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+<PRE>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Book of Golden Deeds, by Charlotte M. Yonge
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+Title: A Book of Golden Deeds
+
+Author: Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+Release Date: September, 2004 [EBook #6489]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on December 22, 2002]
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOOK OF GOLDEN DEEDS ***
+
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+
+
+This Project Gutenberg Etext of 'A Book of Golden Deeds'
+by Charlotte M Yonge was prepared by HanhVu capriccio_vn@yahoo.com
+and Sandra Laythorpe menorot@menorot.com.
+
+</PRE>
+
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<center><h1>A BOOK OF GOLDEN DEEDS</h1>
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h2>CHARLOTTE M YONGE</h2></center>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
+
+What is a Golden Deed?<br>
+The Stories of Alcestis and Antigone<br>
+The Cup of Water<br>
+How one Man has saved a Host<br>
+The Pass of Thermopylae<br>
+The Rock of the Capitol<br>
+The Two Friends of Syracuse<br>
+The Devotion of the Decii<br>
+Regulus<br>
+The brave Brethren of Judah<br>
+The Chief of the Arverni<br>
+Withstanding the Monarch in his Wrath<br>
+The last Fight in the Coliseum<br>
+The Shepherd Girl of Nanterre<br>
+Leo the Slave<br>
+The Battle of the Blackwater<br>
+Guzman el Bueno<br>
+Faithful till Death<br>
+What is better than Slaying a Dragon<br>
+The Keys of Calais<br>
+The Battle of Sempach<br>
+The Constant Prince<br>
+The Carnival of Perth<br>
+The Crown of St. Stephen<br>
+George the Triller<br>
+Sir Thomas More's Daughter<br>
+Under Ivan the Terrible<br>
+Fort St. Elmo<br>
+The Voluntary Convict<br>
+The Housewives of Lowenburg<br>
+Fathers and Sons<br>
+The Soldiers in the Snow<br>
+Gunpowder Perils<br>
+Heroes of the Plague<br>
+The Second of September<br>
+The Vendeans<br>
+</blockquote>
+
+<center><h3>PREFACE</h3></center>
+
+<p>As the most striking lines of poetry are the most hackneyed, because they
+have grown to be the common inheritance of all the world, so many of the most
+noble deeds that earth can show have become the best known, and enjoyed their
+full meed of fame. Therefore it may be feared that many of the events here
+detailed, or alluded to, may seem trite to those in search of novelty; but it is
+not for such that the collection has been made. It is rather intended as a
+treasury for young people, where they may find minuter particulars than their
+abridged histories usually afford of the soul-stirring deeds that give life and
+glory to the record of events; and where also other like actions, out of their
+ordinary course of reading, may be placed before them, in the trust that example
+may inspire the spirit of heroism and self-devotion. For surely it must be a
+wholesome contemplation to look on actions, the very essence of which is such
+entire absorption in others that self is forgotten; the object of which is not
+to win promotion, wealth, or success, but simple duty, mercy, and
+loving-kindness. These are the actions wrought, 'hoping for nothing again', but
+which most surely have their reward.</p>
+<p>The authorities have not been given, as for the most part the
+narratives lie on the surface of history. For the description of the Coliseum, I
+have, however, been indebted to the Abbé Gerbet's Rome Chrétienne; for the
+Housewives of Lowenburg, and St. Stephen's Crown, to Freytag's Sketches of
+German Life; and for the story of George the Triller, to Mr. Mayhew's Germany.
+The Escape of Attalus is narrated (from Gregory of Tours) in Thierry's 'Lettres
+sur l'Histoire de France;' the Russian officer's adventures, and those of
+Prascovia Lopouloff
+&lt;http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/yonge/deeds/pardon.html&gt;, the true
+Elisabeth of Siberia, are from M. le Maistre; the shipwrecks chiefly from
+Gilly's 'Shipwrecks of the British Navy;' the Jersey Powder Magazine from the
+Annual Registrer, and that at Ciudad Rodrigo, from the traditions of the 52nd
+Regiment.</p>
+<p>There is a cloud of doubt resting on a few of the tales, which it may be
+honest to mention, though they were far too beautiful not to tell. These are the
+details of the Gallic occupation of Rome, the Legend of St. Genevieve, the
+Letter of Gertrude von der Wart, the stories of the Keys of Calais, of the
+Dragon of Rhodes, and we fear we must add, both Nelson's plan of the Battle of
+the Nile, and likewise the exact form of the heroism of young Casabianca, of
+which no two accounts agree. But it was not possible to give up such stories as
+these, and the thread of truth there must be in them has developed into such a
+beautiful tissue, that even if unsubstantial when tested, it is surely
+delightful to contemplate.</p>
+<p>Some stories have been passed over as too devoid of foundation, in especial
+that of young Henri, Duke of Nemours, who, at ten years old, was said to have
+been hung up with his little brother of eight in one of Louis XI's cages at
+Loches, with orders that two of the children's teeth should daily be pulled out
+and brought to the king. The elder child was said to have insisted on giving the
+whole supply of teeth, so as to save his brother; but though they were certainly
+imprisoned after their father's execution, they were released after Louis's
+death in a condition which disproves this atrocity.</p>
+<p>The Indian mutiny might likewise have supplied glorious instances of
+Christian self-devotion, but want of materials has compelled us to stop short of
+recording those noble deeds by which delicate women and light-hearted young
+soldiers showed, that in the hour of need there was not wanting to them the
+highest and deepest 'spirit of self-sacrifice.'</p>
+<p>At some risk of prolixity, enough of the surrounding events has in general
+been given to make the situation comprehensible, even without knowledge of the
+general history. This has been done in the hope that these extracts may serve as
+a mother's storehouse for reading aloud to her boys, or that they may be found
+useful for short readings to the intelligent, though uneducated classes.</p>
+<p>NOVEMBER 17, 1864.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>WHAT IS A GOLDEN DEED?</h3></center>
+
+<p>We all of us enjoy a story of battle and adventure. Some of us delight in the
+anxiety and excitement with which we watch the various strange predicaments,
+hairbreadth escapes, and ingenious contrivances that are presented to us; and
+the mere imaginary dread of the dangers thus depicted, stirs our feelings and
+makes us feel eager and full of suspense.</p>
+<p>This taste, though it is the first step above the dullness that cannot be
+interested in anything beyond its own immediate world, nor care for what it
+neither sees, touches, tastes, nor puts to any present use, is still the lowest
+form that such a liking can take. It may be no better than a love of reading
+about murders in the newspaper, just for the sake of a sort of startled
+sensation; and it is a taste that becomes unwholesome when it absolutely
+delights in dwelling on horrors and cruelties for their own sake; or upon
+shifty, cunning, dishonest stratagems and devices. To learn to take interest in
+what is evil is always mischievous.</p>
+<p>But there is an element in many of such scenes of woe and violence that may
+well account for our interest in them. It is that which makes the eye gleam and
+the heart throb, and bears us through the details of suffering, bloodshed, and
+even barbarity--feeling our spirits moved and elevated by contemplating the
+courage and endurance that they have called forth. Nay, such is the charm of
+brilliant valor, that we often are tempted to forget the injustice of the cause
+that may have called forth the actions that delight us. And this enthusiasm is
+often united with the utmost tenderness of heart, the very appreciation of
+suffering only quickening the sense of the heroism that risked the utmost, till
+the young and ardent learn absolutely to look upon danger as an occasion for
+evincing the highest qualities.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'O Life, without thy chequer'd scene<br>
+Of right and wrong, of weal and woe,<br>
+Success and failure, could a ground<br>
+For magnanimity be found?'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The true cause of such enjoyment is perhaps an inherent consciousness that
+there is nothing so noble as forgetfulness of self. Therefore it is that we are
+struck by hearing of the exposure of life and limb to the utmost peril, in
+oblivion, or recklessness of personal safety, in comparison with a higher
+object.</p>
+<p>That object is sometimes unworthy. In the lowest form of courage it is only
+avoidance of disgrace; but even fear of shame is better than mere love of bodily
+ease, and from that lowest motive the scale rises to the most noble and precious
+actions of which human nature is capable--the truly golden and priceless deeds
+that are the jewels of history, the salt of life.</p>
+<p>And it is a chain of Golden Deeds that we seek to lay before our readers;
+but, ere entering upon them, perhaps we had better clearly understand what it is
+that to our mind constitutes a Golden Deed.</p>
+<p>It is not mere hardihood. There was plenty of hardihood in Pizarro when he
+led his men through terrible hardships to attack the empire of Peru, but he was
+actuated by mere greediness for gain, and all the perils he so resolutely
+endured could not make his courage admirable. It was nothing but insensibility
+to danger, when set against the wealth and power that he coveted, and to which
+he sacrificed thousands of helpless Peruvians. Daring for the sake of plunder
+has been found in every robber, every pirate, and too often in all the lower
+grade of warriors, from the savage plunderer of a besieged town up to the
+reckless monarch making war to feed his own ambition.</p>
+<p>There is a courage that breaks out in bravado, the exuberance of high
+spirits, delighting in defying peril for its own sake, not indeed producing
+deeds which deserve to be called golden, but which, from their heedless grace,
+their desperation, and absence of all base motives--except perhaps vanity have
+an undeniable charm about them, even when we doubt the right of exposing a life
+in mere gaiety of heart.</p>
+<p>Such was the gallantry of the Spanish knight who, while Fernando and Isabel
+lay before the Moorish city of Granada, galloped out of the camp, in full view
+of besiegers and besieged, and fastened to the gate of the city with his dagger
+a copy of the Ave Maria. It was a wildly brave action, and yet not without
+service in showing the dauntless spirit of the Christian army. But the same can
+hardly be said of the daring shown by the Emperor Maximilian when he displayed
+himself to the citizens of Ulm upon the topmost pinnacle of their cathedral
+spire; or of Alonso de Ojeda, who figured in like manner upon the tower of the
+Spanish cathedral. The same daring afterwards carried him in the track of
+Columbus, and there he stained his name with the usual blots of rapacity and
+cruelty. These deeds, if not tinsel, were little better than gold leaf.</p>
+<p>A Golden Deed must be something more than mere display of fearlessness. Grave
+and resolute fulfillment of duty is required to give it the true weight. Such
+duty kept the sentinel at his post at the gate of Pompeii, even when the
+stifling dust of ashes came thicker and thicker from the volcano, and the liquid
+mud streamed down, and the people fled and struggled on, and still the sentry
+stood at his post, unflinching, till death had stiffened his limbs; and his
+bones, in their helmet and breastplate, with the hand still raised to keep the
+suffocating dust from mouth and nose, have remained even till our own times to
+show how a Roman soldier did his duty. In like manner the last of the old
+Spanish infantry originally formed by the Great Captain, Gonzalo de Cordova,
+were all cut off, standing fast to a man, at the battle of Rocroy, in 1643, not
+one man breaking his rank. The whole regiment was found lying in regular order
+upon the field of battle, with their colonel, the old Count de Fuentes, at their
+head, expiring in a chair, in which he had been carried, because he was too
+infirm to walk, to this his twentieth battle. The conqueror, the high-spirited
+young Duke d'Enghien, afterwards Prince of Condé, exclaimed, 'Were I not a
+victor, I should have wished thus to die!' and preserved the chair among the
+relics of the bravest of his own fellow countrymen.</p>
+<p>Such obedience at all costs and all risks is, however, the very essence of a
+soldier's life. An army could not exist without it, a ship could not sail
+without it, and millions upon millions of those whose 'bones are dust and good
+swords are rust' have shown such resolution. It is the solid material, but it
+has hardly the exceptional brightness, of a Golden Deed.</p>
+<p>And yet perhaps it is one of the most remarkable characteristics of a Golden
+Deed that the doer of it is certain to feel it merely a duty; 'I have done that
+which it was my duty to do' is the natural answer of those capable of such
+actions. They have been constrained to them by duty, or by pity; have never even
+deemed it possible to act otherwise, and did not once think of themselves in the
+matter at all.</p>
+<p>For the true metal of a Golden Deed is self-devotion. Selfishness is the
+dross and alloy that gives the unsound ring to many an act that has been called
+glorious. And, on the other hand, it is not only the valor, which meets a
+thousand enemies upon the battlefield, or scales the walls in a forlorn hope,
+that is of true gold. It may be, but often it is a mere greed of fame, fear of
+shame, or lust of plunder. No, it is the spirit that gives itself for
+others--the temper that for the sake of religion, of country, of duty, of
+kindred, nay, of pity even to a stranger, will dare all things, risk all things,
+endure all things, meet death in one moment, or wear life away in slow,
+persevering tendance and suffering.</p>
+<p>Such a spirit was shown by Leaena, the Athenian woman at whose house the
+overthrow of the tyranny of the Pisistratids was concerted, and who, when seized
+and put to the torture that she might disclose the secrets of the conspirators,
+fearing that the weakness of her frame might overpower her resolution, actually
+bit off her tongue, that she might be unable to betray the trust placed in her.
+The Athenians commemorated her truly golden silence by raising in her honor the
+statue of a lioness without a tongue, in allusion to her name, which signifies a
+lioness.</p>
+<p>Again, Rome had a tradition of a lady whose mother was in prison under
+sentence of death by hunger, but who, at the peril of her own life, visited her
+daily, and fed her from her own bosom, until even the stern senate were moved
+with pity, and granted a pardon. The same story is told of a Greek lady, called
+Euphrasia, who thus nourished her father; and in Scotland, in 1401, when the
+unhappy heir of the kingdom, David, Duke of Rothesay, had been thrown into the
+dungeon of Falkland Castle by his barbarous uncle, the Duke of Albany, there to
+be starved to death, his only helper was one poor peasant woman, who, undeterred
+by fear of the savage men that guarded the castle, crept, at every safe
+opportunity, to the grated window on a level with the ground, and dropped cakes
+through it to the prisoner, while she allayed his thirst from her own breast
+through a pipe. Alas! the visits were detected, and the Christian prince had
+less mercy than the heathen senate. Another woman, in 1450, when Sir Gilles of
+Brittany was savagely imprisoned and starved in much the same manner by his
+brother, Duke François, sustained him for several days by bringing wheat in her
+veil, and dropping it through the grated window, and when poison had been used
+to hasten his death, she brought a priest to the grating to enable him to make
+his peace with Heaven. Tender pity made these women venture all things; and
+surely their doings were full of the gold of love.</p>
+<p>So again two Swiss lads, whose father was dangerously ill, found that they
+could by no means procure the needful medicine, except at a price far beyond
+their means, and heard that an English traveler had offered a large price for a
+pair of eaglets. The only eyrie was on a crag supposed to be so inacessible,
+that no one ventured to attempt it, till these boys, in their intense anxiety
+for their father, dared the fearful danger, scaled the precipice, captured the
+birds, and safely conveyed them to the traveler. Truly this was a deed of gold.</p>
+<p>Such was the action of the Russian servant whose master's carriage was
+pursued by wolves, and who sprang out among the beasts, sacrificing his own life
+willingly to slake their fury for a few minutes in order that the horses might
+be untouched, and convey his master to a place of safety. But his act of
+self-devotion has been so beautifully expanded in the story of 'Eric's Grave',
+in 'Tales of Christian Heroism', that we can only hint at it, as at that of the
+'Helmsman of Lake Erie', who, with the steamer on fire around him, held fast by
+the wheel in the very jaws of the flame, so as to guide the vessel into harbour,
+and save the many lives within her, at the cost of his own fearful agony, while
+slowly scorched by the flames.</p>
+<p>Memorable, too, was the compassion that kept Dr. Thompson upon the
+battlefield of the Alma, all alone throughout the night, striving to alleviate
+the sufferings and attend to the wants, not of our own wounded, but of the
+enemy, some of whom, if they were not sorely belied, had been known to requite a
+friendly act of assistance with a pistol shot. Thus to remain in the darkness,
+on a battlefield in an enemy's country, among the enemy themselves, all for pity
+and mercy's sake, was one of the noblest acts that history can show. Yet, it was
+paralleled in the time of the Indian Mutiny, when every English man and woman
+was flying from the rage of the Sepoys at Benares, and Dr. Hay alone remained
+because he would not desert the patients in the hospital, whose life depended on
+his care--many of them of those very native corps who were advancing to massacre
+him. This was the Roman sentry's firmness, more voluntary and more glorious. Nor
+may we pass by her to whom our title page points as our living type of Golden
+Deeds--to her who first showed how woman's ministrations of mercy may be carried
+on, not only within the city, but on the borders of the camp itself--'the lady
+with the lamp', whose health and strength were freely devoted to the holy work
+of softening the after sufferings that render war so hideous; whose very step
+and shadow carried gladness and healing to the sick soldier, and who has opened
+a path of like shining light to many another woman who only needed to be shown
+the way. Fitly, indeed, may the figure of Florence Nightingale be shadowed forth
+at the opening of our roll of Golden Deeds.</p>
+<p>Thanks be to God, there is enough of His own spirit of love abroad in the
+earth to make Golden Deeds of no such rare occurrence, but that they are of 'all
+time'. Even heathen days were not without them, and how much more should they
+not abound after the words have been spoken, 'Greater love hath no man than
+this, that he lay down his life for his friend', and after the one Great Deed
+has been wrought that has consecrated all other deeds of self-sacrifice. Of
+martyrdoms we have scarcely spoken. They were truly deeds of the purest gold;
+but they are too numerous to be dwelt on here: and even as soldiers deem it each
+man's simple duty to face death unhesitatingly, so the 'glorious army of
+martyrs' had, for the most part, joined the Church with the expectation that
+they should have to confess the faith, and confront the extremity of death and
+torture for it.</p>
+<p>What have been here brought together are chiefly cases of self-devotion that
+stand out remarkably, either from their hopelessness, their courage, or their
+patience, varying with the character of their age; but with that one essential
+distinction in all, that the dross of self was cast away.</p>
+<p>Among these we cannot forbear mentioning the poor American soldier, who,
+grievously wounded, had just been laid in the middle bed, by far the most
+comfortable of the three tiers of berths in the ship's cabin in which the
+wounded were to be conveyed to New York. Still thrilling with the suffering of
+being carried from the field, and lifted to his place, he saw a comrade in even
+worse plight brought in, and thinking of the pain it must cost his fellow
+soldier to be raised to the bed above him, he surprised his kind lady nurses
+(daily scatterers of Golden Deeds) by saying, 'Put me up there, I reckon I'll
+bear hoisting better than he will'.</p>
+<p>And, even as we write, we hear of an American Railway collision that befell a
+train on the way to Elmira with prisoners. The engineer, whose name was William
+Ingram, might have leapt off and saved himself before the shock; but he remained
+in order to reverse the engine, though with certain death staring him in the
+face. He was buried in the wreck of the meeting train, and when found, his back
+was against the boiler he was jammed in, unable to move, and actually being
+burnt to death; but even in that extremity of anguish he called out to those who
+came round to help him to keep away, as he expected the boiler would burst. They
+disregarded the generous cry, and used every effort to extricate him, but could
+not succeed until after his sufferings had ended in death.</p>
+<p>While men and women still exist who will thus suffer and thus die, losing
+themselves in the thought of others, surely the many forms of woe and misery
+with which this earth is spread do but give occasions of working out some of the
+highest and best qualities of which mankind are capable. And oh, young readers,
+if your hearts burn within you as you read of these various forms of the truest
+and deepest glory, and you long for time and place to act in the like devoted
+way, bethink yourselves that the alloy of such actions is to be constantly
+worked away in daily life; and that if ever it be your lot to do a Golden Deed,
+it will probably be in unconsciousness that you are doing anything
+extraordinary, and that the whole impulse will consist in the having absolutely
+forgotten self.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE STORIES OF ALCESTIS AND ANTIGONE</h3></center>
+
+<p>It has been said, that even the heathens saw and knew the glory of
+self-devotion; and the Greeks had two early instances so very beautiful that,
+though they cannot in all particulars be true, they must not be passed over.
+There must have been some foundation for them, though we cannot now disentangle
+them from the fable that has adhered to them; and, at any rate, the ancient
+Greeks believed them, and gathered strength and nobleness from dwelling on such
+examples; since, as it has been truly said, 'Every word, look or thought of
+sympathy with heroic action, helps to make heroism'. Both tales were presented
+before them in their solemn religious tragedies, and the noble poetry in which
+they were recounted by the great Greek dramatists has been preserved to our
+time.</p>
+<p>Alcestis was the wife of Admetus, King of Pherae, who, according to the
+legend, was assured that his life might be prolonged, provided father, mother,
+or wife would die in his stead. It was Alcestis alone who was willing freely to
+give her life to save that of her husband; and her devotion is thus exquisitely
+described in the following translation, by Professor Anstice, from the choric
+song in the tragedy by Euripides:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Be patient, for thy tears are vain<br>
+They may not wake the dead again:<br>
+E'en heroes, of immortal sire<br>
+And mortal mother born, expire.<br>
+Oh, she was dear<br>
+While she linger'd here;<br>
+She is dear now she rests below,<br>
+And thou mayst boast<br>
+That the bride thou hast lost<br>
+Was the noblest earth can show.<br>
+'We will not look on her burial sod<br>
+As the cell of sepulchral sleep,<br>
+It shall be as the shrine of a radiant god,<br>
+And the pilgrim shall visit that blest abode<br>
+To worship, and not to weep;<br>
+And as he turns his steps aside,<br>
+Thus shall he breathe his vow:<br>
+'Here sleeps a self-devoted bride,<br>
+Of old to save her lord she died.<br>
+She is a spirit now.<br>
+Hail, bright and blest one! grant to me<br>
+The smiles of glad prosperity.'<br>
+Thus shall he own her name divine,<br>
+Thus bend him at Alcestis' shrine.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The story, however, bore that Hercules, descending in the course of one of
+his labors into the realms of the dead, rescued Alcestis, and brought her back;
+and Euripides gives a scene in which the rough, jovial Hercules insists on the
+sorrowful Admetus marrying again a lady of his own choice, and gives the veiled
+Alcestis back to him as the new bride. Later Greeks tried to explain the story
+by saying that Alcestis nursed her husband through an infectious fever, caught
+it herself, and had been supposed to be dead, when a skilful physician restored
+her; but this is probably only one of the many reasonable versions they tried to
+give of the old tales that were founded on the decay and revival of nature in
+winter and spring, and with a presage running through them of sacrifice, death,
+and resurrection. Our own poet Chaucer was a great admirer of Alcestis, and
+improved upon the legend by turning her into his favorite flower---</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'The daisie or els the eye of the daie,<br>
+The emprise and the floure of flouris all'.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Another Greek legend told of the maiden of Thebes, one of the most
+self-devoted beings that could be conceived by a fancy untrained in the
+knowledge of Divine Perfection. It cannot be known how much of her story is
+true, but it was one that went deep into the hearts of Grecian men and women,
+and encouraged them in some of their best feelings; and assuredly the deeds
+imputed to her were golden.</p>
+<p>Antigone was the daughter of the old King Oedipus of Thebes. After a time
+heavy troubles, the consequence of the sins of his youth, came upon him, and he
+was driven away from his kingdom, and sent to wander forth a blind old man,
+scorned and pointed at by all. Then it was that his faithful daughter showed
+true affection for him. She might have remained at Thebes with her brother
+Eteocles, who had been made king in her father's room, but she chose instead to
+wander forth with the forlorn old man, fallen from his kingly state, and
+absolutely begging his bread. The great Athenian poet Sophocles began his
+tragedy of 'Oedipus Coloneus' with showing the blind old king leaning on
+Antigone's arm, and asking--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Tell me, thou daughter of a blind old man,<br>
+Antigone, to what land are we come,<br>
+Or to what city? Who the inhabitants<br>
+Who with a slender pittance will relieve<br>
+Even for a day the wandering Oedipus?'<br>
+POTTER.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The place to which they had come was in Attica, hear the city of Colonus. It
+was a lovely grove--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'All the haunts of Attic ground,<br>
+Where the matchless coursers bound,<br>
+Boast not, through their realms of bliss,<br>
+Other spot so fair as this.<br>
+Frequent down this greenwood dale<br>
+Mourns the warbling nightingale,<br>
+Nestling 'mid the thickest screen<br>
+Of the ivy's darksome green,<br>
+Or where each empurpled shoot<br>
+Drooping with its myriad fruit,<br>
+Curl'd in many a mazy twine,<br>
+Droops the never-trodden vine.'<br>
+ANSTICE.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This beautiful grove was sacred to the Eumenides, or avenging goddesses, and
+it was therefore a sanctuary where no foot might tread; but near it the exiled
+king was allowed to take up his abode, and was protected by the great Athenian
+King, Theseus. There his other daughter, Ismene, joined him, and, after a time,
+his elder son Polynices, arrived.</p>
+<p>Polynices had been expelled from Thebes by his brother Eteocles, and had been
+wandering through Greece seeking aid to recover his rights. He had collected an
+army, and was come to take leave of his father and sisters; and at the same time
+to entreat his sisters to take care that, if he should fall in the battle, they
+would prevent his corpse from being left unburied; for the Greeks believed that
+till the funeral rites were performed, the spirit went wandering restlessly up
+and down upon the banks of a dark stream, unable to enter the home of the dead.
+Antigone solemnly promised to him that he should not be left without these last
+rites. Before long, old Oedipus was killed by lightning, and the two sisters
+returned to Thebes.</p>
+<p>The united armies of the seven chiefs against Thebes came on, led by
+Polynices. Eteocles sallied out to meet them, and there was a terrible battle,
+ending in all the seven chiefs being slain, and the two brothers, Eteocles and
+Polynices, were killed by one another in single combat. Creon, the uncle, who
+thus became king, had always been on the side of Eteocles, and therefore
+commanded that whilst this younger brother was entombed with all due
+solemnities, the body of the elder should be left upon the battlefield to be
+torn by dogs and vultures, and that whosoever durst bury it should be treated as
+a rebel and a traitor to the state.</p>
+<p>This was the time for the sister to remember her oath to her dead brother.
+The more timid Ismene would have dissuaded her, but she answered,</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'To me no sufferings have that hideous form<br>
+Which can affright me from a glorious death'.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And she crept forth by night, amid all the horrors of the deserted field of
+battles, and herself covered with loose earth the corpse of Polynices. The
+barbarous uncle caused it to be taken up and again exposed, and a watch was set
+at some little distance. Again Antigone</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Was seen, lamenting shrill with plaintive notes,<br>
+Like the poor bird that sees her lonely nest<br>
+Spoil'd of her young'.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Again she heaped dry dust with her own hands over the body, and poured forth
+the libations of wine that formed an essential part of the ceremony. She was
+seized by the guard, and led before Creon. She boldly avowed her deed, and, in
+spite of the supplications of Ismene, she was put to death, a sufferer for her
+noble and pious deeds; and with this only comfort:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Glowing at my heart<br>
+I feel this hope, that to my father, dear<br>
+And dear to thee, my mother, dear to thee,<br>
+My brother, I shall go.'<br>
+POTTER.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Dim and beautiful indeed was the hope that upbore the grave and beautiful
+Theban maiden; and we shall see her resolution equaled, though hardly surpassed,
+by Christian Antigones of equal love and surer faith.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE CUP OF WATER</h3></center>
+
+<p>No touch in the history of the minstrel king David gives us a more warm and
+personal feeling towards him than his longing for the water of the well of
+Bethlehem. Standing as the incident does in the summary of the characters of his
+mighty men, it is apt to appear to us as if it had taken place in his latter
+days; but such is not the case, it befell while he was still under thirty, in
+the time of his persecution by Saul.</p>
+<p>It was when the last attempt at reconciliation with the king had been made,
+when the affectionate parting with the generous and faithful Jonathan had taken
+place, when Saul was hunting him like a partridge on the mountains on the one
+side, and the Philistines had nearly taken his life on the other, that David,
+outlawed, yet loyal at the heart, sent his aged parents to the land of Moab for
+refuge, and himself took up his abode in the caves of the wild limestone hills
+that had become familiar to him when he was a shepherd. Brave captain and
+Heaven-destined king as he was, his name attracted around him a motley group of
+those that were in distress, or in debt, or discontented, and among them were
+the 'mighty men' whose brave deeds won them the foremost parts in that army with
+which David was to fulfill the ancient promises to his people. There were his
+three nephews, Joab, the ferocious and imperious, the chivalrous Abishai, and
+Asahel the fleet of foot; there was the warlike Levite Benaiah, who slew lions
+and lionlike men, and others who, like David himself, had done battle with the
+gigantic sons of Anak. Yet even these valiant men, so wild and lawless, could be
+kept in check by the voice of their young captain; and, outlaws as they were,
+they spoiled no peaceful villages, they lifted not their hands against the
+persecuting monarch, and the neighboring farms lost not one lamb through their
+violence. Some at least listened to the song of their warlike minstrel:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Come, ye children, and hearken to me,<br>
+I will teach you the fear of the Lord.<br>
+What man is he that lusteth to live,<br>
+And would fain see good days?<br>
+Let him refrain his tongue from evil<br>
+And his lips that they speak no guile,<br>
+Let him eschew evil and do good,<br>
+Let him seek peace and ensue it.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>With such strains as these, sung to his harp, the warrior gained the hearts
+of his men to enthusiastic love, and gathered followers on all sides, among them
+eleven fierce men of Gad, with faces like lions and feet swift as roes, who swam
+the Jordan in time of flood, and fought their way to him, putting all enemies in
+the valleys to flight.</p>
+<p>But the Eastern sun burnt on the bare rocks. A huge fissure, opening in the
+mountain ridge, encumbered at the bottom with broken rocks, with precipitous
+banks, scarcely affording a foothold for the wild goats--such is the spot where,
+upon a cleft on the steep precipice, still remain the foundations of the 'hold',
+or tower, believed to have been the David's retreat, and near at hand is the
+low-browed entrance of the galleried cave alternating between narrow passages
+and spacious halls, but all oppressively hot and close. Waste and wild, without
+a bush or a tree, in the feverish atmosphere of Palestine, it was a desolate
+region, and at length the wanderer's heart fainted in him, as he thought of his
+own home, with its rich and lovely terraced slopes, green with wheat, trellised
+with vines, and clouded with grey olive, and of the cool cisterns of living
+water by the gate of which he loved to sing--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'He shall feed me in a green pasture,<br>
+And lead me forth beside the waters of comfort'.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>His parched longing lips gave utterance to the sigh, 'Oh that one would give
+me to drink of the water of the well of Bethlehem that is by the gate?'</p>
+<p>Three of his brave men, apparently Abishai, Benaiah, and Eleazar, heard the
+wish. Between their mountain fastness and the dearly loved spring lay the host
+of the Philistines; but their love for their leader feared no enemies. It was
+not only water that he longed for, but the water from the fountain which he had
+loved in his childhood. They descended from their chasm, broke through the midst
+of the enemy's army, and drew the water from the favorite spring, bearing it
+back, once again through the foe, to the tower upon the rock! Deeply moved was
+their chief at this act of self-devotion--so much moved that the water seemed to
+him to be too sacred to be put to his own use. 'May God forbid it me that I
+should do this thing. Shall I drink the blood of these men that have put their
+lives in jeopardy, for with the jeopardy of their lives they brought it?' And as
+a hallowed and precious gift, he poured out unto the Lord the water obtained at
+the price of such peril to his followers.</p>
+<p>In later times we meet with another hero, who by his personal qualities
+inspired something of the same enthusiastic attachment as did David, and who met
+with an adventure somewhat similar, showing the like nobleness of mind on the
+part of both leader and followers.</p>
+<p>It was Alexander of Macedon, whose character as a man, with all its dark
+shades of violence, rage, and profanity, has a nobleness and sweetness that win
+our hearts, while his greatness rests on a far broader basis than that of his
+conquests, though they are unrivalled. No one else so gained the love of the
+conquered, had such wide and comprehensive views for the amelioration of the
+world, or rose so superior to the prejudice of race; nor have any ten years left
+so lasting a trace upon the history of the world as those of his career.</p>
+<p>It is not, however, of his victories that we are here to speak, but of his
+return march from the banks of the Indus, in BC 326, when he had newly recovered
+from the severe wound which he had received under the fig tree, within the mud
+wall of the city of the Malli. This expedition was as much the expedition of a
+discoverer as the journey of a conqueror: and, at the mouth of the Indus, he
+sent his ships to survey the coasts of the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf, while
+he himself marched along the shore of the province, then called Gedrosia, and
+now Mekhran. It was a most dismal tract. Above towered mountains of
+reddish-brown bare stone, treeless and without verdure, the scanty grass
+produced in the summer being burnt up long before September, the month of his
+march; and all the slope below was equally desolate slopes of gravel. The few
+inhabitants were called by the Greeks fish-eaters and turtle-eaters, because
+there was apparently, nothing else to eat; and their huts were built of turtle
+shells.</p>
+<p>The recollections connected with the region were dismal. Semiramis and Cyrus
+were each said to have lost an army there through hunger and thirst; and these
+foes, the most fatal foes of the invader, began to attack the Greek host.
+Nothing but the discipline and all-pervading influence of Alexander could have
+borne his army through. Speed was their sole chance; and through the burning
+sun, over the arid rock, he stimulated their steps with his own high spirit of
+unshrinking endurance, till he had dragged them through one of the most rapid
+and extraordinary marches of his wonderful career. His own share in their
+privations was fully and freely taken; and once when, like the rest, he was
+faint with heat and deadly thirst, a small quantity of water, won with great
+fatigue and difficulty, was brought to him, he esteemed it too precious to be
+applied to his own refreshment, but poured it forth as a libation, lest, he
+said, his warriors should thirst the more when they saw him drink alone; and, no
+doubt, too, because he felt the exceeding value of that which was purchased by
+loyal love.</p>
+<p>A like story is told of Rodolf of Hapsburgh, the founder of the greatness of
+Austria, and one of the most open-hearted of men. A flagon of water was brought
+to him when his army was suffering from severe drought. 'I cannot,' he said,
+'drink alone, nor can all share so small a quantity. I do not thirst for myself,
+but for my whole army.'</p>
+<p>Yet there have been thirsty lips that have made a still more trying
+renunciation. Our own Sir Philip Sidney, riding back, with the mortal hurt in
+his broken thigh, from the fight at Zutphen, and giving the draught from his own
+lips to the dying man whose necessities were greater than his own, has long been
+our proverb for the giver of that self-denying cup of water that shall by no
+means lose its reward.</p>
+<p>A tradition of an act of somewhat the same character survived in a Slesvig
+family, now extinct. It was during the wars that ranged from 1652 to 1660,
+between Frederick III of Denmark and Charles Gustavus of Sweden, that, after a
+battle, in which the victory had remained with the Danes, a stout burgher of
+Flensborg was about to refresh himself, ere retiring to have his wounds dressed,
+with a draught of beer from a wooden bottle, when an imploring cry from a
+wounded Swede, lying on the field, made him turn, and, with the very words of
+Sidney, 'Thy need is greater than mine,' he knelt down by the fallen enemy, to
+pour the liquor into his mouth. His requital was a pistol shot in the shoulder
+from the treacherous Swede. 'Rascal,' he cried, 'I would have befriended you,
+and you would murder me in return! Now I will punish you. I would have given you
+the whole bottle; but now you shall have only half.' And drinking off half
+himself, he gave the rest to the Swede. The king, hearing the story, sent for
+the burgher, and asked him how he came to spare the life of such a rascal.</p>
+<p>'Sire,' said the honest burgher, 'I could never kill a wounded enemy.'</p>
+<p>'Thou meritest to be a noble,' the king said, and created him one
+immediately, giving him as armorial bearings a wooden bottle pierced with an
+arrow! The family only lately became extinct in the person of an old maiden
+lady.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>HOW ONE MAN HAS SAVED A HOST<br>
+B.C. 507</h3></center>
+
+<p>There have been times when the devotion of one man has been the saving of an
+army. Such, according to old Roman story, was the feat of Horatius Cocles. It
+was in the year B.C. 507, not long after the kings had been expelled from Rome,
+when they were endeavoring to return by the aid of the Etruscans. Lars Porsena,
+one of the great Etruscan chieftains, had taken up the cause of the banished
+Tarquinius Superbus and his son Sextus, and gathered all his forces together, to
+advance upon the city of Rome. The great walls, of old Etrurian architecture,
+had probably already risen round the growing town, and all the people came
+flocking in from the country for shelter there; but the Tiber was the best
+defense, and it was only crossed by one wooden bridge, and the farther side of
+that was guarded by a fort, called the Janiculum. But the vanguards of the
+overwhelming Etruscan army soon took the fort, and then, in the gallant words of
+Lord Macaulay's ballad,--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+'Thus in all the Senate<br>
+There was no heart so bold<br>
+But sore it ached, and fast it beat,<br>
+When that ill news was told.<br>
+Forthwith uprose the Consul,<br>
+Up rose the Fathers all,<br>
+In haste they girded up their gowns,<br>
+And hied them to the wall.<br>
+'They held a council standing<br>
+Before the River Gate:<br>
+Short time was there, ye well may guess,<br>
+For musing or debate.<br>
+Out spoke the Consul roundly,<br>
+'The bridge must straight go down,<br>
+For, since Janiculum is lost,<br>
+Nought else can save the town.'<br>
+'Just then a scout came flying,<br>
+All wild with haste and fear:<br>
+'To arms! To arms! Sir Consul,<br>
+Lars Porsena is here.'<br>
+On the low hills to westward<br>
+The Consul fixed his eye,<br>
+And saw the swarthy storm of dust<br>
+Rise fast along the sky.<br>
+. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br>
+'But the Consul's brow was sad,<br>
+And the Consul's speech was low,<br>
+And darkly looked he at the wall,<br>
+And darkly at the foe.<br>
+'Their van will be upon us<br>
+Before the bridge goes down;<br>
+And if they once may win the bridge<br>
+What hope to save the town?'<br>
+'Then out spoke brave Horatius,<br>
+The Captain of the Gate,<br>
+'To every man upon this earth<br>
+Death cometh soon or late;<br>
+And how can man die better<br>
+Than facing fearful odds,<br>
+For the ashes of his fathers,<br>
+And the temples of his gods?<br>
+'And for the tender mother<br>
+Who dandled him to rest,<br>
+And for the wife who nurses<br>
+His baby at her breast?<br>
+And for the holy maidens<br>
+Who feed the eternal flame,<br>
+To save them from false Sextus,<br>
+That wrought the deed of shame?<br>
+'Hew down the bridge, Sir Consul,<br>
+With all the speed ye may,<br>
+I, with two more to help me,<br>
+Will hold the foe in play.<br>
+In yon strait path a thousand<br>
+May well be stopp'd by three:<br>
+Now who will stand on either hand,<br>
+And keep the bridge with me?'<br>
+'Then out spake Spurius Lartius,<br>
+A Ramnian proud was he,<br>
+'Lo, I will stand at thy right hand,<br>
+And keep the bridge with thee.'<br>
+And out spake strong Herminius,<br>
+Of Titian blood was he,<br>
+'I will abide on thy left side,<br>
+And keep the bridge with thee.'<br>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>So forth went these three brave men, Horatius, the Consul's nephew, Spurius
+Lartius, and Titus Herminius, to guard the bridge at the farther end, while all
+the rest of the warriors were breaking down the timbers behind them.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+'And Fathers mixed with commons,<br>
+Seized hatchet, bar, and crow,<br>
+And smote upon the planks above,<br>
+And loosen'd them below.<br>
+'Meanwhile the Tuscan army,<br>
+Right glorious to behold,<br>
+Came flashing back the noonday light,<br>
+Rank behind rank, like surges bright,<br>
+Of a broad sea of gold.<br>
+Four hundred trumpets sounded<br>
+A peal of warlike glee,<br>
+As that great host, with measured tread,<br>
+And spears advanced, and ensigns spread,<br>
+Roll'd slowly towards the bridge's head,<br>
+Where stood the dauntless three.<br>
+'The three stood calm and silent,<br>
+And look'd upon the foes,<br>
+And a great shout of laughter<br>
+From all the vanguard rose.'<br>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>They laughed to see three men standing to meet the whole army; but it was so
+narrow a space, that no more than three enemies could attack them at once, and
+it was not easy to match them. Foe after foe came forth against them, and went
+down before their swords and spears, till at last--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Was none that would be foremost<br>
+To lead such dire attack;<br>
+But those behind cried 'Forward!'<br>
+And those before cried 'Back!'<br>
+. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>However, the supports of the bridge had been destroyed.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'But meanwhile axe and lever<br>
+Have manfully been plied,<br>
+And now the bridge hangs tottering<br>
+Above the boiling tide.<br>
+'Come back, come back, Horatius!'<br>
+Loud cried the Fathers all;<br>
+'Back, Lartius! Back, Herminius!<br>
+Back, ere the ruin fall!'<br>
+'Back darted Spurius Lartius,<br>
+Herminius darted back;<br>
+And as they passed, beneath their feet<br>
+They felt the timbers crack;<br>
+But when they turn'd their faces,<br>
+And on the farther shore<br>
+Saw brave Horatius stand alone,<br>
+They would have cross'd once more.<br>
+'But with a crash like thunder<br>
+Fell every loosen'd beam,<br>
+And, like a dam, the mighty wreck<br>
+Lay right athwart the stream;<br>
+And a long shout of triumph<br>
+Rose from the walls of Rome,<br>
+As to the highest turret-tops<br>
+Was splashed the yellow foam.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<p>The one last champion, behind a rampart of dead enemies, remained till the
+destruction was complete.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Alone stood brave Horatius,<br>
+But constant still in mind,<br>
+Thrice thirty thousand foes before<br>
+And the broad flood behind.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>A dart had put out one eye, he was wounded in the thigh, and his work was
+done. He turned round, and--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Saw on Palatinus,<br>
+The white porch of his home,<br>
+And he spake to the noble river<br>
+That rolls by the walls of Rome:<br>
+'O Tiber! father Tiber!<br>
+To whom the Romans pray,<br>
+A Roman's life, a Roman's arms<br>
+Take thou in charge this day.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And with this brief prayer he leapt into the foaming stream. Polybius was
+told that he was there drowned; but Livy gives the version which the ballad
+follows:--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'But fiercely ran the current,<br>
+Swollen high by months of rain,<br>
+And fast his blood was flowing,<br>
+And he was sore in pain,<br>
+And heavy with his armor,<br>
+And spent with changing blows,<br>
+And oft they thought him sinking,<br>
+But still again he rose.<br>
+'Never, I ween, did swimmer,<br>
+In such an evil case,<br>
+Struggle through such a raging flood<br>
+Safe to the landing place.<br>
+But his limbs were borne up bravely<br>
+By the brave heart within,<br>
+And our good father Tiber<br>
+Bare bravely up his chin.<br>
+. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br>
+'And now he feels the bottom,<br>
+Now on dry earth he stands,<br>
+Now round him throng the Fathers,<br>
+To press his gory hands.<br>
+And now with shouts and clapping,<br>
+And noise of weeping loud,<br>
+He enters through the River Gate,<br>
+Borne by the joyous crowd.<br>
+'They gave him of the corn land,<br>
+That was of public right,<br>
+As much as two strong oxen<br>
+Could plough from morn to night.<br>
+And they made a molten image,<br>
+And set it up on high,<br>
+And there it stands unto this day,<br>
+To witness if I lie.<br>
+'It stands in the Comitium,<br>
+Plain for all folk to see,<br>
+Horatius in his harness,<br>
+Halting upon his knee:<br>
+And underneath is written,<br>
+In letters all of gold,<br>
+How valiantly he kept the bridge<br>
+In the brave days of old.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Never was more honorable surname than his, of Cocles, or the one-eyed; and
+though his lameness prevented him from ever being a Consul, or leading an army,
+he was so much beloved and honored by his fellow citizens, that in the time of a
+famine each Roman, to the number of 300,000, brought him a day's food, lest he
+should suffer want. The statue was shown even in the time of Pliny, 600 years
+afterwards, and was probably only destroyed when Rome was sacked by the
+barbarians.</p>
+<p>Nor was the Roman bridge the only one that has been defended by one man
+against a host. In our own country, Stamford Bridge was, in like manner, guarded
+by a single brave Northman, after the battle fought A.D. 1066, when Earl Tostig,
+the son of Godwin, had persuaded the gallant sea king, Harald Hardrada, to come
+and invade England. The chosen English king, Harold, had marched at full speed
+from Sussex to Yorkshire, and met the invaders marching at their ease, without
+expecting any enemy, and wearing no defensive armor, as they went forth to
+receive the keys of the city of York. The battle was fought by the Norsemen in
+the full certainty that it must be lost. The banner, 'Landwaster', was planted
+in the midst; and the king, chanting his last song, like the minstrel warrior he
+had always been, stood, with his bravest men, in a death ring around it. There
+he died, and his choicest warriors with him; but many more fled back towards the
+ships, rushing over the few planks that were the only way across the River Ouse.
