>
-France. The bloody conflict began. For the slain left
-on the plains of Italy, for the tens of thousands strewn
-on the battle-field of Austerlitz, who is chargeable?
-Neither Napoleon nor France. Napier, in his “Peninsular
-War,” says:</p>
-
-<p>“Up to the peace of Tilsit, the wars of France were
-<i>essentially defensive;</i> for the bloody contest that wasted
-the continent for so many years was not a struggle for
-pre-eminence between ambitious powers, nor for the political
-ascendency of one or other nation, <i>but a deadly conflict
-to determine whether aristocracy or democracy should predominate,—whether
-equality or privilege should henceforth
-be the principle of European governments</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how much does this ‘up to the peace of Tilsit’
-embrace? First, all the first wars of the French Republic,—the
-campaigns of 1792, ’93, ’94, ’95, and the carnage
-and woe that made up their history; second, eleven out
-of the eighteen years of Bonaparte’s career,—the campaigns
-of 1796, in Italy and Germany, the battles of
-Montenotte, Millesimo, Dego, Lodi, Arcola, Castiglione,
-and Rivoli, the campaigns of 1797, and the bloody battle-fields
-that marked their progress. It embraces the wars
-in Italy and Switzerland while Bonaparte was in Egypt;
-the campaign of Marengo, and its carnage; the havoc
-around and in Genoa; the slain thousands that strewed
-the Black Forest and the banks of the Danube, where
-Moreau struggled so heroically; the campaign of Hohenlinden,
-and its losses. And yet this is but a fraction to
-what remains. This period takes in also the campaign of
-Austerlitz and its bloody battle, and the havoc the hand
-of war was making in Italy; the campaign of Jena, and
-the fierce conflicts that accompanied it; the campaign of
-Eylau and the battles of Pultusk, Golymin, Heilsberg,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[454]</a></span>
-crowned by the dreadful slaughter of Eylau; the campaigns
-of Friedland and Tilsit, and the multitudes they
-left on the plains of Europe. All these terrible campaigns,
-with their immense slaughter, does an English historian
-declare to be the result of a defensive war on the part of
-France, not merely a defence of territory, <i>but of human
-rights against tyranny</i>. Let republicans ponder this before
-they adopt the sentiments of prejudiced historians,
-and condemn as a monster the man who was toiling over
-battle-fields to save his country from banded oppressors.”</p>
-
-<p>The 2d of December, 1804, dawned clear and cold.
-It was Sunday, and upon this day Napoleon was to be
-crowned emperor at the church of Nôtre Dame. All
-Paris assembled to witness this imposing ceremony. The
-church was draped in costly velvet of richest hues. At
-one end a gorgeous throne was erected. The Emperor left
-the Tuileries in a splendid carriage, whose sides were of
-glass, thus allowing his magnificent robes to be seen.
-He wore a golden laurel wreath upon his head.</p>
-
-<p>The acclamations of the immense crowds thronging the
-streets filled the air. As Napoleon entered the church,
-five hundred musicians intoned a solemn chant. The
-Pope anointed the Emperor and blessed the sword and
-the sceptre. Then Napoleon lifted the crown and placed
-it upon his own head. Napoleon then took up the crown
-intended for the Empress, and approaching Josephine as
-she knelt before him, he placed it tenderly upon her brow.
-Their eyes met for one moment in a long and loving gaze
-of mutual affection, and tears filled the eyes of the beautiful
-Josephine as she glanced with undisguised adoration
-upon the husband she so reverenced and worshipped.
-And the lofty arches of Nôtre Dame resounded with
-shouts of “<i>Vive l’Empereur!</i>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[455]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Cisalpine Republic had witnessed the change of
-France from a republic to an empire with great satisfaction.
-A deputation from Italy was now sent to Napoleon,
-begging him to assume the crown of Charlemagne. On
-the 20th of May, the coronation took place in the Cathedral
-of Milan. The ceremony was conducted with a magnificence
-not exceeded at Nôtre Dame. The iron crown of
-Charlemagne had reposed for a thousand years in the
-church of Monza. The Empress first appeared gorgeously
-dressed and glittering with jewels. Then Napoleon entered,
-arrayed in imperial robes, with the diadem upon his
-brow and the sceptre and crown of Charlemagne in his
-hands. He placed the crown upon his own head, saying,
-solemnly, “God has given it to me; woe to him who
-touches it!”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, hostilities had commenced in the midst of
-Germany. Austria and Russia had united with England.
-The Austrians had passed the Inn; Munich was invaded;
-war was inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>Then followed the campaign of Ulm. Napoleon writes
-to Josephine, Dec. 5, 1805:—</p>
-
-<p>“I have concluded a truce. The Russians have implored
-it. The victory of Austerlitz is the most illustrious
-of all which I have gained. We have taken forty-five
-flags, 150 pieces of cannon, and twenty generals. More
-than 20,000 are slain. It is an awful spectacle. I have
-beaten the Russian and Austrian armies commanded by
-the two emperors.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1806 England, Russia, and Prussia formed a new
-alliance against the French. Then followed the bloody
-battles of Jena and Auerstadt. On the 28th of October
-Napoleon made a triumphal entry into Berlin, and established
-himself in the king’s palace. While there he visited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[456]</a></span>
-the tomb of Frederick the Great, at Potsdam. The sword
-of the Prussian was suspended over his grave. Napoleon
-took it down, saying, “I will send it to the governor of
-the Invalides.” General Rapp ventured to reply, “Were
-I in your place, I should not be willing to part with this
-sword. I should keep it for myself.”</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon jestingly answered, “<i>Have I not then a sword
-of my own, Mr. Giver of Advice?</i>” The Prussian monarchy
-was destroyed upon the fields of Jena and of Auerstadt.
-But England and Russia were yet clamorous for
-war. Again Napoleon tried to make overture for peace,
-again he was repulsed. Then followed the terrible battle-field
-of Eylau. Amid winter’s snow and ice and storms
-this famous battle was won. As Napoleon passed over
-the gory field after the awful carnage, he exclaimed with
-deep emotion, “To a father who loses his children victory
-has no charms.”</p>
-
-<p>A dragoon, dreadfully shattered and bleeding from the
-effects of a cannon ball, raised his head from the bloody
-snow, and faintly said, “Turn your eyes this way, please
-your Majesty. I believe that I have got my death wound.
-I shall soon be in the other world. But no matter for
-that; <i>vive l’Empereur!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon immediately dismounted from his horse and
-took the hand of the wounded man, telling his aids to
-carry him to the ambulance. Large tears rolled down the
-cheeks of the dying dragoon, as he fixed his eyes upon
-that loved face, fervently exclaiming, “I only wish I had
-a thousand lives to lay down for your majesty.” Amidst
-a heap of dead, a feeble voice was heard crying, “<i>Vive
-l’Empereur!</i>” Half-concealed beneath a tattered flag lay
-a young officer. As Napoleon approached, he raised himself
-upon his elbow, though pierced with numerous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[457]</a></span>
-wounds, and faintly cried: “God bless your majesty!
-farewell, farewell! Oh, my poor mother! To dear
-France my last sigh!” and falling back, was dead. Upon
-this dreadful battle-field, though it was after midnight, he
-wrote this fond note to Josephine:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot2">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My Love</span>,—There was a great battle yesterday. Victory remains
-with me, but I have lost many men. The loss of the enemy,
-still more considerable, does not console me. I write these two
-lines myself, though greatly fatigued, to tell you that I am well,
-and that I love you. Wholly thine,</p>
-
-<div class="sig">
-<span class="smcap">Napoleon</span>.<br />
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The peace of Tilsit was finally concluded, and Napoleon
-returned to Paris.</p>
-
-<p>The French government at this time was composed of
-three houses,—the Senate, the Tribunate, and the Legislature.
-Napoleon blended the Tribunate and the Legislature
-in one. He formed the Council of State, or Cabinet,
-with the greatest care, choosing the most able men in
-every department. The meetings of the Council were
-held in the palace of the Tuileries or at St. Cloud. The
-most perfect freedom of discussion prevailed in the
-Council.</p>
-
-<p>In September, 1808, occurred the memorable meeting
-of the emperors at Erfurth. Kings, princes, and courtiers
-came from all parts of Europe to witness the extraordinary
-spectacle. Napoleon was the gracious host who
-received them as his guests. No more gorgeous retinue
-had ever followed a monarch of the blood royal than surrounded
-the Emperor Napoleon as he left Paris for the
-appointed place of meeting. Amid all the royal magnificence
-which attended these imperial sovereigns, none
-appeared so majestic, so supremely commanding in their
-personal presence as Napoleon the Plebeian Monarch,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[458]</a></span>
-who had raised himself by his own surprising and irresistible
-genius to the proudest place amidst the courts of
-Europe.</p>
-
-<p>All the other sovereigns trembled before his amazing
-power; the imperialism of mind and genius compelled
-the homage of royal titles and royal blood.</p>
-
-<p>We do not uphold that Napoleon’s career was free
-from error, and no greater blot tarnishes the brightness
-of his fame than his divorce of Josephine. From that
-moment Napoleon fell. From that moment Josephine
-mounted an eminence of self-sacrificing, unselfish devotion,
-of heart-martyrdom, never reached by woman before.
-Women have died for their husbands; but this
-was worse than death. Women have slaved and toiled,
-and been down-trodden by brutal husbands; but this was
-worse than that. Never before had woman stepped from
-so high an eminence of bliss into so deep an abyss of
-heart-desolating woe, and with self-renouncing, almost
-inconceivable, womanly devotion, allowed her royal place
-as wife to be taken by another, that thus a supposed
-political power might be gained by the idolized object of
-her affection; who, even though his cruel demand thus
-shattered her hopes, her heart, and her life, she was still
-unselfish enough to glory in her self-renunciatory sacrifice,
-for the still adored object of her love. No political
-excuse can cover this crime committed by Napoleon
-at the instigation of Fouché and other ambitious adherents,
-and worst of all, at the instigation of his own relations,
-whom historians acknowledge were the bitter enemies
-of his wife. No laxity of the times, in the sacred
-laws of marriage, which are the most solemn vows that
-human beings can take upon themselves, next to their
-vows to God, can excuse this blot upon Napoleon’s fame.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[459]</a></span>
-By the very eminence of his genius above all other men, by
-the very exaltation of his lofty position, should he have
-made himself the model as an <i>upholder</i>, not a <i>desecrator</i>,
-of the most sacred human relation ever ordained by God.</p>
-
-<p>“What God hath joined together, let not man put
-asunder!” was a weightier obligation than any supposed
-political advantage, more binding than any patriotism,
-more encumbent upon him than any duty of state or
-country. No political reasons can palliate in the least
-degree this crime; they only weakly <i>explain</i>, but do not
-in any manner excuse it. That Napoleon, with his marvellous
-self-sufficiency of will, and genius, and wise forethought,
-and keen-eyed intuition, could have been led
-into such a deplorable act, is past all comprehension.