+And here stood their defender, alone upon the bridge, keeping back the whole
+pursuing English army, who could only attack him one at a time; until, with
+shame be it spoken, he died by a cowardly blow by an enemy, who had crept down
+the bank of the river, and under the bridge, through the openings between the
+timbers of which he thrust up his spear, and thus was able to hurl the brave
+Northman into the river, mortally wounded, but not till great numbers of his
+countrymen had reached their ships, their lives saved by his gallantry.</p>
+<p>In like manner, Robert Bruce, in the time of his wanderings, during the year
+1306, saved his whole band by his sole exertions. He had been defeated by the
+forces of Edward I. at Methven, and had lost many of his friends. His little
+army went wandering among the hills, sometimes encamping in the woods, sometimes
+crossing the lakes in small boats. Many ladies were among them, and their summer
+life had some wild charms of romance; as the knightly huntsmen brought in the
+salmon, the roe, and the deer that formed their food, and the ladies gathered
+the flowering heather, over which soft skins were laid for their bedding. Sir
+James Douglas was the most courtly and graceful knight of all the party, and
+ever kept them enlivened by his gay temper and ready wit; and the king himself
+cherished a few precious romances, which he used to read aloud to his followers
+as they rested in their mountain home.</p>
+<p>But their bitter foe, the Lord of Lorn, was always in pursuit of them, and,
+near the head of the Tay, he came upon the small army of 300 men with 1000
+Highlanders, armed with Lochaber axes, at a place which is still called Dalry,
+or the King's Field. Many of the horses were killed by the axes; and James
+Douglas and Gilbert de la Haye were both wounded. All would have been slain or
+fallen into the hand of the enemy, if Robert Bruce had not sent them all on
+before him, up a narrow, steep path, and placed himself, with his armor and
+heavy horse, full in the path, protecting the retreat with his single arm. It
+was true, that so tall and powerful a man, sheathed in armor and on horseback,
+had a great advantage against the wild Highlanders, who only wore a shirt and a
+plaid, with a round target upon the arm; but they were lithe, active,
+light-footed men, able to climb like goats on the crags around him, and holding
+their lives as cheaply as he did.</p>
+<p>Lorn, watching him from a distance, was struck with amazement, and exclaimed,
+'Methinks, Marthokson, he resembles Gol Mak Morn protecting his followers from
+Fingal;' thus comparing him to one the most brilliant champions a Highland
+imagination could conceive. At last, three men, named M'Androsser, rushed
+forward, resolved to free their chief from this formidable enemy. There was a
+lake on one side, and a precipice on the other, and the king had hardly space to
+manage his horse, when all three sprang on him at once. One snatched his bridle,
+one caught him by the stirrup and leg, and a third leaped from a rising ground
+and seated himself behind him on his horse. The first lost his arm by one sweep
+of the king's sword; the second was overthrown and trampled on; and the last, by
+a desperate struggle, was dashed down, and his skull cleft by the king's sword;
+but his dying grasp was so tight upon the plaid that Bruce was forced to unclasp
+the brooch that secured it, and leave both in the dead man's hold. It was long
+preserved by the Macdougals of Lorn, as a trophy of the narrow escape of their
+enemy.</p>
+<p>Nor must we leave Robert the Bruce without mentioning that other Golden Deed,
+more truly noble because more full of mercy; namely, his halting his little army
+in full retreat in Ireland in the face of the English host under Roger Mortimer,
+that proper care and attendance might be given to one sick and suffering
+washerwoman and her new-born babe. Well may his old Scotch rhyming chronicler
+remark:--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'This was a full great courtesy<br>
+That swilk a king and so mighty,<br>
+Gert his men dwell on this manner,<br>
+But for a poor lavender.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>We have seen how the sturdy Roman fought for his city, the fierce Northman
+died to guard his comrades' rush to their ships after the lost battle, and how
+the mail-clad knightly Bruce periled himself to secure the retreat of his
+friends. Here is one more instance, from far more modern times, of a soldier,
+whose willing sacrifice of his own life was the safety of a whole army. It was
+in the course of the long dismal conflict between Frederick the Great of Prussia
+and Maria Theresa of Austria, which was called the Seven Years' War. Louis XV.
+of France had taken the part of Austria, and had sent an army into Germany in
+the autumn of 1760. From this the Marquis de Castries had been dispatched, with
+25,000 men, towards Rheinberg, and had taken up a strong position at
+Klostercamp. On the night of the 15th of October, a young officer, called the
+Chevalier d'Assas, of the Auvergne regiment, was sent out to reconnoitre, and
+advanced alone into a wood, at some little distance from his men. Suddenly he
+found himself surrounded by a number of soldiers, whose bayonets pricked his
+breast, and a voice whispered in his ear, 'Make the slightest noise, and you are
+a dead man!' In one moment he understood it all. The enemy were advancing, to
+surprise the French army, and would be upon them when night was further
+advanced. That moment decided his fate. He shouted, as loud as his voice would
+carry the words, 'Here, Auvergne! Here are the enemy!' By the time the cry
+reached the ears of his men, their captain was a senseless corpse; but his death
+had saved the army; the surprise had failed, and the enemy retreated.</p>
+<p>Louis XV was too mean-spirited and selfish to feel the beauty of this brave
+action; but when, fourteen years later, Louis XVI came to the throne, he decreed
+that a pension should be given to the family as long as a male representative
+remained to bear the name of D'Assas. Poor Louis XVI had not long the control of
+the treasure of France; but a century of changes, wars, and revolutions has not
+blotted out the memory of the self-devotion of the chevalier; for, among the new
+war-steamers of the French fleet, there is one that bears the ever-honored name
+of D'Assas.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE PASS OF THERMOPYLAE<br>
+B.C. 430</h3></center>
+
+<p>There was trembling in Greece. 'The Great King', as the Greeks called the
+chief potentate of the East, whose domains stretched from the Indian Caucasus to
+the Aegaeus, from the Caspian to the Red Sea, was marshalling his forces against
+the little free states that nestled amid the rocks and gulfs of the Eastern
+Mediterranean. Already had his might devoured the cherished colonies of the
+Greeks on the eastern shore of the Archipelago, and every traitor to home
+institutions found a ready asylum at that despotic court, and tried to revenge
+his own wrongs by whispering incitements to invasion. 'All people, nations, and
+languages,' was the commencement of the decrees of that monarch's court; and it
+was scarcely a vain boast, for his satraps ruled over subject kingdoms, and
+among his tributary nations he counted the Chaldean, with his learning and old
+civilization, the wise and steadfast Jew, the skilful Phoenician, the learned
+Egyptian, the wild, free-booting Arab of the desert, the dark-skinned Ethiopian,
+and over all these ruled the keen-witted, active native Persian race, the
+conquerors of all the rest, and led by a chosen band proudly called the
+Immortal. His many capitals--Babylon the great, Susa, Persepolis, and the
+like--were names of dreamy splendor to the Greeks, described now and then by
+Ionians from Asia Minor who had carried their tribute to the king's own feet, or
+by courtier slaves who had escaped with difficulty from being all too
+serviceable at the tyrannic court. And the lord of this enormous empire was
+about to launch his countless host against the little cluster of states, the
+whole of which together would hardly equal one province of the huge Asiatic
+realm! Moreover, it was a war not only on the men but on their gods. The
+Persians were zealous adorers of the sun and of fire, they abhorred the idol
+worship of the Greeks, and defiled and plundered every temple that fell in their
+way. Death and desolation were almost the best that could be looked for at such
+hands--slavery and torture from cruelly barbarous masters would only too surely
+be the lot of numbers, should their land fall a prey to the conquerors.</p>
+<p>True it was that ten years back the former Great King had sent his best
+troops to be signally defeated upon the coast of Attica; but the losses at
+Marathon had but stimulated the Persian lust of conquest, and the new King
+Xerxes was gathering together such myriads of men as should crush down the
+Greeks and overrun their country by mere force of numbers.</p>
+<p>The muster place was at Sardis, and there Greek spies had seen the multitudes
+assembling and the state and magnificence of the king's attendants. Envoys had
+come from him to demand earth and water from each state in Greece, as emblems
+that land and sea were his, but each state was resolved to be free, and only
+Thessaly, that which lay first in his path, consented to yield the token of
+subjugation. A council was held at the Isthmus of Corinth, and attended by
+deputies from all the states of Greece to consider of the best means of defense.
+The ships of the enemy would coast round the shores of the Aegean sea, the land
+army would cross the Hellespont on a bridge of boats lashed together, and march
+southwards into Greece. The only hope of averting the danger lay in defending
+such passages as, from the nature of the ground, were so narrow that only a few
+persons could fight hand to hand at once, so that courage would be of more avail
+than numbers.</p>
+<p>The first of all these passes was called Tempe, and a body of troops was sent
+to guard it; but they found that this was useless and impossible, and came back
+again. The next was at Thermopylae. Look in your map of the Archipelago, or
+Aegean Sea, as it was then called, for the great island of Negropont, or by its
+old name, Euboea. It looks like a piece broken off from the coast, and to the
+north is shaped like the head of a bird, with the beak running into a gulf, that
+would fit over it, upon the main land, and between the island and the coast is
+an exceedingly narrow strait. The Persian army would have to march round the
+edge of the gulf. They could not cut straight across the country, because the
+ridge of mountains called Ceta rose up and barred their way. Indeed, the woods,
+rocks, and precipices came down so near the seashore, that in two places there
+was only room for one single wheel track between the steeps and the impassable
+morass that formed the border of the gulf on its south side. These two very
+narrow places were called the gates of the pass, and were about a mile apart.
+There was a little more width left in the intervening space; but in this there
+were a number of springs of warm mineral water, salt and sulphurous, which were
+used for the sick to bathe in, and thus the place was called Thermopylae, or the
+Hot Gates. A wall had once been built across the western-most of these narrow
+places, when the Thessalians and Phocians, who lived on either side of it, had
+been at war with one another; but it had been allowed to go to decay, since the
+Phocians had found out that there was a very steep narrow mountain path along
+the bed of a torrent, by which it was possible to cross from one territory to
+the other without going round this marshy coast road.</p>
+<p>This was, therefore, an excellent place to defend. The Greek ships were all
+drawn up on the farther side of Euboea to prevent the Persian vessels from
+getting into the strait and landing men beyond the pass, and a division of the
+army was sent off to guard the Hot Gates. The council at the Isthmus did not
+know of the mountain pathway, and thought that all would be safe as long as the
+Persians were kept out of the coast path.</p>
+<p>The troops sent for this purpose were from different cities, and amounted to
+about 4,000, who were to keep the pass against two millions. The leader of them
+was Leonidas, who had newly become one of the two kings of Sparta, the city that
+above all in Greece trained its sons to be hardy soldiers, dreading death
+infinitely less than shame. Leonidas had already made up his mind that the
+expedition would probably be his death, perhaps because a prophecy had been
+given at the Temple of Delphi that Sparta should be saved by the death of one of
+her kings of the race of Hercules. He was allowed by law to take with him 300
+men, and these he chose most carefully, not merely for their strength and
+courage, but selecting those who had sons, so that no family might be altogether
+destroyed. These Spartans, with their helots or slaves, made up his own share of
+the numbers, but all the army was under his generalship. It is even said that
+the 300 celebrated their own funeral rites before they set out, lest they should
+be deprived of them by the enemy, since, as we have already seen, it was the
+Greek belief that the spirits of the dead found no rest till their obsequies had
+been performed. Such preparations did not daunt the spirits of Leonidas and his
+men, and his wife, Gorgo, who was not a woman to be faint-hearted or hold him
+back. Long before, when she was a very little girl, a word of hers had saved her
+father from listening to a traitorous message from the King of Persia; and every
+Spartan lady was bred up to be able to say to those she best loved that they
+must come home from battle 'with the shield or on it'--either carrying it
+victoriously or borne upon it as a corpse.</p>
+<p>When Leonidas came to Thermopylae, the Phocians told him of the mountain path
+through the chestnut woods of Mount Ceta, and begged to have the privilege of
+guarding it on a spot high up on the mountain side, assuring him that it was
+very hard to find at the other end, and that there was every probability that
+the enemy would never discover it. He consented, and encamping around the warm
+springs, caused the broken wall to be repaired, and made ready to meet the foe.</p>
+<p>The Persian army were seen covering the whole country like locusts, and the
+hearts of some of the southern Greeks in the pass began to sink. Their homes in
+the Peloponnesus were comparatively secure--had they not better fall back and
+reserve themselves to defend the Isthmus of Corinth? But Leonidas, though Sparta
+was safe below the Isthmus, had no intention of abandoning his northern allies,
+and kept the other Peloponnesians to their posts, only sending messengers for
+further help.</p>
+<p>Presently a Persian on horseback rode up to reconnoitre the pass. He could
+not see over the wall, but in front of it, and on the ramparts, he saw the
+Spartans, some of them engaged in active sports, and others in combing their
+long hair. He rode back to the king, and told him what he had seen. Now, Xerxes
+had in his camp an exiled Spartan Prince, named Demaratus, who had become a
+traitor to his country, and was serving as counsellor to the enemy. Xerxes sent
+for him, and asked whether his countrymen were mad to be thus employed instead
+of fleeing away; but Demaratus made answer that a hard fight was no doubt in
+preparation, and that it was the custom of the Spartans to array their hair with
+special care when they were about to enter upon any great peril. Xerxes would,
+however, not believe that so petty a force could intend to resist him, and
+waited four days, probably expecting his fleet to assist him, but as it did not
+appear, the attack was made.</p>
+<p>The Greeks, stronger men and more heavily armed, were far better able to
+fight to advantage than the Persians, with their short spears and wicker
+shields, and beat them off with great ease. It is said that Xerxes three times
+leapt off his throne in despair at the sight of his troops being driven
+backwards; and thus for two days it seemed as easy to force a way through the
+Spartans as through the rocks themselves. Nay, how could slavish troops, dragged
+from home to spread the victories of an ambitious king, fight like freemen who
+felt that their strokes were to defend their homes and children!</p>
+<p>But on that evening a wretched man, named Ephialtes, crept into the Persian
+camp, and offered, for a great sum of money, to show the mountain path that
+would enable the enemy to take the brave defenders in the rear! A Persian
+general, named Hydarnes, was sent off at nightfall with a detachment to secure
+this passage, and was guided through the thick forests that clothed the
+hillside. In the stillness of the air, at daybreak, the Phocian guards of the
+path were startled by the crackling of the chestnut leaves under the tread of
+many feet. They started up, but a shower of arrows was discharged on them, and
+forgetting all save the present alarm, they fled to a higher part of the
+mountain, and the enemy, without waiting to pursue them, began to descend.</p>
+<p>As day dawned, morning light showed the watchers of the Grecian camp below a
+glittering and shimmering in the torrent bed where the shaggy forests opened;
+but it was not the sparkle of water, but the shine of gilded helmets and the
+gleaming of silvered spears! Moreover, a Cimmerian crept over to the wall from
+the Persian camp with tidings that the path had been betrayed, that the enemy
+were climbing it, and would come down beyond the Eastern Gate. Still, the way
+was rugged and circuitous, the Persians would hardly descend before midday, and
+there was ample time for the Greeks to escape before they could be shut in by
+the enemy.</p>
+<p>There was a short council held over the morning sacrifice. Megistias, the
+seer, on inspecting the entrails of the slain victim, declared, as well he
+might, that their appearance boded disaster. Him Leonidas ordered to retire, but
+he refused, though he sent home his only son. There was no disgrace to an
+ordinary tone of mind in leaving a post that could not be held, and Leonidas
+recommended all the allied troops under his command to march away while yet the
+way was open. As to himself and his Spartans, they had made up their minds to
+die at their post, and there could be no doubt that the example of such a
+resolution would do more to save Greece than their best efforts could ever do if
+they were careful to reserve themselves for another occasion.</p>
+<p>All the allies consented to retreat, except the eighty men who came from
+Mycenae and the 700 Thespians, who declared that they would not desert Leonidas.
+There were also 400 Thebans who remained; and thus the whole number that stayed
+with Leonidas to confront two million of enemies were fourteen hundred warriors,
+besides the helots or attendants on the 300 Spartans, whose number is not known,
+but there was probably at least one to each. Leonidas had two kinsmen in the
+camp, like himself, claiming the blood of Hercules, and he tried to save them by
+giving them letters and messages to Sparta; but one answered that 'he had come
+to fight, not to carry letters'; and the other, that 'his deeds would tell all
+that Sparta wished to know'. Another Spartan, named Dienices, when told that the
+enemy's archers were so numerous that their arrows darkened the sun, replied,
+'So much the better, we shall fight in the shade.' Two of the 300 had been sent
+to a neighboring village, suffering severely from a complaint in the eyes. One
+of them, called Eurytus, put on his armor, and commanded his helot to lead him
+to his place in the ranks; the other, called Aristodemus, was so overpowered
+with illness that he allowed himself to be carried away with the retreating
+allies. It was still early in the day when all were gone, and Leonidas gave the
+word to his men to take their last meal. 'To-night,' he said, 'we shall sup with
+Pluto.'</p>
+<p>Hitherto, he had stood on the defensive, and had husbanded the lives of his
+men; but he now desired to make as great a slaughter as possible, so as to
+inspire the enemy with dread of the Grecian name. He therefore marched out
+beyond the wall, without waiting to be attacked, and the battle began. The
+Persian captains went behind their wretched troops and scourged them on to the
+fight with whips! Poor wretches, they were driven on to be slaughtered, pierced
+with the Greek spears, hurled into the sea, or trampled into the mud of the
+morass; but their inexhaustible numbers told at length. The spears of the Greeks
+broke under hard service, and their swords alone remained; they began to fall,
+and Leonidas himself was among the first of the slain. Hotter than ever was the
+fight over his corpse, and two Persian princes, brothers of Xerxes, were there
+killed; but at length word was brought that Hydarnes was over the pass, and that
+the few remaining men were thus enclosed on all sides. The Spartans and
+Thespians made their way to a little hillock within the wall, resolved to let
+this be the place of their last stand; but the hearts of the Thebans failed
+them, and they came towards the Persians holding out their hands in entreaty for
+mercy. Quarter was given to them, but they were all branded with the king's mark
+as untrustworthy deserters. The helots probably at this time escaped into the
+mountains; while the small desperate band stood side by side on the hill still
+fighting to the last, some with swords, others with daggers, others even with
+their hands and teeth, till not one living man remained amongst them when the
+sun went down. There was only a mound of slain, bristled over with arrows.</p>
+<p>Twenty thousand Persians had died before that handful of men! Xerxes asked
+Demaratus if there were many more at Sparta like these, and was told there were
+8,000. It must have been with a somewhat failing heart that he invited his
+courtiers from the fleet to see what he had done to the men who dared to oppose
+him! and showed them the head and arm of Leonidas set up upon a cross; but he
+took care that all his own slain, except 1,000, should first be put out of
+sight. The body of the brave king was buried where he fell, as were those of the
+other dead. Much envied were they by the unhappy Aristodemus, who found himself
+called by no name but the 'Coward', and was shunned by all his fellow-citizens.
+No one would give him fire or water, and after a year of misery, he redeemed his
+honor by perishing in the forefront of the battle of Plataea, which was the last
+blow that drove the Persians ingloriously from Greece.</p>
+<p>The Greeks then united in doing honor to the brave warriors who, had they
+been better supported, might have saved the whole country from invasion. The
+poet Simonides wrote the inscriptions that were engraved upon the pillars that
+were set up in the pass to commemorate this great action. One was outside the
+wall, where most of the fighting had been. It seems to have been in honor of the
+whole number who had for two days resisted--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Here did four thousand men from Pelops' land<br>
+Against three hundred myriads bravely stand'.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In honor of the Spartans was another column--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Go, traveler, to Sparta tell<br>
+That here, obeying her, we fell'.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>On the little hillock of the last resistance was placed the figure of a stone
+lion, in memory of Leonidas, so fitly named the lion-like, and Simonides, at his
+own expense, erected a pillar to his friend, the seer Megistias--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'The great Megistias' tomb you here may view,<br>
+Who slew the Medes, fresh from Spercheius fords;<br>
+Well the wise seer the coming death foreknew,<br>
+Yet scorn'd he to forsake his Spartan lords'.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The names of the 300 were likewise engraven on a pillar at Sparta.</p>
+<p>Lions, pillars, and inscriptions have all long since passed away, even the
+very spot itself has changed; new soil has been formed, and there are miles of
+solid ground between Mount Ceta and the gulf, so that the Hot Gates no longer
+exist. But more enduring than stone or brass--nay, than the very battlefield
+itself--has been the name of Leonidas. Two thousand three hundred years have
+sped since he braced himself to perish for his country's sake in that narrow,
+marshy coast road, under the brow of the wooded crags, with the sea by his side.
+Since that time how many hearts have glowed, how many arms have been nerved at
+the remembrance of the Pass of Thermopylae, and the defeat that was worth so
+much more than a victory!</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE ROCK OF THE CAPITOL<br>
+B.C. 389</h3></center>
+
+<p>The city of Rome was gradually rising on the banks of the Tiber, and every
+year was adding to its temples and public buildings.</p>
+<p>Every citizen loved his city and her greatness above all else. There was as
+yet little wealth among them; the richest owned little more than a few acres,
+which they cultivated themselves by the help of their families, and sometimes of
+a few slaves, and the beautiful Campagna di Roma, girt in by hills looking like
+amethysts in the distance, had not then become almost uninhabitable from
+pestilential air, but was rich and fertile, full of highly cultivated small
+farms, where corn was raised in furrows made by a small hand plough, and herds
+of sheep, goats, and oxen browsed in the pasture lands. The owners of these
+lands would on public days take off their rude working dress and broad-brimmed
+straw hat, and putting on the white toga with a purple hem, would enter the
+city, and go to the valley called the Forum or Marketplace to give their votes
+for the officers of state who were elected every year; especially the two
+consuls, who were like kings all but the crown, wore purple togas richly
+embroidered, sat on ivory chairs, and were followed by lictors carrying an axe
+in a bundle of rods for the execution of justice. In their own chamber sat the
+Senate, the great council composed of the patricians, or citizens of highest
+birth, and of those who had formerly been consuls. They decided on peace or war,
+and made the laws, and were the real governors of the State, and their grave
+dignity made a great impression on all who came near them. Above the buildings
+of the city rose steep and high the Capitoline Hill, with the Temple of Jupiter
+on its summit, and the strong wall in which was the chief stronghold and citadel
+of Rome, the Capitol, the very centre of her strength and resolution. When a war
+was decided on, every citizen capable of bearing arms was called into the Forum,
+bringing his helmet, breast plate, short sword, and heavy spear, and the
+officers called tribunes, chose out a sufficient number, who were formed into
+bodies called legions, and marched to battle under the command of one of the
+consuls. Many little States or Italian tribes, who had nearly the same customs
+as Rome, surrounded the Campagna, and so many disputes arose that every year, as
+soon as the crops were saved, the armies marched out, the flocks were driven to
+folds on the hills, the women and children were placed in the walled cities, and
+a battle was fought, sometimes followed up by the siege of the city of the
+defeated. The Romans did not always obtain the victory, but there was a
+staunchness about them that was sure to prevail in the long run; if beaten one
+year, they came back to the charge the next, and thus they gradually mastered
+one of their neighbors after another, and spread their dominion over the central
+part of Italy.</p>
+<p>They were well used to Italian and Etruscan ways of making war, but after
+nearly 400 years of this kind of fighting, a stranger and wilder enemy came upon
+them. These were the Gauls, a tall strong, brave people, long limbed and
+red-haired, of the same race as the highlanders of Scotland. They had gradually
+spread themselves over the middle of Europe, and had for some generations past
+lived among the Alpine mountains, whence they used to come down upon the rich
+plans of northern Italy for forays, in which they slew and burnt, and drove off
+cattle, and now and then, when a country was quite depopulated, would settle
+themselves in it. And thus, the Gauls conquering from the north and the Romans
+from the south, these two fierce nations at length came against one another.</p>
+<p>The old Roman story is that it happened thus: The Gauls had an unusually able
+leader, whom Latin historians call Brennus, but whose real name was most likely
+Bran, and who is said to have come out of Britain. He had brought a great host
+of Gauls to attack Clusium, a Tuscan city, and the inhabitants sent to Rome to
+entreat succor. Three ambassadors, brothers of the noble old family of Fabius,
+were sent from Rome to intercede for the Clusians. They asked Brennus what harm
+the men of Clusium had done the Gauls, that they thus made war on them, and,
+according to Plutarch's account, Brennus made answer that the injury was that
+the Clusians possessed land that the Gauls wanted, remarking that it was exactly
+the way in which the Romans themselves treated their neighbors, adding, however,
+that this was neither cruel nor unjust, but according--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'To the good old plan<br>
+That they should take who have the power<br>
+And they should keep who can.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>[Footnote: These lines of Wordsworth on Rob Roy's grave almost literally
+translate the speech Plutarch gives the first Kelt of history, Brennus.]</p>
+<p>The Fabii, on receiving this answer, were so foolish as to transgress the
+rule, owned by the savage Gauls, that an ambassador should neither fight nor be
+fought with; they joined the Clusians, and one brother, named Quintus, killed a
+remarkably large and tall Gallic chief in single combat. Brennus was justly
+enraged, and sent messengers to Rome to demand that the brothers should be given
+up to him for punishment. The priests and many of the Senate held that the rash
+young men had deserved death as covenant-breakers; but their father made strong
+interest for them, and prevailed not only to have them spared, but even chosen
+as tribunes to lead the legions in the war that was expected. [Footnote: These
+events happened during an experiment made by the Romans of having six military
+tribunes instead of two consuls.] Thus he persuaded the whole nation to take on
+itself the guilt of his sons, a want of true self-devotion uncommon among the
+old Romans, and which was severely punished.</p>
+<p>The Gauls were much enraged, and hurried southwards, not waiting for plunder
+by the way, but declaring that they were friends to every State save Rome. The
+Romans on their side collected their troops in haste, but with a lurking sense
+of having transgressed; and since they had gainsaid the counsel of their
+priests, they durst not have recourse to the sacrifices and ceremonies by which
+they usually sought to gain the favor of their gods. Even among heathens, the
+saying has often been verified, 'a sinful heart makes failing hand', and the
+battle on the banks of the River Allia, about eleven miles from Rome, was not so
+much a fight as a rout. The Roman soldiers were ill drawn up, and were at once
+broken. Some fled to Veii and other towns, many were drowned in crossing the
+Tiber, and it was but a few who showed in Rome their shame-stricken faces, and
+brought word that the Gauls were upon them.</p>
+<p>Had the Gauls been really in pursuit, the Roman name and nation would have
+perished under their swords; but they spent three day in feasting and sharing
+their plunder, and thus gave the Romans time to take measures for the safety of
+such as could yet escape. There seems to have been no notion of defending the
+city, the soldiers had been too much dispersed; but all who still remained and
+could call up something of their ordinary courage, carried all the provisions
+they could collect into the stronghold of the Capitol, and resolved to hold out
+there till the last, in hopes that the scattered army might muster again, or
+that the Gauls might retreat, after having revenged themselves on the city.
+Everyone who could not fight, took flight, taking with them all they could
+carry, and among them went the white-clad troop of vestal virgins, carrying with
+them their censer of fire, which was esteemed sacred, and never allowed to be
+extinguished. A man named Albinus, who saw these sacred women footsore, weary,
+and weighted down with the treasures of their temple, removed his own family and
+goods from his cart and seated them in it--an act of reverence for which he was
+much esteemed--and thus they reached the city of Cumae. The only persons left in
+Rome outside the Capitol were eighty of the oldest senators and some of the
+priests. Some were too feeble to fly, and would not come into the Capitol to
+consume the food that might maintain fighting men; but most of them were filled
+with a deep, solemn thought that, by offering themselves to the weapons of the
+barbarians, they might atone for the sin sanctioned by the Republic, and that
+their death might be the saving of the nation. This notion that the death of a
+ruler would expiate a country's guilt was one of the strange presages abroad in
+the heathen world of that which alone takes away the sin of all mankind.</p>
+<p>On came the Gauls at last. The gates stood open, the streets were silent, the
+houses' low-browed doors showed no one in the paved courts. No living man was to
+be seen, till at last, hurrying down the steep empty streets, they reached the
+great open space of the Forum, and there they stood still in amazement, for
+ranged along a gallery were a row of ivory chairs, and in each chair sat the
+figure of a white-haired, white-bearded man, with arms and legs bare, and robes
+either of snowy white, white bordered with purple, or purple richly embroidered,
+ivory staves in their hands, and majestic, unmoved countenances. So motionless
+were they, that the Gauls stood still, not knowing whether they beheld men or
+statues. A wondrous scene it must have been, as the brawny, red-haired Gauls,
+with freckled visage, keen little eyes, long broad sword, and wide plaid
+garment, fashioned into loose trousers, came curiously down into the
+marketplace, one after another; and each stood silent and transfixed at the
+spectacle of those grand figures, still unmoving, save that their large full
+liquid dark eyes showed them to be living beings. Surely these Gauls deemed
+themselves in the presence of that council of kings who were sometimes supposed
+to govern Rome, nay, if they were not before the gods themselves. At last, one
+Gaul, ruder, or more curious than the rest, came up to one of the venerable
+figures, and, to make proof whether he were flesh and blood, stroked his beard.
+Such an insult from an uncouth barbarian was more than Roman blood could brook,
+and the Gaul soon had his doubt satisfied by a sharp blow on the head from the
+ivory staff. All reverence was dispelled by that stroke; it was at once returned
+by a death thrust, and the fury of the savages wakening in proportion to the awe
+that had at first struck them, they rushed on the old senators, and slew each
+one in his curule chair.</p>
+<p>Then they dispersed through the city, burning, plundering, and destroying. To
+take the Capitol they soon found to be beyond their power, but they hoped to
+starve the defenders out; and in the meantime they spent their time in pulling
+down the outer walls, and such houses and temples as had resisted the fire, till
+the defenders of the Capitol looked down from their height on nothing but
+desolate black burnt ground, with a few heaps of ruins in the midst, and the
+barbarians roaming about in it, and driving in the cattle that their foraging
+parties collected from the country round. There was much earnest faith in their
+own religion among the Romans: they took all this ruin as the just reward of
+their shelter of the Fabii, and even in their extremity were resolved not to
+transgress any sacred rule. Though food daily became more scarce and starvation
+was fast approaching, not one of the sacred geese that were kept in Juno's
+Temple was touched; and one Fabius Dorso, who believed that the household gods
+of his family required yearly a sacrifice on their own festival day on the
+Quirinal Hill, arrayed himself in the white robes of a sacrificer, took his
+sacred images in his arms, and went out of the Capitol, through the midst of the
+enemy, through the ruins to the accustomed alter, and there preformed the
+regular rites. The Gauls, seeing that it was a religious ceremony, let him pass
+through them untouched, and he returned in safety; but Brennus was resolved on
+completing his conquest, and while half his forces went out to plunder, he
+remained with the other half, watching the moment to effect an entrance into the
+Capitol; and how were the defenders, worn out with hunger, to resist without
+relief from without? And who was there to bring relief to them, who were
+themselves the Roman State and government?</p>
+<p>Now there was a citizen, named Marcus Furius Camillus, who was, without
+question, at that time, the first soldier of Rome, and had taken several of the
+chief Italian cities, especially that of Veii, which had long been a most
+dangerous enemy. But he was a proud, haughty man, and had brought on himself
+much dislike; until, at last, a false accusation was brought against him, that
+he had taken an unfair share of the plunder of Veii. He was too proud to stand a
+trial; and leaving the city, was immediately fined a considerable sum. He had
+taken up his abode at the city of Ardea, and was there living when the
+plundering half of Brennus' army was reported to be coming thither. Camillus
+immediately offered the magistrates to undertake their defense; and getting
+together all the men who could bear arms, he led them out, fell upon the Gauls
+as they all lay asleep and unguarded in the dead of night, made a great
+slaughter of them, and saved Ardea. All this was heard by the many Romans who
+had been living dispersed since the rout of Allia; and they began to recover
+heart and spirit, and to think that if Camillus would be their leader, they
+might yet do something to redeem the honor of Rome, and save their friends in
+the Capitol. An entreaty was sent to him to take the command of them; but, like
+a proud, stern man as he was, he made answer, that he was a mere exile, and
+could not take upon himself to lead Romans without a decree from the Senate
+giving him authority. The Senate was--all that remained of it--shut up in the
+Capitol; the Gauls were spread all round; how was that decree to be obtained?</p>
+<p>A young man, named Pontius Cominius, undertook the desperate mission. He put
+on a peasant dress, and hid some corks under it, supposing that he should find
+no passage by the bridge over the Tiber. Traveling all day on foot, he came at
+night to the bank, and saw the guard at the bridge; then, having waited for
+darkness, he rolled his one thin light garment, with the corks wrapped up in it,
+round his head, and trusted himself to the stream of Father Tiber, like 'good
+Horatius' before him; and he was safely borne along to the foot of the
+Capitoline Hill. He crept along, avoiding every place where he saw lights or
+heard noise, till he came to a rugged precipice, which he suspected would not be
+watched by the enemy, who would suppose it too steep to be climbed from above or
+below. But the resolute man did not fear the giddy dangerous ascent, even in the
+darkness; he swung himself up by the stems and boughs of the vines and climbing
+plants, his naked feet clung to the rocks and tufts of grass, and at length he
+stood on the top of the rampart, calling out his name to the soldiers who came
+in haste around him, not knowing whether he were friend or foe. A joyful sound
+must his Latin speech have been to the long-tried, half starved garrison, who
+had not seen a fresh face for six long months! The few who represented the
+Senate and people of Rome were hastily awakened from their sleep, and gathered
+together to hear the tidings brought them at so much risk. Pontius told them of
+the victory at Ardea, and that Camillus and the Romans collected at Veii were
+only waiting to march to their succor till they should give him lawful power to
+take the command. There was little debate. The vote was passed at once to make
+Camillus Dictator, an office to which Romans were elected upon great
+emergencies, and which gave them, for the time, absolute kingly control; and
+then Pontius, bearing the appointment, set off once again upon his mission,
+still under shelter of night, clambered down the rock, and crossed the Gallic
+camp before the barbarians were yet awake.</p>
+<p>There was hope in the little garrison; but danger was not over. The
+sharp-eyed Gauls observed that the shrubs and creepers were broken, the moss
+frayed, and fresh stones and earth rolled down at the crag of the Capitol: they
+were sure that the rock had been climbed, and, therefore, that it might be
+climbed again. Should they, who were used to the snowy peaks, dark abysses, and
+huge glaciers of the Alps, be afraid to climb where a soft dweller in a tame
+Italian town could venture a passage? Brennus chose out the hardiest of his
+mountaineers, and directed them to climb up in the dead of night, one by one, in
+perfect silence, and thus to surprise the Romans, and complete the slaughter and
+victory, before the forces assembling at Veii would come to their rescue.</p>
+<p>Silently the Gauls climbed, so stilly that not even a dog heard them; and the
+sentinel nearest to the post, who had fallen into a dead sleep of exhaustion
+from hunger, never awoke. But the fatal stillness was suddenly broken by loud
+gabbling, cackling, and flapping of heavy wings. The sacred geese of Juno, which
+had been so religiously spared in the famine, were frightened by the rustling
+beneath, and proclaimed their terror in their own noisy fashion. The first to
+take the alarm was Marcus Manlius, who started forward just in time to meet the
+foremost climbers as they set foot on the rampart. One, who raised an axe to
+strike, lost his arm by one stroke of Manlius' short Roman sword; the next was
+by main strength hurled backwards over the precipice, and Manlius stood along on
+the top, for a few moments, ready to strike the next who should struggle up. The
+whole of the garrison were in a few moments on the alert, and the attack was
+entirely repulsed; the sleeping sentry was cast headlong down the rock; and
+Manlius was brought, by each grateful soldier, that which was then most valuable
+to all, a little meal and a small measure of wine. Still, the condition of the
+Capitol was lamentable; there was no certainty that Pontius had ever reached
+Camillus in safety; and, indeed, the discovery of his path by the enemy would
+rather have led to the supposition that he had been seized and detected. The
+best hope lay in wearying out the besiegers; and there seemed to be more chance
+of this since the Gauls often could be seen from the heights, burying the
+corpses of their dead; their tall, bony forms looked gaunt and drooping, and,
+here and there, unburied carcasses lay amongst the ruins. Nor were the flocks
+and herds any longer driven in from the country. Either all must have been
+exhausted, or else Camillus and his friends must be near, and preventing their
+raids. At any rate, it appeared as if the enemy was quite as ill off as to
+provisions as the garrison, and in worse condition as to health. In effect, this
+was the first example of the famous saying, that Rome destroys her conquerors.
+In this state of things one of the Romans had a dream that Jupiter, the special
+god of the Capitol, appeared to him, and gave the strange advice that all the
+remaining flour should be baked, and the loaves thrown down into the enemy's
+camp. Telling the dream, which may, perhaps, have been the shaping of his own
+thoughts, that this apparent waste would persuade the barbarians that the
+garrison could not soon be starved out, this person obtained the consent of the
+rest of the besieged. Some approved the stratagem, and no one chose to act
+contrary to Jupiter's supposed advice; so the bread was baked, and tossed down
+by the hungry men.</p>
+<p>After a time, there was a report from the outer guards that the Gallic watch
+had been telling them that their leader would be willing to speak with some of
+the Roman chiefs. Accordingly, Sulpitius, one of the tribunes, went out, and had
+a conference with Brennus, who declared that he would depart, provided the
+Romans would lay down a ransom, for their Capital and their own lives, of a
+thousand pounds' weight of gold. To this Sulpitius agreed, and returning to the
+Capitol, the gold was collected from the treasury, and carried down to meet the
+Gauls, who brought their own weights. The weights did not meet the amount of
+gold ornaments that had been contributed for the purpose, and no doubt the Gauls
+were resolved to have all that they beheld; for when Sulpitius was about to try
+to arrange the balance, Brennus insultingly threw his sword into his own scale,
+exclaiming, Voe victis! 'Woe to the conquered!' The Roman was not yet fallen so
+low as not to remonstrate, and the dispute was waxing sharp, when there was a
+confused outcry in the Gallic camp, a shout from the heights of the Capitol, and
+into the midst of the open space rode a band of Roman patricians and knights in
+armor, with the Dictator Camillus at their head.</p>
+<p>He no sooner saw what was passing, than he commanded the treasure to be taken
+back, and, turning to Brennus, said, 'It is with iron, not gold, that the Romans
+guard their country.'</p>
+<p>Brennus declared that the treaty had been sworn to, and that it would be a
+breach of faith to deprive him of the ransom; to which Camillus replied, that he
+himself was Dictator, and no one had the power to make a treaty in his absence.
+The dispute was so hot, that they drew their swords against one another, and
+there was a skirmish among the ruins; but the Gauls soon fell back, and
+retreated to their camp, when they saw the main body of Camillus' army marching
+upon them. It was no less than 40,000 in number; and Brennus knew he could not
+withstand them with his broken, sickly army. He drew off early the next morning:
+but was followed by Camillus, and routed, with great slaughter, about eight
+miles from Rome; and very few of the Gauls lived to return home, for those who
+were not slain in battle were cut off in their flight by the country people,
+whom they had plundered.</p>
+<p>In reward for their conduct on this occasion, Camillus was termed Romulus,
+Father of his Country, and Second Founder of Rome; Marcus Manlius received the
+honorable surname of Capitolinus; and even the geese were honored by having a
+golden image raised to their honor in Juno's temple, and a live goose was yearly
+carried in triumph, upon a soft litter, in a golden cage, as long as any heathen
+festivals lasted. The reward of Pontius Cominius does not appear; but surely he,
+and the old senators who died for their country's sake, deserved to be for ever
+remembered for their brave contempt of life when a service could be done to the
+State.</p>
+<p>The truth of the whole narrative is greatly doubted, and it is suspected that
+the Gallic conquest was more complete than the Romans ever chose to avow. Their
+history is far from clear up to this very epoch, when it is said that all their
+records were destroyed; but even when place and period are misty, great names
+and the main outline of their actions loom through the cloud, perhaps
+exaggerated, but still with some reality; and if the magnificent romance of the
+sack of Rome be not fact, yet it is certainly history, and well worthy of note
+and remembrance, as one of the finest extant traditions of a whole chain of
+Golden Deeds.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE TWO FRIENDS OF SYRACUSE<br>
+B.C. 380 (CIRCA)</h3></center>
+
+<p>Most of the best and noblest of the Greeks held what was called the
+Pythagorean philosophy. This was one of the many systems framed by the great men
+of heathenism, when by the feeble light of nature they were, as St. Paul says,
+'seeking after God, if haply they might feel after Him', like men groping in the
+darkness. Pythagoras lived before the time of history, and almost nothing is
+known about him, though his teaching and his name were never lost. There is a
+belief that he had traveled in the East, and in Egypt, and as he lived about the
+time of the dispersion of the Israelites, it is possible that some of his purest
+and best teaching might have been crumbs gathered from their fuller instruction
+through the Law and the Prophets. One thing is plain, that even in dealing with
+heathenism the Divine rule holds good, 'By their fruits ye shall know them'.
+Golden Deeds are only to be found among men whose belief is earnest and sincere,
+and in something really high and noble. Where there was nothing worshiped but
+savage or impure power, and the very form of adoration was cruel and unclean, as
+among the Canaanites and Carthaginians, there we find no true self-devotion. The
+great deeds of the heathen world were all done by early Greeks and Romans before
+yet the last gleams of purer light had faded out of their belief, and while
+their moral sense still nerved them to energy; or else by such later Greeks as
+had embraced the deeper and more earnest yearnings of the minds that had become
+a 'law unto themselves'.</p>
+<p>The Pythagoreans were bound together in a brotherhood, the members of which
+had rules that are not now understood, but which linked them so as to form a
+sort of club, with common religious observances and pursuits of science,
+especially mathematics and music. And they were taught to restrain their
+passions, especially that of anger, and to endure with patience all kinds of
+suffering; believing that such self-restraint brought them nearer to the gods,
+and that death would set them free from the prison of the body. The souls of
+evil-doers would, they thought, pass into the lower and more degraded animals,
+while those of good men would be gradually purified, and rise to a higher
+existence. This, though lamentably deficient, and false in some points, was a
+real religion, inasmuch as it gave a rule of life, with a motive for striving
+for wisdom and virtue. Two friends of this Pythagorean sect lived at Syracuse,
+in the end of the fourth century before the Christian era. Syracuse was a great
+Greek city, built in Sicily, and full of all kinds of Greek art and learning;
+but it was a place of danger in their time, for it had fallen under the tyranny
+of a man of strange and capricious temper, though of great abilities, namely
+Dionysius. He is said to have been originally only a clerk in a public office,
+but his talents raised him to continually higher situations, and at length, in a
+great war with the Carthaginians, who had many settlements in Sicily, he became
+general of the army, and then found it easy to establish his power over the
+city.</p>
+<p>This power was not according to the laws, for Syracuse, like most other
+cities, ought to have been governed by a council of magistrates; but Dionysius
+was an exceedingly able man, and made the city much more rich and powerful, he
+defeated the Carthaginians, and rendered Syracuse by far the chief city in the
+island, and he contrived to make everyone so much afraid of him that no one
+durst attempt to overthrow his power. He was a good scholar, and very fond of
+philosophy and poetry, and he delighted to have learned men around him, and he
+had naturally a generous spirit; but the sense that he was in a position that
+did not belong to him, and that everyone hated him for assuming it, made him
+very harsh and suspicious. It is of him that the story is told, that he had a
+chamber hollowed in the rock near his state prison, and constructed with
+galleries to conduct sounds like an ear, so that he might overhear the
+conversation of his captives; and of him, too, is told that famous anecdote
+which has become a proverb, that on hearing a friend, named Damocles, express a
+wish to be in his situation for a single day, he took him at his word, and
+Damocles found himself at a banquet with everything that could delight his
+senses, delicious food, costly wine, flowers, perfumes, music; but with a sword
+with the point almost touching his head, and hanging by a single horsehair! This
+was to show the condition in which a usurper lived!</p>
+<p>Thus Dionysius was in constant dread. He had a wide trench round his bedroom,
+with a drawbridge that he drew up and put down with his own hands; and he put
+one barber to death for boasting that he held a razor to the tyrant's throat
+every morning. After this he made his young daughters shave him; but by and by
+he would not trust them with a razor, and caused them to singe of his beard with
+hot nutshells! He was said to have put a man named Antiphon to death for
+answering him, when he asked what was the best kind of brass, 'That of which the
+statues of Harmodius and Aristogeiton were made.' These were the two Athenians
+who had killed the sons of Pisistratus the tyrant, so that the jest was most
+offensive, but its boldness might have gained forgiveness for it. One
+philosopher, named Philoxenus, he sent to a dungeon for finding fault with his
+poetry, but he afterwards composed another piece, which he thought so superior,
+that he could not be content without sending for this adverse critic to hear it.
+When he had finished reading it, he looked to Philoxenus for a compliment; but
+the philosopher only turned round to the guards, and said dryly, 'Carry me back
+to prison.' This time Dionysius had the sense to laugh, and forgive his honesty.</p>
+<p>All these stories may not be true; but that they should have been current in
+the ancient world shows what was the character of the man of whom they were
+told, how stern and terrible was his anger, and how easily it was incurred.
+Among those who came under it was a Pythagorean called Pythias, who was
+sentenced to death, according to the usual fate of those who fell under his
+suspicion.</p>
+<p>Pythias had lands and relations in Greece, and he entreated as a favor to be
+allowed to return thither and arrange his affairs, engaging to return within a
+specified time to suffer death. The tyrant laughed his request to scorn. Once
+safe out of Sicily, who would answer for his return? Pythias made reply that he
+had a friend, who would become security for his return; and while Dionysius, the
+miserable man who trusted nobody, was ready to scoff at his simplicity, another
+Pythagorean, by name of Damon, came forward, and offered to become surety for
+his friend, engaging, if Pythias did not return according to promise, to suffer
+death in his stead.</p>
+<p>Dionysius, much astonished, consented to let Pythias go, marveling what would
+be the issue of the affair. Time went on and Pythias did not appear. The
+Syracusans watched Damon, but he showed no uneasiness. He said he was secure of
+his friend's truth and honor, and that if any accident had cause the delay of
+his return, he should rejoice in dying to save the life of one so dear to him.</p>
+<p>Even to the last day Damon continued serene and content, however it might
+fall out; nay even when the very hour drew nigh and still no Pythias. His trust
+was so perfect, that he did not even grieve at having to die for a faithless
+friend who had left him to the fate to which he had unwarily pledged himself. It
+was not Pythias' own will, but the winds and waves, so he still declared, when
+the decree was brought and the instruments of death made ready. The hour had
+come, and a few moments more would have ended Damon's life, when Pythias duly
+presented himself, embraced his friend, and stood forward himself to receive his
+sentence, calm, resolute, and rejoiced that he had come in time.</p>
+<p>Even the dim hope they owned of a future state was enough to make these two
+brave men keep their word, and confront death for one another without quailing.
+Dionysius looked on more struck than ever. He felt that neither of such men must
+die. He reversed the sentence of Pythias, and calling the two to his judgment
+seat, he entreated them to admit him as a third in their friendship. Yet all the
+time he must have known it was a mockery that he should ever be such as they
+were to each other--he who had lost the very power of trusting, and constantly
+sacrificed others to secure his own life, whilst they counted not their lives
+dear to them in comparison with their truth to their word, and love to one
+another. No wonder that Damon and Pythias have become such a byword that they
+seem too well known to have their story told here, except that a name in
+everyone's mouth sometimes seems to be mentioned by those who have forgotten or
+never heard the tale attached to it.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE DEVOTION OF THE DECII<br>
+B.C. 339</h3></center>
+
+<p>The spirit of self-devotion is so beautiful and noble, that even when the act
+is performed in obedience to the dictates of a false religion, it is impossible
+not to be struck with admiration and almost reverence for the unconscious type
+of the one great act that has hallowed every other sacrifice. Thus it was that
+Codrus, the Athenian king, has ever since been honored for the tradition that he
+gave his own life to secure the safety of his people; and there is a touching
+story, with neither name nor place, of a heathen monarch who was bidden by his
+priests to appease the supposed wrath of his gods by the sacrifice of the being
+dearest to him. His young son had been seized on as his most beloved, when his
+wife rushed between and declared that her son must live, and not by his death
+rob her of her right to fall, as her husband's dearest. The priest looked at the
+father; the face that had been sternly composed before was full of uncontrolled
+anguish as he sprang forward to save the wife rather than the child. That
+impulse was an answer, like the entreaty of the mother before Solomon; the
+priest struck the fatal blow ere the king's hand could withhold him, and the
+mother died with a last look of exceeding joy at her husband's love and her
+son's safety. Human sacrifices are of course accursed, and even the better sort
+of heathens viewed them with horror; but the voluntary confronting of death,
+even at the call of a distorted presage of future atonement, required qualities
+that were perhaps the highest that could be exercised among those who were
+devoid of the light of truth.</p>
+<p>In the year 339 there was a remarkable instance of such devotion. The Romans
+were at war with the Latins, a nation dwelling to the south of them, and almost
+exactly resembling themselves in language, habits, government, and fashions of
+fighting. Indeed the city of Rome itself was but an offshoot from the old Latin
+kingdom; and there was not much difference between the two nations even in
+courage and perseverance. The two consuls of the year were Titus Manlius
+Torquatus and Publius Decius Mus. They were both very distinguished men. Manlius
+was a patrician, or one of the high ancient nobles of Rome, and had in early
+youth fought a single combat with a gigantic Gaul, who offered himself, like
+Goliath, as a champion of his tribe; had slain him, and taken from him a gold
+torque, or collar, whence his surname Torquatus. Decius was a plebeian; one of
+the free though not noble citizens who had votes, but only within a few years
+had been capable of being chosen to the higher offices of state, and who looked
+upon every election to the consulship as a victory. Three years previously, when
+a tribune in command of a legion, Decius had saved the consul, Cornelius Cossus,
+from a dangerous situation, and enabled him to gain a great victory; and this
+exploit was remembered, and led to the choice of this well-experienced soldier
+as the colleague of Manlius.</p>
+<p>The two consuls both went out together in command of the forces, each having
+a separate army, and intending to act in concert. They marched to the beautiful
+country at the foot of Mount Vesuvius, which was then a harmless mountain
+clothed with chestnut woods, with spaces opening between, where farms and
+vineyards rejoiced in the sunshine and the fresh breezes of the lovely blue bay
+that lay stretched beneath. Those who climbed to the summit might indeed find
+beds of ashes and the jagged edge of a huge basin or gulf; the houses and walls
+were built of dark-red and black material that once had flowed from the crater
+in boiling torrents: but these had long since cooled, and so long was it since a
+column of smoke had been seen to rise from the mountain top, that it only
+remained as a matter of tradition that this region was one of mysterious fire,
+and that the dark cool lake Avernus, near the mountain skirts, was the very
+entrance to the shadowy realms beneath, that were supposed to be inhabited by
+the spirits of the dead.</p>
+<p>It might be that the neighborhood of this lake, with the dread imaginations
+connected with it by pagan fancy, influenced even the stout hearts of the
+consuls; for, the night after they came in sight of the enemy, each dreamt the
+same dream, namely, that he beheld a mighty form of gigantic height and stature,
+who told him 'that the victory was decreed to that army of the two whose leader
+should devote himself to the Dii Manes,' that is, to the deities who watched
+over the shades of the dead. Probably these older Romans held the old Etruscan
+belief, which took these 'gods beneath' to be winged beings, who bore away the
+departing soul, weighted its merits and demerits, and placed it in a region of
+peace or of woe, according to its deserts. This was part of the grave and
+earnest faith that gave the earlier Romans such truth and resolution; but
+latterly they so corrupted it with the Greek myths, that, in after times, they
+did not even know who the gods of Decius were.</p>
+<p>At daybreak the two consuls sought one another out, and told their dreams;
+and they agreed that they would join their armies in one, Decius leading the
+right and Manlius the left wing; and that whichever found his troops giving way,
+should at once rush into the enemy's columns and die, to secure the victory to
+his colleague. At the same time strict commands were given that no Roman should
+come out of his rank to fight in single combat with the enemy; a necessary
+regulation, as the Latins were so like, in every respect, to the Romans, that
+there would have been fatal confusion had there been any mingling together
+before the battle. Just as this command had been given out, young Titus Manlius,
+the son of the consul, met a Latin leader, who called him by name and challenged
+him to fight hand to hand. The youth was emulous of the honor his father had
+gained by his own combat at the same age with the Gaul, but forgot both the
+present edict and that his father had scrupulously asked permission before
+accepting the challenge. He at once came forward, and after a brave conflict,
+slew his adversary, and taking his armor, presented himself at his father's tent
+and laid the spoils at his feet.</p>
+<p>But old Manlius turned aside sadly, and collected his troops to hear his
+address to his son: 'You have transgressed,' he said, 'the discipline which has
+been the support of the Roman people, and reduced me to the hard necessity of
+either forgetting myself and mine, or else the regard I owe to the general
+safety. Rome must not suffer by one fault. We must expiate it ourselves. A sad
+example shall we be, but a wholesome one to the Roman youth. For me, both the
+natural love of a father, and that specimen thou hast given of thy valor move me
+exceedingly; but since either the consular authority must be established by thy
+death, or destroyed by thy impunity, I cannot think, if thou be a true Manlius,
+that thou wilt be backward to repair the breach thou hast made in military
+discipline by undergoing the just meed of thine offence. He then placed the
+wreath of leaves, the reward of a victor, upon his son's head, and gave the
+command to the lictor to bind the young man to a stake, and strike off his head.
+The troops stood round as men stunned, no one durst utter a word; the son
+submitted without one complaint, since his death was for the good of Rome: and
+the father, trusting that the doom of the Dii Manes was about to overtake him,
+beheld the brave but rash young head fall, then watched the corpse covered with
+the trophies won from the Latins, and made no hindrance to the glorious
+obsequies with which the whole army honored this untimely death. Strict
+discipline was indeed established, and no one again durst break his rank; but
+the younger men greatly hated Manlius for his severity, and gave him no credit
+for the agony he had concealed while giving up his gallant son to the wellbeing
+of Rome.</p>
+<p>A few days after, the expected battle took place, and after some little time
+the front rank of Decius' men began to fall back upon the line in their rear.
+This was the token he had waited for. He called to Valerius, the chief priest of
+Rome, to consecrate him, and was directed to put on his chief robe of office,
+the beautiful toga proetexta, to cover his head, and standing on his javelin,
+call aloud to the 'nine gods' to accept his devotion, to save the Roman legions,
+and strike terror into his enemies. This done, he commanded his lictors to carry
+word to his colleague that the sacrifice was accomplished, and then girding his
+robe round him in the manner adopted in sacrificing to the gods, he mounted his
+white horse, and rushed like lightning into the thickest of the Latins. At first
+they fell away on all sides as if some heavenly apparition had come down on
+them; then, as some recognized him, they closed in on him, and pierced his
+breast with their weapons; but even as he fell the superstition that a devoted
+leader was sure to win the field, came full on their minds, they broke and fled.
+Meanwhile the message came to Manlius, and drew from him a burst of tears--tears
+that he had not shed for his son--his hope of himself meeting the doom and
+ending his sorrow was gone; but none the less he nerved himself to complete the
+advantage gained by Decius' death. Only one wing of the Latins had fled, the
+other fought long and bravely, and when at last it was defeated, and cut down on
+the field of battle, both conqueror and conquered declared that, if Manlius had
+been the leader of the Latins, they would have had the victory. Manlius
+afterwards completely subdued the Latins, who became incorporated with the
+Romans; but bravely as he had borne up, his health gave way under his sorrow,
+and before the end of the year he was unable to take the field.</p>
+<p>Forty-five years later, in the year 294, another Decius was consul. He was
+the son of the first devoted Decius, and had shown himself worthy of his name,
+both as a citizen and soldier. His first consulate had been in conjunction with
+one of the most high-spirited and famous Roman nobles, Quintus Fabius, surnamed
+Maximus, or the Greatest, and at three years' end they were again chosen
+together, when the Romans had been brought into considerable peril by an
+alliance between the Gauls and the Samnites, their chief enemies in Italy.</p>
+<p>One being a patrician and the other a plebeian, there was every attempt made
+at Rome to stir up jealousies and dissensions between them; but both were much
+too noble and generous to be thus set one against the other; and when Fabius
+found how serious was the state of affairs in Etruria, he sent to Rome to
+entreat that Decius would come and act with him. 'With him I shall never want
+forces, nor have too many enemies to deal with.'</p>
+<p>The Gauls, since the time of Brennus, had so entirely settled in northern
+Italy, that it had acquired the name of Cisalpine Gaul, and they were as warlike
+as ever, while better armed and trained. The united armies of Gauls, Samnites,
+and their allies, together, are said to have amounted to 143,330 foot and 46,000
+horse, and the Roman army consisted of four legions, 24,000 in all, with an
+unspecified number of horse. The place of battle was at Sentinum, and here for
+the first time the Gauls brought armed chariots into use,--probably the wicker
+chariots, with scythes in the midst of the clumsy wooden wheels, which were used
+by the Kelts in Britain two centuries later. It was the first time the Romans
+had encountered these barbarous vehicles; they were taken by surprise, the
+horses started, and could not be brought back to the charge, and the legions
+were mowed down like corn where the furious Gaul impelled his scythe. Decius
+shouted in vain, and tried to gather his men and lead them back; but the terror
+at this new mode of warfare had so mastered them, that they paid no attention to
+his call. Then, half in policy, half in superstition, he resolved to follow his
+father in his death. He called the chief priest, Marcus Livius, and standing on
+his javelin, went through the same formula of self-dedication, and in the like
+manner threw himself, alone and unarmed, in the midst of the enemy, among whom
+he soon fell, under many a savage stroke. The priest, himself a gallant soldier,
+called to the troops that their victory was now secured, and thoroughly
+believing him, they let him lead them back to the charge, and routed the Gauls;
+whilst Fabius so well did his part against the other nations, that the victory
+was complete, and 25,000 enemies were slain. So covered was the body of Decius
+by the corpses of his enemies, that all that day it could not be found; but on
+the next it was discovered, and Fabius, with a full heart, pronounced the
+funeral oration of the second Decius, who had willingly offered himself to turn
+the tide of battle in favor of his country. It was the last of such acts of
+dedication--the Romans became more learned and philosophical, and perhaps more
+reasonable; and yet, mistaken as was the object, it seems a falling off that,
+200 years later, Cicero should not know who were the 'nine gods' of the Decii,
+and should regard their sacrifice as 'heroic indeed, but unworthy of men of
+understanding'.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>REGULUS<br>
+B.C. 249</h3></center>
+
+<p>The first wars that the Romans engaged in beyond the bounds of Italy, were
+with the Carthaginians. This race came from Tyre and Zidon; and were descended
+from some of the Phoenicians, or Zidonians, who were such dangerous foes, or
+more dangerous friends, to the Israelites. Carthage had, as some say, been first
+founded by some of the Canaanites who fled when Joshua conquered the Promised
+Land; and whether this were so or not, the inhabitants were in all their ways
+the same as the Tyrians and Zidonians, of whom so much is said in the prophecies
+of Isaiah and Ezekiel. Like them, they worshipped Baal and Ashtoreth, and the
+frightful Moloch, with foul and cruel rites; and, like them, they were excellent
+sailors and great merchants trading with every known country, and living in
+great riches and splendor at their grand city on the southern shore of the
+Mediterranean. That they were a wicked and cruel race is also certain; the
+Romans used to call deceit Punic faith, that is, Phoenician faith, and though no
+doubt Roman writers show them up in their worst colours, yet, after the time of
+Hiram, Solomon's ally at Tyre, it is plain from Holy Scripture that their crimes
+were great.</p>
+<p>The first dispute between Rome and Carthage was about their possession in the
+island of Sicily; and the war thus begun had lasted eight years when it was
+resolved to send an army to fight the Carthaginians on their own shores. The
+army and fleet were placed under the command of the two consuls, Lucius Manlius
+and Marcus Attilius Regulus. On the way, there was a great sea fight with the
+Carthaginian fleet, and this was the first naval battle that the Romans ever
+gained. It made the way to Africa free; but the soldiers, who had never been so
+far from home before, murmured, for they expected to meet not only human
+enemies, but monstrous serpents, lions, elephants, asses with horns, and
+dog-headed monsters, to have a scorching sun overhead, and a noisome marsh under
+their feet. However, Regulus sternly put a stop to all murmurs, by making it
+known that disaffection would be punished by death, and the army safely landed,
+and set up a fortification at Clypea, and plundered the whole country round.
+Orders here came from Rome that Manlius should return thither, but that Regulus
+should remain to carry on the war. This was a great grief to him. He was a very
+poor man, with nothing of his own but a little farm of seven acres, and the
+person whom he had employed to cultivate it had died in his absence; a hired
+laborer had undertaken the care of it, but had been unfaithful, and had run away
+with his tools and his cattle; so that he was afraid that, unless he could
+return quickly, his wife and children would starve. However, the Senate engaged
+to provide for his family, and he remained, making expeditions into the country
+round, in the course of which the Romans really did fall in with a serpent as
+monstrous as their imagination had depicted. It was said to be 120 feet long,
+and dwelt upon the banks of the River Bagrada, where it used to devour the Roman
+soldiers as they went to fetch water. It had such tough scales that they were
+obliged to attack it with their engines meant for battering city walls, and only
+succeeded with much difficulty in destroying it.</p>
+<p>The country was most beautiful, covered with fertile cornfields and full of
+rich fruit trees, and all the rich Carthaginians had country houses and gardens,
+which were made delicious with fountains, trees, and flowers. The Roman
+soldiers, plain, hardy, fierce, and pitiless, did, it must be feared, cruel
+damage among these peaceful scenes; they boasted of having sacked 300 villages,
+and mercy was not yet known to them. The Carthaginian army, though strong in
+horsemen and in elephants, kept upon the hills and did nothing to save the
+country, and the wild desert tribes of Numidians came rushing in to plunder what
+the Romans had left. The Carthaginians sent to offer terms of peace; but
+Regulus, who had become uplifted by his conquests, made such demands that the
+messengers remonstrated. He answered, 'Men who are good for anything should
+either conquer or submit to their betters;' and he sent them rudely away, like a
+stern old Roman as he was. His merit was that he had no more mercy on himself
+than on others.</p>
+<p>The Carthaginians were driven to extremity, and made horrible offerings to
+Moloch, giving the little children of the noblest families to be dropped into
+the fire between the brazen hands of his statue, and grown-up people of the
+noblest families rushed in of their own accord, hoping thus to propitiate their
+gods, and obtain safety for their country. Their time was not yet fully come,
+and a respite was granted to them. They had sent, in their distress, to hire
+soldiers in Greece, and among these came a Spartan, named Xanthippus, who at
+once took the command, and led the army out to battle, with a long line of
+elephants ranged in front of them, and with clouds of horsemen hovering on the
+wings. The Romans had not yet learnt the best mode of fighting with elephants,
+namely, to leave lanes in their columns where these huge beasts might advance
+harmlessly; instead of which, the ranks were thrust and trampled down by the
+creatures' bulk, and they suffered a terrible defeat; Regulus himself was seized
+by the horsemen, and dragged into Carthage, where the victors feasted and
+rejoiced through half the night, and testified their thanks to Moloch by
+offering in his fires the bravest of their captives.</p>
+<p>Regulus himself was not, however, one of these victims. He was kept a close
+prisoner for two years, pining and sickening in his loneliness, while in the
+meantime the war continued, and at last a victory so decisive was gained by the
+Romans, that the people of Carthage were discouraged, and resolved to ask terms
+of peace. They thought that no one would be so readily listened to at Rome as
+Regulus, and they therefore sent him there with their envoys, having first made
+him swear that he would come back to his prison if there should neither be peace
+nor an exchange of prisoners. They little knew how much more a true-hearted
+Roman cared for his city than for himself--for his word than for his life.</p>
+<p>Worn and dejected, the captive warrior came to the outside of the gates of
+his own city, and there paused, refusing to enter. 'I am no longer a Roman
+citizen,' he said; 'I am but the barbarian's slave, and the Senate may not give
+audience to strangers within the walls.'</p>
+<p>His wife Marcia ran out to greet him, with his two sons, but he did not look
+up, and received their caresses as one beneath their notice, as a mere slave,
+and he continued, in spite of all entreaty, to remain outside the city, and
+would not even go to the little farm he had loved so well.</p>
+<p>The Roman Senate, as he would not come in to them, came out to hold their
+meeting in the Campagna.</p>
+<p>The ambassadors spoke first, then Regulus, standing up, said, as one
+repeating a task, 'Conscript fathers, being a slave to the Carthaginians, I come
+on the part of my masters to treat with you concerning peace, and an exchange of
+prisoners.' He then turned to go away with the ambassadors, as a stranger might
+not be present at the deliberations of the Senate. His old friends pressed him
+to stay and give his opinion as a senator who had twice been consul; but he
+refused to degrade that dignity by claiming it, slave as he was. But, at the
+command of his Carthaginian masters, he remained, though not taking his seat.</p>
+<p>Then he spoke. He told the senators to persevere in the war. He said he had
+seen the distress of Carthage, and that a peace would only be to her advantage,
+not to that of Rome, and therefore he strongly advised that the war should
+continue. Then, as to the exchange of prisoners, the Carthaginian generals, who
+were in the hands of the Romans, were in full health and strength, whilst he
+himself was too much broken down to be fit for service again, and indeed he
+believed that his enemies had given him a slow poison, and that he could not
+live long. Thus he insisted that no exchange of prisoners should be made.</p>
+<p>It was wonderful, even to Romans, to hear a man thus pleading against
+himself, and their chief priest came forward, and declared that, as his oath had
+been wrested from him by force, he was not bound to return to his captivity. But
+Regulus was too noble to listen to this for a moment. 'Have you resolved to
+dishonor me?' he said. 'I am not ignorant that death and the extremest tortures
+are preparing for me; but what are these to the shame of an infamous action, or
+the wounds of a guilty mind? Slave as I am to Carthage, I have still the spirit
+of a Roman. I have sworn to return. It is my duty to go; let the gods take care
+of the rest.'</p>
+<p>The Senate decided to follow the advice of Regulus, though they bitterly
+regretted his sacrifice. His wife wept and entreated in vain that they would
+detain him; they could merely repeat their permission to him to remain; but
+nothing could prevail with him to break his word, and he turned back to the
+chains and death he expected so calmly as if he had been returning to his home.
+This was in the year B.C. 249.</p>
+<p>'Let the gods take care of the rest,' said the Roman; the gods whom alone he
+knew, and through whom he ignorantly worshipped the true God, whose Light was
+shining out even in this heathen's truth and constancy. How his trust was
+fulfilled is not known. The Senate, after the next victory, gave two
+Carthaginian generals to his wife and sons to hold as pledges for his good
+treatment; but when tidings arrived that Regulus was dead, Marcia began to treat
+them both with savage cruelty, though one of them assured her that he had been
+careful to have her husband well used. Horrible stories were told that Regulus
+had been put out in the sun with his eyelids cut off, rolled down a hill in a
+barrel with spikes, killed by being constantly kept awake, or else crucified.
+Marcia seems to have set about, and perhaps believed in these horrors, and
+avenged them on her unhappy captives till one had died, and the Senate sent for
+her sons and severely reprimanded them. They declared it was their mother's
+doing, not theirs, and thenceforth were careful of the comfort of the remaining
+prisoner.</p>
+<p>It may thus be hoped that the frightful tale of Regulus' sufferings was but
+formed by report acting on the fancy of a vindictive woman, and that Regulus was
+permitted to die in peace of the disease brought on far more probably by the
+climate and imprisonment, than by the poison to which he ascribed it. It is not
+the tortures he may have endured that make him one of the noblest characters of
+history, but the resolution that would neither let him save himself at the risk
+of his country's prosperity, nor forfeit the word that he had pledged.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE BRAVE BRETHREN OF JUDAH<br>
+B.C. 180</h3></center>
+
+<p>It was about 180 years before the Christian era. The Jews had long since come
+home from Babylon, and built up their city and Temple at Jerusalem. But they
+were not free as they had been before. Their country belonged to some greater
+power, they had a foreign governor over them, and had to pay tribute to the king
+who was their master.</p>
+<p>At the time we are going to speak of, this king was Antiochus Epiphanes, King
+of Syria. He was descended from one of those generals who, upon the death of
+Alexander the Great, had shared the East between them, and he reigned over all
+the country from the Mediterranean Sea even into Persia and the borders of
+India. He spoke Greek, and believed in both the Greek and Roman gods, for he had
+spent some time at Rome in his youth; but in his Eastern kingdom he had learnt
+all the self-indulgent and violent habits to which people in those hot countries
+are especially tempted.</p>
+<p>He was so fierce and passionate, that he was often called the 'Madman', and
+he was very cruel to all who offended him. One of his greatest desires was, that
+the Jews should leave their true faith in one God, and do like the Greeks and
+Syrians, his other subjects, worship the same idols, and hold drunken feasts in
+their honor. Sad to say, a great many of the Jews had grown ashamed of their own
+true religion and the strict ways of their law, and thought them old-fashioned.
+They joined in the Greek sports, played games naked in the theatre, joined in
+riotous processions, carrying ivy in honor of Bacchus, the god of wine, and
+offered incense to the idols; and the worst of all these was the false high
+priest, Menelaus, who led the King Antiochus into the Temple itself, even into
+the Holy of Holies, and told him all that would most desecrate it and grieve the
+Jews. So a little altar to the Roman god Jupiter was set up on the top of the
+great brazen altar of burnt offerings, a hog was offered up, and broth of its
+flesh sprinkled everywhere in the Temple; then all the precious vessels were
+seized, the shewbread table of gold, the candlesticks, and the whole treasury,
+and carried away by the king; the walls were thrown down, and the place made
+desolate.</p>
+<p>Some Jews were still faithful to their God, but they were horribly punished
+and tortured to death before the eyes of the king; and when at last he went away
+to his own country, taking with him the wicked high priest Menelaus, he left
+behind him a governor and an army of soldiers stationed in the tower of Acra,
+which overlooked the Temple hill, and sent for an old man from Athens to teach
+the people the heathen rites and ceremonies. Any person who observed the Sabbath
+day, or any other ordinance of the law of Moses, was put to death in a most
+cruel manner; all the books of the Old Testament Scripture that could be found
+were either burnt or defiled, by having pictures of Greek gods painted upon
+them; and the heathen priests went from place to place, with a little brazen
+altar and image and a guard of soldiers, who were to kill every person who
+refused to burn incense before the idol. It was the very saddest time that the
+Jews had ever known, and there seemed no help near or far off; they could have
+no hope, except in the promises that God would never fail His people, or forsake
+His inheritance, and in the prophecies that bad times should come, but good ones
+after them.</p>
+<p>The Greeks, in going through the towns to enforce the idol worship, came to a
+little city called Modin, somewhere on the hills on the coast of the
+Mediterranean Sea, not far from Joppa. There they sent out, as usual, orders to
+all the men of the town to meet them in the marketplace; but they were told
+beforehand, that the chief person in the place was an old man named Mattathias,
+of a priestly family, and so much respected, that all the other inhabitants of
+the place were sure to do whatever he might lead them in. So the Greeks sent for
+him first of all, and he came at their summons, a grand and noble old man,
+followed by his five sons, Johanan, Simon, Judas, Jonathan, and Eleazar. The
+Greek priest tried to talk him over. He told him that the high priest had
+forsaken the Jewish superstition, that the Temple was in ruins, and that
+resistance was in vain; and exhorted him to obtain gratitude and honor for
+himself, by leading his countrymen in thus adoring the deities of the king's
+choice, promising him rewards and treasures if he would comply.</p>
+<p>But the old man spoke out with a loud and fearless voice: 'Though all the
+nations that are under the king's dominion obey him, and fall away every one
+from the religion of their fathers, and give consent to his commandments; yet
+will I and my sons and my brethren walk in the covenant of our fathers. God
+forbid that we should forsake the law and the ordinances! We will not hearken to
+the king's words, to go from our religion, either on the right hand or the
+left!'</p>
+<p>As he spoke, up came an apostate Jew to do sacrifice at the heathen altar.
+Mattathias trembled at the sight, and his zeal broke forth. He slew the
+offender, and his brave sons gathering round him, they attacked the Syrian
+soldiers, killed the commissioner, and threw down the altar. Then, as they knew
+that they could not there hold out against the king's power, Mattathias
+proclaimed throughout the city: 'Whosoever is zealous of the law, and
+maintaineth the covenant, let him follow me!' With that, he and his five sons,
+with their families, left their houses and lands, and drove their cattle with
+them up into the wild hills and caves, where David had once made his home; and
+all the Jews who wished to be still faithful, gathered around them, to worship
+God and keep His commandments.</p>
+<p>There they were, a handful of brave men in the mountains, and all the heathen
+world and apostate Jews against them. They used to come down into the villages,
+remind the people of the law, promise their help, and throw down any idol altars
+that they found, and the enemy never were able to follow them into their rocky
+strongholds. But the old Mattathias could not long bear the rude wild life in
+the cold mountains, and he soon died. First he called all his five sons, and
+bade them to 'be zealous for the law, and give their lives for the covenant of
+their fathers'; and he reminded them of all the many brave men who had before
+served God, and been aided in their extremity. He appointed his son Judas, as
+the strongest and mightiest, to lead his brethren to battle, and Simon, as the
+wisest, to be their counsellor; then he blessed them and died; and his sons were
+able to bury him in the tomb of his fathers at Modin.</p>
+<p>Judas was one of the bravest men who ever lived; never dreading the numbers
+that came against him. He was surnamed Maccabeus, which some people say meant
+the hammerer; but others think it was made up of the first letters of the words
+he carried on his banner, which meant 'Who is like unto Thee, among the gods, O
+Lord?' Altogether he had about six thousand men round him when the Greek
+governor, Apollonius, came out to fight with him. The Jews gained here their
+first victory, and Judas killed Apollonius, took his sword, and fought all his
+other battles with it. Next came a captain called Seron, who went out to the
+hills to lay hold of the bold rebels that dared to rise against the King of
+Syria. The place where Judas met him was one to make the Jews' hearts leap with
+hope and trust. It was on the steep stony broken hillside of Beth-horon, the
+very place where Joshua had conquered the five kings of the Amorites, in the
+first battle on the coming in of the children of Israel to Palestine. There was
+the rugged path where Joshua had stood and called out to the sun to stand still
+in Gibeon, and the moon in the valley of Ajalon. Miracles were over, and Judas
+looked for no wonder to help him; but when he came up the mountain road from
+Joppa, his heart was full of the same trust as Joshua's, and he won another
+great victory.</p>
+<p>By this time King Antiochus began to think the rising of the Jews a serious
+matter, but he could not come himself against them, because his provinces in
+Armenia and Persia had refused their tribute, and he had to go in person to
+reduce them. He appointed, however, a governor, named Lysias, to chastise the
+Jews, giving him an army of 40,000 foot and 7000 horse. Half of these Lysias
+sent on before him, with two captains, named Nicanor and Gorgias, thinking that
+these would be more than enough to hunt down and crush the little handful that
+were lurking in the hills. And with them came a great number of slave merchants,
+who had bargained with Nicanor that they should have ninety Jews for one talent,
+to sell to the Greeks and Romans, by whom Jewish slaves were much esteemed.</p>
+<p>There was great terror in Palestine at these tidings, and many of the
+weaker-minded fell away from Judas; but he called all the faithful together at
+Mizpeh, the same place where, 1000 years before, Samuel had collected the
+Israelites, and, after prayer and fasting, had sent them forth to free their
+country from the Philistines. Shiloh, the sanctuary, was then lying desolate,
+just as Jerusalem now lay in ruins; and yet better times had come. But very
+mournful was that fast day at Mizpeh, as the Jews looked along the hillside to
+their own holy mountain crowned by no white marble and gold Temple flashing back
+the sunbeams, but only with the tall castle of their enemies towering over the
+precipice. They could not sacrifice, because a sacrifice could only be made at
+Jerusalem, and the only book of the Scriptures that they had to read from was
+painted over with the hateful idol figures of the Greeks. And the huge army of
+enemies was ever coming nearer! The whole assembly wept, and put on sackcloth
+and prayed aloud for help, and then there was a loud sounding of trumpets, and
+Judas stood forth before them. And he made the old proclamation that Moses had
+long ago decreed, that no one should go out to battle who was building a house,
+or planting a vineyard, or had just betrothed a wife, or who was fearful and
+faint-hearted. All these were to go home again. Judas had 6,000 followers when
+he made this proclamation. He had only 3,000 at the end of the day, and they
+were but poorly armed. He told them of the former aid that had come to their
+fathers in extremity, and made them bold with his noble words. Then he gave them
+for their watchword 'the help of God', and divided the leadership of the band
+between himself and his brothers, appointing Eleazar, the youngest, to read the
+Holy Book.</p>
+<p>With these valiant men, Judas set up his camp; but tidings were soon brought
+him that Gorgias, with 5000 foot and 1000 horse, had left the main body to fall
+on his little camp by night. He therefore secretly left the place in the
+twilight; so that when the enemy attacked his camp, they found it deserted, and
+supposing them to be hid in the mountains, proceeded hither in pursuit of them.</p>
+<p>But in the early morning Judas and his 3,000 men were all in battle array in
+the plains, and marching full upon the enemy's camp with trumpet sound, took
+them by surprise in the absence of Gorgias and his choice troops, and utterly
+defeated and put them to flight, but without pursuing them, since the fight with
+Gorgias and his 5,000 might be yet to come. Even as Judas was reminding his men
+of this, Gorgias's troops were seen looking down from the mountains where they
+had been wandering all night; but seeing their own camp all smoke and flame,
+they turned and fled away. Nine thousand of the invaders had been slain, and the
+whole camp, full of arms and treasures, was in the hands of Judas, who there
+rested for a Sabbath of glad thanksgiving, and the next day parted the spoil,
+first putting out the share for the widows and orphans and the wounded, and then
+dividing the rest among his warriors. As to the slave merchants, they were all
+made prisoners, and instead of giving a talent for ninety Jews, were sold
+themselves.</p>
+<p>The next year Lysias came himself, but was driven back and defeated at
+Bethshur, four or five miles south of Bethlehem. And now came the saddest, yet
+the greatest, day of Judas's life, when he ventured to go back into the holy
+city and take possession of the Temple again. The strong tower of Acra, which
+stood on a ridge of Mount Moriah looking down on the Temple rock, was still held
+by the Syrians, and he had no means of taking it; but he and his men loved the
+sanctuary too well to keep away from it, and again they marched up the steps and
+slopes that led up the holy hill. They went up to find the walls broken, the
+gates burnt, the cloisters and priests' chambers pulled down, and the courts
+thickly grown with grass and shrubs, the altar of their one true God with the
+false idol Jupiter's altar in the middle of it. These warriors, who had turned
+three armies to flight, could not bear the sight. They fell down on their faces,
+threw dust on their heads, and wept aloud for the desolation of their holy
+place. But in the midst Judas caused the trumpets to sound an alarm. They were
+to do something besides grieving. The bravest of them were set to keep watch and
+ward against the Syrians in the tower, while he chose out the most faithful
+priests to cleanse out the sanctuary, and renew all that could be renewed,
+making new holy vessels from the spoil taken in Nicanor's camp, and setting the
+stones of the profaned altar apart while a new one was raised. On the third
+anniversary of the great profanation, the Temple was newly dedicated, with songs
+and hymns of rejoicing, and a festival day was appointed, which has been
+observed by the Jews ever since. The Temple rock and city were again fortified
+so as to be able to hold out against their enemies, and this year and the next
+were the most prosperous of the life of the loyal-hearted Maccabee.</p>
+<p>The great enemy of the Jews, Antiochus Epiphanes, was in the meantime dying
+in great agony in Persia, and his son Antiochus Eupator was set on the throne by
+Lysias, who brought him with an enormous army to reduce the rising in Judea. The
+fight was again at Bethshur, where Judas had built a strong fort on a point of
+rock that guarded the road to Hebron. Lysias tried to take this fort, and Judas
+came to the rescue with his little army, to meet the far mightier Syrian force,
+which was made more terrific by possessing thirty war elephants imported from
+the Indian frontier. Each of these creatures carried a tower containing
+thirty-two men armed with darts and javelins, and an Indian driver on his neck;
+and they had 1000 foot and 500 horse attached to the special following of the
+beast, who, gentle as he was by nature, often produced a fearful effect on the
+enemy; not so much by his huge bulk as by the terror he inspired among men, and
+far more among horses. The whole host was spread over the mountains and the
+valleys so that it is said that their bright armor and gold and silver shields
+made the mountains glisten like lamps of fire.</p>
+<p>Still Judas pressed on to the attack, and his brother Eleazar, perceiving
+that one of the elephants was more adorned than the rest, thought it might be
+carrying the king, and devoted himself for his country. He fought his way to the
+monster, crept under it, and stabbed it from beneath, so that the mighty weight
+sank down on him and crushed him to death in his fall. He gained a 'perpetual
+name' for valor and self-devotion; but the king was not upon the elephant, and
+after a hard-fought battle, Judas was obliged to draw off and leave Bethshur to
+be taken by the enemy, and to shut himself up in Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>There, want of provisions had brought him to great distress, when tidings
+came that another son of Antiochus Epiphanes had claimed the throne, and Lysias
+made peace in haste with Judas, promising him full liberty of worship, and left
+Palestine in peace.</p>
+<p>This did not, however, last long. Lysias and his young master were slain by
+the new king, Demetrius, who again sent an army for the subjection of Judas, and
+further appointed a high priest, named Alcimus, of the family of Aaron, but
+inclined to favor the new heathen fashions.</p>
+<p>This was the most fatal thing that had happened to Judas. Though of the
+priestly line, he was so much of a warrior, that he seems to have thought it
+would be profane to offer sacrifice himself; and many of the Jews were so glad
+of another high priest, that they let Alcimus into the Temple, and Jerusalem was
+again lost to Judas. One more battle was won by him at Beth-horon, and then
+finding how hard it was to make head against the Syrians, he sent to ask the aid
+of the great Roman power. But long before the answer could come, a huge Syrian
+army had marched in on the Holy Land, 20,000 men, and Judas had again no more
+than 3000. Some had gone over to Alcimus, some were offended at his seeking
+Roman alliance, and when at Eleasah he came in sight of the host, his men's
+hearts failed more than they ever had done before, and, out of the 3000 at first
+collected, only 800 stood with him, and they would fain have persuaded him to
+retreat.</p>
+<p>'God forbid that I should do this thing,' he said, 'and flee away from them.
+If our time be come, let us die manfully for our brethren, and let us not stain
+our honor.'</p>
+<p>Sore was the battle, as sore as that waged by the 800 at Thermopylae, and the
+end was the same. Judas and his 800 were not driven from the field, but lay dead
+upon it. But their work was done. What is called the moral effect of such a
+defeat goes further than many a victory. Those lives, sold so dearly, were the
+price of freedom for Judea.</p>
+<p>Judas's brothers Jonathan and Simon laid him in his father's tomb, and then
+ended the work that he had begun; and when Simon died, the Jews, once so trodden
+on, were the most prosperous race in the East. The Temple was raised from its
+ruins, and the exploits of the Maccabees had nerved the whole people to do or
+die in defense of the holy faith of their fathers.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE CHIEF OF THE ARVERNI<br>
+B.C. 52</h3></center>
+
+<p>We have seen the Gauls in the heart of Rome, we have now to see them showing
+the last courage of despair, defending their native lands against the greatest
+of all the conquerors that Rome ever sent forth.</p>
+<p>These lands, where they had dwelt for so many years as justly to regard them
+as their inheritance, were Gaul. There the Celtic race had had their abode ever
+since history has spoken clearly, and had become, in Gaul especially, slightly
+more civilized from intercourse with the Greek colony at Massilia, or
+Marseilles. But they had become borderers upon the Roman dominions, and there
+was little chance that they would not be absorbed; the tribes of Provence, the
+first Roman province, were already conquered, others were in alliance with Rome,
+and some had called in the Romans to help them fight their battles. There is no
+occasion to describe the seven years' war by which Julius Caesar added Gaul to
+the provinces claimed by Rome, and when he visited Britain; such conquests are
+far from being Golden Deeds, but are far worthier of the iron age. It is the
+stand made by the losing party, and the true patriotism of one young chieftain,
+that we would wish here to dwell upon.</p>
+<p>In the sixth year of the war the conquest seemed to have been made, and the
+Roman legions were guarding the north and west, while Caesar himself had crossed
+the Alps. Subjection pressed heavily on the Gauls, some of their chiefs had been
+put to death, and the high spirit of the nation was stirred. Meetings took place
+between the warriors of the various tribes, and an oath was taken by those who
+inhabited the centre of the country, that if they once revolted, they would
+stand by one another to the last. These Gauls were probably not tall, bony
+giants, like the pillagers of Rome; their appearance and character would be more
+like that of the modern Welsh, or of their own French descendants, small, alert,
+and dark-eyed, full of fire, but, though fierce at the first onset, soon
+rebuffed, yet with much perseverance in the long run. Their worship was
+conducted by Druids, like that of the Britons, and their dress was of checked
+material, formed into a loose coat and wide trousers. The superior chiefs, who
+had had any dealings with Rome, would speak a little Latin, and have a few Roman
+weapons as great improvements upon their own. Their fortifications were
+wonderfully strong. Trunks of trees were laid on the ground at two feet apart,
+so that the depth of the wall was their full length. Over these another tier of
+beams was laid crosswise, and the space between was filled up with earth, and
+the outside faced with large stones; the building of earth and stone was carried
+up to some height, then came another tier of timbers, crossed as before, and
+this was repeated again to a considerable height, the inner ends of the beams
+being fastened to a planking within the wall, so that the whole was of immense
+compactness. Fire could not damage the mineral part of the construction, nor the
+battering ram hurt the wood, and the Romans had been often placed in great
+difficulties by these rude but admirable constructions, within which the Gauls
+placed their families and cattle, building huts for present shelter. Of late,
+some attempts had been made at copying the regular streets and houses built
+round courts that were in use among the Romans, and Roman colonies had been
+established in various places, where veteran soldiers had received grants of
+land on condition of keeping the natives in check. A growing taste for arts and
+civilization was leading to Romans of inferior classes settling themselves in
+other Gallic cities.</p>
+<p>The first rising of the Gauls began by a quarrel at the city we now call
+Orleans, ending in a massacre of all the Romans there. The tidings were spread
+through all the country by loud shouts, repeated from one to the other by men
+stationed on every hill, and thus, what had been done at Orleans at sunrise was
+known by nine at night 160 miles off among the mountains, which were then the
+homes of a tribe called by the Romans the Arverni, who have left their name to
+the province of Auvergne.</p>
+<p>Here dwelt a young chieftain, probably really called Fearcuincedorigh, or Man
+who is chief of a hundred heads, known to us by Caesar's version of his name, as
+Vercingetorix, a high-spirited youth, who keenly felt the servitude of his
+country, and who, on receiving these tidings, instantly called on his friends to
+endeavor to shake off the yoke. His uncle, who feared to provoke Roman
+vengeance, expelled him from the chief city, Gergovia, the remains of which may
+be traced on the mountain still called Gergoie, about six miles from Clermont;
+but he collected all the younger and more high-spirited men, forced a way into
+the city, and was proclaimed chief of his tribe. All the neighboring tribes
+joined in the league against the common enemy, and tidings were brought to
+Caesar that the whole country round the Loire was in a state of revolt.</p>
+<p>In the heart of winter he hurried back, and took the Gauls by surprise by
+crossing the snows that lay thick on the wild waste of the Cebenna, which the
+Arverni had always considered as their impenetrable barrier throughout the
+winter. The towns quickly fell into his hands, and he was rapidly recovering all
+he had lost, when Vercingetorix, collecting his chief supporters, represented to
+them that their best hope would be in burning all the inhabited places
+themselves and driving off all the cattle, then lying in wait to cut off all the
+convoys of provisions that should be sent to the enemy, and thus starving them
+into a retreat. He said that burning houses were indeed a grievous sight, but it
+would be more grievous to see their wives and children dragged into captivity.
+To this all the allies agreed, and twenty towns in one district were burnt in a
+single day; but when they came to the city of Avaricum, now called Bourges, the
+tribe of Bituriges, to whom it belonged, entreated on their knees not to be
+obliged to destroy the most beautiful city in the country, representing that, as
+it had a river on one side, and a morass everywhere else, except at a very
+narrow entrance, it might be easily held out against the enemy, and to their
+entreaties Vercingetorix yielded, though much against his own judgment.</p>
+<p>Caesar laid siege to the place, but his army suffered severely from cold and
+hunger; they had no bread at all, and lived only on the cattle driven in from
+distant villages, while Vercingetorix hovered round, cutting off their supplies.