-That it was the cruel and bitter mistake of his life, he
-himself has acknowledged. Napoleon said afterwards,
-“In separating myself from Josephine, and in marrying
-Maria Louisa, I placed my foot upon an abyss which was
-covered with flowers.”</p>
-
-<p>It was an abyss deep and awful; and from this dark
-and direful abyss issued forth the horrible reptiles of disappointment,
-sorrow, and remorse, which thrust their
-cruel fangs into the quivering heart of the lonely exile at
-St. Helena. Perchance, in the silent anguish of his
-agonized but heroic soul, a dumb wail broke forth, “Ah,
-Josephine! my only love! bright star of my destiny!
-when I no longer gazed upward to thy heavenly light, but
-tempted by the demons of false counsel, followed an
-<i>ignis fatuus</i> o’er the treacherous quicksands of political
-ambition, then did I find myself ingulfed in sorrows, and
-my heart was shrouded in the black darkness of a rayless
-night of hopeless despair. Had I been true to thee, perchance
-a just and righteous Providence might have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[460]</a></span>
-more merciful to me. Thou wert my star of hope and
-love! Thou wert ordained by heaven, my star of destiny!
-Bitterly do I remember thy prophetic words upon
-that memorable night, when the tie which bound us
-together was shattered by my blind ambition, ‘Bonaparte,
-behold that bright star; it is mine! and remember,
-to mine, not to thine, has sovereignty been promised.
-Separate, then, our fates, and your star fades!’</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Josephine, you were right! It is to you alone
-that I owe the only few moments of happiness I have
-known in the world!”</p>
-
-<p>Yes, Josephine was right; that hour marked the commencement
-of the downfall of Napoleon. His star, which
-once blazed forth in matchless splendor in the heavens,
-was soon to sink forever. The two greatest errors of
-Napoleon were the conquest of Spain and the invasion of
-Russia. The first was unjust, the second was unfortunate.
-We can but give one picture of the Russian campaign.
-Napoleon and his army had marched in triumph more
-than two thousand miles from his capital. Victory had
-accompanied him. He had taken the metropolis of the
-most powerful nation on the continent, though that
-nation had been aided by England, Spain, Portugal, and
-Sweden. Moscow was in the possession of the French.
-Napoleon was established in the Krémlin.</p>
-
-<p>It was the 16th of September, 1812. At midnight the
-cry of “Fire!” resounded through the streets. Moscow
-was in flames! Mines were sprung, shells burst, cannons
-were discharged, wagons of powder exploded; earthquake
-succeeded earthquake; volcano followed volcano
-of flame and smoke and burning projectiles, until the
-whole vast city was wrapped in one wild ocean of flame.
-Napoleon said of this awful sight: “It was a spectacle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[461]</a></span>
-of a sea and billows of fire, a sky and clouds of flame;
-mountains of red rolling flames, like immense waves of
-the sea, alternately bursting forth and elevating themselves
-to skies of fire, and then sinking into the ocean of
-flame below. Oh! it was the most grand, the most sublime,
-the most terrific sight the world ever beheld.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing was left of Moscow save the remembrance of
-its former grandeur. Then followed the terrible retreat
-of the French army, through the cold and snow and
-winter storms. During this unfortunate expedition the
-entire army of Napoleon had been destroyed. “During
-the Russian campaign France is believed to have lost
-about three hundred and fifty thousand soldiers: a hundred
-thousand were killed in the advance and retreat, a
-hundred and fifty thousand died from hunger, fatigue, and
-the severity of the climate, and about a hundred thousand
-remained prisoners in the hands of the Russians,
-not more than half of whom ever returned to France.”</p>
-
-<p>Still, notwithstanding the enormous wars in which
-Napoleon had been engaged, he had expended in works
-of public improvement, for the embellishment of France,
-in the course of nine years, more than two hundred millions
-of dollars. “These miracles,” says a French writer,
-“were all effected by steadiness of purpose, talent armed
-with power, and finances wisely and economically applied.
-If a man of the age of the Medici, or of Louis XIV.,
-were to revisit the earth, and at the sight of so many
-marvels, ask how many ages of peace and glorious reigns
-had been required to produce them, he would be answered,
-‘<i>Twelve years of war, and a single man!</i>’”</p>
-
-<p>But the war was not over. With an army formed of
-fresh recruits, again Napoleon was forced to meet his
-foes. Then followed the battle of Lützen, which is regarded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[462]</a></span>
-as one of the most brilliant proofs of Napoleon’s
-genius. But now many a Judas appeared in the midst of
-his supposed friends. General Jomini deserted the staff
-of Marshal Ney, and went over to the Emperor Alexander.