+They however labored diligently to raise a mount against a wall of the town; but
+as fast as they worked, the higher did the Gauls within raise the stages of
+their rampart, and for twenty-five days there was a most brave defense; but at
+last the Romans made their entrance, and slaughtered all they found there,
+except 800, who escaped to the camp of Vercingetorix. He was not disconcerted by
+this loss, which he had always expected, but sheltered and clothed the
+fugitives, and raised a great body of archers and of horsemen, with whom he
+returned to his own territory in Auvergne. There was much fighting around the
+city of Gergovia; but at length, owing to the revolt of the Aedui, another
+Gallic tribe, Caesar was forced to retreat over the Loire; and the wild peaks of
+volcanic Auvergne were free again.</p>
+<p>But no gallant resolution could long prevail against the ever-advancing power
+of Rome, and at length the Gauls were driven into their fortified camp at
+Alesia, now called Alise [Footnote: In Burgundy, between Semur and Dijon.], a
+city standing on a high hill, with two rivers flowing round its base, and a
+plain in front about three miles wide. Everywhere else it was circled in by high
+hills, and here Caesar resolved to shut these brave men in and bring them to
+bay. He caused his men to begin that mighty system of earthworks by which the
+Romans carried on their attacks, compassing their victim round on every side
+with a deadly slowness and sureness, by those broad ditches and terraced
+ramparts that everywhere mark where their foot of iron was trod. Eleven miles
+round did this huge rampart extend, strengthened by three-and-twenty redoubts,
+or places of defense, where a watch was continually kept. Before the lines were
+complete, Vercingetorix brought out his cavalry, and gave battle, at one time
+with a hope of success; but the enemy were too strong for him, and his horsemen
+were driven into the camp. He then resolved to send home all of these, since
+they could be of no use in the camp, and had better escape before the ditch
+should have shut them in on every side. He charged them to go to their several
+tribes and endeavor to assemble all the fighting men to come to his rescue; for,
+if he were not speedily succored, he and 80,000 of the bravest of the Gauls must
+fall into the hands of the Romans, since he had only corn for thirty days, even
+with the utmost saving.</p>
+<p>Having thus exhorted them, he took leave of them, and sent them away at nine
+at night, so that they might escape in the dark where the Roman trench had not
+yet extended. Then he distributed the cattle among his men, but retained the
+corn himself, serving it out with the utmost caution. The Romans outside
+fortified their camp with a double ditch, one of them full of water, behind
+which was a bank twelve feet high, with stakes forked like the horns of a stag.
+The space between the ditches was filled with pits, and scattered with iron
+caltrops or hooked spikes. All this was against the garrison, to prevent them
+from breaking out; and outside the camp he made another line of ditches and
+ramparts against the Gauls who might be coming to the rescue.</p>
+<p>The other tribes were not deaf to the summons of their friends, but assembled
+in large numbers, and just as the besieged had exhausted their provisions, an
+army was seen on the hills beyond the camp. Their commander was Vergosillaunus
+(most probably Fearsaighan, the Man of the Standard), a near kinsman of
+Vercingetorix; and all that bravery could do, they did to break through the
+defenses of the camp from outside, while within, Vercingetorix and his 80,000
+tried to fill up the ditches, and force their way out to meet their friends. But
+Caesar himself commanded the Romans, who were confident in his fortunes, and
+raised a shout of ecstasy wherever they beheld his thin, marked, eagle face and
+purple robe, rushing on the enemy with a confidence of victory that did in fact
+render them invincible. The Gauls gave way, lost seventy-four of their
+standards, and Vergosillaunus himself was taken a prisoner; and as for the brave
+garrison within Alesia, they were but like so many flies struggling in vain
+within the enormous web that had been woven around them. Hope was gone, but the
+chief of the Arverni could yet do one thing for his countrymen--he could offer
+up himself in order to obtain better terms for them.</p>
+<p>The next day he convened his companions in arms, and told them that he had
+only fought for the freedom of their country, not to secure his private
+interest; and that now, since yield they must, he freely offered himself to
+become a victim for their safety, whether they should judge it best for
+themselves to appease the anger of the conqueror by putting him to death
+themselves, or whether they preferred giving him up alive.</p>
+<p>It was a piteous necessity to have to sacrifice their noblest and bravest,
+who had led them so gallantly during the long war; but they had little choice,
+and could only send messengers to the camp to offer to yield Vercingetorix as
+the price of their safety. Caesar made it known that he was willing to accept
+their submission, and drawing up his troops in battle array, with the Eagle
+standards around him, he watched the whole Gallic army march past him. First,
+Vercingetorix was placed as a prisoner in his hands, and then each man lay down
+sword, javelin, or bow and arrows, helmet, buckler and breastplate, in one
+mournful heap, and proceeded on his way, scarcely thankful that the generosity
+of their chieftain had purchased for them subjection rather than death.</p>
+<p>Vercingetorix himself had become the property of the great man from whom
+alone we know of his deeds; who could perceive his generous spirit and high
+qualities as a general, nay, who honored the self-devotion by which he
+endeavored to save his countrymen. He remained in captivity--six long years sped
+by--while Caesar passed the Rubicon, fought out his struggle for power at Rome,
+and subdued Egypt, Pontus, and Northern Africa--and all the time the brave Gaul
+remained closely watched and guarded, and with no hope of seeing the jagged
+peaks and wild valleys of his own beautiful Auvergne. For well did he, like
+every other marked foe of Rome, know for what he was reserved, and no doubt he
+yielded himself in the full expectation of that fate which many a man, as brave
+as he, had escaped by self-destruction.</p>
+<p>The day came at last. In July, B.C. 45, the victorious Caesar had leisure to
+celebrate his victories in four grand triumphs, all in one month, and that in
+honor of the conquest of Gaul came the first. The triumphal gate of Rome was
+thrown wide open, every house was decked with hangings of silk and tapestry, the
+household images of every family, dressed with fresh flowers, were placed in
+their porches, those of the gods stood on the steps of the temples, and in
+marched the procession, the magistrates first in their robes of office, and then
+the trumpeters. Next came the tokens of the victory--figures of the supposed
+gods of the two great rivers, Rhine and Rhone, and even of the captive Ocean,
+made in gold, were carried along, with pictures framed in citron wood, showing
+the scenes of victory--the wild waste of the Cevennes, the steep peaks of
+Auvergne, the mighty camp of Alesia; nay, there too would be the white cliffs of
+Dover, and the struggle with the Britons on the beach. Models in wood and ivory
+showed the fortifications of Avaricum, and of many another city; and here too
+were carried specimens of the olives and vines, and other curious plants of the
+newly won land; here was the breastplate of British pearls that Caesar dedicated
+to Venus. A band of flute-players followed, and then came the white oxen that
+were to be sacrificed, their horns gilded and flowers hung round them, the
+sacrificing priests with wreathed heads marching with them. Specimens of bears
+and wolves from the woods and mountains came next in order, and after them waved
+for the last time the national ensigns of the many tribes of Gaul. Once more
+Vercingetorix and Vergosillaunus saw their own Arvernian standard, and marched
+behind it with the noblest of their clan: once more they wore their native dress
+and well-tried armor. But chains were on their hands and feet, and the men who
+had fought so long and well for freedom, were the captive gazing-stock of Rome.
+Long, long was the line of chained Gauls of every tribe, before the four white
+horses appeared, all abreast, drawing the gilded car, in which stood a slight
+form in a purple robe, with the bald head and narrow temples encircled with a
+wreath of bay, the thin cheeks tinted with vermilion, the eager aquiline face
+and narrow lips gravely composed to Roman dignity, and the quick eye searching
+out what impression the display was making on the people. Over his head a slave
+held a golden crown, but whispered, 'Remember that thou too art a man.' And in
+following that old custom, how little did the victor know that, bay-crowned like
+himself, there followed close behind, in one of the chariots of the officers,
+the man whose dagger-thrust would, two years later, be answered by his dying
+word of reproach! The horsemen of the army followed, and then the legions, every
+spear wreathed, every head crowned with bay, so that an evergreen grove might
+have seemed marching through the Roman streets, but for the war songs, and the
+wild jests, and ribald ballads that custom allowed the soldiers to shout out,
+often in pretended mockery of their own victorious general, the Imperator.</p>
+<p>The victor climbed the Capitol steps, and laid his wreath of bay on Jupiter's
+knees, the white oxen were sacrificed, and the feast began by torchlight. Where
+was the vanquished? He was led to the dark prison vault in the side of
+Capitoline hill, and there one sharp sword-thrust ended the gallant life and
+long captivity.</p>
+<p>It was no special cruelty in Julius Caesar. Every Roman triumph was stained
+by the slaughter of the most distinguished captives, after the degradation of
+walking in chains had been undergone. He had spirit to appreciate Vercingetorix,
+but had not nobleness to spare him from the ordinary fate. Yet we may doubt
+which, in true moral greatness, was the superior in that hour of triumph, the
+conqueror who trod down all that he might minister to his own glory, or the
+conquered, who, when no resistance had availed, had voluntarily confronted shame
+and death in hopes to win pardon and safety for his comrades.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>WITHSTANDING THE MONARCH IN HIS WRATH<br>
+A.D. 389</h3></center>
+
+<p>When a monarch's power is unchecked by his people, there is only One to whom
+he believes himself accountable; and if he have forgotten the dagger of
+Damocles, or if he be too high-spirited to regard it, then that Higher One alone
+can restrain his actions. And there have been times when princes have so broken
+the bounds of right, that no hope remains of recalling them to their duty save
+by the voice of the ministers of God upon Earth. But as these ministers bear no
+charmed life, and are subjects themselves of the prince, such rebukes have been
+given at the utmost risk of liberty and life.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that though Nathan, unharmed, showed David his sin, and Elijah,
+the wondrous prophet of Gilead, was protected from Jezebel's fury, when he
+denounced her and her husband Ahab for the idolatry of Baal and the murder of
+Naboth; yet no Divine hand interposed to shield Zachariah, the son of Jehoiada,
+the high priest, when he rebuked the apostasy of his cousin, Jehoash, King of
+Judah, and was stoned to death by the ungrateful king's command in that very
+temple court where Jehoiada and his armed Levites had encountered the savage
+usurping Athaliah, and won back the kingdom for the child Jehoash. And when 'in
+the spirit and power of Elijah', St. John the Baptist denounced the sin of Herod
+Antipas in marrying his brother Philip's wife, he bore the consequences to the
+utmost, when thrown into prison and then beheaded to gratify the rage of the
+vindictive woman.</p>
+<p>Since Scripture Saints in the age of miracles were not always shielded from
+the wrath of kings, Christian bishops could expect no special interposition in
+their favor, when they stood forth to stop the way of the sovereign's passions,
+and to proclaim that the cause of mercy, purity, and truth is the cause of God.</p>
+<p>The first of these Christian bishops was Ambrose, the sainted prelate of
+Milan. It was indeed a Christian Emperor whom he opposed, no other than the
+great Theodosius, but it was a new and unheard-of thing for any voice to rebuke
+an Emperor of Rome, and Theodosius had proved himself a man of violent passions.</p>
+<p>The fourth century was a time when races and all sorts of shows were the
+fashion, nay, literally the rage; for furious quarrels used to arise among the
+spectators who took the part of one or other of the competitors, and would call
+themselves after their colours, the Blues or the Greens. A favorite chariot
+driver, who had excelled in these races at Thessalonica, was thrown into prison
+for some misdemeanor by Botheric, the Governor of Illyria, and his absence so
+enraged the Thessalonican mob, that they rose in tumult, and demanded his
+restoration. On being refused, they threw such a hail of stones that the
+governor himself and some of his officers were slain.</p>
+<p>Theodosius might well be displeased, but his rage passed all bounds. He was
+at Milan at the time, and at first Ambrose so worked on his feelings as to make
+him promise to temper justice with mercy; but afterwards fresh accounts of the
+murder, together with the representations of his courtier Rufinus, made him
+resolve not to relent, and he sent off messengers commanding that there should
+be a general slaughter of all the race-going Thessalonicans, since all were
+equally guilty of Botheric's death. He took care that his horrible command
+should be kept a secret from Ambrose, and the first that the Bishop heard of it
+was the tidings that 7,000 persons had been killed in the theatre, in a massacre
+lasting three hours!</p>
+<p>There was no saving these lives, but Ambrose felt it his duty to make the
+Emperor feel his sin, in hopes of saving others. Besides, it was not consistent
+with the honor of God to receive at his altar a man reeking with innocent blood.
+The Bishop, however, took time to consider; he went into the country for a few
+days, and thence wrote a letter to the Emperor, telling him that thus stained
+with crime, he could not be admitted to the Holy Communion, nor received into
+church. Still the Emperor does not seem to have believed he could be really
+withstood by any subject, and on Ambrose's return, he found the imperial
+procession, lictors, guards, and all, escorting the Emperor as usual to the
+Basilica or Justice Hall, that had been turned into a church.</p>
+<p>Then to the door came the Bishop and stood in the way, forbidding the
+entrance, and announcing that there, at least, sacrilege should not be added to
+murder.</p>
+<p>'Nay,' said the Emperor, 'did not holy King David commit both murder and
+adultery, yet was he not received again?'</p>
+<p>'If you have sinned like him, repent like him,' answered Ambrose.</p>
+<p>Theodosius turned away, troubled. He was great enough not to turn his anger
+against the Bishop; he felt that he had sinned, and that the chastisement was
+merited, and he went back to his palace weeping, and there spent eight months,
+attending to his duties of state, but too proud to go through the tokens of
+penitence that the discipline of the Church had prescribed before a great sinner
+could be received back into the congregation of the faithful. Easter was the
+usual time for reconciling penitents, and Ambrose was not inclined to show any
+respect of persons, or to excuse the Emperor from a penance he would have
+imposed on any offender. However, Rufinus could not believe in such disregard,
+and thought all would give way to the Emperor's will. Christmas had come, but
+for one man at Milan there were no hymns, no shouts of 'glad tidings!' no
+midnight festival, no rejoicing that 'to us a Child is born; to us a Son is
+given'. The Basilica was thronged with worshippers and rang with their Amens,
+resounding like thunder, and their echoing song--the Te Deum--then their newest
+hymn of praise. But the lord of all those multitudes was alone in his palace. He
+had not shown good will to man; he had not learnt mercy and peace from the
+Prince of Peace; and the door was shut upon him. He was a resolute Spanish
+Roman, a well-tried soldier, a man advancing in years, but he wept, and wept
+bitterly. Rufinus found him thus weeping. It must have been strange to the
+courtier that his master did not send his lictors to carry the offending bishop
+to a dungeon, and give all his court favor to the heretics, like the last
+empress who had reigned at Milan. Nay, he might even, like Julian the Apostate,
+have altogether renounced that Christian faith which could humble an emperor
+below the poorest of his subjects.</p>
+<p>But Rufinus contented himself with urging the Emperor not to remain at home
+lamenting, but to endeavor again to obtain admission into the church, assuring
+him that the Bishop would give way. Theodosius replied that he did not expect
+it, but yielded to the persuasions, and Rufinus hastened on before to warn the
+Bishop of his coming, and represented how inexpedient it was to offend him.</p>
+<p>'I warn you,' replied Ambrose, 'that I shall oppose his entrance, but if he
+chooses to turn his power into tyranny, I shall willingly let him slay me.'</p>
+<p>The Emperor did not try to enter the church, but sought Ambrose in an
+adjoining building, where he entreated to be absolved from his sin.</p>
+<p>'Beware,' returned the Bishop, 'of trampling on the laws of God.'</p>
+<p>'I respect them,' said the Emperor, 'therefore I have not set foot in the
+church, but I pray thee to deliver me from these bonds, and not to close against
+me the door that the Lord hath opened to all who truly repent.'</p>
+<p>'What repentance have you shown for such a sin?' asked Ambrose.</p>
+<p>'Appoint my penance,' said the Emperor, entirely subdued.</p>
+<p>And Ambrose caused him at once to sign a decree that thirty days should
+always elapse between a sentence of death and its execution. After this,
+Theodosius was allowed to come into the church, but only to the corner he had
+shunned all these eight months, till the 'dull hard stone within him' had
+'melted', to the spot appointed for the penitents. There, without his crown, his
+purple robe, and buskins, worked with golden eagles, all laid aside, he lay
+prostrate on the stones, repeating the verse, 'My soul cleaveth unto the dust;
+quicken me, O Lord, according to thy word.' This was the place that penitents
+always occupied, and there fasts and other discipline were also appointed. When
+the due course had been gone through, probably at the next Easter, Ambrose, in
+his Master's name, pronounced the forgiveness of Theodosius, and received him
+back to the full privileges of a Christian. When we look at the course of many
+another emperor, and see how easily, where the power was irresponsible, justice
+became severity, and severity, bloodthirstiness, we see what Ambrose dared to
+meet, and from what he spared Theodosius and all the civilized world under his
+sway. Who can tell how many innocent lives have been saved by that thirty days'
+respite?</p>
+<p>Pass over nearly 700 years, and again we find a church door barred against a
+monarch. This time it is not under the bright Italian sky, but under the grey
+fogs of the Baltic sea. It is not the stately marble gateway of the Milanese
+Basilica, but the low-arched, rough stone portal of the newly built cathedral of
+Roskilde, in Zealand, where, if a zigzag surrounds the arch, it is a great
+effort of genius. The Danish king Swend, the nephew of the well-known Knut,
+stands before it; a stern and powerful man, fierce and passionate, and with many
+a Danish axe at his command. Nay, only lately for a few rude jests, he caused
+some of his chief jarls to be slain without a trial. Half the country is still
+pagan, and though the king himself is baptized, there is no certainty that, if
+the Christian faith do not suit his taste, he may not join the heathen party and
+return to the worship of Thor and Tyr, where deeds of blood would be not
+blameworthy, but a passport to the rude joys of Valhall. Nevertheless there is a
+pastoral staff across the doorway, barring the way of the king, and that staff
+is held against him by an Englishman, William, Bishop of Roskilde, the
+missionary who had converted a great part of Zealand, but who will not accept
+Christians who have not laid aside their sins.</p>
+<p>He confronts the king who has never been opposed before. 'Go back,' he says,
+'nor dare approach the alter of God--thou who art not a king but a murderer.'</p>
+<p>Some of the jarls seized their swords and axes, and were about to strike the
+bishop away from the threshold, but he, without removing his staff, bent his
+head, and bade them strike, saying he was ready to die in the cause of God. But
+the king came to a better frame of mind, he called the jarls away, and returning
+humbly to his palace, took off his royal robes, and came again barefoot and in
+sackcloth to the church door, where Bishop William met him, took him by the
+hand, gave him the kiss of peace, and led him to the penitents' place. After
+three days he was absolved, and for the rest of his life, the bishop and the
+king lived in the closest friendship, so much so that William always prayed that
+even in death he might not be divided from his friend. The prayer was granted.
+The two died almost at the same time, and were buried together in the cathedral
+at Roskilde, where the one had taught and other learnt the great lesson of
+mercy.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE LAST FIGHT IN THE COLISEUM<br>
+A.D. 404</h3></center>
+
+<p>As the Romans grew prouder and more fond of pleasure, no one could hope to
+please them who did not give them sports and entertainments. When any person
+wished to be elected to any public office, it was a matter of course that he
+should compliment his fellow citizens by exhibitions of the kind they loved, and
+when the common people were discontented, their cry was that they wanted panem
+ac Circenses, 'bread and sports', the only things they cared for. In most places
+where there has been a large Roman colony, remains can be seen of the
+amphitheatres, where the citizens were wont to assemble for these diversions.
+Sometimes these are stages of circular galleries of seats hewn out of the
+hillside, where rows of spectators might sit one above the other, all looking
+down on a broad, flat space in the centre, under their feet, where the
+representations took place. Sometimes, when the country was flat, or it was
+easier to build than to excavate, the amphitheatre was raised above ground,
+rising up to a considerable height.</p>
+<p>The grandest and most renowned of all these amphitheatres is the Coliseum at
+Rome. It was built by Vespasian and his son Titus, the conquerors of Jerusalem,
+in a valley in the midst of the seven hills of Rome. The captive Jews were
+forced to labour at it; and the materials, granite outside, and softer
+travertine stone within, are so solid and so admirably built, that still at the
+end of eighteen centuries it has scarcely even become a ruin, but remains one of
+the greatest wonders of Rome.</p>
+<p>Five acres of ground were enclosed within the oval of its outer wall, which
+outside rises perpendicularly in tiers of arches one above the other. Within,
+the galleries of seats projected forwards, each tier coming out far beyond the
+one above it, so that between the lowest and the outer wall there was room for a
+great space of chambers, passages, and vaults around the central space, called
+the arena, from the arena, or sand, with which it was strewn.</p>
+<p>When the Roman Emperors grew very vain and luxurious, they used to have this
+sand made ornamental with metallic filings, vermilion, and even powdered
+precious stones; but it was thought better taste to use the scrapings of a soft
+white stone, which, when thickly strewn, made the whole arena look as if covered
+with untrodden snow. Around the border of this space flowed a stream of fresh
+water. Then came a straight wall, rising to a considerable height, and
+surmounted by a broad platform, on which stood a throne for the Emperor, curule
+chairs of ivory and gold for the chief magistrates and senators, and seats for
+the vestal virgins. Next above were galleries for the equestrian order, the
+great mass of those who considered themselves as of gentle station, though not
+of the highest rank; farther up, and therefore farther back, were the galleries
+belonging to the freemen of Rome; and these were again surmounted by another
+plain wall with a platform on the top, where were places for the ladies, who
+were not (except the vestal virgins) allowed to look on nearer, because of the
+unclothed state of some of the performers in the arena. Between the ladies'
+boxes, benches were squeezed in where the lowest people could seat themselves;
+and some of these likewise found room in the two uppermost tiers of porticoes,
+where sailors, mechanics, and persons in the service of the Coliseum had their
+post. Altogether, when full, this huge building held no less than 87,000
+spectators. It had no roof; but when there was rain, or if the sun was too hot,
+the sailors in the porticoes unfurled awnings that ran along upon ropes, and
+formed a covering of silk and gold tissue over the whole. Purple was the
+favorite color for this velamen, or veil; because, when the sun shone through
+it, it cast such beautiful rosy tints on the snowy arena and the white
+purple-edged togas of the Roman citizens.</p>
+<p>Long days were spent from morning till evening upon those galleries. The
+multitude who poured in early would watch the great dignitaries arrive and take
+their seats, greeting them either with shouts of applause or hootings of
+dislike, according as they were favorites or otherwise; and when the Emperor
+came in to take his place under his canopy, there was one loud acclamation, 'Joy
+to thee, master of all, first of all, happiest of all. Victory to thee for
+ever!'</p>
+<p>When the Emperor had seated himself and given the signal, the sports began.
+Sometimes a rope-dancing elephant would begin the entertainment, by mounting
+even to the summit of the building and descending by a cord. Then a bear,
+dressed up as a Roman matron, would be carried along in a chair between porters,
+as ladies were wont to go abroad, and another bear, in a lawyer's robe, would
+stand on his hind legs and go through the motions of pleading a case. Or a lion
+came forth with a jeweled crown on his head, a diamond necklace round his neck,
+his mane plaited with gold, and his claws gilded, and played a hundred pretty
+gentle antics with a little hare that danced fearlessly within his grasp. Then
+in would come twelve elephants, six males in togas, six females with the veil
+and pallium; they took their places on couches around an ivory table, dined with
+great decorum, playfully sprinkled a little rosewater over the nearest
+spectators, and then received more guests of their unwieldy kind, who arrived in
+ball dresses, scattered flowers, and performed a dance.</p>
+<p>Sometimes water was let into the arena, a ship sailed in, and falling to
+pieces in the midst, sent a crowd of strange animals swimming in all directions.
+Sometimes the ground opened, and trees came growing up through it, bearing
+golden fruit. Or the beautiful old tale of Orpheus was acted; these trees would
+follow the harp and song of the musician; but--to make the whole part
+complete--it was no mere play, but real earnest, that the Orpheus of the piece
+fell a prey to live bears.</p>
+<p>For the Coliseum had not been built for such harmless spectacles as those
+first described. The fierce Romans wanted to be excited and feel themselves
+strongly stirred; and, presently, the doors of the pits and dens round the arena
+were thrown open, and absolutely savage beasts were let loose upon one
+another--rhinoceroses and tigers, bulls and lions, leopards and wild
+boars--while the people watched with savage curiosity to see the various kinds
+of attack and defense; or, if the animals were cowed or sullen, their rage would
+be worked up--red would be shown to the bulls, white to boars, red-hot goads
+would be driven into some, whips would be lashed at others, till the work of
+slaughter was fairly commenced, and gazed on with greedy eyes and ears
+delighted, instead of horror-struck, by the roars and howls of the noble
+creatures whose courage was thus misused. Sometimes indeed, when some especially
+strong or ferocious animal had slain a whole heap of victims, the cries of the
+people would decree that it should be turned loose in its native forest, and,
+amid shouts of 'A triumph! a triumph!' the beast would prowl round the arena,
+upon the carcasses of the slain victims. Almost incredible numbers of animals
+were imported for these cruel sports, and the governors of distant provinces
+made it a duty to collect troops of lions, elephants, ostriches, leopards--the
+fiercer or the newer the creature the better--to be thus tortured to frenzy, to
+make sport in the amphitheatre. However, there was daintiness joined with
+cruelty: the Romans did not like the smell of blood, though they enjoyed the
+sight of it, and all the solid stonework was pierced with tubes, through which
+was conducted the stream of spices and saffron, boiled in wine, that the perfume
+might overpower the scent of slaughter below.</p>
+<p>Wild beasts tearing each other to pieces might, one would think, satisfy any
+taste of horror; but the spectators needed even nobler game to be set before
+their favorite monsters--men were brought forward to confront them. Some of
+these were at first in full armor, and fought hard, generally with success; and
+there was a revolving machine, something like a squirrel's cage, in which the
+bear was always climbing after his enemy, and then rolling over by his own
+weight. Or hunters came, almost unarmed, and gaining the victory by swiftness
+and dexterity, throwing a piece of cloth over a lion's head, or disconcerting
+him by putting their fist down his throat. But it was not only skill, but death,
+that the Romans loved to see; and condemned criminals and deserters were
+reserved to feast the lions, and to entertain the populace with their various
+kinds of death. Among these condemned was many a Christian martyr, who witnessed
+a good confession before the savage-eyed multitude around the arena, and 'met
+the lion's gory mane' with a calm resolution and hopeful joy that the lookers-on
+could not understand. To see a Christian die, with upward gaze and hymns of joy
+on his tongue, was the most strange unaccountable sight the Coliseum could
+offer, and it was therefore the choicest, and reserved for the last part of the
+spectacles in which the brute creation had a part.</p>
+<p>The carcasses were dragged off with hooks, and bloodstained sand was covered
+with a fresh clean layer, the perfume wafted in stronger clouds, and a
+procession came forward--tall, well-made men, in the prime of their strength.
+Some carried a sword and a lasso, others a trident and a net; some were in light
+armor, others in the full heavy equipment of a soldier; some on horseback, some
+in chariots, some on foot. They marched in, and made their obeisance to the
+Emperor; and with one voice, their greeting sounded through the building, Ave,
+Caesar, morituri te salutant! 'Hail, Caesar, those about to die salute thee!'</p>
+<p>They were the gladiators--the swordsmen trained to fight to the death to
+amuse the populace. They were usually slaves placed in schools of arms under the
+care of a master; but sometimes persons would voluntarily hire themselves out to
+fight by way of a profession: and both these, and such slave gladiators as did
+not die in the arena, would sometimes retire, and spend an old age of quiet; but
+there was little hope of this, for the Romans were not apt to have mercy on the
+fallen.</p>
+<p>Fights of all sorts took place--the light-armed soldier and the netsman--the
+lasso and the javelin--the two heavy-armed warriors--all combinations of single
+combat, and sometimes a general melee. When a gladiator wounded his adversary,
+he shouted to the spectators, Hoc habet! 'He has it!' and looked up to know
+whether he should kill or spare. If the people held up their thumbs, the
+conquered was left to recover, if he could; if they turned them down, he was to
+die: and if he showed any reluctance to present his throat for the deathblow,
+there was a scornful shout, Recipe ferrum! 'Receive the steel!' Many of us must
+have seen casts of the most touching statue of the wounded man, that called
+forth the noble lines of indignant pity which, though so often repeated, cannot
+be passed over here:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'I see before me the Gladiator lie;<br>
+He leans upon his hand--his manly brow<br>
+Consents to death, but conquers agony.<br>
+And his droop'd head sinks gradually low,<br>
+And through his side the last drops, ebbing slow<br>
+From the red gash, fall heavy one by one,<br>
+Like the first of a thunder shower; and now<br>
+The arena swims around him--he is gone<br>
+Ere ceased the inhuman shout which hailed the wretch who won.<br>
+'He heard it, but he heeded no--this eyes<br>
+Were with his heart, and that was far away.<br>
+He reck'd not of the life he lost, nor prize,<br>
+But where his rude hut by the Danube lay,<br>
+There were his young barbarians all at play,<br>
+There was their Dacian mother--he their sire,<br>
+Butcher'd to make a Roman holiday.<br>
+All this rush'd with his blood--Shall he expire,<br>
+And unavenged? Arise ye Goths and glut your ire.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Sacred vestals, tender mothers, fat, good-humored senators, all thought it
+fair play, and were equally pitiless in the strange frenzy for exciting scenes
+to which they gave themselves up, when they mounted the stone stairs of the
+Coliseum. Privileged persons would even descend into the arena, examine the
+death agonies, and taste the blood of some specially brave victim ere the corpse
+was drawn forth at the death gate, that the frightful game might continue
+undisturbed and unencumbered. Gladiator shows were the great passion of Rome,
+and popular favor could hardly be gained except by ministering to it. Even when
+the barbarians were beginning to close in on the Empire, hosts of brave men were
+still kept for this slavish mimic warfare--sport to the beholders, but sad
+earnest to the actors.</p>
+<p>Christianity worked its way upwards, and at least was professed by the
+Emperor on his throne. Persecution came to an end, and no more martyrs fed the
+beasts in the Coliseum. The Christian emperors endeavored to prevent any more
+shows where cruelty and death formed the chief interest and no truly religious
+person could endure the spectacle; but custom and love of excitement prevailed
+even against the Emperor. Mere tricks of beasts, horse and chariot races, or
+bloodless contests, were tame and dull, according to the diseased taste of Rome;
+it was thought weak and sentimental to object to looking on at a death scene;
+the Emperors were generally absent at Constantinople, and no one could get
+elected to any office unless he treated the citizens to such a show as they best
+liked, with a little bloodshed and death to stir their feelings; and thus it
+went on for full a hundred years after Rome had, in name, become a Christian
+city, and the same custom prevailed wherever there was an amphitheatre and
+pleasure-loving people.</p>
+<p>Meantime the enemies of Rome were coming nearer and nearer, and Alaric, the
+great chief of the Goths, led his forces into Italy, and threatened the city
+itself. Honorius, the Emperor, was a cowardly, almost idiotical, boy; but his
+brave general, Stilicho, assembled his forces, met the Goths at Pollentia (about
+twenty-five miles from where Turin now stands), and gave them a complete defeat
+on the Easter Day of the year 403. He pursued them into the mountains, and for
+that time saved Rome. In the joy of the victory the Roman senate invited the
+conqueror and his ward Honorius to enter the city in triumph, at the opening of
+the new year, with the white steeds, purple robes, and vermilion cheeks with
+which, of old, victorious generals were welcomed at Rome. The churches were
+visited instead of the Temple of Jupiter, and there was no murder of the
+captives; but Roman bloodthirstiness was not yet allayed, and, after all the
+procession had been completed, the Coliseum shows commenced, innocently at
+first, with races on foot, on horseback, and in chariots; then followed a grand
+hunting of beasts turned loose in the arena; and next a sword dance. But after
+the sword dance came the arraying of swordsmen, with no blunted weapons, but
+with sharp spears and swords--a gladiator combat in full earnest. The people,
+enchanted, applauded with shouts of ecstasy this gratification of their savage
+tastes. Suddenly, however, there was an interruption. A rude, roughly robed man,
+bareheaded and barefooted, had sprung into the arena, and, signing back the
+gladiators, began to call aloud upon the people to cease from the shedding of
+innocent blood, and not to requite God's mercy in turning away the sword of the
+enemy by encouraging murder. Shouts, howls, cries, broke in upon his words; this
+was no place for preachings--the old customs of Rome should be observed 'Back,
+old man!' 'On, gladiators!' The gladiators thrust aside the meddler, and rushed
+to the attack. He still stood between, holding them apart, striving in vain to
+be heard. 'Sedition! Sedition!' 'Down with him!' was the cry; and the man in
+authority, Alypius, the prefect, himself added his voice. The gladiators,
+enraged at interference with their vocation, cut him down. Stones, or whatever
+came to hand, rained down upon him from the furious people, and he perished in
+the midst of the arena! He lay dead, and then came the feeling of what had been
+done.</p>
+<p>His dress showed that he was one of the hermits who vowed themselves to a
+holy life of prayer and self-denial, and who were greatly reverenced, even by
+the most thoughtless. The few who had previously seen him, told that he had come
+from the wilds of Asia on pilgrimage, to visit the shrines and keep his
+Christmas at Rome--they knew he was a holy man--no more, and it is not even
+certain whether his name was Alymachus or Telemachus. His spirit had been
+stirred by the sight of thousands flocking to see men slaughter one another, and
+in his simple-hearted zeal he had resolved to stop the cruelty or die. He had
+died, but not in vain. His work was done. The shock of such a death before their
+eyes turned the hearts of the people; they saw the wickedness and cruelty to
+which they had blindly surrendered themselves; and from the day when the hermit
+died in the Coliseum there was never another fight of the Gladiators. Not merely
+at Rome, but in every province of the Empire, the custom was utterly abolished;
+and one habitual crime at least was wiped from the earth by the self-devotion of
+one humble, obscure, almost nameless man.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE SHEPHERD GIRL OF NANTERRE<br>
+A.D. 438</h3></center>
+
+<p>Four hundred years of the Roman dominion had entirely tamed the once wild and
+independent Gauls. Everywhere, except in the moorlands of Brittany, they had
+become as much like Romans themselves as they could accomplish; they had Latin
+names, spoke the Latin tongue, all their personages of higher rank were enrolled
+as Roman citizens, their chief cities were colonies where the laws were
+administered by magistrates in the Roman fashion, and the houses, dress, and
+amusements were the same as those of Italy. The greater part of the towns had
+been converted to Christianity, though some Paganism still lurked in the more
+remote villages and mountainous districts.</p>
+<p>It was upon these civilized Gauls that the terrible attacks came from the
+wild nations who poured out of the centre and east of Europe. The Franks came
+over the Rhine and its dependent rivers, and made furious attacks upon the
+peaceful plains, where the Gauls had long lived in security, and reports were
+everywhere heard of villages harried by wild horsemen, with short double-headed
+battleaxes, and a horrible short pike, covered with iron and with several large
+hooks, like a gigantic artificial minnow, and like it fastened to a long rope,
+so that the prey which it had grappled might be pulled up to the owner. Walled
+cities usually stopped them, but every farm or villa outside was stripped of its
+valuables, set on fire, the cattle driven off, and the more healthy inhabitants
+seized for slaves.</p>
+<p>It was during this state of things that a girl was born to a wealthy peasant
+at the village now called Nanterre, about two miles from Lutetia, which was
+already a prosperous city, though not as yet so entirely the capital as it was
+destined to become under the name of Paris. She was christened by an old Gallic
+name, probably Gwenfrewi, or White Stream, in Latin Genovefa, but she is best
+known by the late French form of Genevieve. When she was about seven years old,
+two celebrated bishops passed through the village, Germanus, of Auxerre, and
+Lupus, of Troyes, who had been invited to Britain to dispute the false doctrine
+of Pelagius. All the inhabitants flocked into the church to see them, pray with
+them, and receive their blessing; and here the sweet childish devotion of
+Genevieve so struck Germanus, that he called her to him, talked to her, made her
+sit beside him at the feast, gave her his special blessing, and presented her
+with a copper medal with a cross engraven upon it. From that time the little
+maiden always deemed herself especially consecrated to the service of Heaven,
+but she still remained at home, daily keeping her father's sheep, and spinning
+their wool as she sat under the trees watching them, but always with a heart
+full of prayer.</p>
+<p>After this St. Germanus proceeded to Britain, and there encouraged his
+converts to meet the heathen Picts at Maes Garmon, in Flintshire, where the
+exulting shout of the white-robed catechumens turned to flight the wild
+superstitious savages of the north,--and the Hallelujah victory was gained
+without a drop of bloodshed. He never lost sight of Genevieve, the little maid
+whom he had so early distinguished for her piety.</p>
+<p>After she lost her parents she went to live with her godmother, and continued
+the same simple habits, leading a life of sincere devotion and strict
+self-denial, constant prayer, and much charity to her poorer neighbors.</p>
+<p>In the year 451 the whole of Gaul was in the most dreadful state of terror at
+the advance of Attila, the savage chief of the Huns, who came from the banks of
+the Danube with a host of savages of hideous features, scarred and disfigured to
+render them more frightful. The old enemies, the Goths and the Franks, seemed
+like friends compared with these formidable beings whose cruelties were said to
+be intolerable, and of whom every exaggerated story was told that could add to
+the horrors of the miserable people who lay in their path. Tidings came that
+this 'Scourge of God', as Attila called himself, had passed the Rhine, destroyed
+Tongres and Metz, and was in full march for Paris. The whole country was in the
+utmost terror. Everyone seized their most valuable possessions, and would have
+fled; but Genevieve placed herself on the only bridge across the Seine, and
+argued with them, assuring them in a strain that was afterwards thought of as
+prophetic, that, if they would pray, repent, and defend instead of abandoning
+their homes, God would protect them. They were at first almost ready to stone
+her for thus withstanding their panic, but just then a priest arrived from
+Auxerre, with a present for Genevieve from St. Germanus, and they were thus
+reminded of the high estimation in which he held her; they became ashamed of
+their violence, and she held them back to pray and to arm themselves. In a few
+days they heard that Attila had paused to besiege Orleans, and that Aetius, the
+Roman general, hurrying from Italy, had united his troops with those of the
+Goths and Franks, and given Attila so terrible a defeat at Chalons that the Huns
+were fairly driven out of Gaul. And here it must be mentioned that when the next
+year, 452, Attila with his murderous host came down into Italy, and after
+horrible devastation of all the northern provinces, came to the gates of Rome,
+no one dared to meet him but one venerable Bishop, Leo, the Pope, who, when his
+flock were in transports of despair, went forth only accompanied by one
+magistrate to meet the invader, and endeavor to turn his wrath side. The savage
+Huns were struck with awe by the fearless majesty of the unarmed old man. They
+conducted him safely to Attila, who listened to him with respect, and promised
+not to lead his people into Rome, provided a tribute should be paid to him. He
+then retreated, and, to the joy of all Europe, died on his way back to his
+native dominions.</p>
+<p>But with the Huns the danger and suffering of Europe did not end. The happy
+state described in the Prophets as 'dwelling safely, with none to make them
+afraid', was utterly unknown in Europe throughout the long break-up of the Roman
+Empire; and in a few more years the Franks were overrunning the banks of the
+Seine, and actually venturing to lay siege to the Roman walls of Paris itself.
+The fortifications were strong enough, but hunger began to do the work of the
+besiegers, and the garrison, unwarlike and untrained, began to despair. But
+Genevieve's courage and trust never failed; and finding no warriors willing to
+run the risk of going beyond the walls to obtain food for the women and children
+who were perishing around them, this brave shepherdess embarked alone in a
+little boat, and guiding it down the stream, landed beyond the Frankish camp,
+and repairing to the different Gallic cities, she implored them to send succor
+to the famished brethren. She obtained complete success. Probably the Franks had
+no means of obstructing the passage of the river, so that a convoy of boats
+could easily penetrate into the town, and at any rate they looked upon Genevieve
+as something sacred and inspired whom they durst not touch; probably as one of
+the battle maids in whom their own myths taught them to believe. One account
+indeed says that, instead of going alone to obtain help, Genevieve placed
+herself at the head of a forage party, and that the mere sight of her inspired
+bearing caused them to be allowed to enter and return in safety; but the boat
+version seems the more probable, since a single boat on a broad river would more
+easily elude the enemy than a troop of Gauls pass through their army.</p>
+<p>But a city where all the valor resided in one woman could not long hold out,
+and in another inroad, when Genevieve was absent, Paris was actually seized by
+the Franks. Their leader, Hilperik, was absolutely afraid of what the
+mysteriously brave maiden might do to him, and commanded the gates of the city
+to be carefully guarded lest she should enter; but Geneviere learnt that some of
+the chief citizens were imprisoned, and that Hilperik intended their death, and
+nothing could withhold her from making an effort in their behalf. The Franks had
+made up their minds to settle, and not to destroy. They were not burning and
+slaying indiscriminately, but while despising the Romans, as they called the
+Gauls, for their cowardice, they were in awe of the superior civilization and
+the knowledge of arts. The country people had free access to the city, and
+Genevieve in her homely gown and veil passed by Hilperik's guards without being
+suspected of being more than an ordinary Gaulish village maid; and thus she
+fearlessly made her way, even to the old Roman halls, where the long-haired
+Hilperik was holding his wild carousal. Would that we knew more of that
+interview--one of the most striking that ever took place! We can only picture to
+ourselves the Roman tessellated pavement bestrewn with wine, bones, and
+fragments of the barbarous revelry. There were untamed Franks, their sun-burnt
+hair tied up in a knot at the top of their heads, and falling down like a
+horse's tail, their faces close shaven, except two moustaches, and dressed in
+tight leather garments, with swords at their wide belts. Some slept, some
+feasted, some greased their long locks, some shouted out their favorite war
+songs around the table which was covered with the spoils of churches, and at
+their heads sat the wild, long-haired chieftain, who was a few years later
+driven away by his own followers for his excesses, the whole scene was all that
+was abhorrent to a pure, devout, and faithful nature, most full of terror to a
+woman. Yet, there, in her strength, stood the peasant maiden, her heart full of
+trust and pity, her looks full of the power that is given by fearlessness of
+them that can kill the body. What she said we do not know--we only know that the
+barbarous Hilperik was overawed; he trembled before the expostulations of the
+brave woman, and granted all she asked--the safety of his prisoners, and mercy
+to the terrified inhabitants. No wonder that the people of Paris have ever since
+looked back to Genevieve as their protectress, and that in after ages she has
+grown to be the patron saint of the city.</p>
+<p>She lived to see the son of Hilperik, Chlodweh, or, as he was more commonly
+called, Clovis, marry a Christian wife, Clotilda, and after a time became a
+Christian. She saw the foundation of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame, and of the two
+famous churches of St. Denys and of St. Martin of Tours, and gave her full share
+to the first efforts for bringing the rude and bloodthirsty conquerors to some
+knowledge of Christian faith, mercy, and purity. After a life of constant prayer
+and charity she died, three months after King Clovis, in the year 512, the
+eighty-ninth of her age. [Footnote: Perhaps the exploits of the Maid of Orleans
+were the most like those of Genevieve, but they are not here added to our
+collection of 'Golden Deeds,' because the Maid's belief that she was directly
+inspired removes them from the ordinary class. Alas! the English did not treat
+her as Hilperik treated Genevieve.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>LEO THE SLAVE<br>
+A.D. 533</h3></center>
+
+<p>The Franks had fully gained possession of all the north of Gaul, except
+Brittany. Chlodweh had made them Christians in name, but they still remained
+horribly savage--and the life of the Gauls under them was wretched. The
+Burgundians and Visigoths who had peopled the southern and eastern provinces
+were far from being equally violent. They had entered on their settlements on
+friendly terms, and even showed considerable respect for the Roman-Gallic
+senators, magistrates, and higher clergy, who all remained unmolested in their
+dignities and riches. Thus it was that Gregory, Bishop of Langres, was a man of
+high rank and consideration in the Burgundian kingdom, whence the Christian
+Queen Clotilda had come; and even after the Burgundians had been subdued by the
+four sons of Chlodweh, he continued a rich and prosperous man.</p>
+<p>After one of the many quarrels and reconciliations between these fierce
+brethren, there was an exchange of hostages for the observance of the terms of
+the treaty. These were not taken from among the Franks, who were too proud to
+submit to captivity, but from among the Gaulish nobles, a much more convenient
+arrangement to the Frankish kings, who cared for the life of a 'Roman'
+infinitely less than even for the life of a Frank. Thus many young men of
+senatorial families were exchanged between the domains of Theodrik to the south,
+and of Hildebert to the northward, and quartered among Frankish chiefs, with
+whom at first they had nothing more to endure than the discomfort of living as
+guests with such rude and coarse barbarians. But ere long fresh quarrels broke
+out between Theodrik and Hildebert, and the unfortunate hostages were at once
+turned into slaves. Some of them ran away if they were near the frontier, but
+Bishop Gregory was in the utmost anxiety about his young nephew Attalus, who had
+been last heard of as being placed under the charge of a Frank who lived between
+Treves and Metz. The Bishop sent emissaries to make secret enquiries, and they
+brought word that the unfortunate youth had indeed been reduced to slavery, and
+was made to keep his master's herds of horses. Upon this the uncle again sent
+off his messengers with presents for the ransom of Attalus, but the Frank
+rejected them, saying, 'One of such high race can only be redeemed for ten
+pounds' weight of gold.'</p>
+<p>This was beyond the Bishop's means, and while he was considering how to raise
+the sum, the slaves were all lamenting for their young lord, to whom they were
+much attached, till one of them, named Leo, the cook to the household, came to
+the Bishop, saying to him, 'If thou wilt give me leave to go, I will deliver him
+from captivity.' The Bishop replied that he gave free permission, and the slave
+set off for Treves, and there watched anxiously for an opportunity of gaining
+access to Attalus; but though the poor young man--no longer daintily dressed,
+bathed, and perfumed, but ragged and squalid--might be seen following his herds
+of horses, he was too well watched for any communication to be held with him.