-Bernadotte, of Sweden, took up arms against the
-French; and General Moreau went over to the camp of
-the Allies.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 445px;">
-<img src="images/i-633.jpg" width="445" height="612" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">NAPOLEON AT FONTAINEBLEAU.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After the disaster of Leipsic, and the losses sustained
-by different divisions of the army in that campaign, and
-the mortality which thinned so dreadfully the French
-armies on the Rhine, France felt herself exhausted and
-weak.</p>
-
-<p>In this depressed state, the civilized world was preparing
-its last united onset upon her. From the Baltic to
-the Bosphorus, from the Archangel to the Mediterranean,
-Europe had banded itself against Napoleon. Denmark
-and Sweden had struck hands with Austria and Russia
-and Prussia and England; while, to crown all, the princes
-of the Confederation of the Rhine put their signatures to
-the league, and <i>one million and twenty-eight thousand men</i>
-stood up in battle array on the plains of Europe to overthrow
-this mighty spirit that had shaken so terribly their
-thrones. And all this resistless host were pointing their
-bayonets towards Paris. What man or nation could meet
-such an overwhelming foe? Never did Napoleon’s genius
-shine forth with greater splendor than in the almost super-human
-exertions he put forth in this last great struggle
-for his empire. The Allies entered the capital, and Napoleon
-was compelled to abdicate, preferring exile, rather
-than involve France in more terrible bloodshed. He then
-penned this memorable abdication:—</p>
-
-<p>“The allied sovereigns having declared that the Emperor
-Napoleon is the sole obstacle to the re-establishment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[463]</a></span>
-of a general peace in Europe, the Emperor Napoleon,
-faithful to his oath, declares that he renounces, for himself
-and his heirs, the throne of France and Italy; and
-that there is no personal sacrifice, not even that of life
-itself, which he is not willing to make for the interests of
-France.”</p>
-
-<p>Then followed his mournful farewell to his soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>“As Napoleon arrived at the landing of the grand
-staircase, he stood for a moment and looked around upon
-the Guard drawn up in the court, and upon the innumerable
-multitude which thronged its surroundings. Every eye
-was fixed on him. It was a funereal scene, over which
-was suspended the solemnity of religious awe. Acclamations
-in that hour would have been a mockery. The
-silence of the grave reigned undisturbed. Tears rolled
-down the furrowed cheeks of the warriors, and their heads
-were bowed in overwhelming grief. Napoleon cast a tender
-and a grateful look over the battalions and the squadrons
-who had ever proved so faithful to himself and to
-his cause. Before descending to the courtyard, he hesitated
-for a moment, as if his fortitude were forsaking
-him. But immediately rallying his strength, he approached
-the soldiers. The drums commenced beating the accustomed
-salute. With a gesture Napoleon arrested the
-martial tones.” A breathless stillness prevailed. With
-a voice clear and firm,—every articulation of which was
-heard in the remotest ranks,—he said:—</p>
-
-<p>“Generals, officers, and soldiers of my Old Guard, I
-bid you farewell. For five and twenty years I have ever
-found you in the path of honor and of glory. In these
-last days, as in the days of our prosperity, you have never
-ceased to be models of fidelity and of courage. Europe
-has armed against us. Still, with men such as you, our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[464]</a></span>
-cause never could have been lost. We could have maintained
-a civil war for years. But it would have rendered
-our country unhappy. I have therefore sacrificed our interests
-to those of France. I leave you; but, my friends,
-<i>be faithful to the new sovereign whom France has accepted</i>.
-The happiness of France was my only thought; it shall
-ever be the object of my most fervent prayers. Grieve
-not for my lot; I shall be happy so long as I know that
-you are so. If I have consented to outlive myself, it is
-with the hope of still promoting your glory. I trust to
-write the deeds we have achieved together. Adieu, my
-children! I would that I could press you all to my heart.
-Let me at least embrace your general and your eagle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Every eye was now bathed in tears. At a signal
-from Napoleon, General Petit, who then commanded the
-Old Guard, advanced and stood between the ranks of the
-soldiers and their emperor. Napoleon, with tears dimming
-his eyes, encircled the general in his arms, while
-the veteran commander, entirely unmanned, sobbed aloud.
-All hearts were melted, and a stilled moan was heard
-through all the ranks.</p>
-
-<p>“Again the Emperor recovered himself, and said, ‘Bring
-me the eagle.’ A grenadier advanced, bearing one of the
-eagles of the regiment. Napoleon imprinted a kiss upon
-its silver beak, then pressed the eagle to his heart, and
-said, in tremulous accents, ‘Dear eagle, may this last embrace
-vibrate forever in the hearts of all my faithful
-soldiers! Farewell, again, my old companions, farewell!’”</p>
-
-<p>But Elba could not long hold that daring, restless
-spirit. The next year he again unrolled his standard in
-the capital of France, and the army opened its arms to
-receive him. He at length staked all on the field of
-Waterloo. There the star of his destiny again rose over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[465]</a></span>
-horizon, and struggled with its ancient strength to mount
-the heavens of fame. The battle-cloud rolled over it,
-and when it again was swept away, that star had gone
-down, sunk in blood and carnage, to rise no more forever.</p>
-
-<p>“Volumes have been written on this campaign and last
-battle; but every impartial mind must come to the same
-conclusion,—that Napoleon’s plans never promised more
-complete success than at this last effort. Wellington was
-entrapped, and with the same co-operation on both sides,
-he was lost beyond redemption. Had Blücher stayed away
-as Grouchy did, or had Grouchy come up as did Blücher,
-victory would once more have soared with the French
-eagles. It is in vain to talk of Grouchy’s having obeyed
-orders. It was plainly his duty, and his only duty, to
-detain Blücher or to follow him.”</p>
-
-<p>Even yet Napoleon could have placed himself at the
-head of fifty thousand men in a few hours. He was entreated
-by his friends to grasp these powerful resources
-and again attack the foe. But treachery had already invaded
-the Chamber of Deputies. The wily Fouché—the
-same who had largely instigated the divorce of Josephine—had
-obtained the control, and joining with the Bourbons,
-persuaded the Chamber to demand the second abdication
-of the Emperor.</p>
-
-<p>“Two regiments of volunteers from the Faubourg St.
-Antoine, accompanied by a countless multitude, marched
-to the gates of the Elysée. A deputation waited upon
-the Emperor, stating that the traitorous Chamber of Deputies
-was about to sell France again to the Bourbons, and
-entreating him to take the reins of government into his
-own hands, as on the 18th Brumaire.” The Emperor replied,
-“You recall to my remembrance the 18th Brumaire,
-but you forget that the circumstances are not the same.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[466]</a></span>
-On the 18th Brumaire the nation was unanimous in desiring
-a change. A feeble effort only was necessary to
-effect what they so much desired. Now it would require
-floods of French blood, and never shall a single drop be
-shed by me in defence of a cause purely personal. Putting
-the brute force of the mass of the people into action
-would doubtless save Paris and insure me the crown without
-incurring the horrors of civil war, but it would likewise
-be risking thousands of French lives. <i>No! I like the
-regrets of France better than her crown.</i>”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i-639.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">NAPOLEON ON BOARD THE BELLEROPHON.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And so Napoleon, sacrificing himself to save the lives
-of the French people, dictated his second act of abdication,
-and resigned himself with amazing calmness to this
-overwhelming disaster. But when he threw himself upon
-the generosity of England, she treacherously entrapped
-him on the <i>Bellerophon</i>, and afterwards conveyed him as
-a captive to the desolate island of St. Helena, where she
-set spies over him to torture and insult him, and gloated
-with demoniacal cruelty over the reports they gave of his
-sufferings.</p>
-
-<p>But England, with all her cunning and her base treachery,
-could not imprison the matchless mind and soul of
-the great Napoleon. Though his body was chained to a
-dreary rock-prison, his genius was still the royal emperor
-of the world. His wondrous sayings at St. Helena have
-become the text-books for the students of all climes.</p>
-
-<p>An English writer, who holds the position of a professor
-in the University at Cambridge, in a work lately published,
-thus gives to Napoleon his place in history:
-“There are times—and these are the most usual—when
-the most wonderful abilities would not have availed
-to raise any man from such a station as that in which
-Napoleon was born to the head of affairs. But the last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[467]</a></span>
-years of the eighteenth century formed an exceptional period,
-in which such an ascent was not only possible in France,
-but was quite possible without very extraordinary abilities.
-That particular part of Napoleon’s career to which the
-Alexanders and Hannibals can show nothing parallel, is,
-in fact, just the part which, in that exceptional time,
-was within the reach of an ordinary man. Thus the
-miracle of Bonaparte’s rise to power lies not so much in
-his personality as in the time.”</p>
-
-<p>What a pity that this <i>English professor</i> could not have
-happened to have lived when <i>ordinary</i> men might have
-become so great!</p>
-
-<p>One great secret of Napoleon’s success was the union
-of two striking qualities which are not often found together.
-His imagination was as ardent, and his mind as
-impetuous, as the most rash warrior; at the same time
-his judgment was as cool and correct as the ablest tactician.
-“His mind moved with the rapidity of lightning,
-and yet with the precision and steadiness of naked reason.”
-This power of thinking quick and thinking right is one of
-the rarest and yet most important qualities to insure success.
-As a military leader he has no superior in ancient
-or modern times. Instead of following what was then
-considered the scientific mode of warfare, he fell back
-upon his own genius, and originated tactics which filled
-his foes with horrified surprise. His power of combination
-was unequalled; his mind seemed vast enough for
-the management of the globe. And yet so perfect was
-the system and arrangement of his plans and thoughts
-that the slightest detail was never overlooked. His
-bravery amounted to rashness where his own life was
-concerned. He feared neither shot nor shell, and carelessly
-exposed himself whenever he thought his presence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[468]</a></span>
-was needed, replying to his soldiers, who often besought
-him not to risk his life so recklessly, “Courage! the bullet
-that is to kill me is not yet cast.”</p>
-
-<p>As a thinker and statesman, Napoleon was as remarkable
-as he was as a politician and general. His genius
-was universal. Had he not been a Napoleon, he might
-have been a Shakespeare or a Bacon. He condensed a
-volume into a sentence; his words were as keen as the
-blade of a Damascus sword, and as freighted with ominous
-meaning as the tides of the ocean. He knew men; he
-knew books; he knew nature. In twenty-five lessons
-Napoleon became so familiar with the English language
-that he could read any English book without difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>Another remarkable trait in Napoleon was his self-sufficiency.
-That self-confidence, which in smaller men
-would have been mad folly, was in him the most far-seeing
-wisdom. He needed no opinions of other men to
-govern his actions. He was sufficient unto himself. He
-took counsel only of his own genius and reason and marvellous
-intuitions.</p>
-
-<p>His self-reliance was his power in the midst of danger
-and difficulties. He believed God had given him a great
-part to play in the world’s drama, and he meant to play
-it well. His plans were almost the inspirations of
-prophetic foreknowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon was also the greatest of statesmen. His conversations
-at St. Helena display his wonderful knowledge
-of men and governments and laws and administrative
-legislation. Nowhere else can be found such profound
-thoughts upon politics, war, sciences, arts, or religion.
-He has been accused of infidelity. But few declarations
-of the Divinity of Christ, ever uttered by mortal lips, have
-equalled in far-reaching apprehension, and also acknowledgment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[469]</a></span>
-of the divine incomprehensibility of the mystery
-of the Godhead, as the sayings of Napoleon. Conversing
-with General Bertrand at St. Helena, Napoleon said:—</p>
-
-<p>“I know men, and I tell you that Jesus Christ is not a
-man. Superficial minds see a resemblance between Christ
-and the founders of empires and the gods of other religions.