+Then Leo went to a person, probably of Gallic birth, and said, 'Come with me to
+this barbarian's house, and there sell me for a slave. Thou shalt have the
+money, I only ask thee to help me thus far.'</p>
+<p>Both repaired to the Frank's abode, the chief among a confused collection of
+clay and timber huts intended for shelter during eating and sleeping. The Frank
+looked at the slave, and asked him what he could do.</p>
+<p>'I can dress whatever is eaten at lordly tables,' replied Leo. 'I am afraid
+of no rival; I only tell thee the truth when I say that if thou wouldst give a
+feast to the king, I would send it up in the neatest manner.'</p>
+<p>'Ha!' said the barbarian, 'the Sun's day is coming--I shall invite my kinsmen
+and friends. Cook me such a dinner as may amaze them, and make then say, 'We saw
+nothing better in the king's house.'</p>
+<p>'Let me have plenty of poultry, and I will do according to my master's
+bidding,' returned Leo.</p>
+<p>Accordingly, he was purchased for twelve gold pieces, and on the Sunday (as
+Bishop Gregory of Tours, who tells the story, explains that the barbarians
+called the Lord's day) he produced a banquet after the most approved Roman
+fashion, much to the surprise and delight of the Franks, who had never tasted
+such delicacies before, and complimented their host upon them all the evening.
+Leo gradually became a great favorite, and was placed in authority over the
+other slaves, to whom he gave out their daily portions of broth and meat; but
+from the first he had not shown any recognition of Attalus, and had signed to
+him that they must be strangers to one another. A whole year had passed away in
+this manner, when one day Leo wandered, as if for pastime, into the plain where
+Attalus was watching the horses, and sitting down on the ground at some paces
+off, and with his back towards his young master, so that they might not be seen
+together, he said, 'This is the time for thoughts of home! When thou hast led
+the horses to the stable to-night, sleep not. Be ready at the first call!'</p>
+<p>That day the Frank lord was entertaining a large number of guests, among them
+his daughter's husband, a jovial young man, given to jesting. On going to rest
+he fancied he should be thirsty at night and called Leo to set a pitcher of
+hydromel by his bedside. As the slave was setting it down, the Frank looked
+slyly from under his eyelids, and said in joke, 'Tell me, my father-in-law's
+trusty man, wilt not thou some night take one of those horses, and run away to
+thine own home?'</p>
+<p>'Please God, it is what I mean to do this very night,' answered the Gaul, so
+undauntedly that the Frank took it as a jest, and answered, 'I shall look out
+that thou dost not carry off anything of mine,' and then Leo left him, both
+laughing.</p>
+<p>All were soon asleep, and the cook crept out to the stable, where Attalus
+usually slept among the horses. He was broad awake now, and ready to saddle the
+two swiftest; but he had no weapon except a small lance, so Leo boldly went back
+to his master's sleeping hut, and took down his sword and shield, but not
+without awaking him enough to ask who was moving. 'It is I--Leo,' was the
+answer, 'I have been to call Attalus to take out the horses early. He sleeps as
+hard as a drunkard.' The Frank went to sleep again, quite satisfied, and Leo,
+carrying out the weapons, soon made Attalus feel like a free man and a noble
+once more. They passed unseen out of the enclosure, mounted their horses, and
+rode along the great Roman road from Treves as far as the Meuse, but they found
+the bridge guarded, and were obliged to wait till night, when they cast their
+horses loose and swam the river, supporting themselves on boards that they found
+on the bank. They had as yet had no food since the supper at their master's, and
+were thankful to find a plum tree in the wood, with fruit, to refresh them in
+some degree, before they lay down for the night. The next morning they went on
+in the direction of Rheims, carefully listening whether there were any sounds
+behind, until, on the broad hard-paved causeway, they actually heard the
+trampling of horses. Happily a bush was near, behind which they crept, with
+their naked swords before them, and here the riders actually halted for a few
+moments to arrange their harness. Men and horses were both those they feared,
+and they trembled at hearing one say, 'Woe is me that those rogues have made
+off, and have not been caught! On my salvation, if I catch them, I will have one
+hung and the other chopped into bits!' It was no small comfort to hear the trot
+of the horses resumed, and soon dying away in the distance. That same night the
+two faint, hungry, weary travelers, footsore and exhausted, came stumbling into
+Rheims, looking about for some person still awake to tell them the way to the
+house of the Priest Paul, a friend of Attalus' uncle. They found it just as the
+church bell was ringing for matins, a sound that must have seemed very like home
+to these members of an episcopal household. They knocked, and in the morning
+twilight met the Priest going to his earliest Sunday morning service.</p>
+<p>Leo told his young master's name, and how they had escaped, and the Priest's
+first exclamation was a strange one: 'My dream is true. This very night I saw
+two doves, one white and one black, who came and perched on my hand.'</p>
+<p>The good man was overjoyed, but he scrupled to give them any food, as it was
+contrary to the Church's rules for the fast to be broken before mass; but the
+travelers were half dead with hunger, and could only say, 'The good Lord pardon
+us, for, saving the respect due to His day, we must eat something, since this is
+the forth day since we have touched bread or meat.' The Priest upon this gave
+them some bread and wine, and after hiding them carefully, went to church,
+hoping to avert suspicion; but their master was already at Rheims, making strict
+search for them, and learning that Paul the Priest was a friend of the Bishop of
+Langres, he went to church, and there questioned him closely. But the Priest
+succeeded in guarding his secret, and though he incurred much danger, as the
+Salic law was very severe against concealers of runaway slaves, he kept Attalus
+and Leo for two days till the search was blown over, and their strength was
+restored, so that they could proceed to Langres. There they were welcomed like
+men risen from the dead; the Bishop wept on the neck of Attalus, and was ready
+to receive Leo as a slave no more, but a friend and deliverer.</p>
+<p>A few days after Leo was solemnly led to the church. Every door was set open
+as a sign that he might henceforth go whithersoever he would. Bishop Gregorus
+took him by the hand, and, standing before the Archdeacon, declared that for the
+sake of the good services rendered by his slave, Leo, he set him free, and
+created him a Roman citizen.</p>
+<p>Then the Archdeacon read a writing of manumission. 'Whatever is done
+according to the Roman law is irrevocable. According to the constitution of the
+Emperor Constantine, of happy memory, and the edict that declares that whosoever
+is manumitted in church, in the presence of the bishops, priests, and deacons,
+shall become a Roman citizen under the protection of the Church: from this day
+Leo becomes a member of the city, free to go and come where he will as if he had
+been born of free parents. From this day forward, he is exempt from all
+subjection of servitude, of all duty of a freed-man, all bond of client-ship. He
+is and shall be free, with full and entire freedom, and shall never cease to
+belong to the body of Roman citizens.'</p>
+<p>At the same time Leo was endowed with lands, which raised him to the rank of
+what the Franks called a Roman proprietor--the highest reward in the Bishop's
+power for the faithful devotion that had incurred such dangers in order to
+rescue the young Attalus from his miserable bondage.</p>
+<p>Somewhat of the same kind of faithfulness was shown early in the nineteenth
+century by Ivan Simonoff, a soldier servant belonging to Major Kascambo, an
+officer in the Russian army, who was made prisoner by one of the wild tribes of
+the Caucasus. But though the soldier's attachment to his master was quite as
+brave and disinterested as that of the Gallic slave, yet he was far from being
+equally blameless in the means he employed, and if his were a golden deed at
+all, it was mixed with much of iron.</p>
+<p>Major Kascambo, with a guard of fifty Cossacks, was going to take the command
+of the Russian outpost of Lars, one of the forts by which the Russian Czars have
+slowly been carrying on the aggressive warfare that has nearly absorbed into
+their vast dominions all the mountains between the Caspian and Black seas. On
+his way he was set upon by seven hundred horsemen of the savage and independent
+tribe of Tchetchenges. There was a sharp fight, more than half his men were
+killed, and he with the rest made a rampart of the carcasses of their horses,
+over which they were about to fire their last shots, when the Tchetchenges made
+a Russian deserter call out to the Cossacks that they would let them all escape
+provided they would give up their officer. Kascambo on this came forward and
+delivered himself into their hands; while the remainder of the troops galloped
+off. His servant, Ivan, with a mule carrying his baggage, had been hidden in a
+ravine, and now, instead of retreating with the Cossacks, came to join his
+master. All the baggage was, however, instantly seized and divided among the
+Tchetchenges; nothing was left but a guitar, which they threw scornfully to the
+Major. He would have let it lie, but Ivan picked it up, and insisted on keeping
+it. 'Why be dispirited?' he said; 'the God of the Russians is great, it is the
+interest of the robbers to save you, they will do you no harm.'</p>
+<p>Scouts brought word that the Russian outposts were alarmed, and that troops
+were assembling to rescue the officer. Upon this the seven hundred broke up into
+small parties, leaving only ten men on foot to conduct the prisoners, whom they
+forced to take off their iron-shod boots and walk barefoot over stones and
+thorns, till the Major was so exhausted that they were obliged to drag him by
+cords fastened to his belt.</p>
+<p>After a terrible journey, the prisoners were placed in a remote village,
+where the Major had heavy chains fastened to his hands and feet, and another to
+his neck, with a huge block of oak as a clog at the other end; they half-starved
+him, and made him sleep on the bare ground of the hut in which he lodged. The
+hut belonged to a huge, fierce old man of sixty named Ibrahim, whose son had
+been killed in a skirmish with the Russians. This man, together with his son's
+widow, were continually trying to revenge themselves on their captive. The only
+person who showed him any kindness was his little grandson, a child of seven
+years old, called Mamet, who often caressed him, and brought him food by
+stealth. Ivan was also in the same hut, but less heavily ironed than his master,
+and able to attempt a few alleviations for his wretched condition. An
+interpreter brought the Major a sheet of paper and a reed pen, and commanded him
+to write to his friends that he might be ransomed for 10,000 roubles, but that,
+if the whole sum were not paid, he would be put to death. He obeyed, but he knew
+that his friends could not possibly raise such a sum, and his only hope was in
+the government, which had once ransomed a colonel who had fallen into the hands
+of the same tribe.</p>
+<p>These Tchetchenges professed to be Mahometans, but their religion sat very
+loose upon them, and they were utter barbarians. One piece of respect they paid
+the Major's superior education was curious--they made him judge in all the
+disputes that arose. The houses in the village were hollowed out underground,
+and the walls only raised three or four feet, and then covered by a flat roof,
+formed of beaten clay, where the inhabitants spent much of their time. Kascambo
+was every now and then brought, in all his chains, to the roof of the hut, which
+served as a tribunal whence he was expected to dispense justice. For instance, a
+man had commissioned his neighbour to pay five roubles to a person in another
+valley, but the messenger's horse having died by the way, a claim was set up to
+the roubles to make up for it. Both parties collected all their friends, and a
+bloody quarrel was about to take place, when they agreed to refer the question
+to the prisoner, who was accordingly set upon his judgment seat.</p>
+<p>'Pray,' said he, 'if, instead of giving you five roubles, your comrade had
+desired you to carry his greetings to his creditor, would not your horse have
+died all the same?'</p>
+<p>'Most likely.'</p>
+<p>'Then what should you have done with the greetings? Should you have kept them
+in compensation? My sentence is that you should give back the roubles, and that
+your comrade gives you a greeting.'</p>
+<p>The whole assembly approved the decision, and the man only grumbled out, as
+he gave back the money, 'I knew I should lose it, if that dog of a Christian
+meddled with it.'</p>
+<p>All this respect, however, did not avail to procure any better usage for the
+unfortunate judge, whose health was suffering severely under his privations.
+Ivan, however, had recommended himself in the same way as Leo, by his
+perfections as a cook, and moreover he was a capital buffoon. His fetters were
+sometimes taken off that he might divert the villagers by his dances and strange
+antics while his master played the guitar. Sometimes they sang Russian songs
+together to the instrument, and on these occasions the Major's hands were
+released that he might play on it; but one day he was unfortunately heard
+playing in his chains for his own amusement, and from that time he was never
+released from his fetters.</p>
+<p>In the course of a year, three urgent letters had been sent; but no notice
+was taken of them, and Ivan began to despair of aid from home, and set himself
+to work. His first step was to profess himself a Mahometan. He durst not tell
+his master till the deed was done, and then Kascambo was infinitely shocked; but
+the act did not procure Ivan so much freedom as he had hoped. He was, indeed, no
+longer in chains, but he was evidently distrusted, and was so closely watched,
+that the only way in which he could communicate with his master was when they
+were set to sing together, when they chanted out question and answer in Russ,
+unsuspected, to the tune of their national airs. He was taken on an expedition
+against the Russians, and very nearly killed by the suspicious Tchetchenges on
+one side, and by the Cossacks on the other, as a deserter. He saved a young man
+of the tribe from drowning; but though he thus earned the friendship of the
+family, the rest of the villagers hated and dreaded him all the more, since he
+had not been able to help proving himself a man of courage, instead of the
+feeble buffoon he had tried to appear.</p>
+<p>Three months after this expedition, another took place; but Ivan was not
+allowed even to know of it. He saw preparations making, but nothing was said to
+him; only one morning he found the village entirely deserted by all the young
+men, and as he wandered round it, the aged ones would not speak to him. A child
+told him that his father had meant to kill him, and on the roof of her house
+stood the sister of the man he had saved, making signals of great terror, and
+pointing towards Russia. Home he went and found that, besides old Ibrahim, his
+master was watched by a warrior, who had been prevented by an intermitting fever
+from joining the expedition. He was convinced that if the tribe returned
+unsuccessful, the murder of both himself and his master was certain; but he
+resolved not to fly alone, and as he busied himself in preparing the meal, he
+sung the burden of a Russian ballad, intermingled with words of encouragement
+for his master:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The time is come;<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+The time is come,<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+Our woe is at an end,<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+Or we die at once!<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+To-morrow, to-morrow,<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+We are off for a town,<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+For a fine, fine town,<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+But I name no names,<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+Courage, courage, master dear,<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+Never, never, despair,<br>
+Hai Luli!<br>
+For the God of the Russians is great,<br>
+Hai Luli!</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Poor Kascambo, broken down, sick, and despairing, only muttered, 'Do as you
+please, only hold your peace!'</p>
+<p>Ivan's cookery incited the additional guard to eat so much supper, that he
+brought on a severe attack of his fever, and was obliged to go home; but old
+Ibrahim, instead of going to bed, sat down on a log of wood opposite the
+prisoner, and seemed resolved to watch him all night. The woman and child went
+to bed in the inner room, and Ivan signed to his master to take the guitar, and
+began to dance. The old man's axe was in an open cupboard at the other end of
+the room, and after many gambols and contortions, during which the Major could
+hardly control his fingers to touch the strings, Ivan succeeded in laying his
+hands upon it, just when the old man was bending over the fire to mend it. Then,
+as Ibrahim desired that the music should cease, he cut him down with a single
+blow, on his own hearth. And the daughter-in-law coming out to see what had
+happened, he slew her with the same weapon. And then, alas! in spite of the
+commands, entreaties, and cries of his master, he dashed into the inner room,
+and killed the sleeping child, lest it should give the alarm. Kascambo, utterly
+helpless to save, fell almost fainting upon the bloody floor, and did not cease
+to reproach Ivan, who was searching the old man's pockets for the key of the
+fetters, but it was not there, nor anywhere else in the hut, and the irons were
+so heavy that escape was impossible in them. Ivan at last knocked off the clog
+and the chains on the wrist with the axe, but he could not break the chains
+round the legs, and could only fasten them as close as he could to hinder them
+clanking. Then securing all the provisions he could carry, and putting his
+master into his military cloak, obtaining also a pistol and dagger, they crept
+out, but not on the direct road. It was February, and the ground was covered
+with snow. All night they walked easily, but at noon the sun so softened it that
+they sank in at every step, and the Major's chains rendered each motion terrible
+labour. It was only on the second night that Ivan, with his axe, succeeded in
+breaking through the fastenings, and by that time the Major's legs were so
+swollen and stiffened that he could not move without extreme pain. However, he
+was dragged on through the wild mountain paths, and then over the plains for
+several days more, till they were on the confines of another tribe of
+Tchetchenges, who were overawed by Russia, and in a sort of unwilling alliance.
+Here, however, a sharp storm, and a fall into the water, completely finished
+Kascambo's strength, and he sank down on the snow, telling Ivan to go home and
+explain his fate, and give his last message to his mother.</p>
+<p>'If you perish here,' said Ivan, 'trust me, neither your mother nor mine will
+ever see me again.'</p>
+<p>He covered his master with his cloak, gave him the pistol, and walked on to a
+hut, where he found a Tchetchenge man, and told him that here was a means of
+obtaining two hundred roubles. He had only to shelter the major as a guest for
+three days, whilst Ivan himself went on to Mosdok, to procure the money, and
+bring back help for his master. The man was full of suspicion, but Ivan
+prevailed, and Kascambo was carried into the village nearly dying, and was very
+ill all the time of his servant's absence. Ivan set off for the nearest Russian
+station, where he found some of the Cossacks who had been present when the major
+was taken. All eagerly subscribed to raise the two hundred roubles, but the
+Colonel would not let Ivan go back alone, as he had engaged to do, and sent a
+guard of Cossacks. This had nearly been fatal to the Major, for as soon as his
+host saw the lances, he suspected treachery, and dragging his poor sick guest to
+the roof of the house, he tied him up to a stake, and stood over him with a
+pistol, shouting to Ivan, 'If you come nearer, I shall blow his brains out, and
+I have fifty cartridges more for my enemies, and the traitor who leads them.'</p>
+<p>'No traitor!' cried Ivan. 'Here are the roubles. I have kept my word!'</p>
+<p>'Let the Cossacks go back, or I shall fire.'</p>
+<p>Kascambo himself begged the officer to retire, and Ivan went back with the
+detachment, and returned alone. Even then the suspicious host made him count out
+the roubles at a hundred paces from the house, and at once ordered him out of
+sight; but then went up to the roof, and asked the Major's pardon for all this
+rough usage.</p>
+<p>'I shall only recollect that you were my host, and kept your word,' said
+Kascambo.</p>
+<p>In a few hours more, Kascambo was in safety among his brother officers. Ivan
+was made a non-commissioned officer, and some months after was seen by the
+traveler who told the story, whistling the air of Hai Luli at his former
+master's wedding feast. He was even then scarcely twenty years old, and
+peculiarly quiet and soft in manners.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE BATTLE OF THE BLACKWATER<br>
+991</h3></center>
+
+<p>In the evil days of King Ethelred the Unready, when the teaching of good King
+Alfred was fast fading away from the minds of his descendants, and
+self-indulgence was ruining the bold and hardy habits of the English, the fleet
+was allowed to fall into decay, and Danish ships again ventured to appear on the
+English coasts.</p>
+<p>The first Northmen who had ravaged England came eager for blood and plunder,
+and hating the sight of a Christian church as an insult to their gods, Thor and
+Odin; but the lapse of a hundred years had in some degree changed the temper of
+the North; and though almost every young man thought it due to his fame to have
+sailed forth as a sea rover, yet the attacks of these marauders might be bought
+off, and provided they had treasure to show for their voyage, they were willing
+to spare the lives and lands of the people of the coasts they visited.</p>
+<p>King Ethelred and his cowardly, selfish Court were well satisfied with this
+expedient, and the tax called Danegeld was laid upon the people, in order to
+raise a fund for buying off the enemy. But there were still in England men of
+bolder and truer hearts, who held that bribery was false policy, merely inviting
+the enemy to come again and again, and that the only wise course would be in
+driving them back by English valor, and keeping the fleet in a condition to
+repel the 'Long Serpent' ships before the foe could set foot upon the coast.</p>
+<p>Among those who held this opinion was Brythnoth, Earl of Essex. He was of
+partly Danish descent himself, but had become a thorough Englishman, and had
+long and faithfully served the King and his father. He was a friend to the
+clergy, a founder of churches and convents, and his manor house of Hadleigh was
+a home of hospitality and charity. It would probably be a sort of huge farmyard,
+full of great barn-like buildings and sheds, all one story high; some of them
+serving for storehouses, and others for living-rooms and places of entertainment
+for his numerous servants and retainers, and for the guests of all degrees who
+gathered round him as the chief dispenser of justice in his East-Saxon earldom.
+When he heard the advice given and accepted that the Danes should be bribed,
+instead of being fought with, he made up his mind that he, at least, would try
+to raise up a nobler spirit, and, at the sacrifice of his own life, would show
+the effect of making a manful stand against them.</p>
+<p>He made his will, and placed it in the hands of the Archbishop of Canterbury;
+and then, retiring to Hadleigh, he provided horses and arms, and caused all the
+young men in his earldom to be trained in warlike exercises, according to the
+good old English law, that every man should be provided with weapons and know
+the use of them.</p>
+<p>The Danes sailed forth, in the year 991, with ninety-three vessels, the
+terrible 'Long Serpents', carved with snakes' heads at the prow, and the stern
+finished as the gilded tail of the reptile; and many a lesser ship, meant for
+carrying plunder. The Sea King, Olaf (or Anlaff), was the leader; and as tidings
+came that their sails had been seen upon the North Sea, more earnest than ever
+rang out the petition in the Litany, 'From the fury of the Northmen, good Lord,
+deliver us'.</p>
+<p>Sandwich and Ipswich made no defense, and were plundered; and the fleet then
+sailed into the mouth of the River Blackwater, as far as Maldon, where the
+ravagers landed, and began to collect spoil. When, however, they came back to
+their ships, they found that the tide would not yet serve them to re-embark; and
+upon the farther bank of the river bristled the spears of a body of warriors,
+drawn up in battle array, but in numbers far inferior to their own.</p>
+<p>Anlaff sent a messenger, over the wooden bridge that crossed the river, to
+the Earl, who, he understood, commanded this small army. The brave old man, his
+grey hair hanging down beneath his helmet, stood, sword in hand, at the head of
+his warriors.</p>
+<p>'Lord Earl,' said the messenger, 'I come to bid thee to yield to us thy
+treasure, for thy safety. Buy off the fight, and we will ratify a peace with
+gold.'</p>
+<p>'Hear, O thou sailor!' was Brythnoth's answer, 'the reply of this people.
+Instead of Danegeld, thou shalt have from them the edge of the sword, and the
+point of the spear. Here stands an English Earl, who will defend his earldom and
+the lands of his King. Point and edge shall judge between us.'</p>
+<p>Back went the Dane with his message to Anlaff, and the fight began around the
+bridge, where the Danes long strove to force their way across, but were always
+driven back by the gallant East-Saxons. The tide had risen, and for some time
+the two armies only shot at one another with bows and arrows; but when it ebbed,
+leaving the salt-marches dry, the stout old Earl's love of fair play overpowered
+his prudence, and he sent to offer the enemy a free passage, and an open field
+in which to measure their strength.</p>
+<p>The numbers were too unequal; but the battle was long and bloody before the
+English could be overpowered. Brythnoth slew one of the chief Danish leaders
+with his own hand, but not without receiving a wound. He was still able to fight
+on, though with ebbing strength and failing numbers. His hand was pierced by a
+dart; but a young boy at his side instantly withdrew it, and, launching it back
+again, slew the foe who had aimed it. Another Dane, seeing the Earl faint and
+sinking, advanced to plunder him of his ring and jeweled weapons; but he still
+had strength to lay the spoiler low with his battleaxe. This was his last blow;
+he gathered his strength for one last cheer to his brave men, and then, sinking
+on the ground, he looked up to heaven, exclaiming: 'I thank thee, Lord of
+nations, for all the joys I have known on earth. Now, O mild Creator! have I the
+utmost need that Thou shouldst grant grace unto my soul, that my spirit may
+speed to Thee with peace, O King of angels! to pass into thy keeping. I sue to
+Thee that Thou suffer not the rebel spirits of hell to vex my parting soul!'</p>
+<p>With these words he died; but an aged follower, of like spirit, stood over
+his corpse, and exhorted his fellows. 'Our spirit shall be the hardier, and our
+soul the greater, the fewer our numbers become!' he cried. 'Here lies our chief,
+the brave, the good, the much-loved lord, who has blessed us with many a gift.
+Old as I am, I will not yield, but avenge his death, or lay me at his side.
+Shame befall him that thinks to fly from such a field as this!'</p>
+<p>Nor did the English warriors fly. Night came down, at last, upon the
+battlefield, and saved the lives of the few survivors; but they were forced to
+leave the body of their lord, and the Danes bore away with them his head as a
+trophy, and with it, alas! ten thousand pounds of silver from the King, who, in
+his sluggishness and weakness had left Brythnoth to fight and die unaided for
+the cause of the whole nation. One of the retainers, a minstrel in the happy old
+days of Hadleigh, who had done his part manfully in the battle, had heard these
+last goodly sayings of his master, and, living on to peaceful days, loved to
+rehearse them to the sound of his harp, and dwell on the glories of one who
+could die, but not be defeated.</p>
+<p>Ere those better days had come, another faithful-hearted Englishman had given
+his life for his people. In the year 1012, a huge army, called from their
+leader, 'Thorkill's Host', were overrunning Kent, and besieging Canterbury. The
+Archbishop Aelfeg was earnestly entreated to leave the city while yet there was
+time to escape; but he replied, 'None but a hireling would leave his flock in
+time of danger;' and he supported the resolution of the inhabitants, so that
+they held out the city for twenty days; and as the wild Danes had very little
+chance against a well-walled town, they would probably have saved it, had not
+the gates been secretly opened to them by the traitorous Abbot Aelfman, whom
+Aelfeg had once himself saved, when accused of treason before the King.</p>
+<p>The Danes slaughtered all whom they found in the streets, and the
+Archbishop's friends tried to keep him in the church, lest he should run upon
+his fate; but he broke from them, and, confronting the enemy, cried: 'Spare the
+guiltless! Is there glory in shedding such blood? Turn your wrath on me! It is I
+who have denounced your cruelty, have ransomed and re-clad your captive.' The
+Danes seized upon him, and, after he had seen his cathedral burnt and his clergy
+slain, they threw him into a dungeon, whence he was told he could only come
+forth upon the payment of a heavy ransom.</p>
+<p>His flock loved him, and would have striven to raise the sum; but, miserably
+used as they were by the enemy, and stripped by the exactions of the Danes, he
+would not consent that they should be asked for a further contribution on his
+account. After seven months' patience in his captivity, the Danish chiefs, who
+were then at Greenwich desired him to be brought into their camp, where they had
+just been holding a great feast. It was Easter Eve, and the quiet of that day of
+calm waiting was disturbed with their songs, and shouts of drunken revelry, as
+the chained Archbishop was led to the open space where the warriors sat and lay
+amid the remains of their rude repast. The leader then told him that they had
+agreed to let him off for his own share with a much smaller payment than had
+been demanded, provided he would obtain a largesse for them from the King, his
+master.</p>
+<p>'I am not the man,' he answered, 'to provide Christian flesh for Pagan
+wolves;' and when again they repeated the demand, 'Gold I have none to offer
+you, save the true wisdom of the knowledge of the living God.' And he began, as
+he stood in the midst, to 'reason to them of righteousness, temperance, and
+judgment to come.'</p>
+<p>They were mad with rage and drink. The old man's voice was drowned with
+shouts of 'Gold, Bishop--give us gold!' The bones and cups that lay around were
+hurled at him, and he fell to the ground, with the cry, 'O Chief Shepherd, guard
+Thine own children!' As he partly raised himself, axes were thrown at him; and,
+at last, a Dane, who had begun to love and listen to him in his captivity,
+deemed it mercy to give him a deathblow with an axe. The English maintained that
+Aelfeg had died to save his flock from cruel extortion, and held him as a saint
+and martyr, keeping his death day (the 19th of April) as a holiday; and when the
+Italian Archbishop of Canterbury (Lanfranc) disputed his right to be so
+esteemed, there was strong opposition and discontent. Indeed, our own Prayer
+Book still retains his name, under the altered form of St. Alphege; and surely
+no one better merits to be remembered, for having loved his people far better
+than himself.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>GUZMAN EL BUENO<br>
+1293</h3></center>
+
+<p>In the early times of Spanish history, before the Moors had been expelled
+from the peninsula, or the blight of Western gold had enervated the nation, the
+old honor and loyalty of the Gothic race were high and pure, fostered by
+constant combats with a generous enemy. The Spanish Arabs were indeed the flower
+of the Mahometan races, endowed with the vigor and honor of the desert tribes,
+yet capable of culture and civilization, excelling all other nations of their
+time in science and art, and almost the equals of their Christian foes in the
+attributes of chivalry. Wars with them were a constant crusade, consecrated in
+the minds of the Spaniards as being in the cause of religion, and yet in some
+degree freed from savagery and cruelty by the respect exacted by the honorable
+character of the enemy, and by the fact that the civilization and learning of
+the Christian kingdoms were far more derived from the Moors than from the
+kindred nations of Europe.</p>
+<p>By the close of the thirteenth century, the Christian kingdoms of Castille
+and Aragon were descending from their mountain fastnesses, and spreading over
+the lovely plains of the south, even to the Mediterranean coast, as one
+beautiful Moorish city after another yielded to the persevering advances of the
+children of the Goths; and in 1291 the nephew of our own beloved Eleanor of
+Castille, Sancho V. called El Bravo, ventured to invest the city of Tarifa.</p>
+<p>This was the western buttress of the gate of the Mediterranean, the base of
+the northern Pillar of Hercules, and esteemed one of the gates of Spain. By it
+five hundred years previously had the Moorish enemy first entered Spain at the
+summons of Count Julian, under their leader Tarif-abu-Zearah, whose name was
+bestowed upon it in remembrance of his landing there. The form of the ground is
+said to be like a broken punch bowl, with the broken part towards the sea. The
+Moors had fortified the city with a surrounding wall and twenty-six towers, and
+had built a castle with a lighthouse on a small adjacent island, called Isla
+Verde, which they had connected with the city by a causeway. Their
+fortifications, always admirable, have existed ever since, and in 1811, another
+five hundred years after, were successfully defended against the French by a
+small force of British troops under the command of Colonel Hugh Gough, better
+known in his old age as the victor of Aliwal. The walls were then unable to
+support the weight of artillery, for which of course they had never been built,
+but were perfectly effective against escalade.</p>
+<p>For six months King Sancho besieged Tarifa by land and sea, his fleet, hired
+from the Genoese, lying in the waters where the battle of Trafalgar was to be
+fought. The city at length yielded under stress of famine, but the King feared
+that he had no resources to enable him to keep it, and intended to dismantle and
+forsake it, when the Grand Master of the military order of Calatrava offered to
+undertake the defense with his knights for one year, hoping that some other
+noble would come forward at the end of that time and take the charge upon
+himself.</p>
+<p>He was not mistaken. The noble who made himself responsible for this post of
+danger was a Leonese knight of high distinction, by name Alonso Perez de Guzman,
+already called El Bueno, or 'The Good', from the high qualities he had
+manifested in the service of the late King, Don Alonso VI, by whom he had always
+stood when the present King, Don Sancho, was in rebellion. The offer was readily
+accepted, and the whole Guzman family removed to Tarifa, with the exception of
+the eldest son, who was in the train of the Infant Don Juan, the second son of
+the late King, who had always taken part with his father against his brother,
+and on Sancho's accession, continued his enmity, and fled to Portugal.</p>
+<p>The King of Portugal, however, being requested by Sancho not to permit him to
+remain there, he proceeded to offer his services to the King of Morocco,
+Yusuf-ben-Yacoub, for whom he undertook to recover Tarifa, if 5,000 horse were
+granted to him for the purpose. The force would have been most disproportionate
+for the attack of such a city as Tarifa, but Don Juan reckoned on means that he
+had already found efficacious; when he had obtained the surrender of Zamora to
+his father by threatening to put to death a child of the lady in command of the
+fortress.</p>
+<p>Therefore, after summoning Tarifa at the head of his 5,000 Moors, he led
+forth before the gates the boy who had been confided to his care, and declared
+that unless the city were yielded instantly, Guzman should behold the death of
+his own son at his hand! Before, he had had to deal with a weak woman on a
+question of divided allegiance. It was otherwise here. The point was whether the
+city should be made over to the enemies of the faith and country, whether the
+plighted word of a loyal knight should be broken. The boy was held in the grasp
+of the cruel prince, stretching out his hands and weeping as he saw his father
+upon the walls. Don Alonso's eyes, we are told, filled with tears as he cast one
+long, last look at his first-born, whom he might not save except at the expense
+of his truth and honor.</p>
+<p>The struggle was bitter, but he broke forth at last in these words: 'I did
+not beget a son to be made use of against my country, but that he should serve
+her against her foes. Should Don Juan put him to death, he will but confer honor
+on me, true life on my son, and on himself eternal shame in this world and
+everlasting wrath after death. So far am I from yielding this place or betraying
+my trust, that in case he should want a weapon for his cruel purpose, there goes
+my knife!'</p>
+<p>He cast the knife in his belt over the walls, and returned to the Castle
+where, commanding his countenance, he sat down to table with his wife. Loud
+shouts of horror and dismay almost instantly called him forth again. He was told
+that Don Juan had been seen to cut the boy's throat in a transport of blind
+rage. 'I thought the enemy had broken in,' he calmly said, and went back again.</p>
+<p>The Moors themselves were horrorstruck at the atrocity of their ally, and as
+the siege was hopeless they gave it up; and Don Juan, afraid and ashamed to
+return to Morocco, wandered to the Court of Granada.</p>
+<p>King Sancho was lying sick at Alcala de Henares when the tidings of the price
+of Guzman's fidelity reached him. Touched to the depths of his heart he wrote a
+letter to his faithful subject, comparing his sacrifice to that of Abraham,
+confirming to him the surname of Good, lamenting his own inability to come and
+offer his thanks and regrets, but entreating Guzman's presence at Alcala.</p>
+<p>All the way thither, the people thronged to see the man true to his word at
+such a fearful cost. The Court was sent out to meet him, and the King, after
+embracing him, exclaimed, 'Here learn, ye knights, what are exploits of virtue.
+Behold your model.'</p>
+<p>Lands and honors were heaped upon Alonso de Guzman, and they were not a
+mockery of his loss, for he had other sons to inherit them. He was the staunch
+friend of Sancho's widow and son in a long and perilous minority, and died full
+of years and honors. The lands granted to him were those of Medina Sidonia which
+lie between the Rivers Guadiana and Guadalquivir, and they have ever since been
+held by his descendants, who still bear the honored name of Guzman, witnessing
+that the man who gave the life of his first-born rather than break his faith to
+the King has left a posterity as noble and enduring as any family in Europe.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>FAITHFUL TILL DEATH<br>
+1308</h3></center>
+
+<p>One of the ladies most admired by the ancient Romans was Arria, the wife of
+Caecina Paetus, a Roman who was condemned by the Emperor Claudius to become his
+own executioner. Seeing him waver, his wife, who was resolved to be with him in
+death as in life, took the dagger from his hand, plunged it into her own breast,
+and with her last strength held it out to him, gasping out, 'It is not painful,
+my Paetus.'</p>
+<p>Such was heathen faithfulness even to death; and where the teaching of
+Christianity had not forbidden the taking away of life by one's own hand,
+perhaps wifely love could not go higher. Yet Christian women have endured a yet
+more fearful ordeal to their tender affection, watching, supporting, and finding
+unfailing fortitude to uphold the sufferer in agonies that must have rent their
+hearts.</p>
+<p>Natalia was the fair young wife of Adrian, an officer at Nicomedia, in the
+guards of the Emperor Galerius Maximianus, and only about twenty-eight years
+old. Natalia was a Christian, but her husband remained a pagan, until, when he
+was charged with the execution of some martyrs, their constancy, coupled with
+the testimony of his own wife's virtues, triumphed over his unbelief, and he
+confessed himself likewise a Christian. He was thrown into prison, and sentenced
+to death, but he prevailed on his gaoler to permit him to leave the dungeon for
+a time, that he might see his wife. The report came to Natalia that he was no
+longer in prison, and she threw herself on the ground, lamenting aloud: 'Now
+will men point at me, and say, 'Behold the wife of the coward and apostate, who,
+for fear of death, hath denied his God.'</p>
+<p>'Oh, thou noble and strong-hearted woman,' said Adrian's voice at the door,
+'I bless God that I am not unworthy of thee. Open the door that I may bid thee
+farewell.'</p>
+<p>But this was not the last farewell, though he duly went back to the prison;
+for when, the next day, he had been cruelly scourged and tortured before the
+tribunal, Natalia, with her hair cut short, and wearing the disguise of a youth,
+was there to tend and comfort him. She took him in her arms saying, 'Oh, light
+of mine eyes, and husband of mine heart, blessed art thou, who art chosen to
+suffer for Christ's sake.'</p>
+<p>On the following day, the tyrant ordered that Adrian's limbs should be one by
+one struck off on a blacksmith's anvil, and lastly his head. And still it was
+his wife who held him and sustained him through all and, ere the last stroke of
+the executioner, had received his last breath. She took up one of the severed
+hands, kissed it, and placed it in her bosom, and escaping to Byzantium, there
+spent her life in widowhood.</p>
+<p>Nor among these devoted wives should we pass by Gertrude, the wife of Rudolf,
+Baron von der Wart, a Swabian nobleman, who was so ill-advised as to join in a
+conspiracy of Johann of Hapsburg, in 1308, against the Emperor, Albrecht I, the
+son of the great and good Rudolf of Hapsburg.</p>
+<p>This Johann was the son of the Emperor's brother Rudolf, a brave knight who
+had died young, and Johann had been brought up by a Baron called Walther von
+Eschenbach, until, at nineteen years old, he went to his uncle to demand his
+father's inheritance. Albrecht was a rude and uncouth man, and refused
+disdainfully the demand, whereupon the noblemen of the disputed territory
+stirred up the young prince to form a plot against him, all having evidently
+different views of the lengths to which they would proceed. This was just at the
+time that the Swiss, angry at the overweening and oppressive behaviour of
+Albrecht's governors, were first taking up arms to maintain that they owed no
+duty to him as Duke of Austria, but merely as Emperor of Germany. He set out on
+his way to chastise them as rebels, taking with him a considerable train, of
+whom his nephew Johann was one. At Baden, Johann, as a last experiment, again
+applied for his inheritance, but by way of answer, Albrecht held out a wreath of
+flowers, telling him they better became his years than did the cares of
+government. He burst into tears, threw the wreath upon the ground, and fed his
+mind upon the savage purpose of letting his uncle find out what he was fit for.</p>
+<p>By and by, the party came to the banks of the Reuss, where there was no
+bridge, and only one single boat to carry the whole across. The first to cross
+were the Emperor with one attendant, besides his nephew and four of the secret
+partisans of Johann. Albrecht's son Leopold was left to follow with the rest of
+the suite, and the Emperor rode on towards the hills of his home, towards the
+Castle of Hapsburg, where his father's noble qualities had earned the reputation
+which was the cause of all the greatness of the line. Suddenly his nephew rode
+up to him, and while one of the conspirators seized the bridle of his horse,
+exclaimed, 'Will you now restore my inheritance?' and wounded him in the neck.
+The attendant fled; Der Wart, who had never thought murder was to be a part of
+the scheme, stood aghast, but the other two fell on the unhappy Albrecht, and
+each gave him a mortal wound, and then all five fled in different directions.
+The whole horrible affair took place full in view of Leopold and the army on the
+other side of the river, and when it became possible for any of them to cross,
+they found that the Emperor had just expired, with his head in the lap of a poor
+woman.</p>
+<p>The murderers escaped into the Swiss mountains, expecting shelter there; but
+the stout, honest men of the cantons were resolved not to have any connection
+with assassins, and refused to protect them. Johann himself, after long and
+miserable wanderings in disguise, bitterly repented, owned his crime to the
+Pope, and was received into a convent; Eschenbach escaped, and lived fifteen
+years as a cowherd. The others all fell into the hands of the sons and daughters
+of Albrecht, and woeful was the revenge that was taken upon them, and upon their
+innocent families and retainers.</p>
+<p>That Leopold, who had seen his father slain before his eyes, should have been
+deeply incensed, was not wonderful, and his elder brother Frederick, as Duke of
+Austria, was charged with the execution of justice; but both brothers were
+horribly savage and violent in their proceedings, and their sister Agnes
+surpassed them in her atrocious thirst for vengeance. She was the wife of the
+King of Hungary, very clever and discerning, and also supposed to be very
+religious, but all better thoughts were swept away by her furious passion. She
+had nearly strangled Eschenbach's infant son with her own bare hands, when he
+was rescued from her by her own soldiers, and when she was watching the
+beheading of sixty-three vassals of another of the murderers, she repeatedly
+exclaimed, 'Now I bathe in May dew.' Once, indeed, she met with a stern rebuke.