-That resemblance does not exist. There is between
-Christianity and all other religions whatsoever the
-distance of infinity. Paganism was never accepted as
-truth by the wise men of Greece, neither by Socrates,
-Pythagoras, Plato, Anaxagoras, nor Pericles. But on the
-other side, the loftiest intellects since the advent of
-Christianity have had faith, a living faith, a practical faith,
-in the mysteries and doctrines of the Gospel. Paganism
-is the work of man. What do these gods so boastful
-know more than other mortals? these legislators, Greek
-or Roman? this Numa? this Lycurgus? these priests of
-India or of Memphis? this Confucius? this Mohammed?
-Absolutely nothing. They have made a perfect chaos of
-morals. There is not one among them all who has said
-anything new in reference to our future destiny, to the
-soul, to the essence of God, to the creation. As for me,
-I recognize the gods and these great men as beings like
-myself. They have performed a lofty part in their times,
-as I have done. Nothing announces them divine. On
-the contrary, there are numerous resemblances between
-them and myself,—foibles and errors which ally them to
-me and to humanity.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not so with Christ. Everything in him astonishes
-me. His spirit overawes me, and his will confounds
-me. Between him and whoever else in the world there
-is no possible term of comparison; his birth, and the history
-of his life; the profundity of his doctrine, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[470]</a></span>
-grapples the mightiest difficulties, and which is of those
-difficulties the most admirable solution; his Gospel, his
-apparition, his empire, his march across the ages and the
-realms,—everything is to me a prodigy, an insoluble
-mystery, which plunges me into a reverie from which I
-cannot escape, a mystery which is there before my eyes,
-a mystery which I can neither deny nor explain. Here I
-see nothing human.</p>
-
-<p>“Jesus borrowed nothing from our sciences. His religion
-is a revelation from an intelligence which certainly
-is not that of man. One can absolutely find nowhere,
-but in him alone, the imitation or the example of his life.
-He is not a philosopher, since he advances by miracles,
-and from the first his disciples worshipped him. He persuades
-them far more by an appeal to the heart, than by
-any display of method and of logic. Neither did he impose
-upon them any preliminary studies or any knowledge
-of letters. All his religion consists in <i>believing</i>. In
-fact, the sciences and philosophy avail nothing for salvation.
-He has nothing to do but with the soul, and to
-that alone he brings his Gospel. The soul is sufficient for
-him, as he is sufficient for the soul. I search in vain in
-history to find a parallel to Jesus Christ, or anything
-which can approach the Gospel. Neither history, nor
-humanity, nor the ages, nor nature, can offer me anything
-with which I am able to compare it or explain it. The
-more I consider the Gospel, the more I am assured that
-there is nothing there which is not beyond the march of
-events, and above the human mind.</p>
-
-<p>“You speak of Cæsar, of Alexander, of their conquests,
-and of the enthusiasm they enkindled in the
-hearts of their soldiers; but can you conceive of a dead
-man making conquests with an army faithful and entirely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[471]</a></span>
-devoted to his memory? My armies have forgotten me,
-even while living, as the Carthaginian army forgot Hannibal.
-Such is our power! A single battle lost crushes us,
-and adversity scatters our friends.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you conceive of Cæsar, the eternal emperor of
-the Roman Senate, from the depths of his mausoleum
-governing the empire, watching over the destinies of
-Rome? Such is the history of the invasion and conquest
-of the world by Christianity. Such is the power of the
-God of the Christians, and such is the perpetual miracle
-of the progress of the faith and of the government of his
-Church. Nations pass away, thrones crumble, but the
-Church remains. In every other existence but that of
-Christ, how many imperfections! From the first day to
-the last he is the same, always the same, majestic and
-simple, infinitely firm and infinitely gentle. Christ proved
-that he was the Son of the Eternal by his disregard of
-time. All his doctrines signify one and the same thing,—<i>Eternity</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“The Gospel is not a book; it is a living being, with an
-action, a power which invades everything that opposes its
-extension. Behold it upon this table, this Book surpassing
-all others” (here he solemnly placed his hand upon
-it); “I never omit to read it, and every day with the
-same pleasure. Nowhere is to be found such a series of
-beautiful ideas, admirable moral maxims, which defile like
-the battalions of a celestial army, and which produce in
-our soul the same emotion which one experiences in contemplating
-the infinite expanse of the skies, resplendent
-in a summer’s night with all the brilliance of the stars.
-Not only is our mind absorbed; it is controlled, and the
-soul can never go astray with this Book for its guide.
-Once master of our spirit, the faithful Gospel loves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[472]</a></span>
-us. God even is our Friend, our Father, and truly our
-God.</p>
-
-<p>“What a proof of the divinity of Christ! With an
-empire so absolute, he has but one single end,—the spiritual
-amelioration of individuals, the purity of conscience,
-the union to that which is true, the holiness of the soul.
-So that Christ’s greatest miracle undoubtedly is the reign
-of charity.</p>
-
-<p>“Behold the destiny near at hand of him who has
-been called the great Napoleon! What an abyss between
-my deep misery and the eternal reign of Christ, which is
-proclaimed, loved, adored, and which is extending over
-all the earth. Is this to die? Is it not rather to live?
-The death of Christ! It is the death of God.” Turning
-to General Bertrand, “If you do not perceive that Jesus
-Christ is God, very well; then I did wrong to make you
-a general.” At length came the last, though to Napoleon
-most welcome, summons. A few days before his death,
-he awoke one morning, saying, “I have just seen my
-good Josephine, but she would not embrace me. She
-disappeared at the moment when I was about to take her
-in my arms. She was seated there. It seemed to me
-that I had seen her yesterday evening. She is not
-changed. She is still the same, full of devotion to me.