+A hermit, for whom she had offered to build a convent, answered her, 'Woman, God
+is not served by shedding innocent blood and by building convents out of the
+plunder of families, but by compassion and forgiveness of injuries.'</p>
+<p>Rudolf von der Wart received the horrible sentence of being broken on the
+wheel. On his trial the Emperor's attendant declared that Der Wart had attacked
+Albert with his dagger, and the cry, 'How long will ye suffer this carrion to
+sit on horseback?' but he persisted to the last that he had been taken by
+surprise by the murder. However, there was no mercy for him; and, by the express
+command of Queen Agnes, after he had been bound upon one wheel, and his limbs
+broken by heavy blows from the executioner, he was fastened to another wheel,
+which was set upon a pole, where he was to linger out the remaining hours of his
+life. His young wife, Gertrude, who had clung to him through all the trial, was
+torn away and carried off to the Castle of Kyburg; but she made her escape at
+dusk, and found her way, as night came on, to the spot where her husband hung
+still living upon the wheel. That night of agony was described in a letter
+ascribed to Gertrude herself. The guard left to watch fled at her approach, and
+she prayed beneath the scaffold, and then, heaping some heavy logs of wood
+together, was able to climb up near enough to embrace him and stroke back the
+hair from his face, whilst he entreated her to leave him, lest she should be
+found there, and fall under the cruel revenge of the Queen, telling her that
+thus it would be possible to increase his suffering.</p>
+<p>'I will die with you,' she said, 'tis for that I came, and no power shall
+force me from you;' and she prayed for the one mercy she hoped for, speedy death
+for her husband.</p>
+<p>In Mrs. Hemans' beautiful words--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'And bid me not depart,' she cried,<br>
+'My Rudolf, say not so;<br>
+This is no time to quit thy side,<br>
+Peace, peace, I cannot go!<br>
+Hath the world aught for me to fear<br>
+When death is on thy brow?<br>
+The world! what means it? Mine is here!<br>
+I will not leave thee now.<br>
+'I have been with thee in thine hour<br>
+Of glory and of bliss;<br>
+Doubt not its memory's living power<br>
+To strengthen me through this.<br>
+And thou, mine honor'd love and true,<br>
+Bear on, bear nobly on;<br>
+We have the blessed heaven in view,<br>
+Whose rest shall soon be won.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>When day began to break, the guard returned, and Gertrude took down her stage
+of wood and continued kneeling at the foot of the pole. Crowds of people came to
+look, among them the wife of one of the officials, whom Gertrude implored to
+intercede that her husband's sufferings might be ended; but though this might
+not be, some pitied her, and tried to give her wine and confections, which she
+could not touch. The priest came and exhorted Rudolf to confess the crime, but
+with a great effort he repeated his former statement of innocence.</p>
+<p>A band of horsemen rode by. Among them was the young Prince Leopold and his
+sister Agnes herself, clad as a knight. They were very angry at the compassion
+shown by the crowd, and after frightfully harsh language commanded that Gertrude
+should be dragged away; but one of the nobles interceded for her, and when she
+had been carried away to a little distance her entreaties were heard, and she
+was allowed to break away and come back to her husband. The priest blessed
+Gertrude, gave her his hand and said, 'Be faithful unto death, and God will give
+you the crown of life,' and she was no further molested.</p>
+<p>Night came on, and with it a stormy wind, whose howling mingled with the
+voice of her prayers, and whistled in the hair of the sufferer. One of the guard
+brought her a cloak. She climbed on the wheel, and spread the covering over her
+husband's limbs; then fetched some water in her shoe, and moistened his lips
+with it, sustaining him above all with her prayers, and exhortations to look to
+the joys beyond. He had ceased to try to send her away, and thanked her for the
+comfort she gave him. And still she watched when morning came again, and noon
+passed over her, and it was verging to evening, when for the last time he moved
+his head; and she raised herself so as to be close to him. With a smile, he
+murmured, 'Gertrude, this is faithfulness till death,' and died. She knelt down
+to thank God for having enabled her to remain for that last breath--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'While even as o'er a martyr's grave<br>
+She knelt on that sad spot,<br>
+And, weeping, blessed the God who gave<br>
+Strength to forsake it not!'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>She found shelter in a convent at Basle, where she spent the rest of her life
+in a quiet round of prayer and good works; till the time came when her widowed
+heart should find its true rest for ever.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>WHAT IS BETTER THAN SLAYING A DRAGON<br>
+1332</h3></center>
+
+<p>The next story we have to tell is so strange and wild, that it would seem
+better to befit the cloudy times when history had not yet been disentangled from
+fable, than the comparatively clear light of the fourteenth century.</p>
+<p>It took place in the island of Rhodes. This Greek isle had become the home of
+the Knights of St. John, or Hospitaliers, an order of sworn brethren who had
+arisen at the time of the Crusades. At first they had been merely monks, who
+kept open house for the reception of the poor penniless pilgrims who arrived at
+Jerusalem in need of shelter, and often of nursing and healing. The good monks
+not only fed and housed them, but did their best to cure the many diseases that
+they would catch in the toilsome journey in that feverish climate; and thus it
+has come to pass that the word hospitium, which in Latin only means an inn, has,
+in modern languages, given birth, on the one hand, to hotel, or lodging house,
+on the other, to hospital, or house of healing. The Hospital at Jerusalem was
+called after St. John the Almoner, a charitable Bishop of old, and the brethren
+were Hospitaliers. By and by, when the first Crusade was over, and there was a
+great need of warriors to maintain the Christian cause in Jerusalem, the
+Hospitaliers thought it a pity that so many strong arms should be prevented from
+exerting themselves, by the laws that forbade the clergy to do battle, and they
+obtained permission from the Pope to become warriors as well as monks. They were
+thus all in one--knights, priests, and nurses; their monasteries were both
+castles and hospitals; and the sick pilgrim or wounded Crusader was sure of all
+the best tendance and medical care that the times could afford, as well as of
+all the ghostly comfort and counsel that he might need, and, if he recovered, he
+was escorted safely down to the seashore by a party strong enough to protect him
+from the hordes of robber Arabs. All this was for charity's sake, and without
+reward. Surely the constitution of the Order was as golden as its badge--the
+eight-pointed cross--which the brethren wore round their neck. They wore it also
+in white over their shoulder upon a black mantle. And the knights who had been
+admitted to the full honors of the Order had a scarlet surcoat, likewise with
+the white cross, over their armor. The whole brotherhood was under the command
+of a Grand Master, who was elected in a chapter of all the knights, and to whom
+all vowed to render implicit obedience.</p>
+<p>Good service in all their three capacities had been done by the Order as long
+as the Crusaders were able to keep a footing in the Holy Land; but they were
+driven back step by step, and at last, in 1291, their last stronghold at Acre
+was taken, after much desperate fighting, and the remnant of the Hospitaliers
+sailed away to the isle of Cyprus, where, after a few years, they recruited
+their forces, and, in 1307, captured the island of Rhodes, which had been a nest
+of Greek and Mahometan pirates. Here they remained, hoping for a fresh Crusade
+to recover the Holy Sepulcher, and in the meantime fulfilling their old mission
+as the protectors and nurses of the weak. All the Mediterranean Sea was infested
+by corsairs from the African coast and the Greek isles, and these brave knights,
+becoming sailors as well as all they had been before, placed their red flag with
+its white cross at the masthead of many a gallant vessel that guarded the
+peaceful traveler, hunted down the cruel pirate, and brought home his Christian
+slave, rescued from laboring at the oar, to the Hospital for rest and tendance.
+Or their treasures were used in redeeming the captives in the pirate cities. No
+knight of St. John might offer any ransom for himself save his sword and scarf;
+but for the redemption of their poor fellow Christians their wealth was ready,
+and many a captive was released from toiling in Algiers or Tripoli, or still
+worse, from rowing the pirate vessels, chained to the oar, between the decks,
+and was restored to health and returned to his friends, blessing the day he had
+been brought into the curving harbour of Rhodes, with the fine fortified town of
+churches and monasteries.</p>
+<p>Some eighteen years after the conquest of Rhodes, the whole island was filled
+with dismay by the ravages of an enormous creature, living in a morass at the
+foot of Mount St. Stephen, about two miles from the city of Rhodes. Tradition
+calls it a dragon, and whether it were a crocodile or a serpent is uncertain.
+There is reason to think that the monsters of early creation were slow in
+becoming extinct, or it is not impossible that either a crocodile or a python
+might have been brought over by storms or currents from Africa, and have grown
+to a more formidable size than usual in solitude among the marshes, while the
+island was changing owners. The reptile, whatever it might be, was the object of
+extreme dread; it devoured sheep and cattle, when they came down to the water,
+and even young shepherd boys were missing. And the pilgrimage to the Chapel of
+St. Stephen, on the hill above its lair, was especially a service of danger, for
+pilgrims were believed to be snapped up by the dragon before they could mount
+the hill.</p>
+<p>Several knights had gone out to attempt the destruction of the creature, but
+not one had returned, and at last the Grand Master, Helion de Villeneuve,
+forbade any further attacks to be made. The dragon is said to have been covered
+with scales that were perfectly impenetrable either to arrows or any cutting
+weapon; and the severe loss that encounters with him had cost the Order,
+convinced the Grand Master that he must be let alone.</p>
+<p>However, a young knight, named Dieudonne de Gozon, was by no means willing to
+acquiesce in the decree; perhaps all the less because it came after he had once
+gone out in quest of the monster, but had returned, by his own confession,
+without striking a blow. He requested leave of absence, and went home for a time
+to his father's castle of Gozon, in Languedoc; and there he caused a model of
+the monster to be made. He had observed that the scales did not protect the
+animal's belly, though it was almost impossible to get a blow at it, owing to
+its tremendous teeth, and the furious strokes of its length of tail. He
+therefore caused this part of his model to be made hollow, and filled with food,
+and obtaining two fierce young mastiffs, he trained them to fly at the under
+side of the monster, while he mounted his warhorse, and endeavored to accustom
+it likewise to attack the strange shape without swerving.</p>
+<p>When he thought the education of horse and dogs complete, he returned to
+Rhodes; but fearing to be prevented from carrying out his design, he did not
+land at the city, but on a remote part of the coast, whence he made his way to
+the chapel of St. Stephen. There, after having recommended himself to God, he
+left his two French squires, desiring them to return home if he were slain, but
+to watch and come to him if he killed the dragon, or were only hurt by it. He
+then rode down the hillside, and towards the haunt of the dragon. It roused
+itself at his advance, and at first he charged it with his lance, which was
+perfectly useless against the scales. His horse was quick to perceive the
+difference between the true and the false monster, and started back, so that he
+was forced to leap to the ground; but the two dogs were more staunch, and sprang
+at the animal, whilst their master struck at it with his sword, but still
+without reaching a vulnerable part, and a blow from the tail had thrown him
+down, and the dragon was turning upon him, when the movement left the undefended
+belly exposed. Both mastiffs fastened on it at once, and the knight, regaining
+his feet, thrust his sword into it. There was a death grapple, and finally the
+servants, coming down the hill, found their knight lying apparently dead under
+the carcass of the dragon. When they had extricated him, taken off his helmet,
+and sprinkled him with water, he recovered, and presently was led into the city
+amid the ecstatic shouts of the whole populace, who conducted him in triumph to
+the palace of the Grand Master.</p>
+<p>We have seen how Titus Manlius was requited by his father for his breach of
+discipline. It was somewhat in the same manner that Helion de Villeneuve
+received Dieudonne. We borrow Schiller's beautiful version of the conversation
+that took place, as the young knight, pale, with his black mantle rent, his
+shining armor dinted, his scarlet surcoat stained with blood, came into the
+Knights' Great Hall.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Severe and grave was the Master's brow,<br>
+Quoth he, 'A hero bold art thou,<br>
+By valor 't is that knights are known;<br>
+A valiant spirit hast thou shown;<br>
+But the first duty of a knight,<br>
+Now tell, who vows for CHRIST to fight<br>
+And bears the Cross on his coat of mail.'<br>
+The listeners all with fear grew pale,<br>
+While, bending lowly, spake the knight,<br>
+His cheeks with blushes burning,<br>
+'He who the Cross would bear aright<br>
+Obedience must be learning.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Even after hearing the account of the conflict, the Grand Master did not
+abate his displeasure.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'My son, the spoiler of the land<br>
+Lies slain by thy victorious hand<br>
+Thou art the people's god, but so<br>
+Thou art become thine Order's foe;<br>
+A deadlier foe thine heart has bred<br>
+Than this which by thy hand is dead,<br>
+That serpent still the heart defiling<br>
+To ruin and to strife beguiling,<br>
+It is that spirit rash and bold,<br>
+That scorns the bands of order;<br>
+Rages against them uncontrolled<br>
+Till earth is in disorder.<br>
+'Courage by Saracens is shown,<br>
+Submission is the Christian's own;<br>
+And where our Saviour, high and holy,<br>
+Wandered a pilgrim poor and lowly<br>
+Upon that ground with mystery fraught,<br>
+The fathers of our Order taught<br>
+The duty hardest to fulfil<br>
+Is to give up your own self-will<br>
+Thou art elate with glory vain.<br>
+Away then from my sight!<br>
+Who can his Saviour's yoke disdain<br>
+Bears not his Cross aright.'<br>
+'An angry cry burst from the crowd,<br>
+The hall rang with their tumult loud;<br>
+Each knightly brother prayed for grace.<br>
+The victor downward bent his face,<br>
+Aside his cloak in silence laid,<br>
+Kissed the Grand Master's hand, nor stayed.<br>
+The Master watched him from the hall,<br>
+Then summoned him with loving call,<br>
+'Come to embrace me, noble son,<br>
+Thine is the conquest of the soul;<br>
+Take up the Cross, now truly won,<br>
+By meekness and by self-control.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The probation of Dieudonne is said to have been somewhat longer than the poem
+represents, but after the claims of discipline had been established, he became a
+great favorite with stern old Villeneuve, and the dragon's head was set up over
+the gate of the city, where Thèvenot professed to have seen it in the
+seventeenth century, and said that it was larger than that of a horse, with a
+huge mouth and teeth and very large eyes. The name of Rhodes is said to come
+from a Phoenician word, meaning a serpent, and the Greeks called this isle of
+serpents, which is all in favor of the truth of the story. But, on the other
+hand, such traditions often are prompted by the sight of the fossil skeletons of
+the dragons of the elder world, and are generally to be met with where such
+minerals prevail as are found in the northern part of Rhodes. The tale is
+disbelieved by many, but it is hard to suppose it an entire invention, though
+the description of the monster may have been exaggerated.</p>
+<p>Dieudonne de Gozon was elected to the Grand Mastership after the death of
+Villeneuve, and is said to have voted for himself. If so, it seems as if he
+might have had, in his earlier days, an overweening opinion of his own
+abilities. However, he was an excellent Grand Master, a great soldier, and much
+beloved by all the poor peasants of the island, to whom he was exceedingly kind.
+He died in 1353, and his tomb is said to have been the only inscribed with these
+words, 'Here lies the Dragon Slayer.'</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE KEYS OF CALAIS<br>
+1347</h3></center>
+
+<p>Nowhere does the continent of Europe approach Great Britain so closely as at
+the straits of Dover, and when our sovereigns were full of the vain hope of
+obtaining the crown of France, or at least of regaining the great possessions
+that their forefathers has owned as French nobles, there was no spot so coveted
+by them as the fortress of Calais, the possession of which gave an entrance into
+France.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that when, in 1346, Edward III. had beaten Philippe VI. at the
+battle of Crecy, the first use he made of his victory was to march upon Calais,
+and lay siege to it. The walls were exceedingly strong and solid, mighty
+defenses of masonry, of huge thickness and like rocks for solidity, guarded it,
+and the king knew that it would be useless to attempt a direct assault. Indeed,
+during all the Middle Ages, the modes of protecting fortifications were far more
+efficient than the modes of attacking them. The walls could be made enormously
+massive, the towers raised to a great height, and the defenders so completely
+sheltered by battlements that they could not easily be injured and could take
+aim from the top of their turrets, or from their loophole windows. The gates had
+absolute little castles of their own, a moat flowed round the walls full of
+water, and only capable of being crossed by a drawbridge, behind which the
+portcullis, a grating armed beneath with spikes, was always ready to drop from
+the archway of the gate and close up the entrance. The only chance of taking a
+fortress by direct attack was to fill up the moat with earth and faggots, and
+then raise ladders against the walls; or else to drive engines against the
+defenses, battering-rams which struck them with heavy beams, mangonels which
+launched stones, sows whose arched wooden backs protected troops of workmen who
+tried to undermine the wall, and moving towers consisting of a succession of
+stages or shelves, filled with soldiers, and with a bridge with iron hooks,
+capable of being launched from the highest story to the top of the battlements.
+The besieged could generally disconcert the battering-ram by hanging beds or
+mattresses over the walls to receive the brunt of the blow, the sows could be
+crushed with heavy stones, the towers burnt by well-directed flaming missiles,
+the ladders overthrown, and in general the besiegers suffered a great deal more
+damage than they could inflict. Cannon had indeed just been brought into use at
+the battle of Crecy, but they only consisted of iron bars fastened together with
+hoops, and were as yet of little use, and thus there seemed to be little danger
+to a well-guarded city from any enemy outside the walls.</p>
+<p>King Edward arrived before the place with all his victorious army early in
+August, his good knights and squires arrayed in glittering steel armor, covered
+with surcoats richly embroidered with their heraldic bearings; his stout
+men-at-arms, each of whom was attended by three bold followers; and his archers,
+with their crossbows to shoot bolts, and longbows to shoot arrows of a yard
+long, so that it used to be said that each went into battle with three men's
+lives under his girdle, namely, the three arrows he kept there ready to his
+hand. With the King was his son, Edward, Prince of Wales, who had just won the
+golden spurs of knighthood so gallantly at Crecy, when only in his seventeenth
+year, and likewise the famous Hainault knight, Sir Walter Mauny, and all that
+was noblest and bravest in England.</p>
+<p>This whole glittering army, at their head the King's great royal standard
+bearing the golden lilies of France quartered with the lions of England, and
+each troop guided by the square banner, swallow-tailed pennon or pointed
+pennoncel of their leader, came marching to the gates of Calais, above which
+floated the blue standard of France with its golden flowers, and with it the
+banner of the governor, Sir Jean de Vienne. A herald, in a rich long robe
+embroidered with the arms of England, rode up to the gate, a trumpet sounding
+before him, and called upon Sir Jean de Vienne to give up the place to Edward,
+King of England, and of France, as he claimed to be. Sir Jean made answer that
+he held the town for Philippe, King of France, and that he would defend it to
+the last; the herald rode back again and the English began the siege of the
+city.</p>
+<p>At first they only encamped, and the people of Calais must have seen the
+whole plain covered with the white canvas tents, marshalled round the ensigns of
+the leaders, and here and there a more gorgeous one displaying the colours of
+the owner. Still there was no attack upon the walls. The warriors were to be
+seen walking about in the leathern suits they wore under their armor; or if a
+party was to be seen with their coats of mail on, helmet on head, and lance in
+hand, it was not against Calais that they came; they rode out into the country,
+and by and by might be seen driving back before them herds of cattle and flocks
+of sheep or pigs that they had seized and taken away from the poor peasants; and
+at night the sky would show red lights where farms and homesteads had been set
+on fire. After a time, in front of the tents, the English were to be seen hard
+at work with beams and boards, setting up huts for themselves, and thatching
+them over with straw or broom. These wooden houses were all ranged in regular
+streets, and there was a marketplace in the midst, whither every Saturday came
+farmers and butchers to sell corn and meat, and hay for the horses; and the
+English merchants and Flemish weavers would come by sea and by land to bring
+cloth, bread, weapons, and everything that could be needed to be sold in this
+warlike market.</p>
+<p>The Governor, Sir Jean de Vienne, began to perceive that the King did not
+mean to waste his men by making vain attacks on the strong walls of Calais, but
+to shut up the entrance by land, and watch the coast by sea so as to prevent any
+provisions from being taken in, and so to starve him into surrendering. Sir Jean
+de Vienne, however, hoped that before he should be entirely reduced by famine,
+the King of France would be able to get together another army and come to his
+relief, and at any rate he was determined to do his duty, and hold out for his
+master to the last. But as food was already beginning to grow scarce, he was
+obliged to turn out such persons as could not fight and had no stores of their
+own, and so one Wednesday morning he caused all the poor to be brought together,
+men, women, and children, and sent them all out of the town, to the number of
+1,700. It was probably the truest mercy, for he had no food to give them, and
+they could only have starved miserably within the town, or have hindered him
+from saving it for his sovereign; but to them it was dreadful to be driven out
+of house and home, straight down upon the enemy, and they went along weeping and
+wailing, till the English soldiers met them and asked why they had come out.
+They answered that they had been put out because they had nothing to eat, and
+their sorrowful, famished looks gained pity for them. King Edward sent orders
+that not only should they go safely through his camp, but that they should all
+rest, and have the first hearty dinner that they had eaten for many a day, and
+he sent every one a small sum of money before they left the camp, so that many
+of them went on their way praying aloud for the enemy who had been so kind to
+them.</p>
+<p>A great deal happened whilst King Edward kept watch in his wooden town and
+the citizens of Calais guarded their walls. England was invaded by King David
+II. of Scotland, with a great army, and the good Queen Philippa, who was left to
+govern at home in the name of her little son Lionel, assembled all the forces
+that were left at home, and crossed the Straits of Dover, and a messenger
+brought King Edward letters from his Queen to say that the Scots army had been
+entirely defeated at Nevil's Cross, near Durham, and that their King was a
+prisoner, but that he had been taken by a squire named John Copeland, who would
+not give him up to her.</p>
+<p>King Edward sent letters to John Copeland to come to him at Calais, and when
+the squire had made his journey, the King took him by the hand saying, 'Ha!
+welcome, my squire, who by his valor has captured our adversary the King of
+Scotland.'</p>
+<p>Copeland, falling on one knee, replied, 'If God, out of His great kindness,
+has given me the King of Scotland, no one ought to be jealous of it, for God
+can, when He pleases, send His grace to a poor squire as well as to a great
+Lord. Sir, do not take it amiss if I did not surrender him to the orders of my
+lady the Queen, for I hold my lands of you, and my oath is to you, not to her.'</p>
+<p>The King was not displeased with his squire's sturdiness, but made him a
+knight, gave him a pension of 500l. a year, and desired him to surrender his
+prisoner to the Queen, as his own representative. This was accordingly done, and
+King David was lodged in the Tower of London. Soon after, three days before All
+Saint's Day, there was a large and gay fleet to be seen crossing from the white
+cliffs of Dover, and the King, his son, and his knights rode down to the landing
+place to welcome plump, fair haired Queen Philippa, and all her train of ladies,
+who had come in great numbers to visit their husbands, fathers, or brothers in
+the wooden town.</p>
+<p>Then there was a great Court, and numerous feasts and dances, and the knights
+and squires were constantly striving who could do the bravest deed of prowess to
+please the ladies. The King of France had placed numerous knights and
+men-at-arms in the neighboring towns and castles, and there were constant fights
+whenever the English went out foraging, and many bold deeds that were much
+admired were done. The great point was to keep provisions out of the town, and
+there was much fighting between the French who tried to bring in supplies, and
+the English who intercepted them. Very little was brought in by land, and Sir
+Jean de Vienne and his garrison would have been quite starved but for two
+sailors of Abbeville, named Marant and Mestriel, who knew the coast thoroughly,
+and often, in the dark autumn evenings, would guide in a whole fleet of little
+boats, loaded with bread and meat for the starving men within the city. They
+were often chased by King Edward's vessels, and were sometimes very nearly
+taken, but they always managed to escape, and thus they still enabled the
+garrison to hold out.</p>
+<p>So all the winter passed, Christmas was kept with brilliant feastings and
+high merriment by the King and his Queen in their wooden palace outside, and
+with lean cheeks and scanty fare by the besieged within. Lent was strictly
+observed perforce by the besieged, and Easter brought a betrothal in the English
+camp; a very unwilling one on the part of the bridegroom, the young Count of
+Flanders, who loved the French much better than the English, and had only been
+tormented into giving his consent by his unruly vassals because they depended on
+the wool of English sheep for their cloth works. So, though King Edward's
+daughter Isabel was a beautiful fair-haired girl of fifteen, the young Count
+would scarcely look at her; and in the last week before the marriage day, while
+her robes and her jewels were being prepared, and her father and mother were
+arranging the presents they should make to all their Court on the wedding day,
+the bridegroom, when out hawking, gave his attendants the slip, and galloped off
+to Paris, where he was welcomed by King Philippe.</p>
+<p>This made Edward very wrathful, and more than ever determined to take Calais.
+About Whitsuntide he completed a great wooden castle upon the seashore, and
+placed in it numerous warlike engines, with forty men-at-arms and 200 archers,
+who kept such a watch upon the harbour that not even the two Abbeville sailors
+could enter it, without having their boats crushed and sunk by the great stones
+that the mangonels launched upon them. The townspeople began to feel what hunger
+really was, but their spirits were kept up by the hope that their King was at
+last collecting an army for their rescue.</p>
+<p>And Philippe did collect all his forces, a great and noble army, and came one
+night to the hill of Sangate, just behind the English army, the knights' armor
+glancing and their pennons flying in the moonlight, so as to be a beautiful
+sight to the hungry garrison who could see the white tents pitched upon the
+hillside. Still there were but two roads by which the French could reach their
+friends in the town--one along the seacoast, the other by a marshy road higher
+up the country, and there was but one bridge by which the river could be
+crossed. The English King's fleet could prevent any troops from passing along
+the coast road, the Earl of Derby guarded the bridge, and there was a great
+tower, strongly fortified, close upon Calais. There were a few skirmishes, but
+the French King, finding it difficult to force his way to relieve the town, sent
+a party of knights with a challenge to King Edward to come out of his camp and
+do battle upon a fair field.</p>
+<p>To this Edward made answer, that he had been nearly a year before Calais, and
+had spent large sums of money on the siege, and that he had nearly become master
+of the place, so that he had no intention of coming out only to gratify his
+adversary, who must try some other road if he could not make his way in by that
+before him.</p>
+<p>Three days were spent in parleys, and then, without the slightest effort to
+rescue the brave, patient men within the town, away went King Philippe of
+France, with all his men, and the garrison saw the host that had crowded the
+hill of Sangate melt away like a summer cloud.</p>
+<p>August had come again, and they had suffered privation for a whole year for
+the sake of the King who deserted them at their utmost need. They were in so
+grievous a state of hunger and distress that the hardiest could endure no more,
+for ever since Whitsuntide no fresh provisions had reached them. The Governor,
+therefore, went to the battlements and made signs that he wished to hold a
+parley, and the King appointed Lord Basset and Sir Walter Mauny to meet him, and
+appoint the terms of surrender.</p>
+<p>The Governor owned that the garrison was reduced to the greatest extremity of
+distress, and requested that the King would be contented with obtaining the city
+and fortress, leaving the soldiers and inhabitants to depart in peace.</p>
+<p>But Sir Walter Mauny was forced to make answer that the King, his lord, was
+so much enraged at the delay and expense that Calais had cost him, that he would
+only consent to receive the whole on unconditional terms, leaving him free to
+slay, or to ransom, or make prisoners whomsoever he pleased, and he was known to
+consider that there was a heavy reckoning to pay, both for the trouble the siege
+had cost him and the damage the Calesians had previously done to his ships.</p>
+<p>The brave answer was: 'These conditions are too hard for us. We are but a
+small number of knights and squires, who have loyally served our lord and master
+as you would have done, and have suffered much ill and disquiet, but we will
+endure far more than any man has done in such a post, before we consent that the
+smallest boy in the town shall fare worse than ourselves. I therefore entreat
+you, for pity's sake, to return to the King and beg him to have compassion, for
+I have such an opinion of his gallantry that I think he will alter his mind.'</p>
+<p>The King's mind seemed, however, sternly made up; and all that Sir Walter
+Mauny and the barons of the council could obtain from him was that he would
+pardon the garrison and townsmen on condition that six of the chief citizens
+should present themselves to him, coming forth with bare feet and heads, with
+halters round their necks, carrying the keys of the town, and becoming
+absolutely his own to punish for their obstinacy as he should think fit.</p>
+<p>On hearing this reply, Sir Jean de Vienne begged Sir Walter Mauny to wait
+till he could consult the citizens, and, repairing to the marketplace, he caused
+a great bell to be rung, at sound of which all the inhabitants came together in
+the town hall. When he told them of these hard terms he could not refrain from
+weeping bitterly, and wailing and lamentation arose all round him. Should all
+starve together, or sacrifice their best and most honored after all suffering in
+common so long?</p>
+<p>Then a voice was heard; it was that of the richest burgher in the town,
+Eustache de St. Pierre. 'Messieurs high and low,' he said, 'it would be a sad
+pity to suffer so many people to die through hunger, if it could be prevented;
+and to hinder it would be meritorious in the eyes of our Saviour. I have such
+faith and trust in finding grace before God, if I die to save my townsmen, that
+I name myself as the first of the six.'</p>
+<p>As the burgher ceased, his fellow townsmen wept aloud, and many, amid tears
+and groans, threw themselves at his feet in a transport of grief and gratitude.
+Another citizen, very rich and respected, rose up and said, 'I will be second to
+my comrade, Eustache.' His name was Jean Daire. After him, Jacques Wissant,
+another very rich man, offered himself as companion to these, who were both his
+cousins; and his brother Pierre would not be left behind: and two more, unnamed,
+made up this gallant band of men willing to offer their lives for the rescue of
+their fellow townsmen.</p>
+<p>Sir Jean de Vienne mounted a little horse--for he had been wounded, and was
+still lame--and came to the gate with them, followed by all the people of the
+town, weeping and wailing, yet, for their own sakes and their children's not
+daring to prevent the sacrifice. The gates were opened, the governor and the six
+passed out, and the gates were again shut behind them. Sir Jean then rode up to
+Sir Walter Mauny, and told him how these burghers had voluntarily offered
+themselves, begging him to do all in his power to save them; and Sir Walter
+promised with his whole heart to plead their cause. De Vienne then went back
+into the town, full of heaviness and anxiety; and the six citizens were led by
+Sir Walter to the presence of the King, in his full Court. They all knelt down,
+and the foremost said: 'Most gallant King, you see before you six burghers of
+Calais, who have all been capital merchants, and who bring you the keys of the
+castle and town. We yield ourselves to your absolute will and pleasure, in order
+to save the remainder of the inhabitants of Calais, who have suffered much
+distress and misery. Condescend, therefore, out of your nobleness of mind, to
+have pity on us.'</p>
+<p>Strong emotion was excited among all the barons and knights who stood round,
+as they saw the resigned countenances, pale and thin with patiently endured
+hunger, of these venerable men, offering themselves in the cause of their fellow
+townsmen. Many tears of pity were shed; but the King still showed himself
+implacable, and commanded that they should be led away, and their heads stricken
+off. Sir Walter Mauny interceded for them with all his might, even telling the
+King that such an execution would tarnish his honor, and that reprisals would be
+made on his own garrisons; and all the nobles joined in entreating pardon for
+the citizens, but still without effect; and the headsman had been actually sent
+for, when Queen Philippa, her eyes streaming with tears, threw herself on her
+knees amongst the captives, and said, 'Ah, gentle sir, since I have crossed the
+sea, with much danger, to see you, I have never asked you one favor; now I beg
+as a boon to myself, for the sake of the Son of the Blessed Mary, and for your
+love to me, that you will be merciful to these men!'</p>
+<p>For some time the King looked at her in silence; then he exclaimed: 'Dame,
+dame, would that you had been anywhere than here! You have entreated in such a
+manner that I cannot refuse you; I therefore give these men to you, to do as you
+please with.'</p>
+<p>Joyfully did Queen Philippa conduct the six citizens to her own apartments,
+where she made them welcome, sent them new garments, entertained them with a
+plentiful dinner, and dismissed them each with a gift of six nobles. After this,
+Sir Walter Mauny entered the city, and took possession of it; retaining Sir Jean
+de Vienne and the other knights and squires till they should ransom themselves,
+and sending out the old French inhabitants; for the King was resolved to people
+the city entirely of English, in order to gain a thoroughly strong hold of this
+first step in France.</p>
+<p>The King and Queen took up their abode in the city; and the houses of Jean
+Daire were, it appears, granted to the Queen--perhaps, because she considered
+the man himself as her charge, and wished to secure them for him--and her little
+daughter Margaret was, shortly after, born in one of his houses. Eustache de St.
+Pierre was taken into high favor, and placed in charge of the new citizens whom
+the King placed in the city.</p>
+<p>Indeed, as this story is told by no chronicler but Froissart, some have
+doubted of it, and thought the violent resentment thus imputed to Edward III
+inconsistent with his general character; but it is evident that the men of
+Calais had given him strong provocation by attacks on his shipping--piracies
+which are not easily forgiven--and that he considered that he had a right to
+make an example of them. It is not unlikely that he might, after all, have
+intended to forgive them, and have given the Queen the grace of obtaining their
+pardon, so as to excuse himself from the fulfillment of some over-hasty threat.
+But, however this may have been, nothing can lessen the glory of the six grave
+and patient men who went forth, by their own free will, to meet what might be a
+cruel and disgraceful death, in order to obtain the safety of their
+fellow-townsmen.</p>
+<p>Very recently, in the summer of 1864, an instance has occurred of
+self-devotion worthy to be recorded with that of Eustache de St. Pierre. The
+City of Palmyra, in Tennessee, one of the Southern States of America, had been
+occupied by a Federal army. An officer of this army was assassinated, and, on
+the cruel and mistaken system of taking reprisals, the general arrested ten of
+the principal inhabitants, and condemned them to be shot, as deeming the city
+responsible for the lives of his officers. One of them was the highly respected
+father of a large family, and could ill be spared. A young man, not related to
+him, upon this, came forward and insisted on being taken in his stead, as a less
+valuable life. And great as was the distress of his friend, this generous
+substitution was carried out, and not only spared a father to his children, but
+showed how the sharpest strokes of barbarity can still elicit light from the
+dark stone--light that but for these blows might have slept unseen.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE BATTLE OF SEMPACH<br>
+1397</h3></center>
+
+<p>Nothing in history has been more remarkable than the union of the cantons and
+cities of the little republic of Switzerland. Of differing races, languages,
+and, latterly, even religions--unlike in habits, tastes, opinions and
+costumes--they have, however, been held together, as it were, by pressure from
+without, and one spirit of patriotism has kept the little mountain republic
+complete for five hundred years.</p>
+<p>Originally the lands were fiefs of the Holy Roman Empire, the city
+municipalities owning the Emperor for their lord, and the great family of
+Hapsburg, in whom the Empire became at length hereditary, was in reality Swiss,
+the county that gave them title lying in the canton of Aargau. Rodolf of
+Hapsburg was elected leader of the burghers of Zurich, long before he was chosen
+to the Empire; and he continued a Swiss in heart, retaining his mountaineer's
+open simplicity and honesty to the end of his life. Privileges were granted by
+him to the cities and the nobles, and the country was loyal and prosperous in
+his reign.</p>
+<p>His son Albert, the same who was slain by his nephew Johann, as
+before-mentioned, permitted those tyrannies of his bailiffs which goaded the
+Swiss to their celebrated revolt, and commenced the long series of wars with the
+House of Hapsburgor, as it was now termed, of Austria--which finally established
+their independence.</p>
+<p>On the one side, the Dukes of Austria and their ponderous German chivalry
+wanted to reduce the cantons and cities to vassalage, not to the Imperial Crown,
+a distant and scarcely felt obligation, but to the Duchy of Austria; on the
+other, the hardy mountain peasants and stout burghers well knew their true
+position, and were aware that to admit the Austrian usurpation would expose
+their young men to be drawn upon for the Duke's wars, cause their property to be
+subject to perpetual rapacious exactions, and fill their hills with castles for
+ducal bailiffs, who would be little better than licensed robbers. No wonder,
+then, that the generations of William Tell and Arnold Melchthal bequeathed a
+resolute purpose of resistance to their descendants.</p>
+<p>It was in 1397, ninety years since the first assertion of Swiss independence,
+when Leopold the Handsome, Duke of Austria, a bold but misproud and violent
+prince, involved himself in one of the constant quarrels with the Swiss that
+were always arising on account of the insulting exactions of toll and tribute in
+the Austrian border cities. A sharp war broke out, and the Swiss city of Lucerne
+took the opportunity of destroying the Austrian castle of Rothemburg, where the
+tolls had been particularly vexatious, and of admitting to their league the
+cities of Sempach and Richensee.</p>
+<p>Leopold and all the neighboring nobles united their forces. Hatred and
+contempt of the Swiss, as low-born and presumptuous, spurred them on; and twenty
+messengers reached the Duke in one day, with promises of support, in his march
+against Sempach and Lucerne. He had sent a large force in the direction of
+Zurich with Johann Bonstetten, and advanced himself with 4,000 horse and 1,400
+foot upon Sempach. Zurich undertook its own defense, and the Forest cantons sent
+their brave peasants to the support of Lucerne and Sempach, but only to the
+number of 1,300, who, on the 9th of July, took post in the woods around the
+little lake of Sempach.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, Leopold's troops rode round the walls of the little city,
+insulting the inhabitants, one holding up a halter, which he said was for the
+chief magistrate; and another, pointing to the reckless waste that his comrades
+were perpetrating on the fields, shouted, 'Send a breakfast to the reapers.' The
+burgomaster pointed to the wood where his allies lay hid, and answered, 'My
+masters of Lucerne and their friends will bring it.'</p>
+<p>The story of that day was told by one of the burghers who fought in the ranks
+of Lucerne, a shoemaker, named Albert Tchudi, who was both a brave warrior and a
+master-singer; and as his ballad was translated by another master-singer, Sir
+Walter Scott, and is the spirited record of an eyewitness, we will quote from
+him some of his descriptions of the battle and its golden deed.</p>
+<p>The Duke's wiser friends proposed to wait till he could be joined by
+Bonstetten and the troops who had gone towards Zurich, and the Baron von
+Hasenburg (i.e. hare-rock) strongly urged this prudent counsel; but--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'O, Hare-Castle, thou heart of hare!'<br>
+Fierce Oxenstiern he cried,<br>
+'Shalt see then how the game will fare,'<br>
+The taunted knight replied.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>'This very noon,' said the younger knight to the Duke, 'we will deliver up to
+you this handful of villains.'</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'And thus they to each other said,<br>
+'Yon handful down to hew<br>
+Will be no boastful tale to tell<br>
+The peasants are so few.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Characteristically enough, the doughty cobbler describes how the first
+execution that took place was the lopping off the long-peaked toes of the boots
+that the gentlemen wore chained to their knees, and which would have impeded
+them on foot; since it had been decided that the horses were too much tired to
+be serviceable in the action.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'There was lacing then of helmets bright,<br>
+And closing ranks amain,<br>
+The peaks they hewed from their boot points<br>
+Might well nigh load a wain.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>They were drawn up in a solid compact body, presenting an unbroken line of
+spears, projecting beyond the wall of gay shields and polished impenetrable
+armor.</p>
+<p>The Swiss were not only few in number, but armor was scarce among them; some
+had only boards fastened on their arms by way of shields, some had halberts,
+which had been used by their fathers at the battle of Morgarten, others
+two-handed swords and battleaxes. They drew themselves up in the form of a wedge
+and</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'The gallant Swiss confederates then<br>
+They prayed to God aloud,<br>
+And He displayed His rainbow fair,<br>
+Against a swarthy cloud.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Then they rushed upon the serried spears, but in vain. 'The game was nothing
+sweet.'</p>
+<p>The banner of Lucerne was in the utmost danger, the Landamman was slain, and
+sixty of his men, and not an Austrian had been wounded. The flanks of the
+Austrian host began to advance so as to enclose the small peasant force, and
+involve it in irremediable destruction. A moment of dismay and stillness ensued.
+Then Arnold von Winkelried of Unterwalden, with an eagle glance saw the only
+means of saving his country, and, with the decision of a man who dares by dying
+to do all things, shouted aloud: 'I will open a passage.'</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'I have a virtuous wife at home,<br>
+A wife and infant son:<br>
+I leave them to my country's care,<br>
+The field shall yet be won!'<br>
+He rushed against the Austrian band<br>
+In desperate career,<br>
+And with his body, breast, and hand,<br>
+Bore down each hostile spear;<br>
+Four lances splintered on his crest,<br>
+Six shivered in his side,<br>
+Still on the serried files he pressed,<br>
+He broke their ranks and died!'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The very weight of the desperate charge of this self-devoted man opened a
+breach in the line of spears. In rushed the Swiss wedge, and the weight of the
+nobles' armor and length of their spears was only encumbering. They began to
+fall before the Swiss blows, and Duke Leopold was urged to fly. 'I had rather
+die honorably than live with dishonor,' he said. He saw his standard bearer
+struck to the ground, and seizing his banner from his hand, waved it over his
+head, and threw himself among the thickest of the foe. His corpse was found amid
+a heap of slain, and no less then 2000 of his companions perished with him, of
+whom a third are said to have been counts, barons and knights.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Then lost was banner, spear and shield<br>
+At Sempach in the flight;<br>
+The cloister vaults at Konigsfeldt<br>
+Hold many an Austrian knight.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The Swiss only lost 200; but, as they were spent with the excessive heat of
+the July sun, they did not pursue their enemies. They gave thanks on the
+battlefield to the God of victories, and the next day buried the dead, carrying
+Duke Leopold and twenty-seven of his most illustrious companions to the Abbey of
+Konigsfeldt, where they buried him in the old tomb of his forefathers, the lords
+of Aargau, who had been laid there in the good old times, before the house of
+Hapsburg had grown arrogant with success.</p>
+<p>As to the master-singer, he tells us of himself that</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'A merry man was he, I wot,<br>
+The night he made the lay,<br>
+Returning from the bloody spot,<br>
+Where God had judged the day.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>On every 9th of July subsequently, the people of the country have been wont
+to assemble on the battlefield, around four stone crosses which mark the spot. A
+priest from a pulpit in the open air gives a thanksgiving sermon on the victory
+that ensured the freedom of Switzerland, and another reads the narrative of the
+battle, and the roll of the brave 200, who, after Winkelried's example, gave
+their lives in the cause. All this is in the face of the mountains and the lake
+now lying in summer stillness, and the harvest fields whose crops are secure
+from marauders, and the congregation then proceed to the small chapel, the walls
+of which are painted with the deed of Arnold von Winkelried, and the other
+distinguished achievements of the confederates, and masses are sung for the
+souls of those who were slain. No wonder that men thus nurtured in the memory of
+such actions were, even to the fall of the French monarchy, among the most
+trustworthy soldiery of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE CONSTANT PRINCE<br>
+1433</h3></center>
+
+<p>The illustrious days of Portugal were during the century and a half of the
+dynasty termed the House of Aviz, because its founder, Dom Joao I. had been
+grand master of the military order of Aviz.</p>
+<p>His right to the throne was questionable, or more truly null, and he had only
+obtained the crown from the desire of the nation to be independent of Castile,
+and by the assistance of our own John of Gaunt, whose daughter, Philippa of
+Lancaster, became his wife, thus connecting the glories of his line with our own
+house of Plantagenet.</p>
+<p>Philippa was greatly beloved in Portugal, and was a most noble-minded woman,
+who infused her own spirit into her children. She had five sons, and when they
+all had attained an age to be admitted to the order of knighthood, their father
+proposed to give a grand tournament in which they might evince their prowess.
+This, however, seemed but play to the high-spirited youths, who had no doubt fed
+upon the story of the manner in which their uncle, the Black Prince, whose name
+was borne by the eldest, had won his spurs at Crecy. Their entreaty was, not to
+be carpet--knights dubbed in time of peace, and King Joao on the other hand
+objected to entering on a war merely for the sake of knighting his sons. At last
+Dom Fernando, the youngest of the brothers, a lad of fourteen, proposed that
+their knighthood should be earned by an expedition to take Ceuta from the Moors.