-She told me that we were about to see each other again,
-never more to part.”</p>
-
-<p>The disease progressed rapidly, and the dying hour
-drew near. It was the month of May, 1821. A violent
-storm raged with wild fury on that rocky prison-isle, as
-the spirit of the great Napoleon was freeing itself from its
-earthly fetters. His few faithful friends who shared his
-exile, stood weeping around his couch. In the solemn
-silence of that sacred hour his loved voice was once more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[473]</a></span>
-faintly heard: “<i>France! Army! Head of the Army!
-Josephine!</i>” and the heart of Napoleon I. ceased to beat.
-“<i>Isle of Elba! Napoleon!</i>” had been the last words of the
-loving and forgiving Josephine. “France! the Army!
-Josephine!” were the last images which lingered in the
-heart, and the last words which trembled on the lips of
-the dying emperor.</p>
-
-<p>“When the prejudice, and falsehood, and hatred of his
-enemies shall disappear, and the world can gaze impartially
-on this plebeian soldier, rising to the throne of an
-empire, measuring his single intellect with the proudest
-kings of Europe, and coming off victorious from the encounter,
-rising above the prejudices and follies of his age,
-‘making kings of plebeians, and plebeians of kings,’ grasping,
-as by intuition, all military and political science,
-expending with equal facility his vast energies on war or
-peace, turning with the same profound thought from
-fierce battles to commerce, and trade, and finances; when
-the world can calmly thus contemplate him, his amazing
-genius will receive that homage which envy and ignorance
-and hatred now withhold.</p>
-
-<p>“And when the intelligent philanthropist shall understand
-the political and civil history of Europe, and see
-how Napoleon broke up its systems of oppression and
-feudalism, proclaiming human rights in the ears of the
-world, till the continent shook with the rising murmurs
-of oppressed man; study well the changes he introduced,
-without which human progress must have ceased; see the
-great public works he established, the institutions he
-founded, the laws he proclaimed, and the civil liberty he
-restored; and then, remembering that the bloody wars
-that offset all these were waged by him in self-defence,
-and were equal rights struggling against exclusive despotism,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[474]</a></span>
-he will regret that he has adopted the slanders of
-his foemen and the falsehoods of monarchists.”</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 427px;">
-<img src="images/i-649.jpg" width="427" height="650" alt="painting" />
-<div class="caption">THE ROCK AT ST. HELENA.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Alexander’s conquests were only for selfish glory; he
-cared not for his people, and little for his soldiers. Cæsar’s
-triumphs were for his own personal honor and
-power. The wars of Frederick the Great were nearly
-all unjust and aggressive, and he openly asserted his selfish
-ambition. But Napoleon, equalling them all in the
-brilliancy of his conquests, stands so far above them, as
-the idol of his people and his soldiers, as a man of incorruptible
-character, in the midst of temptations as great as
-any which have beset mortal men, as an intellectual genius,
-with a mind so phenomenal as to make him almost
-a miracle in far-seeing intuitions and marvellous accomplishment,—that
-he must be acknowledged, not only as
-the most famous of all the rulers of the world, but as
-the greatest uninspired man that ever lived. The history
-of most men terminates with the grave. But Napoleon’s
-story ended not with his lonely death upon the dreary
-Isle of St. Helena. Each year his memory was growing
-brighter. Each year the French people realized more
-and more the irreparable loss they had sustained. The
-heart-melting story of his hardships at St. Helena was
-told over and over again in his beloved France, till at
-last the nation rose as one man to do his memory honor.
-Just twenty-five years from the time when Napoleon was
-landed a captive upon the Island of St. Helena, his
-sacred remains were brought from their humble resting-place
-upon that rocky isle, and placed in the magnificent
-mausoleum prepared for them in the Church of the Invalides.
-On the anniversary of the great victory of Austerlitz,
-the two funeral frigates entered the harbor of Cherbourg.
-Three ships of war, the <i>Austerlitz</i>, the <i>Friedland</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[475]</a></span>
-and the <i>Tilsit</i>, immediately encircled the ship which bore
-the sacred remains. All the forts, batteries, and warships
-fired a salute. All France flocked to the cities and
-villages through which the funeral cortège was to pass.</p>
-
-<p>At four o’clock, on the afternoon of the 14th of December,
-1840, the flotilla arrived at Courbevoie, a small village
-four miles from Paris. Here the remains were to be
-transferred from the steamer to the shore. As the
-funeral barge sailed up the Seine, a colossal statue of
-Josephine, which had been erected on the shore, offered
-an appropriate and fitting welcome. Her fair form and
-face seemed to greet the return of her idolized husband.
-Maria Louisa, the daughter of the Cæsars, was then living
-ingloriously at Parma. No one thought of her. But at
-last Josephine and Napoleon were united together in
-sacred memories on earth, as their spirits had already
-been reunited in heaven.</p>
-
-<p>“A Grecian temple one hundred feet high was constructed
-at the termination of the wharf, under which the
-body was to lie in state until transferred to the funeral
-car. Here Sergeant Hubert, who for nineteen years had
-kept watch at the solitary grave of Napoleon at St.
-Helena, landed. All the generals gathered around him,
-and he was welcomed by the people with deep emotion.