+A war with the infidel never came amiss, and was in fact regarded as a sacred
+duty; moreover, Ceuta was a nest of corsairs who infested the whole
+Mediterranean coast. Up to the nineteenth century the seaports along the African
+coast of the Mediterranean were the hives of pirates, whose small rapid vessels
+were the terror of every unarmed ship that sailed in those waters, and whose
+descents upon the coasts of Spain, France, and Italy rendered life and property
+constantly insecure. A regular system of kidnapping prevailed; prisoners had
+their fixed price, and were carried off to labour in the African dockyards, or
+to be chained to the benches of the Moorish ships which their oars propelled,
+until either a ransom could be procured from their friends, or they could be
+persuaded to become renegades, or death put an end to their sufferings. A
+captivity among the Moors was by no means an uncommon circumstance even in the
+lives of Englishmen down to the eighteenth century, and pious persons frequently
+bequeathed sums of money for the ransom of the poorer captives.</p>
+<p>Ceuta, perched upon the southern Pillar of Hercules, was one of the most
+perilous of these dens of robbery, and to seize it might well appear a worthy
+action, not only to the fiery princes, but to their cautious father. He kept his
+designs absolutely secret, and contrived to obtain a plan of the town by causing
+one of his vessels to put in there as in quest of provisions, while, to cover
+his preparations for war, he sent a public challenge to the Count of Holland,
+and a secret message at the same time, with the assurance that it was only a
+blind. These proceedings were certainly underhand, and partook of treachery; but
+they were probably excused in the King's own mind by the notion, that no faith
+was to be kept with unbelievers, and, moreover, such people as the Ceutans were
+likely never to be wanting in the supply of pretexts for attack.</p>
+<p>Just as all was ready, the plague broke out in Lisbon, and the Queen fell
+sick of it. Her husband would not leave her, and just before her death she sent
+for all her sons, and gave to each a sword, charging them to defend the widow
+and orphan, and to fight against the infidel. In the full freshness of their
+sorrow, the King and his sons set sail from the Bay of Lagos, in the August of
+1415, with 59 galleys, 33 ships of war, and 120 transports; the largest fleet
+ever yet sent forth by the little kingdom, and the first that had left a
+Peninsular port with the banners and streamers of which the more northern
+armaments were so profuse.</p>
+<p>The governor of Ceuta, Zala ben Zala, was not unprepared for the attack, and
+had collected 5,000 allies to resist the Christians; but a great storm having
+dispersed the fleet on the first day of its appearance, he thought the danger
+over, and dismissed his friends On the 14th August, however, the whole fleet
+again appeared, and the King, in a little boat, directed the landing of his men,
+led by his sons, the Infantes Duarte and Henrique. The Moors gave way before
+them, and they entered the city with 500 men, among the flying enemy, and there,
+after a period of much danger, were joined by their brother Pedro. The three
+fought their way to a mosque, where they defended themselves till the King with
+the rest of his army made their way in. Zala ben Zala fled to the citadel, but,
+after one assault, quitted it in the night.</p>
+<p>The Christian captives were released, the mosque purified and consecrated as
+a cathedral, a bishop was appointed, and the King gave the government of the
+place to Dom Pedro de Menezes, a knight of such known fidelity that the King
+would not suffer him to take the oath of allegiance. An attempt was made by the
+Moors four years later to recover the place; but the Infantes Pedro and Henrique
+hurried from Portugal to succor Menezes, and drove back the besiegers; whereupon
+the Moors murdered their King, Abu Sayd, on whom they laid the blame of the
+disaster.</p>
+<p>On the very day, eighteen years later, of the taking of Ceuta, King Joao died
+of the plague at Lisbon, on the 14th of August, 1433. Duarte came to the throne;
+and, a few months after, his young brother, Fernando, persuaded him into fitting
+out another expedition to Africa, of which Tangier should be the object.</p>
+<p>Duarte doubted of the justice of the war, and referred the question to the
+Pope, who decided against it; but the answer came too late, the preparations
+were made, and the Infantes Henrique and Fernando took the command. Henrique was
+a most enlightened prince, a great mathematician and naval discoverer, but he
+does not appear to have made good use of his abilities on the present occasion;
+for, on arriving at Ceuta, and reviewing the troops, they proved to have but
+8,000, instead of 14,000, as they had intended. Still they proceeded, Henrique
+by land and Fernando by sea, and laid siege to Tangier, which was defended by
+their old enemy, Zala ben Zala. Everything was against them; their scaling
+ladders were too short to reach to the top of the walls, and the Moors had time
+to collect in enormous numbers for the relief of the city, under the command of
+the kings of Fez and Morocco.</p>
+<p>The little Christian army was caught as in a net, and, after a day's hard
+fighting, saw the necessity of re-embarking. All was arranged for this to be
+done at night; but a vile traitor, chaplain to the army, passed over to the
+Moors, and revealed their intention. The beach was guarded, and the retreat cut
+off. Another day of fighting passed, and at night hunger reduced them to eating
+their horses.</p>
+<p>It was necessary to come to terms, and messengers were sent to treat with the
+two kings. The only terms on which the army could be allowed to depart were that
+one of the Infantes should remain as a hostage for the delivery of Ceuta to the
+Moors. For this purpose Fernando offered himself, though it was exceedingly
+doubtful whether Ceuta would be restored; and the Spanish poet, Calderon, puts
+into his mouth a generous message to his brother the King, that they both were
+Christian princes, and that his liberty was not to be weighed in the scale with
+their father's fairest conquest.</p>
+<p>Henrique was forced thus to leave his brave brother, and return with the
+remnants of his army to Ceuta, where he fell sick with grief and vexation. He
+sent the fleet home; but it met with a great storm, and many vessels were driven
+on the coast of Andalusia, where, by orders of the King, the battered sailors
+and defeated soldiers were most kindly and generously treated.</p>
+<p>Dom Duarte, having in the meantime found out with how insufficient an army
+his brothers had been sent forth, had equipped a fresh fleet, the arrival of
+which at Ceuta cheered Henrique with hope of rescuing his brother; but it was
+soon followed by express orders from the King that Henrique should give up all
+such projects and return home. He was obliged to comply, but, unable to look
+Duarte in the face, he retired to his own estates at the Algarve.</p>
+<p>Duarte convoked the States-general of the kingdom, to consider whether Ceuta
+should be yielded to purchase his brother's freedom. They decided that the place
+was too important to be parted with, but undertook to raise any sum of money for
+the ransom; and if this were not accepted, proposed to ask the Pope to proclaim
+a crusade for his rescue.</p>
+<p>At first Fernando was treated well, and kept at Tangier as an honorable
+prisoner; but disappointment enraged the Moors, and he was thrown into a
+dungeon, starved, and maltreated. All this usage he endured with the utmost
+calmness and resolution, and could by no means be threatened into entreating for
+liberty to be won at the cost of the now Christian city where his knighthood had
+been won.</p>
+<p>His brother Duarte meantime endeavored to raise the country for his
+deliverance; but the plague was still desolating Portugal, so that it was
+impossible to collect an army, and the infection at length seized on the King
+himself, from a letter which he incautiously opened, and he died, in his
+thirty-eighth year, in 1438, the sixth year of his reign and the second of his
+brother's captivity. His successor, Affonso V., was a child of six years old,
+and quarrels and disputes between the Queen Mother and the Infante Dom Pedro
+rendered the chance of redeeming the captivity of Fernando less and less.</p>
+<p>The King of Castille, and even the Moorish King of Granada, shocked at his
+sufferings and touched by his constancy, proposed to unite their forces against
+Tangier for his deliverance; but the effect of this was that Zala ben Zala made
+him over to Muley Xeques, the King of Fez, by whom he was thrown into a dungeon
+without light or air. After a time, he was brought back to daylight, but only to
+toil among the other Christian slaves, to whom he was a model of patience,
+resignation, and kindness. Even his enemies became struck with admiration of his
+high qualities, and the King of Fez declared that he even deserved to be a
+Mahometan!</p>
+<p>At last, in 1443, Fernando's captivity ended, but only by his death. Muley
+Xeque caused a tall tower to be erected on his tomb, in memory of the victory of
+Tangier; but in 1473, two sons of Muley being made prisoners by the Portuguese,
+one was ransomed for the body of Dom Fernando, who was then solemnly laid in the
+vaults of the beautiful Abbey of Batalha on the field of Aljubarota, which had
+given his father the throne. Universal honor attended the name of the Constant
+Prince, the Portuguese Regulus; and seldom as the Spanish admire anything
+Portuguese, a fine drama of the poet Calderon is founded upon that noble spirit
+which preferred dreary captivity to the yielding up his father's conquest to the
+enemies of his country and religion. Nor was this constancy thrown away; Ceuta
+remained a Christian city. It was held by Portugal till the house of Aviz was
+extinguished in Dom Sebastiao, and since that time has belonged to the crown of
+Spain.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE CARNIVAL OF PERTH<br>
+1435</h3></center>
+
+<p>It was bedtime, and the old vaulted chambers of the Dominican monastery at
+Perth echoed with sounds that would seem incongruous in such a home of
+austerity, but that the disturbed state of Scotland rendered it the habit of her
+kings to attach their palaces to convents, that they themselves might benefit by
+the 'peace of the Church', which was in general accorded to all sacred spots.</p>
+<p>Thus it was that Christmas and Carnival time of 1435-6 had been spent by the
+Court in the cloisters of Perth, and the dance, the song, and the tourney had
+strangely contrasted with the grave and self-denying habits to which the
+Dominicans were devoted in their neighboring cells. The festive season was
+nearly at an end, for it was the 20th of February; but the evening had been more
+than usually gay, and had been spent in games at chess, tables, or backgammon,
+reading romances of chivalry, harping, and singing. King James himself, brave
+and handsome, and in the prime of life, was the blithest of the whole joyous
+party. He was the most accomplished man in his dominions; for though he had been
+basely kept a prisoner at Windsor throughout his boyhood by Henry IV of England,
+an education had been bestowed on him far above what he would have otherwise
+obtained; and he was naturally a man of great ability, refinement, and strength
+of character. Not only was he a perfect knight on horseback, but in wrestling
+and running, throwing the hammer, and 'putting the stane', he had scarcely a
+rival, and he was skilled in all the learned lore of the time, wrote poetry,
+composed music both sacred and profane, and was a complete minstrel, able to
+sing beautifully and to play on the harp and organ. His Queen, the beautiful
+Joan Beaufort, had been the lady of his minstrelsy in the days of his captivity,
+ever since he had watched her walking on the slopes of Windsor Park, and wooed
+her in verses that are still preserved. They had now been eleven years married,
+and their Court was one bright spot of civilization, refinement, and grace, amid
+the savagery of Scotland. And now, after the pleasant social evening, the Queen,
+with her long fair hair unbound, was sitting under the hands of her tire-women,
+who were preparing her for the nights rest; and the King, in his furred
+nightgown, was standing before the bright fire on the hearth of the wide
+chimney, laughing and talking with the attendant ladies.</p>
+<p>Yet dark hints had already been whispered, which might have cast a shadow
+over that careless mirth. Always fierce and vindictive, the Scots had been
+growing more and more lawless and savage ever since the disputed succession of
+Bruce and Balliol had unsettled all royal authority, and led to one perpetual
+war with the English. The twenty years of James's captivity had been the worst
+of all--almost every noble was a robber chief; Scottish Borderer preyed upon
+English Borderer, Highlander upon Lowlander, knight upon traveler, everyone who
+had armor upon him who had not; each clan was at deadly feud with its neighbour;
+blood was shed like water from end to end of the miserable land, and the higher
+the birth of the offender the greater the impunity he claimed.</p>
+<p>Indeed, James himself had been brought next to the throne by one of the most
+savage and horrible murders ever perpetrated--that of his elder brother, David,
+by his own uncle; and he himself had probably been only saved from sharing the
+like fate by being sent out of the kingdom. His earnest words on his return to
+take the rule of this unhappy realm were these: 'Let God but grant me life, and
+there shall not be a spot in my realm where the key shall not keep the castle,
+and the bracken bush the cow, though I should lead the life of a dog to
+accomplish it.'</p>
+<p>This great purpose had been before James through the eleven years of his
+reign, and he had worked it out resolutely. The lawless nobles would not brook
+his ruling hand, and strong and bitter was the hatred that had arisen against
+him. In many of his transactions he was far from blameless: he was sometimes
+tempted to craft, sometimes to tyranny; but his object was always a high and
+kingly one, though he was led by the horrid wickedness of the men he had to deal
+with more than once to forget that evil is not to be overcome with evil, but
+with good. In the main, it was his high and uncompromising resolution to enforce
+the laws upon high and low alike that led to the nobles' conspiracies against
+him; though, if he had always been true to his purpose of swerving neither to
+the right nor to the left, he might have avoided the last fatal offence that
+armed the murderer against his life.</p>
+<p>The chief misdoers in the long period of anarchy had been his uncles and
+cousins; nor was it till after his eldest uncle's death that his return home had
+been possible. With a strong hand had he avenged upon the princes and their
+followers the many miseries they had inflicted upon his people; and in carrying
+out these measures he had seized upon the great earldom of Strathern, which had
+descended to one of their party in right of his wife, declaring that it could
+not be inherited by a female. In this he appears to have acted unjustly, from
+the strong desire to avail himself by any pretext of an opportunity of breaking
+the overweening power of the great turbulent nobles; and, to make up for the
+loss, he created the new earldom of Menteith, for the young Malise Graham, the
+son of the dispossessed earl. But the proud and vindictive Grahams were not thus
+to he pacified. Sir Robert Graham, the uncle of the young earl, drew off into
+the Highlands, and there formed a conspiracy among other discontented men who
+hated the resolute government that repressed their violence. Men of princely
+blood joined in the plot, and 300 Highland catherans were ready to accompany the
+expedition that promised the delights of war and plunder.</p>
+<p>Even when the hard-worked King was setting forth to enjoy his holiday at
+Perth, the traitors had fixed upon that spot as the place of his doom; but the
+scheme was known to so many, that it could not be kept entirely secret, and
+warnings began to gather round the King. When, on his way to Perth, he was about
+to cross the Firth of Forth, the wild figure of a Highland woman appeared at his
+bridle rein, and solemnly warned him 'that, if he crossed that water, he would
+never return alive'. He was struck by the apparition, and bade one of his
+knights to enquire of her what she meant; but the knight must have been a
+dullard or a traitor, for he told the King that the woman was either mad or
+drunk, and no notice was taken of her warning.</p>
+<p>There was likewise a saying abroad in Scotland, that the new year, 1436,
+should see the death of a king; and this same carnival night, James, while
+playing at chess with a young friend, whom he was wont to call the king of love,
+laughingly observed that 'it must be you or I, since there are but two kings in
+Scotland--therefore, look well to yourself'.</p>
+<p>Little did the blithe monarch guess that at that moment one of the
+conspirators, touched by a moment's misgiving, was hovering round, seeking in
+vain for an opportunity of giving him warning; that even then his chamberlain
+and kinsman, Sir Robert Stewart, was enabling the traitors to place boards
+across the moat for their passage, and to remove the bolts and bars of all the
+doors in their way. And the Highland woman was at the door, earnestly entreating
+to see the King, if but for one moment! The message was even brought to him,
+but, alas! he bade her wait till the morrow, and she turned away, declaring that
+she should never more see his face!</p>
+<p>And now, as before said, the feast was over, and the King stood, gaily
+chatting with his wife and her ladies, when the clang of arms was heard, and the
+glare of torches in the court below flashed on the windows. The ladies flew to
+secure the doors. Alas! the bolts and bars were gone! Too late the warnings
+returned upon the King's mind, and he knew it was he alone who was sought. He
+tried to escape by the windows, but here the bars were but too firm. Then he
+seized the tongs, and tore up a board in the floor, by which he let himself down
+into the vault below, just as the murderers came rushing along the passage,
+slaying on their way a page named Walter Straiton.</p>
+<p>There was no bar to the door. Yes, there was. Catherine Douglas, worthy of
+her name, worthy of the cognizance of the bleeding heart, thrust her arm through
+the empty staples to gain for her sovereign a few moments more for escape and
+safety! But though true as steel, the brave arm was not as strong. It was
+quickly broken. She was thrust fainting aside, and the ruffians rushed in. Queen
+Joan stood in the midst of the room, with her hair streaming round her, and her
+mantle thrown hastily on. Some of the wretches even struck and wounded her, but
+Graham called them off, and bade them search for the King. They sought him in
+vain in every corner of the women's apartments, and dispersed through the other
+rooms in search of their prey. The ladies began to hope that the citizens and
+nobles in the town were coming to their help, and that the King might have
+escaped through an opening that led from the vault into the tennis court.
+Presently, however, the King called to them to draw him up again, for he had not
+been able to get out of the vault, having a few days before caused the hole to
+be bricked up, because his tennis balls used to fly into it and be lost. In
+trying to draw him up by the sheets, Elizabeth Douglas, another of the ladies,
+was actually pulled down into the vault; the noise was heard by the assassins,
+who were still watching outside, and they returned.</p>
+<p>There is no need to tell of the foul and cruel slaughter that ensued, nor of
+the barbarous vengeance that visited it. Our tale is of golden, not of brazen
+deeds; and if we have turned our eyes for a moment to the Bloody Carnival of
+Perth, it is for the sake of the King, who was too upright for his bloodthirsty
+subjects, and, above all, for that of the noble-hearted lady whose frail arm was
+the guardian of her sovereign's life in the extremity of peril.</p>
+<p>In like manner, on the dreadful 6th of October, 1787, when the infuriated mob
+of Paris had been incited by the revolutionary leaders to rush to Versailles in
+pursuit of the royal family, whose absence they fancied deprived them of bread
+and liberty, a woman shared the honor of saving her sovereign's life, at least
+for that time.</p>
+<p>The confusion of the day, with the multitude thronging the courts and park of
+Versailles, uttering the most frightful threats and insults, had been beyond all
+description; but there had been a pause at night, and at two o'clock, poor Queen
+Marie Antoinette, spent with horror and fatigue, at last went to bed, advising
+her ladies to do the same; but their anxiety was too great, and they sat up at
+her door. At half-past four they heard musket shots, and loud shouts, and while
+one awakened the Queen, the other, Madame Auguier, flew towards the place whence
+the noise came. As she opened the door, she found one of the royal bodyguards,
+with his face covered with blood, holding his musket so as to bar the door while
+the furious mob were striking at him. He turned to the lady, and cried, 'Save
+the Queen, madame, they are come to murder her!' Quick as lightning, Madame
+Auguier shut and bolted the door, rushed to the Queen's bedside, and dragged her
+to the opposite door, with a petticoat just thrown over her. Behold, the door
+was fastened on the other side! The ladies knocked violently, the King's valet
+opened it, and in a few minutes the whole family were in safety in the King's
+apartments. M. de Miomandre, the brave guardsman, who used his musket to guard
+the Queen's door instead of to defend himself, fell wounded; but his comrade, M.
+de Repaire, at once took his place, and, according to one account, was slain,
+and the next day his head, set upon a pike, was borne before the carriage in
+which the royal family were escorted back to Paris.</p>
+<p>M. de Miomandre, however, recovered from his wounds, and a few weeks after,
+the Queen, hearing that his loyalty had made him a mark for the hatred of the
+mob, sent for him to desire him to quit Paris. She said that gold could not
+repay such a service as his had been, but she hoped one day to be able to
+recompense him more as he deserved; meanwhile, she hoped he would consider that
+as a sister might advance a timely sum to a brother, so she might offer him
+enough to defray his expenses at Paris, and to provide for his journey. In a
+private audience then he kissed her hand, and those of the King and his saintly
+sister, Elizabeth, while the Queen gratefully expressed her thanks, and the King
+stood by, with tears in his eyes, but withheld by his awkward bashfulness from
+expressing the feelings that overpowered him.</p>
+<p>Madame Auguier, and her sister, Madame Campan, continued with their royal
+lady until the next stage in that miserable downfall of all that was high and
+noble in unhappy France. She lived through the horrors of the Revolution, and
+her daughter became the wife of Marshal Ney.</p>
+<p>Well it is that the darkening firmament does but show the stars, and that
+when treason and murder surge round the fated chambers of royalty, their
+foulness and violence do but enhance the loyal self-sacrifice of such
+doorkeepers as Catherine Douglas, Madame Auguier, or M. de Miomandre.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Such deeds can woman's spirit do,<br>
+O Catherine Douglas, brave and true!<br>
+Let Scotland keep thy holy name<br>
+Still first upon her ranks of fame.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE CROWN OF ST. STEPHEN<br>
+1440</h3></center>
+
+<p>Of all the possessions of the old kingdom of Hungary, none was more valued
+than what was called the Crown of St. Stephen, so called from one, which had, in
+the year 1000, been presented by Pope Sylvester II. to Stephen, the second
+Christian Duke, and first King of Hungary. A crown and a cross were given to him
+for his coronation, which took place in the Church of the Holy Virgin, at Alba
+Regale, also called in German Weissenburg, where thenceforth the Kings of
+Hungary were anointed to begin their troubled reigns, and at the close of them
+were laid to rest beneath the pavement, where most of them might have used the
+same epitaph as the old Italian leader: 'He rests here, who never rested
+before'. For it was a wild realm, bordered on all sides by foes, with Poland,
+Bohemia, and Austria, ever casting greedy eyes upon it, and afterwards with the
+Turk upon the southern border, while the Magyars, or Hungarian nobles,
+themselves were a fierce and untameable race, bold and generous, but brooking
+little control, claiming a voice in choosing their own Sovereign, and to resist
+him, even by force of arms, if he broke the laws. No prince had a right to their
+allegiance unless he had been crowned with St. Stephen's Crown; but if he had
+once worn that sacred circle, he thenceforth was held as the only lawful
+monarch, unless he should flagrantly violate the Constitution. In 1076, another
+crown had been given by the Greek Emperor to Geysa, King of Hungary, and the
+sacred crown combined the two. It had the two arches of the Roman crown, and the
+gold circlet of the Constantinopolitan; and the difference of workmanship was
+evident.</p>
+<p>In the year 1439 died King Albert, who had been appointed King of Hungary in
+right of his wife, Queen Elizabeth. He left a little daughter only four years
+old, and as the Magyars had never been governed by a female hand, they proposed
+to send and offer their crown, and the hand of their young widowed Queen, to
+Wladislas, the King of Poland. But Elizabeth had hopes of another child, and in
+case it should be a son, she had no mind to give away its rights to its father's
+throne. How, then, was she to help herself among the proud and determined nobles
+of her Court? One thing was certain, that if once the Polish king were crowned
+with St. Stephen's crown, it would be his own fault if he were not King of
+Hungary as long as he lived; but if the crown were not to be found, of course he
+could not receive it, and the fealty of the nobles would not be pledged to him.</p>
+<p>The most trustworthy person she had about her was Helen Kottenner, the lady
+who had the charge of her little daughter, Princess Elizabeth, and to her she
+confided her desire that the crown might be secured, so as to prevent the Polish
+party from getting access to it. Helen herself has written down the history of
+these strange events, and of her own struggles of mind, at the risk she ran, and
+the doubt whether good would come of the intrigue; and there can be no doubt
+that, whether the Queen's conduct were praiseworthy or not, Helen dared a great
+peril for the sake purely of loyalty and fidelity. 'The Queen's commands', she
+says, 'sorely troubled me; for it was a dangerous venture for me and my little
+children, and I turned it over in my mind what I should do, for I had no one to
+take counsel of but God alone; and I thought if I did it not, and evil arose
+therefrom, I should be guilty before God and the world. So I consented to risk
+my life on this difficult undertaking; but desired to have someone to help me.'
+This was permitted; but the first person to whom the Lady of Kottenner confided
+her intention, a Croat, lost his color from alarm, looked like one half-dead,
+and went at once in search of his horse. The next thing that was heard of him
+was that he had had a bad fall from his horse, and had been obliged to return to
+Croatia, and the Queen remained much alarmed at her plans being known to one so
+faint-hearted. However, a more courageous confidant was afterwards found in a
+Hungarian gentleman, whose name has become illegible in Helen's old manuscript.</p>
+<p>The crown was in the vaults of the strong Castle of Plintenburg, also called
+Vissegrad, which stands upon a bend of the Danube, about twelve miles from the
+twin cities of Buda and Pesth. It was in a case within a chest, sealed with many
+seals, and since the King's death, it had been brought up by the nobles, who
+closely guarded both it and the Queen, into her apartments, and there examined
+and replaced in the chest. The next night, one of the Queen's ladies upset a wax
+taper, without being aware of it, and before the fire was discovered, and put
+out, the corner of the chest was singed, and a hole burnt in the blue velvet
+cushion that lay on the top. Upon this, the lords had caused the chest to be
+taken down again into the vault, and had fastened the doors with many locks and
+with seals. The Castle had further been put into the charge of Ladislas von
+Gara, the Queen's cousin, and Ban, or hereditary commander, of the border
+troops, and he had given it over to a Burggraf, or seneschal, who had placed his
+bed in the chamber where was the door leading to the vaults.</p>
+<p>The Queen removed to Komorn, a castle higher up the Danube, in charge of her
+faithful cousin, Count Ulric of Eily, taking with her her little daughter
+Elizabeth, Helen Kottenner, and two other ladies. This was the first stage on
+the journey to Presburg, where the nobles had wished to lodge the Queen, and
+from thence she sent back Helen to bring the rest of the maids of honor and her
+goods to join her at Komorn. It was early spring, and snow was still on the
+ground, and the Lady of Kottenner and her faithful nameless assistant travelled
+in a sledge; but two Hungarian noblemen went with them, and they had to be most
+careful in concealing their arrangements. Helen had with her the Queen's signet,
+and keys; and her friend had a file in each shoe, and keys under his black
+velvet dress.</p>
+<p>On arriving in the evening, they found that the Burggraf had fallen ill, and
+could not sleep in the chamber leading to the vault, because it belonged to the
+ladies' chambers, and that he had therefore put a cloth over the padlock of the
+door and sealed it. There was a stove in the room, and the maidens began to pack
+up their clothes there, an operation that lasted till eight o'clock; while
+Helen's friend stood there, talking and jesting with them, trying all the while
+to hide the files, and contriving to say to Helen: 'Take care that we have a
+light.' So she begged the old housekeeper to give her plenty of wax tapers, as
+she had many prayers to say. At last everyone was gone to bed, and there only
+remained in the room with Helen, an old woman, whom she had brought with her,
+who knew no German, and was fast asleep. Then the accomplice came back through
+the chapel, which opened into this same hall. He had on his black velvet gown
+and felt shoes, and was followed by a servant, who, Helen says, was bound to him
+by oath, and had the same Christian name as himself, this being evidently an
+additional bond of fidelity. Helen, who had received from the Queen all the keys
+to this outer room, let them in, and, after the Burggraf's cloth and seal had
+been removed, they unlocked the padlock, and the other two locks of the outer
+door of the vault, and the two men descended into it. There were several other
+doors, whose chains required to be filed through, and their seals and locks
+broken, and to the ears of the waiting Helen the noise appeared fatally loud.
+She says, 'I devoutly prayed to God and the Holy Virgin, that they would support
+and help me; yet I was in greater anxiety for my soul than for my life, and I
+prayed to God that He would be merciful to my soul, and rather let me die at
+once there, than that anything should happen against his will, or that should
+bring misfortune on my country and people.'</p>
+<p>She fancied she heard a noise of armed men at the chapel door, but finding
+nothing there, believed--not in her own nervous agitation, a thing not yet
+invented--that it was a spirit, and returning to her prayers, vowed, poor lady,
+to make a pilgrimage to St. Maria Zell, in Styria, if the Holy Virgin's
+intercessions obtained their success, and till the pilgrimage could be made, 'to
+forego every Saturday night my feather bed!' After another false alarm at a
+supposed noise at the maiden's door, she ventured into the vault to see how her
+companions were getting on, when she found they had filed away all the locks,
+except that of the case containing the crown, and this they were obliged to
+burn, in spite of their apprehension that the smell and smoke might be observed.
+They then shut up the chest, replaced the padlocks and chains with those they
+had brought for the purpose, and renewed the seals with the Queen's signet,
+which bearing the royal arms, would baffle detection that the seals had been
+tampered with. They then took the crown into the chapel, where they found a red
+velvet cushion, so large that by taking out some of the stuffing a hiding place
+was made in which the crown was deposited, and the cushion sewn up over it.</p>
+<p>By this time day was dawning, the maidens were dressing, and it was the hour
+for setting off for Komorn. The old woman who had waited on them came to the
+Lady of Kottenner to have her wages paid, and be dismissed to Buda. While she
+was waiting, she began to remark on a strange thing lying by the stove, which,
+to the Lady Helen's great dismay, she perceived to be a bit of the case in which
+the crown was kept. She tried to prevent the old woman from noticing it, pushed
+it into the hottest part of the stove, and, by way of further precaution, took
+the old woman away with her, on the plea of asking the Queen to make her a
+bedeswoman at Vienna, and this was granted to her.</p>
+<p>When all was ready, the gentleman desired his servant to take the cushion and
+put it into the sledge designed for himself and the Lady of Kottenner. The man
+took it on his shoulders, hiding it under an old ox-hide, with the tail hanging
+down, to the laughter of all beholders. Helen further records the trying to get
+some breakfast in the marketplace and finding nothing but herrings, also the
+going to mass, and the care she took not to sit upon the holy crown, though she
+had to sit on its cushion in the sledge. They dined at an inn, but took care to
+keep the cushion in sight, and then in the dusk crossed the Danube on the ice,
+which was becoming very thin, and halfway across it broke under the maidens'
+carriage, so that Helen expected to be lost in the Danube, crown and all.
+However, though many packages were lost under the ice, her sledge got safe over,
+as well as all the ladies, some of whom she took into her conveyance, and all
+safely arrived at the castle of Komorn late in the evening.</p>
+<p>The very hour of their arrival a babe was born to the Queen, and to her
+exceeding joy it was a son. Count von Eily, hearing 'that a king and friend was
+born to him', had bonfires lighted, and a torchlight procession on the ice that
+same night, and early in the morning came the Archbishop of Gran to christen the
+child. The Queen wished her faithful Helen to be godmother, but she refused in
+favor of some lady whose family it was probably needful to propitiate. She took
+off the little princess Elizabeth's mourning for her father and dressed her in
+red and gold, all the maidens appeared in gay apparel, and there was great
+rejoicing and thanksgiving when the babe was christened Ladislas, after a
+sainted King of Hungary.</p>
+<p>The peril was, however, far from ended; for many of the Magyars had no notion
+of accepting an infant for their king, and by Easter, the King of Poland was
+advancing upon Buda, to claim the realm to which he had been invited. No one had
+discovered the abstraction of the crown, and Elizabeth's object was to take her
+child to Weissenburg, and there have him crowned, so as to disconcert the Polish
+party. She had sent to Buda for cloth of gold to make him a coronation dress,
+but it did not come in time, and Helen therefore shut herself into the chapel at
+Komorn, and, with doors fast bolted, cut up a rich and beautiful vestment of his
+grandfather's, the emperor Sigismund, of red and gold, with silver spots, and
+made it into a tiny coronation robe, with surplice and humeral (or
+shoulder-piece), the stole and banner, the gloves and shoes. The Queen was much
+alarmed by a report that the Polish party meant to stop her on her way to
+Weissenburg; and if the baggage should be seized and searched, the discovery of
+the crown might have fatal consequences. Helen, on this, observed that the King
+was more important than the crown, and that the best way would be to keep them
+together; so she wrapped up the crown in a cloth, and hid it under the mattress
+of his cradle, with a long spoon for mixing his pap upon the top, so, said the
+Queen, he might take care of his crown himself.</p>
+<p>On Tuesday before Whit Sunday the party set out, escorted by Count Ulric, and
+several other knights and nobles. After crossing the Danube in a large boat, the
+Queen and her little girl were placed in a carriage, or more probably a litter,
+the other ladies rode, and the cradle and its precious contents were carried by
+four men; but this the poor little Lassla, as Helen shortens his lengthy name,
+resented so much, that he began to scream so loud that she was forced to
+dismount and carry him in her arms, along a road rendered swampy by much rain.</p>
+<p>They found all the villages deserted by the peasants, who had fled into the
+woods, and as most of their lords were of the other party, they expected an
+attack, so the little king was put into the carriage with his mother and sister,
+and the ladies formed a circle round it 'that if anyone shot at the carriage we
+might receive the stroke'. When the danger was over the child was taken out
+again, for he would be content nowhere but in the arms of either his nurse or of
+faithful Helen, who took turns to carry him on foot nearly all the way,
+sometimes in a high wind which covered them with dust, sometimes in great heat,
+sometimes in rain so heavy that Helen's fur pelisse, with which she covered his
+cradle, had to be wrung out several times. They slept at an inn, round which the
+gentlemen lighted a circle of fires, and kept watch all night.</p>
+<p>Weissenburg was loyal, five hundred armed gentlemen came out to meet them,
+and on Whitsun Eve they entered the city, Helen carrying her little king in her
+arms in the midst of a circle of these five hundred holding their naked swords
+aloft. On Whit Sunday, Helen rose early, bathed the little fellow, who was
+twelve weeks old that day, and dressed him. He was then carried in her arms to
+the church, beside his mother. According to the old Hungarian customs, the choir
+door was closed--the burghers were within, and would not open till the new
+monarch should have taken the great coronation oath to respect the Hungarian
+liberties and laws.</p>
+<p>This oath was taken by the Queen in the name of her son, the doors were
+opened, and all the train entered, the little princess being lifted up to stand
+by the organ, lest she should be hurt in the throng. First Helen held her charge
+up to be confirmed, and then she had to hold him while he was knighted, with a
+richly adorned sword bearing the motto 'Indestructible', and by a stout
+Hungarian knight called Mikosch Weida, who struck with such a goodwill that
+Helen felt the blow on her arm, and the Queen cried out to him not to hurt the
+child.</p>
+<p>The Archbishop of Gran anointed the little creature, dressed him in the red
+and gold robe, and put on his head the holy crown, and the people admired to see
+how straight he held up his neck under it; indeed, they admired the loudness and
+strength of his cries, when, as the good lady records, 'the noble king had
+little pleasure in his coronation for he wept aloud'. She had to hold him up for
+the rest of the service, while Count Ulric of Eily held the crown over his head,
+and afterwards to seat him in a chair in St. Peter's Church, and then he was
+carried home in his cradle, with the count holding the crown over his head, and
+the other regalia borne before him.</p>
+<p>And thus Ladislas became King of Hungary at twelve weeks old, and was then
+carried off by his mother into Austria for safety. Whether this secret robbery
+of the crown, and coronation by stealth, was wise or just on the mother's part
+is a question not easy of answer--though of course she deemed it her duty to do
+her utmost for her child's rights. Of Helen Kottenner's deep fidelity and
+conscientious feeling there can be no doubt, and her having acted with her eyes
+fully open to the risk she ran, her trust in Heaven overcoming her fears and
+terrors, rendered her truly a heroine.</p>
+<p>The crown has had many other adventures, and afterwards was kept in an
+apartment of its own, in the castle of Ofen, with an antechamber guarded by two
+grenadiers. The door was of iron, with three locks, and the crown itself was
+contained in an iron chest with five seals. All this, however, did not prevent
+it from being taken away and lost in the Revolution of 1849.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>GEORGE THE TRILLER<br>
+1455</h3></center>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><b>I.</b></p>
+
+<p>'Why, Lady dear, so sad of cheer?<br>
+Hast waked the livelong night?'<br>
+'My dreams foreshow my children's woe,<br>
+Ernst bold and Albrecht bright.<br>
+'From the dark glades of forest shades<br>
+There rushed a raging boar,<br>
+Two sapling oaks with cruel strokes<br>
+His crooked tusks uptore.'<br>
+'Ah, Lady dear, dismiss thy fear<br>
+Of phantoms haunting sleep!'<br>
+'The giant knight, Sir Konrad hight,<br>
+Hath vowed a vengeance deep.<br>
+'My Lord, o'erbold, hath kept his gold,<br>
+And scornful answer spake:<br>
+'Kunz, wisdom learn, nor strive to burn<br>
+The fish within their lake.'<br>
+'See, o'er the plain, with all his train,<br>
+My Lord to Leipzig riding;<br>
+Some danger near my children dear<br>
+My dream is sure betiding.'<br>
+'The warder waits before the gates,<br>
+The castle rock is steep,<br>
+The massive walls protect the halls,<br>
+Thy children safely sleep.'</p>
+
+<p><b>II.</b></p>
+
+<p>'T is night's full noon, fair shines the moon<br>
+On Altenburg's old halls,<br>
+The silver beams in tranquil streams<br>
+Rest on the ivied walls.<br>
+Within their tower the midnight hour<br>
+Has wrapt the babes in sleep,<br>
+With unclosed eyes their mother lies<br>
+To listen and to weep.<br>
+What sudden sound is stirring round?<br>
+What clang thrills on her ear?<br>
+Is it the breeze amid the trees<br>
+Re-echoing her fear?<br>
+Swift from her bed, in sudden dread,<br>
+She to her lattice flies:<br>
+Oh! sight of woe, from far below<br>
+Behold a ladder rise:<br>
+And from yon tower, her children's bower,<br>
+Lo! Giant Kunz descending!<br>
+Ernst, in his clasp of iron grasp,<br>
+His cries with hers is blending.<br>
+'Oh! hear my prayer, my children spare,<br>
+The sum shall be restored;<br>
+Nay, twenty-fold returned the gold,<br>
+Thou know'st how true my Lord.'<br>
+With mocking grace he bowed his face:<br>
+'Lady, my greetings take;<br>
+Thy Lord may learn how I can burn<br>
+The fish within their lake.'<br>
+Oh! double fright, a second knight<br>
+Upon the ladder frail,<br>
+And in his arm, with wild alarm,<br>
+A child uplifts his wail!<br>
+Would she had wings! She wildly springs<br>
+To rouse her slumbering train;<br>
+Bolted without, her door so stout<br>
+Resists her efforts vain!<br>
+No mortal ear her calls can hear,<br>
+The robbers laugh below;<br>
+Her God alone may hear her moan,<br>
+Or mark her hour of woe.<br>
+A cry below, 'Oh! let me go,<br>
+I am no prince's brother;<br>
+Their playmate I--Oh! hear my cry<br>
+Restore me to my mother!'<br>
+With anguish sore she shakes the door.<br>
+Once more Sir Kunz is rearing<br>
+His giant head. His errand sped<br>
+She sees him reappearing.<br>
+Her second child in terror wild<br>
+Is struggling in his hold;<br>
+Entreaties vain she pours again,<br>
+Still laughs the robber bold.<br>
+'I greet thee well, the Elector tell<br>
+How Kunz his counsel takes,<br>
+And let him learn that I can burn<br>
+The fish within their lakes.'</p>
+
+<p><b>III.</b></p>
+
+<p>'Swift, swift, good steed, death's on thy speed,<br>
+Gain Isenburg ere morn;<br>
+Though far the way, there lodged our prey,<br>
+We laugh the Prince to scorn.<br>
+'There Konrad's den and merry men<br>
+Will safely hold the boys--<br>
+The Prince shall grieve long ere we leave<br>
+Our hold upon his joys.<br>
+'But hark! but hark! how through the dark<br>
+The castle bell is tolling,<br>
+From tower and town o'er wood and down,<br>
+The like alarm notes rolling.<br>
+'The peal rings out! echoes the shout!<br>
+All Saxony's astir;<br>
+Groom, turn aside, swift must we ride<br>
+Through the lone wood of fir.'<br>
+Far on before, of men a score<br>
+Prince Ernst bore still sleeping;<br>
+Thundering as fast, Kunz came the last,<br>
+Carrying young Albrecht weeping.<br>
+The clanging bell with distant swell<br>
+Dies on the morning air,<br>
+Bohemia's ground another bound<br>
+Will reach, and safety there.<br>
+The morn's fresh beam lights a cool stream,<br>
+Charger and knight are weary,<br>
+He draws his rein, the child's sad plain<br>
+He meets with accents cheery.<br>
+'Sir Konrad good, be mild of mood,<br>
+A fearsome giant thou!<br>
+For love of heaven, one drop be given<br>
+To cool my throbbing brow!'<br>
+Kunz' savage heart feels pity's smart,<br>
+He soothes the worn-out child,<br>
+Bathes his hot cheeks, and bending seeks<br>
+For woodland berries wild.<br>
+A deep-toned bark! A figure dark,<br>
+Smoke grimed and sun embrowned,<br>
+Comes through the wood in wondering mood,<br>
+And by his side a hound.<br>
+'Oh, to my aid, I am betrayed,<br>
+The Elector's son forlorn,<br>
+From out my bed these men of dread<br>
+Have this night hither borne!'<br>
+'Peace, if thou 'rt wise,' the false groom cries,<br>
+And aims a murderous blow;<br>
+His pole-axe long, his arm so strong,<br>
+Must lay young Albrecht low.<br>
+See, turned aside, the weapon glide<br>
+The woodman's pole along,<br>
+To Albrecht's clasp his friendly grasp<br>
+Pledges redress from wrong.<br>
+Loud the hound's note as at the throat<br>
+Of the false groom he flies;<br>
+Back at the sounds Sir Konrad bounds:<br>
+'Off hands, base churl,' he cries.<br>
+The robber lord with mighty sword,<br>
+Mailed limbs of giant strength--<br>
+The woodman stout, all arms without,<br>
+Save his pole's timber length--<br>
+Unequal fight! Yet for the right<br>
+The woodman holds the field;<br>
+Now left, now right, repels the knight,<br>
+His pole full stoutly wields.<br>
+His whistle clear rings full of cheer,<br>
+And lo! his comrades true,<br>
+All swarth and lusty, with fire poles trusty,<br>
+Burst on Sir Konrad's view.<br>
+His horse's rein he grasps amain<br>
+Into his selle to spring,<br>
+His gold-spurred heel his stirrup's steel<br>
+Has caught, his weapons ring.<br>
+His frightened steed with wildest speed<br>
+Careers with many a bound;<br>
+Sir Konrad's heel fast holds the steel,<br>
+His head is on the ground.<br>
+The peasants round lift from the ground<br>
+His form in woeful plight,<br>
+To convent cell, for keeping well,<br>
+Bear back the robber knight.<br>
+'Our dear young lord, what may afford<br>
+A charcoal-burners' store<br>
+We freely spread, milk, honey, bread,<br>
+Our heated kiln before!'</p>
+
+<p><b>IV.</b></p>
+
+<p>Three mournful days the mother prays,<br>
+And weeps the children's fate;<br>
+The prince in vain has scoured the plain--<br>
+A sound is at the gate.<br>
+The mother hears, her head she rears,<br>
+She lifts her eager finger--<br>
+'Rejoice, rejoice, 't is Albrecht's voice,<br>
+Open! Oh, wherefore linger?'<br>
+See, cap in hand the woodman stand--<br>
+Mother, no more of weeping--<br>
+His hound well tried is at his side,<br>
+Before him Albrecht leaping,<br>
+Cries, 'Father dear, my friend is here!<br>
+My mother! Oh, my mother!<br>
+The giant knight he put to flight,<br>
+The good dog tore the other.'<br>
+Oh! who the joy that greets the boy,<br>
+Or who the thanks may tell,<br>
+Oh how they hail the woodman's tale,<br>
+How he had 'trilled him well!'</p>
+<p>[Footnote: Trillen, to shake; a word analogous to our rill, to shake the
+voice in singing]</p>
+<p>'I trilled him well,' he still will tell<br>
+In homely phrase his story,<br>
+To those who sought to know how wrought<br>
+An unarmed hand such glory.<br>
+That mother sad again is glad,<br>
+Her home no more bereft;<br>
+For news is brought Ernst may be sought<br>
+Within the Devil's Cleft.<br>
+That cave within, these men of sin<br>
+Had learnt their leader's fall,<br>
+The prince to sell they proffered well<br>
+At price of grace to all.<br>
+Another day and Earnest lay,<br>
+Safe on his mother's breast;<br>
+Thus to her sorrow a gladsome morrow<br>
+Had brought her joy and rest.<br>
+The giant knight was judged aright,<br>
+Sentenced to death he lay;<br>
+The elector mild, since safe his child,<br>
+Sent forth the doom to stay.<br>
+But all to late, and o'er the gate<br>
+Of Freiburg's council hall<br>
+Sir Konrad's head, with features dread,<br>
+The traitor's eyes appal.<br>
+The scullion Hans who wrought their plans,<br>
+And oped the window grate,<br>
+Whose faith was sold for Konrad's gold,<br>
+He met a traitor's fate</p>
+
+<p><b>V.</b></p>
+
+<p>Behold how gay the wood to-day,<br>
+The little church how fair,<br>
+What banners wave, what tap'stry brave<br>
+Covers its carvings rare!<br>
+A goodly train--the parents twain,<br>
+And here the princess two,<br>
+Here with his pole, George, stout of soul,<br>
+And all his comrades true.<br>
+High swells the chant, all jubilant,<br>
+And each boy bending low,<br>
+Humbly lays down the wrapping gown<br>
+He wore the night of woe.<br>
+Beside them lay a smock of grey,<br>
+All grimed with blood and smoke;<br>
+A thankful sign to Heaven benign,<br>
+That spared the sapling oak.<br>
+'What prize would'st hold, thou 'Triller bold',<br>
+Who trilled well for my son?'<br>
+'Leave to cut wood, my Lord, so good,<br>
+Near where the fight was won.'<br>
+'Nay, Triller mine, the land be thine,<br>
+My trusty giant-killer,<br>
+A farm and house I and my spouse<br>
+Grant free to George the Triller!'<br>
+Years hundred four, and half a score,<br>
+Those robes have held their place;<br>
+The Triller's deed has grateful meed<br>
+From Albrecht's royal race.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The child rescued by George the Triller's Golden Deed was the ancestor of the
+late Prince Consort, and thus of our future line of kings. He was the son of the
+Elector Friedrich the mild of Saxony, and of Margarethe of Austria, whose dream
+presaged her children's danger. The Elector had incurred the vengeance of the
+robber baron, Sir Konrad of Kauffingen, who, from his huge stature, was known as
+the Giant Ritter, by refusing to make up to him the sum of 4000 gulden which he
+had had to pay for his ransom after being made prisoner in the Elector's
+service. In reply to his threats, all the answer that the robber knight received
+was the proverbial one, 'Do not try to burn the fish in the ponds, Kunz.'</p>
+<p>Stung by the irony, Kunz bribed the elector's scullion, by name Hans Schwabe,
+to admit him and nine chosen comrades into the Castle of Altenburg on the night
+of the 7th of July, 1455, when the Elector was to be at Leipzig. Strange to say,
+this scullion was able to write, for a letter is extant from him to Sir Konrad,
+engaging to open the window immediately above the steep precipice, which on that
+side was deemed a sufficient protection to the castle, and to fasten a rope
+ladder by which to ascend the crags. This window can still be traced, though
+thenceforth it was bricked up. It gave access to the children's apartments, and
+on his way to them, the robber drew the bolt of their mother's door, so that
+though, awakened by the noise, she rushed to her window, she was a captive in
+her own apartment, and could not give the alarm, nor do anything but join her
+vain entreaties to the cries of her helpless children. It was the little son of
+the Count von Bardi whom Wilhelm von Mosen brought down by mistake for young
+Albrecht, and Kunz, while hurrying up to exchange the children, bade the rest of
+his band hasten on to secure the elder prince without waiting for him. He
+followed in a few seconds with Albrecht in his arms, and his servant Schweinitz
+riding after him, but he never overtook the main body. Their object was to reach
+Konrad's own Castle of Isenburg on the frontiers of Bohemia, but they quickly
+heard the alarm bells ringing, and beheld beacons lighted upon every hill. They
+were forced to betake themselves to the forests, and about half-way, Prince
+Ernst's captors, not daring to go any father, hid themselves and him in a cavern
+called the Devil's Cleft on the right bank of the River Mulde.</p>
+<p>Kunz himself rode on till the sun had risen, and he was within so few miles
+of his castle that the terror of his name was likely to be a sufficient
+protection. Himself and his horse were, however, spent by the wild midnight
+ride, and on the border of the wood of Eterlein, near the monastery of Grunheim,
+he halted, and finding the poor child grievously exhausted and feverish, he
+lifted him down, gave him water, and went himself in search of wood strawberries
+for his refreshment, leaving the two horses in the charge of Schweinitz. The
+servant dozed in his saddle, and meanwhile the charcoal-burner, George Schmidt,
+attracted by the sounds, came out of the wood, where all night he had been
+attending to the kiln, hollowed in the earth, and heaped with earth and roots of
+trees, where a continual charring of wood was going on. Little Albrecht no
+sooner saw this man than he sprang to him, and telling his name and rank,
+entreated to be rescued from these cruel men. The servant awaking, leapt down
+and struck a deadly blow at the boy's head with his pole-ax, but it was parried
+by the charcoal-burner, who interposing with one hand the strong wooden pole he
+used for stirring his kiln, dragged the little prince aside with the other, and
+at the same time set his great dog upon the servant. Sir Konrad at once hurried
+back, but the valiant charcoal-burner still held his ground, dangerous as the
+fight was between the peasant unarmed except for the long pole, and the fully
+accoutered knight of gigantic size and strength. However, a whistle from George
+soon brought a gang of his comrades to his aid, and Kunz, finding himself
+surrounded, tried to leap into his saddle, and break through the throng by
+weight of man and horse, but his spur became entangled, the horse ran away, and
+he was dragged along with his head on the ground till he was taken up by the
+peasants and carried to the convent of Grunheim, whence he was sent to Zwickau,
+and was thence transported heavily ironed to Freiburg, where he was beheaded on
+the 14th of July, only a week after his act of violence. The Elector, in his joy
+at the recovery of even one child, was generous enough to send a pardon, but the
+messenger reached Freiburg too late, and a stone in the marketplace still marks
+the place of doom, while the grim effigy of Sir Konrad's head grins over the
+door of the Rathhaus. It was a pity Friedrich's mildness did not extend to
+sparing torture as well as death to his treacherous scullion, but perhaps a
+servant's power of injuring his master was thought a reason for surrounding such
+instances of betrayal with special horrors.</p>
+<p>The party hidden in the Devil's Cleft overheard the peasants in the wood
+talking of the fall of the giant of Kauffingen, and, becoming alarmed for
+themselves, they sent to the Governor of the neighboring castle of Hartenstein
+to offer to restore Prince Ernst, provided they were promised a full pardon. The
+boy had been given up as dead, and intense were the rejoicings of the parents at
+his restoration. The Devil's Cleft changed its name to the Prince's Cleft, and
+the tree where Albrecht had lain was called the Prince's Oak, and still remains
+as a witness to the story, as do the moth-eaten garments of the princely
+children, and the smock of the charcoal-burner, which they offered up in token
+of thanksgiving at the little forest church of Ebendorff, near the scene of the
+rescue.</p>
+<p>'I trillirt the knaves right well,' was honest George's way of telling the
+story of his exploit, not only a brave one, but amounting even to self-devotion
+when we remember that the robber baron was his near neighbour, and a terror to
+all around. The word Triller took the place of his surname, and when the sole
+reward he asked was leave freely to cut wood in the forest, the Elector gave him
+a piece of land of his own in the parish of Eversbach. In 1855 there was a grand
+celebration of the rescue of the Saxon princes on the 9th of July, the four
+hundredth anniversary, with a great procession of foresters and charcoal-burners
+to the 'Triller's Brewery', which stands where George's hut and kiln were once
+placed. Three of his descendants then figured in the procession, but since that
+time all have died, and the family of the Trillers is now extinct.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>SIR THOMAS MORE'S DAUGHTER<br>
+1535</h3></center>
+
+<p>We have seen how dim and doubtful was the belief that upbore the grave and
+beautiful Antigone in her self-sacrifice; but there have been women who have
+been as brave and devoted in their care of the mortal remains of their
+friends--not from the heathen fancy that the weal of the dead depended on such
+rites, but from their earnest love, and with a fuller trust beyond.</p>
+<p>Such was the spirit of Beatrix, a noble maiden of Rome, who shared the
+Christian faith of her two brothers, Simplicius and Faustinus, at the end of the
+third century. For many years there had been no persecution, and the Christians
+were living at peace, worshipping freely, and venturing even to raise churches.