-The imperial funeral car was composed of five distinct
-parts, the basement, the pedestal, the Caryatides, the
-shield, and the cenotaph. The basement rested on four
-massive gilt wheels. It was profusely adorned with rich
-ornaments which were covered with frosted gold. Upon
-this basement stood groups of cherubs, seven feet high,
-supporting a pedestal eighteen feet long, covered with
-burnished gold. This pedestal was hung with purple velvet
-embroidered with gold. Upon it stood fourteen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[476]</a></span>
-Caryatides, antique figures larger than life, and entirely
-covered with gold, supporting with their heads and hands
-an immense shield of solid gold. This shield was of oval
-form, and eighteen feet in length, and was richly decorated.
-Upon the top of this shield, nearly fifty feet
-from the ground, was placed the cenotaph, an exact copy
-of Napoleon’s coffin. It was slightly veiled with purple
-crape embroidered with golden bees. On the cenotaph,
-upon a velvet cushion, were placed the sceptre, the sword
-of justice, the imperial crown, in gold and embellished
-with precious stones.</p>
-
-<p>“The Church of the Invalides had been magnificently
-adorned for the solemn ceremony. Thirty-six thousand
-spectators were seated upon immense platforms on the
-esplanade of the Invalides. Six thousand spectators
-thronged the seats of the spacious portico. In the interior
-of the church were assembled the clergy, the members
-of the Chambers of Deputies and of Peers, and all the
-members of the royal family and other distinguished
-personages from France and Europe.</p>
-
-<p>“As the coffin, preceded by the Prince de Joinville,
-was borne along the nave upon the shoulders of thirty-two
-of Napoleon’s Old Guard, all rose and bowed in homage
-to the mighty dead.” Louis Philippe, surrounded by the
-great officers of state, then stepped forward to receive the
-remains.</p>
-
-<p>“Sire,” said the prince, “I present to you the body of
-the Emperor Napoleon.”</p>
-
-<p>“I receive it,” replied the king, “in the name of
-France.” Then taking from the hand of Marshal Soult
-the sword of Napoleon, and presenting it to General
-Bertrand, he said, “General, I charge you to place this
-glorious sword of the Emperor upon his coffin.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[477]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Beneath the lofty dome of the church, where the massive
-tomb of Napoleon has since been erected, a magnificent
-cenotaph in the form of a temple had been reared.
-Within this richly decorated catafalque the coffin of
-Napoleon was reverently and solemnly placed, thus fulfilling
-the last wish of the Emperor, expressed in these
-memorable words, “It is my wish that my ashes may
-repose on the banks of the Seine, in the midst of the
-French people whom I have loved so well.”</p>
-
-<p>“He who united in himself alone the glory of Alexander,
-of Cæsar, of Charlemagne, and of Louis XIV., took
-his place in the Invalides, which, during his life, he had
-marked as the place of heroes.” His devoted Generals
-Bertrand and Duroc now lie beside him. A few aged
-veterans of the Old Guard still watch over him. The
-sunlight, softened by the rich tints of the costly windows,
-falls lovingly upon his tomb, and his cherished memory
-lives in the hearts of his beloved people, growing more
-beautiful, more triumphantly venerated, and sacredly respected
-with each passing year. As his faithful veterans
-cast their crowns of flowers at the foot of his coffin, with
-trembling voices they lovingly though mournfully cried,
-“<i>Vive l’Empereur!</i>” and this loved Emperor still lives in
-the hearts of his people, royally enshrined in a nation’s
-undying love.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div class="tnote"><div class="center">
-<b>Transcriber’s Notes:</b></div>
-
-<p>Obvious punctuation errors repaired. Warenne, Earl of Surrey, was
-spelled both as Warren and Warrene throughout the text. This was retained.
-Varied hyphenation retained as printed.</p>
-
-<p>Page xi, “Kremlin” changed to “Krémlin” (The Krémlin of Moscow)</p>
-
-<p>Page 15, “Aphrodite” changed to “Aphrodité” (mother, Aphrodité, caught him)</p>
-
-<p>Page 80, “enthusiam” changed to “enthusiasm” (enthusiasm of Alexander’s)</p>
-
-<p>Page 157, “guantlets” changed to “gauntlets” (garnished with gauntlets)</p>
-
-<p>Page 160, “Debonnaire” changed to “Débonnaire” (called Louis le Débonnaire)</p>
-
-<p>Page 163, “Debonnaire” changed to “Débonnaire” (his son Louis le Débonnaire)</p>
-
-<p>Page 272, “seige” changed to “siege” (and commenced its siege)</p>
-
-<p>Page 279, “cortége” changed to “cortège” (brilliant <i>cortège</i> glittering)</p>
-
-<p>Page 372, illustration caption, “KREMLIN” changed to “KRÉMLIN” (THE KRÉMLIN OF MOSCOW)</p>
-
-<p>Page 441, “endeavord” changed to “endeavored” (enemies who endeavored)</p>
-
-<p>Page 442, “Sardina” changed to “Sardinia” (king of Sardinia together)</p>
-
-<p>Page 445, “pontroon” changed to “pontoon” (and four pontoon trains)</p>
-
-<p>Page 446, “striction” changed to “stricken” (terror-stricken inaction)</p>
-
-<p>Page 454, “Friendland” changed to “Friedland” (of Friedland and Tilsit)</p>
-
-<p>Page 454 “Tuilieries” changed to “Tuileries” (Tuileries in a splendid)</p>
-
-<p>Page 460, “Kremlin” changed to “Krémlin” (established in the Krémlin)</p>
-
-<p>Page 461, “Lutzen” changed to “Lützen” (of Lützen, which is)</p>
-
-<p>Page 473, “falshood” changed to “falsehood” (prejudice, and falsehood)</p>
-
-<p>Page 475, “cortege” changed to “cortège” (funeral cortège was to pass)</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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