+Young people had grown up to whom the being thrown to the lions, beheaded, or
+burnt for the faith's sake, was but a story of the times gone by. But under the
+Emperor Diocletian all was changed. The old heathen gods must be worshipped,
+incense must be burnt to the statue of the Emperor, or torture and death were
+the punishment. The two brothers Simplicius and Faustinus were thus asked to
+deny their faith, and resolutely refused. They were cruelly tortured, and at
+length beheaded, and their bodies thrown into the tawny waters of the Tiber.
+Their sister Beatrix had taken refuge with a poor devout Christian woman, named
+Lucina. But she did not desert her brothers in death; she made her way in secret
+to the bank of the river, watching to see whether the stream might bear down the
+corpses so dear to her. Driven along, so as to rest upon the bank, she found
+them at last, and, by the help of Lucina, she laid them in the grave in the
+cemetery called Ad Ursum Pileatum. For seven months she remained in her shelter,
+but she was at last denounced, and was brought before the tribunal, where she
+made answer that nothing should induce her to adore gods made of wood and stone.
+She was strangled in her prison, and her corpse being cast out, was taken home
+by Lucina, and buried beside her brothers. It was, indeed, a favorite charitable
+work of the Christian widows at Rome to provide for the burial of the martyrs;
+and as for the most part they were poor old obscure women, they could perform
+this good work with far less notice than could persons of more mark.</p>
+<p>But nearer home, our own country shows a truly Christian Antigone, resembling
+the Greek lady, both in her dutifulness to the living, and in her tender care
+for the dead. This was Margaret, the favorite daughter of sir Thomas More, the
+true-hearted, faithful statesman of King Henry VIII.</p>
+<p>Margaret's home had been an exceedingly happy one. Her father, Sir Thomas
+More, was a man of the utmost worth, and was both earnestly religious and
+conscientious, and of a sweetness of manner and playfulness of fancy that
+endeared him to everyone. He was one of the most affectionate and dutiful of
+sons to his aged father, Sir John More; and when the son was Lord Chancellor,
+while the father was only a judge, Sir Thomas, on his way to his court, never
+failed to kneel down before his father in public, and ask his blessing. Never
+was the old saying, that a dutiful child had dutiful children, better
+exemplified than in the More family. In the times when it was usual for parents
+to be very stern with children, and keep them at a great distance, sometimes
+making them stand in their presence, and striking them for any slight offence,
+Sir Thomas More thought it his duty to be friendly and affectionate with them,
+to talk to them, and to enter into their confidence; and he was rewarded with
+their full love and duty.</p>
+<p>He had four children--Margaret, Elizabeth, Cicely, and John. His much-loved
+wife died when they were all very young, and he thought it for their good to
+marry a widow, Mrs. Alice Middleton, with one daughter named Margaret, and he
+likewise adopted an orphan called Margaret Giggs. With this household he lived
+in a beautiful large house at Chelsea, with well-trimmed gardens sloping down to
+the Thames; and this was the resort of the most learned and able men, both
+English and visitors from abroad, who delighted in pacing the shady walks,
+listening to the wit and wisdom of Sir Thomas, or conversing with the daughters,
+who had been highly educated, and had much of their father's humor and
+sprightliness. Even Henry VIII. himself, then one of the most brilliant and
+graceful gentlemen of his time, would sometimes arrive in his royal barge, and
+talk theology or astronomy with Sir Thomas; or, it might be, crack jests with
+him and his daughters, or listen to the music in which all were skilled, even
+Lady More having been persuaded in her old age to learn to play on various
+instruments, including the flute. The daughters were early given in marriage,
+and with their husbands, continued to live under their father's roof. Margaret's
+husband was William Roper, a young lawyer, of whom Sir Thomas was very fond, and
+his household at Chelsea was thus a large and joyous family home of children and
+grandchildren, delighting in the kind, bright smiles of the open face under the
+square cap, that the great painter Holbein has sent down to us as a familiar
+sight.</p>
+<p>But these glad days were not to last for ever. The trying times of the reign
+of Henry VIII. were beginning, and the question had been stirred whether the
+King's marriage with Katherine of Aragon had been a lawful one. When Sir Thomas
+More found that the King was determined to take his own course, and to divorce
+himself without permission from the Pope, it was against his conscience to
+remain in office when acts were being done which he could not think right or
+lawful. He therefore resigned his office as Lord Chancellor, and, feeling
+himself free from the load and temptation, his gay spirits rose higher than
+ever. His manner of communicating the change to his wife, who had been very
+proud of his state and dignity, was thus. At church, when the service was over,
+it had always been the custom for one of his attendants to summon Lady More by
+coming to her closet door, and saying, 'Madam, my lord is gone.' On the day
+after his resignation, he himself stepped up, and with a low bow said, 'Madam,
+my lord is gone,' for in good soothe he was no longer Chancellor, but only plain
+Sir Thomas.</p>
+<p>He thoroughly enjoyed his leisure, but he was not long left in tranquillity.
+When Anne Boleyn was crowned, he was invited to be present, and twenty pounds
+were offered him to buy a suitably splendid dress for the occasion; but his
+conscience would not allow him to accept the invitation, though he well knew the
+terrible peril he ran by offending the King and Queen. Thenceforth there was a
+determination to ruin him. First, he was accused of taking bribes when
+administering justice. It was said that a gilt cup had been given to him as a
+New Year's gift, by one lady, and a pair of gloves filled with gold coins by
+another; but it turned out, on examination, that he had drunk the wine out of
+the cup, and accepted the gloves, because it was ill manners to refuse a lady's
+gift, yet he had in both cases given back the gold.</p>
+<p>Next, a charge was brought that he had been leaguing with a half-crazy woman
+called the Nun of Kent, who had said violent things about the King. He was sent
+for to be examined by Henry and his Council, and this he well knew was the
+interview on which his safety would turn, since the accusation was a mere
+pretext, and the real purpose of the King was to see whether he would go along
+with him in breaking away from Rome--a proceeding that Sir Thomas, both as
+churchman and as lawyer, could not think legal. Whether we agree or not in his
+views, it must always be remembered that he ran into danger by speaking the
+truth, and doing what he thought right. He really loved his master, and he knew
+the humor of Henry VIII., and the temptation was sore; but when he came down
+from his conference with the King in the Tower, and was rowed down the river to
+Chelsea, he was so merry that William Roper, who had been waiting for him in the
+boat, thought he must be safe, and said, as they landed and walked up the
+garden--</p>
+<p>'I trust, sir, all is well, since you are so merry?'</p>
+<p>'It is so, indeed, son, thank God!'</p>
+<p>'Are you then, sir, put out of the bill?'</p>
+<p>'Wouldest thou know, son why I am so joyful? In good faith I rejoice that I
+have given the devil a foul fall; because I have with those lords gone so far
+that without great shame I can never go back,' he answered, meaning that he had
+been enabled to hold so firmly to his opinions, and speak them out so boldly,
+that henceforth the temptation to dissemble them and please the King would be
+much lessened. That he had held his purpose in spite of the weakness of mortal
+nature, was true joy to him, though he was so well aware of the consequences
+that when his daughter Margaret came to him the next day with the glad tidings
+that the charge against him had been given up, he calmly answered her, 'In
+faith, Meg, what is put off is not given up.'</p>
+<p>One day, when he had asked Margaret how the world went with the new Queen,
+and she replied, 'In faith, father, never better; there is nothing else in the
+court but dancing and sporting,' he replied, with sad foresight, 'Never better.
+Alas, Meg! it pitieth me to remember unto what misery, poor soul, she will
+shortly come. These dances of hers will prove such dances that she will spurn
+off our heads like footballs, but it will not be long ere her head will take the
+same dance.'</p>
+<p>So entirely did he expect to be summoned by a pursuivant that he thought it
+would lessen the fright of his family if a sham summons were brought. So he
+caused a great knocking to be made while all were at dinner, and the sham
+pursuivant went through all the forms of citing him, and the whole household
+were in much alarm, till he explained the jest; but the earnest came only a few
+days afterwards. On the 13th of April of 1534, arrived the real pursuivant to
+summon him to Lambeth, there to take the oath of supremacy, declaring that the
+King was the head of the Church of England, and that the Pope had no authority
+there. He knew what the refusal would bring on him. He went first to church, and
+then, not trusting himself to be unmanned by his love for his children and
+grandchildren, instead of letting them, as usual, come down to the water side,
+with tender kisses and merry farewells, he shut the wicket gate of the garden
+upon them all, and only allowed his son-in-law Roper to accompany him,
+whispering into his ear, 'I thank our Lord, the field is won.'</p>
+<p>Conscience had triumphed over affection, and he was thankful, though for the
+last time he looked on the trees he had planted, and the happy home he had
+loved. Before the council, he undertook to swear to some clauses in the oath
+which were connected with the safety of the realm; but he refused to take that
+part of the oath which related to the King's power over the Church. It is said
+that the King would thus have been satisfied, but that the Queen urged him
+further. At any rate, after being four days under the charge of the Abbot of
+Westminister, Sir Thomas was sent to the Tower of London. There his wife--a
+plain, dull woman, utterly unable to understand the point of conscience--came
+and scolded him for being so foolish as to lie there in a close, filthy prison,
+and be shut up with rats and mice, instead of enjoying the favor of the King. He
+heard all she had to say, and answered, 'I pray thee, good Mrs. Alice, tell me
+one thing--is not this house as near heaven as my own?' To which she had no
+better answer than 'Tilly vally, tilly vally.' But, in spite of her folly, she
+loved him faithfully; and when all his property was seized, she sold even her
+clothes to obtain necessaries for him in prison.</p>
+<p>His chief comfort was, however, in visits and letters from his daughter
+Margaret, who was fully able to enter into the spirit that preferred death to
+transgression. He was tried in Westminster Hall, on the 1st of July, and, as he
+had fully expected, sentenced to death. He was taken back along the river to the
+Tower. On the wharf his loving Margaret was waiting for her last look. She broke
+through the guard of soldiers with bills and halberds, threw her arms round his
+neck, and kissed him, unable to say any word but 'Oh, my father!--oh, my
+father!' He blessed her, and told her that whatsoever she might suffer, it was
+not without the will of God, and she must therefore be patient. After having
+once parted with him, she suddenly turned back again, ran to him, and, clinging
+round his neck, kissed him over and over again--a sight at which the guards
+themselves wept. She never saw him again; but the night before his execution he
+wrote to her a letter with a piece of charcoal, with tender remembrances to all
+the family, and saying to her, 'I never liked your manner better than when you
+kissed me last; for I am most pleased when daughterly love and dear charity have
+no leisure to look to worldly courtesy.' He likewise made it his especial
+request that she might be permitted to be present at his burial.</p>
+<p>His hope was sure and steadfast, and his heart so firm that he did not even
+cease from humorous sayings. When he mounted the crazy ladder of the scaffold he
+said, 'Master Lieutenant, I pray you see me safe up; and for my coming down let
+me shift for myself.' And he desired the executioner to give him time to put his
+beard out of the way of the stroke, 'since that had never offended his
+Highness'.</p>
+<p>His body was given to his family, and laid in the tomb he had already
+prepared in Chelsea Church; but the head was set up on a pole on London Bridge.
+The calm, sweet features were little changed, and the loving daughter gathered
+courage as she looked up at them. How she contrived the deed, is not known; but
+before many days had passed, the head was no longer there, and Mrs. Roper was
+said to have taken it away. She was sent for to the Council, and accused of the
+stealing of her father's head. She shrank not from avowing that thus it had
+been, and that the head was in her own possession. One story says that, as she
+was passing under the bridge in a boat, she looked up, and said, 'That head has
+often lain in my lap; I would that it would now fall into it.' And at that
+moment it actually fell, and she received it. It is far more likely that she
+went by design, at the same time as some faithful friend on the bridge, who
+detached the precious head, and dropped it down to her in her boat beneath. Be
+this as it may, she owned before the cruel-hearted Council that she had taken
+away and cherished the head of the man whom they had slain as a traitor.
+However, Henry VIII. was not a Creon, and our Christian Antigone was dismissed
+unhurt by the Council, and allowed to retain possession of her treasure. She
+caused it to be embalmed, kept it with her wherever she went, and when, nine
+years afterwards, she died (in the year 1544), it was laid in her coffin in the
+'Roper aisle' of St. Dunstan's Church, at Canterbury.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>UNDER IVAN THE TERRIBLE<br>
+1564</h3></center>
+
+<p>Prince Andrej Kourbsky was one of the chief boyards or nobles at the Court of
+Ivan, the first Grand Prince of Muscovy who assumed the Eastern title of Tzar,
+and who relieved Russia from the terrible invasions of the Tatars. This wild
+race for nearly four hundred years had roamed over the country, destroying and
+plundering all they met with, and blighting all the attempts at civilization
+that had begun to be made in the eleventh century. It was only when the Russians
+learnt the use of firearms that these savages were in any degree repressed. In
+the year 1551 the city of Kazan, upon the River Kazanka, a tributary of the
+Volga, was the last city that remained in the hands of the Tatars. It was a rich
+and powerful place, a great centre of trade between Europe and the East, but it
+was also a nest of robbers, who had frequently broken faith with the Russians,
+and had lately expelled the Khan Schig Alei for having endeavored to fulfill his
+engagements to them. The Tzar Ivan Vassilovitch, then only twenty-two years of
+age, therefore marched against the place, resolved at any cost to reduce it and
+free his country from these inveterate foes.</p>
+<p>On his way he received tidings that the Crimean Tatars had come plundering
+into Russia, probably thinking to attack Moscow, while Ivan was besieging Kazan.
+He at once sent off the Prince Kourbsky with 15,000 men, who met double that
+number of Tatars at Toula, and totally defeated them, pursuing them to the River
+Chevorona, where, after a second defeat, they abandoned a great number of
+Russian captives, and a great many camels. Prince Kourbsky was wounded in the
+head and shoulder, but was able to continue the campaign.</p>
+<p>Some of the boyards murmured at the war, and declared that their strength and
+resources were exhausted. Upon this the Tzar desired that two lists might be
+drawn up of the willing and unwilling warriors in his camp. 'The first', he
+said, 'shall be as dear to me as my own children; their needs shall be made
+known to me, and I will share all I have with them. The others may stay at home;
+I want no cowards in my army.' No one of course chose to be in the second list,
+and about this time was formed the famous guard called the Strelitzes, a body of
+chosen warriors who were always near the person of the Tzar.</p>
+<p>In the middle of August, 1552, Ivan encamped in the meadows on the banks of
+the Volga, which spread like a brilliant green carpet around the hill upon which
+stood the strongly fortified city of Kazan. The Tatars had no fears. 'This is
+not the first time', they said, 'that we have seen the Muscovites beneath our
+walls. Their fruitless attacks always end in retreats, till we have learned to
+laugh them to scorn;' and when Ivan sent them messengers with offers of peace,
+they replied, 'All is ready; we only await your coming to begin the feast.'</p>
+<p>They did not know of the great change that the last half-century had made in
+sieges. One of the Italian condottieri, or leaders of free companies, had made
+his way to Moscow, and under his instructions, Ivan's troops were for the first
+time to conduct a siege in the regular modern manner, by digging trenches in the
+earth, and throwing up the soil in front into a bank, behind which the cannon
+and gunners are posted, with only small openings made through which to fire at
+some spot in the enemy's walls. These trenches are constantly worked nearer and
+nearer to the fortifications, till by the effect of the shot an opening or
+breach must be made in the walls, and the soldiers can then climb up upon
+scaling ladders or heaps of small faggots piled up to the height of the opening.
+Sometimes, too, the besiegers burrow underground till they are just below the
+wall, then fill the hole with gunpowder, and blow up all above them; in short,
+instead of, as in former days, a well-fortified city being almost impossible to
+take, except by starving out the garrison, a siege is in these times almost
+equally sure to end in favor of the besiegers.</p>
+<p>All through August and September the Russians made their approaches, while
+the Tatars resisted them bravely, but often showing great barbarity. Once when
+Ivan again sent a herald, accompanied by a number of Tatar prisoners, to offer
+terms to Yediguer, the present Khan, the defenders called out to their
+countrymen, 'You had better perish by our pure hands than by those of the
+wretched Christians,' and shot a whole flight of arrows at them. Moreover, every
+morning the magicians used to come out at sunrise upon the walls, and their
+shrieks, contortions, and waving of garments were believed, not only by the
+Tatars but by the Russians, and by Andrej Kourbsky himself, to bring foul
+weather, which greatly harassed the Russians. On this Ivan sent to Moscow for a
+sacred cross that had been given to the Grand Prince Vladimir when he was
+converted; the rivers were blessed, and their water sprinkled round the camp,
+and the fair weather that ensued was supposed to be due to the counteraction of
+the incantations of the magicians. These Tatars were Mahometans, but they must
+have retained some of the wind-raising enchantments of their Buddhist brethren
+in Asia.</p>
+<p>A great mine had been made under the gate of Arsk, and eleven barrels of
+gunpowder placed in it. On the 30th of September it was blown up, and the whole
+tower became a heap of ruins. For some minutes the consternation of the besieged
+was such that there was a dead silence like the stillness of the grave. The
+Russians rushed forward over the opening, but the Tatars, recovering at the
+sight of them, fought desperately, but could not prevent them from taking
+possession of the tower at the gateway. Other mines were already prepared, and
+the Tzar gave notice of a general assault for the next day, and recommended all
+his warriors to purify their souls by repentance, confession, and communion, in
+readiness for the deadly strife before them. In the meantime, he sent Yediguer a
+last offer of mercy, but the brave Tatars cried out, 'We will have no pardon! If
+the Russians have one tower, we will build another; if they ruin our ramparts we
+will set up more. We will be buried under the walls of Kazan, or else we will
+make him raise the siege.'</p>
+<p>Early dawn began to break. The sky was clear and cloudless. The Tatars were
+on their walls, the Russians in their trenches; the Imperial eagle standard,
+which Ivan had lately assumed, floated in the morning wind. The two armies were
+perfectly silent, save here and there the bray of a single trumpet, or beat of a
+naker drum in one or the other, and the continuous hum of the hymns and chants
+from the three Russian chapel-tents. The archers held their arrows on the
+string, the gunners stood with lighted matches. The copper-clad domes of the
+minarets began to glow with the rising sunbeams; the muezzins were on the roofs
+about to call the Moslemin to prayer; the deacon in the Tzar's chapel-tent was
+reading the Gospel. 'There shall be one fold and one Shepherd.' At that moment
+the sun's disk appeared above the eastern hills, and ere yet the red orb had
+fully mounted above the horizon, there was a burst as it were of tremendous
+thunderings, and the ground shook beneath the church. The Tzar went to the
+entrance, and found the whole city hill so 'rolled in sable smoke', that he
+could distinguish nothing, and, going back to his place, desired that the
+service should continue. The deacon was in the midst of the prayer for the
+establishment of the power of the Tzar and the discomfiture of his enemies, when
+the crushing burst of another explosion rushed upon their ears, and as it died
+away another voice broke forth, the shout raised by every man in the Russian
+lines, 'God is with us!' On then they marched towards the openings that the
+mines had made, but there the dauntless garrison, in spite of the terror and
+destruction caused by the two explosions, met them with unabated fury, rolling
+beams or pouring boiling water upon them as they strove to climb the breach, and
+fighting hand to hand with them if they mounted it. However, by the time the
+Tzar had completed his devotions and mounted his horse, his eagle could be seen
+above the smoke upon the citadel.</p>
+<p>Still the city had to be won, step by step, house by house, street by street;
+and even while struggling onwards the Russians were tempted aside by plunder
+among the rich stores of merchandise that were heaped up in the warehouses of
+this the mart of the East. The Khan profited by their lack of discipline, and
+forced them back to the walls; nay, they would have absolutely been driven out
+at the great gate, but that they beheld their young Tzar on horseback among his
+grey-haired councillors. By the advice of these old men Ivan rode forward, and
+with his own hand planted the sacred standard at the gates, thus forming a
+barrier that the fugitives were ashamed to pass. At the same time he, with half
+his choice cavalry, dismounted, and entered the town all fresh and vigorous,
+their rich armor glittering with gold and silver, and plumes of various colours
+streaming from their helmets in all the brilliancy of Eastern taste. This
+reinforcement recalled the plunderers to their duty, and the Tatars were driven
+back to the Khan's palace, whence, after an hour's defense, they were forced to
+retreat.</p>
+<p>At a postern gate, Andrej Kourbsky and two hundred men met Yediguer and
+10,000 Tatars, and cut off their retreat, enclosing them in the narrow streets.
+They forced their Khan to take refuge in a tower, and made signs as if to
+capitulate. 'Listen,' they said. 'As long as we had a government, we were
+willing to die for our prince and country. Now Kazan is yours, we deliver our
+Khan to you, alive and unhurt--lead him to the Tzar. For our own part, we are
+coming down into the open field to drain our last cup of life with you.'</p>
+<p>Yediguer and one old councillor were accordingly placed in the hands of an
+officer, and then the desperate Tatars, climbing down the outside of the walls,
+made for the Kazanka, where no troops, except the small body under Andrej
+Kourbsky and his brother Romanus, were at leisure to pursue them. The fighting
+was terrible, but the two princes kept them in view until checked by a marsh
+which horses could not pass. The bold fugitives took refuge in a forest, where,
+other Russian troops coming up, all were surrounded and slain, since not a man
+of them would accept quarter.</p>
+<p>Yediguer was kindly treated by Ivan, and accompanying him to Moscow, there
+became a Christian, and was baptized by the name of Simeon, in the presence of
+the Tzar and his whole court, on the banks of the Moskwa. He married a Russian
+lady, and his whole conduct proved that his conversion was sincere.</p>
+<p>But this story has only been told at so much length to show what manner of
+man Andrej Kourbsky was, and Ivan Vassilovitch had been, and how they had once
+been brethren in arms; and perhaps it has been lingered over from the melancholy
+interest there must always be in watching the fall of a powerful nation, and the
+last struggles of gallant men. Ivan was then a gallant, religious and highly
+gifted prince, generous and merciful, and with every promise of a glorious
+reign, full of benefits to his country. Alas! this part of his career was one
+glimpse of brightness in the course of a long tempestuous day. His reign had
+begun when he was but three years old. He had had a violent and cruel mother,
+and had, after her death, been bred up by evil-minded courtiers, who absolutely
+taught him cruel and dissolute amusements in order to prevent him from attending
+to state affairs. For a time, the exhortations of the good and fearless
+patriarch, and the influence of his gentle wife Anastasia, had prevailed, and
+with great vigor and strong principle he had shaken off all the evil habits of
+his boyhood, and begun, as it seemed, an admirable reign.</p>
+<p>Too soon, a severe illness shook the balance of his mind, and this</p>
+<p>was quickly followed by the death of the excellent Tzarina Anastasia. Whether
+grief further unsettled him, or whether the loss of her gentle influence left
+him a prey to his wicked councillors, from that time forward his conduct was so
+wildly savage and barbarous as to win for him the surname of the Terrible.
+Frantic actions, extravagant excesses, and freaks of horrible cruelty looked
+like insanity; and yet, on the other hand, he often showed himself a
+clear-headed and sagacious monarch, anxious for the glory and improvement of his
+people.</p>
+<p>But he lived in continual suspicion, and dreaded every eminent man in his
+dominions. Kourbsky whom he had once loved and trusted, and had charged with the
+command of his army, as his most able boyard, fell under his suspicion; and,
+with horror and indignation, learnt that the Tzar was plotting against his life,
+and intended to have him put to death. Kourbsky upon this explained to his wife
+that she must either see him put to a shameful death, or let him leave her for
+ever. He gave his blessing to his son, a boy of nine years old, and leaving his
+house at night he scaled the wall of Moscow, and meeting his faithful servant,
+Vasili Shibanoff, with two horses, he made his escape. This Vasili was his
+stirrup-bearer, one of those serfs over whom the boyard on whose land they were
+born possessed absolute power. That power was often abused, but the instinctive
+faithfulness of the serf towards his master could hardly be shaken, even by the
+most savage treatment, and a well-treated serf viewed his master's family with
+enthusiastic love and veneration. Vasili accompanied his master's flight through
+the birch forests towards the Livonian frontier, the country where but lately
+Kourbsky had been leading the Tzar's armies. On the way the prince's horse
+became exhausted by his weight, and Vasili insisted on giving up his own in its
+stead, though capture in the course of such desertion would have been certain
+death. However, master and servant safely arrived at Wolmar in Livonia, and
+there Andrej came to the determination of renouncing the service of the
+ungrateful Ivan, and entering that of the King of Poland. For this last step
+there was no excuse. Nothing can justify a man in taking up arms against his
+country, but in the middle Ages the tie of loyalty was rather to the man than to
+the state, and Andrej Kourbsky seems to have deemed that his honor would be
+safe, provided he sent a letter to his sovereign, explaining his grievance and
+giving up his allegiance. The letter is said to have been full of grave severity
+and deep, suppressed indignation, though temperate in tone; but no one would
+consent to be the bearer of such a missive, since the cruel tyrant's first fury
+was almost certain to fall on him who presented it. Believing his master's honor
+at stake, Vasili offered himself to be the bearer of the fatal letter, and
+Kourbsky accepted the offer, tendering to him a sum of money, which the serf
+rejected, knowing that money would soon be of little service to him, and seeking
+no reward for what he deemed his duty to his lord.</p>
+<p>As Ivan's justice had turned into barbarity, so his religion had turned into
+foolish fanatic observance. He had built a monastery near Moscow for himself and
+three hundred chosen boyards, and every morning at three or four o'clock he took
+his two sons into the belfry with him and proceeded to strike the bells, the
+Russian mode of ringing them, till all the brethren were assembled. This
+bell-sounding was his favorite occupation, and in it he was engaged when Vasili
+arrived. The servant awaited him in the vestibule, and delivered the letter with
+these words: 'From my master and thine exile, Prince Andrej Kourbsky.'</p>
+<p>Ivan answered by such a blow on the leg with his iron-tipped rod that the
+blood poured from the wound; but Vasili neither started, cried out, nor moved a
+feature. At once the Tzar bade him be seized and tortured, to make him disclose
+whether his master had any partners in guilt, or if any plans were matured. But
+no extremity of agony could extract aught but praises of the prince, and
+assurances of his readiness to die for him. From early morning till late at
+night the torturers worked, one succeeding when another was tired out; but
+nothing could overcome his constancy, and his last words were a prayer to
+implore his God to have mercy on his master and forgive his desertion.</p>
+<p>His praise came even from the tyrant, who wrote to Kourbsky--'Let thy servant
+Vaska [Footnote: the abbreviation of Vasili or Basil.] shame thee. He preserved
+his truth to thee before the Tzar and the people. Having given thee his word of
+faith, he kept it, even before the gates of death.'</p>
+<p>After the flight of Kourbsky, the rage of Ivan continued to increase with
+each year of his life. He had formed a sort of bodyguard of a thousand ruffians,
+called the Oprichnina, who carried out his barbarous commands, and committed an
+infinity of murders and robberies on their own account. He was like a distorted
+caricature of Henry VIII, and, like him, united violence and cruelty with great
+exactness about religious worship, carrying his personal observances to the most
+fanatic extravagance.</p>
+<p>In the vacancy of the Metropolitan See, he cast his eyes upon the monastery
+in the little island of Solovsky, in the White Sea, where the Prior, Feeleep
+Kolotchof, was noted for his holy life, and the good he had done among the wild
+and miserable population of the island. He was the son of a rich boyard, but had
+devoted himself from his youth to a monastic life, and the fame of his exertions
+in behalf of the islanders had led the Tzar to send him not only precious
+vessels for the use of his church, but contributions to the stone churches,
+piers, and hostelries that he raised for his people; for whom he had made roads,
+drained marshes, introduced cattle, and made fisheries and salt pans, changing
+the whole aspect of the place, and lessening even the inclemency of the climate.</p>
+<p>On this good man the Tzar fixed his choice. He wrote to him to come to Moscow
+to attend a synod, and on his arrival made him dine at the palace, and informed
+him that he was to be chief pastor of the Russian Church. Feeleep burst into
+tears, entreating permission to refuse, and beseeching the Tzar not to trust 'so
+heavy a freight to such a feeble bark'. Ivan held to his determination, and
+Feeleep then begged him at least to dismiss the cruel Oprichnina. 'How can I
+bless you,' he said, 'while I see my country in mourning?'</p>
+<p>The Tzar replied by mentioning his suspicions of all around him, and
+commanded Feeleep to be silent. He expected to be sent back to his convent at
+once, but, instead of this, the Tzar commanded the clergy to elect him
+Archbishop, and they all added their entreaties to him to accept the office, and
+endeavor to soften the Tzar, who respected him; and he yielded at last, saying,
+'The will of the Tzar and the pastors of the church must, then, be done.'</p>
+<p>At his consecration, he preached a sermon on the power of mildness, and the
+superiority of the victories of love over the triumphs of war. It awoke the
+better feelings of Ivan, and for months he abstained from any deed of violence;
+his good days seemed to have returned and he lived in intimate friendship with
+the good Archbishop.</p>
+<p>But after a time the sleeping lion began to waken. Ivan's suspicious mind
+took up an idea that Feeleep had been incited by the nobles to request the
+abolition of the Oprichnina, and that they were exciting a revolt. The spies
+whom he sent into Moscow told him that wherever an Oprichnik appeared, the
+people shrank away in silence, as, poor things! they well might. He fancied this
+as a sign that conspiracies were brewing, and all his atrocities began again.
+The tortures to which whole families were put were most horrible; the Oprichniks
+went through the streets with poignards and axes, seeking out their victims, and
+killing from ten to twenty a day. The corpses lay in the streets, for no one
+dared to leave his house to bury them. Feeleep vainly sent letters and
+exhortations to the Tzar--they were unnoticed. The unhappy citizens came to the
+Archbishop, entreating him to intercede for them, and he gave them his promise
+that he would not spare his own blood to save theirs.</p>
+<p>One Sunday, as Feeleep was about to celebrate the Holy Communion, Ivan came
+into the Cathedral with a troop of his satellites, like him, fantastically
+dressed in black cassocks and high caps. He came towards the Metropolitan, but
+Feeleep kept his eyes fixed on the picture of our Lord, and never looked at him.
+Someone said, 'Holy Father, here is the prince; give him your blessing.'</p>
+<p>'No,' said the Archbishop, 'I know not the Tzar in this strange
+disguise--still less do I know him in his government. Oh, Prince! we are here
+offering sacrifice to the Lord, and beneath the altar the blood of guiltless
+Christians is flowing in torrents... You are indeed on the throne, but there is
+One above all, our Judge and yours. How shall you appear before his Judgment
+Seat?--stained with the blood of the righteous, stunned with their shrieks, for
+the stones beneath your feet cry out for vengeance to Heaven. Prince, I speak as
+shepherd of souls; I fear God alone.'</p>
+<p>The Archbishop was within the golden gates, which, in Russian churches, close
+in the sanctuary or chancel, and are only entered by the clergy. He was thus out
+of reach of the cruel iron-tipped staff, which the Tzar could only strike
+furiously on the pavement, crying out, 'Rash monk, I have spared you too long.
+Henceforth I will be to you such as you describe.'</p>
+<p>The murders went on in their full horrors; but, in spite of the threat, the
+Archbishop remained unmolested, though broken-hearted at the cruelties around
+him. At last, however, his resolute witness became more than the tyrant would
+endure, and messengers were secretly sent to the island of Solovsky, to endeavor
+to find some accusation against him. They tampered with all the monks in the
+convent, to induce them to find some fault in him, but each answered that he was
+a saint in every thought, word, and deed; until at last Payssi, the prior who
+had succeeded him, was induced, by the hope of a bishopric, to bear false
+witness against him.</p>
+<p>He was cited before an assembly of bishops and boyards, presided over by the
+Tzar, and there he patiently listened to the monstrous stories told by Payssi.
+Instead of defending himself, he simply said, 'This seed will not bring you a
+good harvest;' and, addressing himself to the Tzar, said, 'Prince, you are
+mistaken if you think I fear death. Having attained an advanced age, far from
+stormy passions and worldly intrigues, I only desire to return my soul to the
+Most High, my Sovereign Master and yours. Better to perish an innocent martyr,
+than as Metropolitan to look on at the horrors and impieties of these wretched
+times. Do what you will with me! Here are the pastoral staff, the white mitre,
+and the mantle with which you invested me. And you, bishops, archimandrites,
+abbots, servants of the altar, feed the flock of Christ zealously, as preparing
+to give an account thereof, and fear the Judge of Heaven more than the earthly
+judge.'</p>
+<p>He was then departing, when the Tzar recalled him, saying that he could not
+be his own judge, and that he must await his sentence. In truth, worse
+indignities were preparing for him. He was in the midst of the Liturgy on the
+8th of November, the Greek Michaelmas, when a boyard came in with a troop of
+armed Oprichniks, who overawed the people, while the boyard read a paper
+degrading the Metropolitan from his sacred office; and then the ruffians,
+entering through the golden gates tore off his mitre and robes, wrapped him in a
+mean gown, absolutely swept him out of the church with brooms, and took him in a
+sledge to the Convent of the Epiphany. The people ran after him, weeping
+bitterly, while the venerable old man blessed them with uplifted hands, and,
+whenever he could be heard, repeated his last injunction, 'Pray, pray to God.'</p>
+<p>Once again he was led before the Emperor, to hear the monstrous sentence that
+for sorcery, and other heavy charges, he was to be imprisoned for life. He said
+no reproachful word, only, for the last time, he besought the Tzar to have pity
+on Russia, and to remember how his ancestors had reigned, and the happy days of
+his youth. Ivan only commanded the soldiers to take him away; and he was heavily
+ironed, and thrown into a dungeon, whence he was afterwards transferred to a
+convent on the banks of the Moskwa, where he was kept bare of almost all the
+necessaries of life: and in a few days' time the head of Ivan Borissovitch
+Kolotchof, the chief of his family, was sent to him, with the message, 'Here are
+the remains of your dear kinsman, your sorcery could not save him!' Feeleep
+calmly took the head in his arms, blessed it, and gave it back.</p>
+<p>The people of Moscow gathered round the convent, gazed at his cell, and told
+each other stories of his good works, which they began to magnify into miracles.
+Thereupon the Emperor sent him to another convent, at a greater distance. Here
+he remained till the next year, 1569, when Maluta Skouratof, a Tatar, noted as a
+favorite of the Tzar, and one of the chief ministers of his cruelty, came into
+his cell, and demanded his blessing for the Tzar.</p>
+<p>The Archbishop replied that blessings only await good men and good works,
+adding tranquilly, 'I know what you are come for. I have long looked for death.
+Let the Tzar's will be done.' The assassin then smothered him, but pretended to
+the abbot that he had been stifled by the heat of the cell. He was buried in
+haste behind the altar, but his remains have since been removed to his own
+cathedral at Moscow, the scene where he had freely offered his own life by
+confronting the tyrant in the vain endeavor to save his people.</p>
+<p>Vain, too, was the reproof of the hermit, who shocked Ivan's scruples by
+offering him a piece of raw flesh in the middle of Lent, and told him that he
+was preying on the flesh and blood of his subjects. The crimes of Ivan grew more
+and more terrible, and yet his acuteness was such that they can hardly be
+inscribed to insanity. He caused the death of his own son by a blow with that
+fatal staff of his; and a last, after a fever varied by terrible delirium, in
+which alone his remorse manifested itself, he died while setting up the pieces
+for a game at chess, on the 17th of March, 1584.</p>
+<p>This has been a horrible story, in reality infinitely more horrible than we
+have made it; but there is this blessing among many others in Christianity, that
+the blackest night makes its diamonds only show their living luster more
+plainly: and surely even Ivan the Terrible, in spite of himself, did something
+for the world in bringing out the faithful fearlessness of Archbishop Feeleep,
+and the constancy of the stirrup-bearer, Vasili.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>FORT ST. ELMO<br>
+1565</h3></center>
+
+<p>The white cross of the Order of St. John waved on the towers of Rhodes for
+two hundred and fifty-five years. In 1552, after a desperate resistance, the
+Turks, under their great Sultan, Solyman the Magnificent, succeeded in driving
+the Knights Hospitaliers from their beautiful home, and they were again cast
+upon the world.</p>
+<p>They were resolved, however, to continue their old work of protecting the
+Mediterranean travelers, and thankfully accepted, as a gift from the Emperor
+Charles V., the little islet of Malta as their new station. It was a great
+contrast to their former home, being little more than a mere rock rising steeply
+out of the sea, white, glaring and with very shallow earth, unfit to bear corn,
+though it produced plenty of oranges, figs, and melons--with little water, and
+no wood,--the buildings wretched, and for the most part uninhabited, and the few
+people a miserable mongrel set, part Arab, part Greek, part Sicilian, and
+constantly kept down by the descents of the Moorish pirates, who used to land in
+the unprotected bays, and carry off all the wretched beings they could catch, to
+sell for slaves. It was a miserable exchange from fertile Rhodes, which was
+nearly five times larger than this barren rock; but the Knights only wanted a
+hospital, a fortress, and a harbour; and this last they found in the deeply
+indented northern shore, while they made the first two. Only a few years had
+passed before the dreary Citta Notabile had become in truth a notable city, full
+of fine castle-like houses, infirmaries, and noble churches, and fenced in with
+mighty wall and battlements--country houses were perched upon the rocks--the
+harbors were fortified, and filled with vessels of war--and deep vaults were
+hollowed out in the rock, in which corn was stored sufficient to supply the
+inhabitants for many months.</p>
+<p>Everywhere that there was need was seen the red flag with the eight-pointed
+cross. If there was an earthquake on the shores of Italy or Sicily, there were
+the ships of St. John, bringing succor to the crushed and ruined townspeople. In
+every battle with Turk or Moor, the Knights were among the foremost; and, as
+ever before, their galleys were the aid of the peaceful merchant, and the terror
+of the corsair. Indeed, they were nearer Tunis, Tripoli, and Algiers, the great
+nests of these Moorish pirates, and were better able to threaten them, and
+thwart their cruel descents, than when so much farther eastward; and the
+Mahometan power found them quite as obnoxious in Malta as in Rhodes.</p>
+<p>Solyman the Magnificent resolved, in his old age, to sweep these obstinate
+Christians from the seas, and, only twelve years after the siege of Rhodes,
+prepared an enormous armament, which he united with those of the Barbary
+pirates, and placed under the command of Mustafa and Piali, his two bravest
+pashas, and Dragut, a terrible Algerine corsair, who had already made an attempt
+upon the island, but had been repulsed by the good English knight, Sir Nicholas
+Upton. Without the advice of this pirate the Sultan desired that nothing should
+be undertaken.</p>
+<p>The Grand Master who had to meet this tremendous danger was Jean Parisot de
+la Valette, a brave and resolute man, as noted for his piety and tenderness to
+the sick in the infirmaries as for his unflinching courage. When he learnt the
+intentions of the Sultan, he began by collecting a Chapter of his Order, and,
+after laying his tidings before them, said: 'A formidable army and a cloud of
+barbarians are about to burst on this isle. Brethren, they are the enemies of
+Jesus Christ. The question is the defense of the Faith, and whether the Gospel
+shall yield to the Koran. God demands from us the life that we have already
+devoted to Him by our profession. Happy they who in so good a cause shall first
+consummate their sacrifice. But, that we may be worthy, my brethren, let us
+hasten to the altar, there to renew our vows; and may to each one of us be
+imparted, by the very Blood of the Saviour of mankind, and by faithful
+participation in His Sacraments, that generous contempt of death that can alone
+render us invincible.'</p>
+<p>With these words, he led the way to the church, and there was not an
+individual knight who did not on that day confess and receive the Holy
+Communion; after which they were as new men--all disputes, all trivialities and
+follies were laid aside--and the whole community awaited the siege like persons
+under a solemn dedication.</p>
+<p>The chief harbour of Malta is a deep bay, turned towards the north, and
+divided into two lesser bays by a large tongue of rock, on the point of which
+stood a strong castle, called Fort St. Elmo. The gulf to the westward has a
+little island in it, and both gulf and islet are called Marza Muscat. The gulf
+to the east, called the Grand Port, was again divided by three fingers of rock
+projecting from the mainland, at right angles to the tongue that bore Fort St.
+Elmo. Each finger was armed with a strong talon--the Castle of La Sangle to the
+east, the Castle of St. Angelo in the middle, and Fort Ricasoli to the west.
+Between St. Angelo and La Sangle was the harbour where all the ships of war were
+shut up at night by an immense chain; and behind was il Borgo, the chief
+fortification in the island. Citta Notabile and Gozo were inland, and their fate
+would depend upon that of the defenses of the harbor. To defend all this, the
+Grand Master could only number 700 knights and 8,500 soldiers. He sent to summon
+home all those of the Order who were dispersed in the different commanderies in
+France, Spain, and Germany, and entreated aid from the Spanish king, Philip II.,
+who wished to be considered as the prime champion of Roman Catholic Christendom,
+and who alone had the power of assisting him. The Duke of Alva, viceroy for
+Philip in Sicily, made answer that he would endeavor to relieve the Order, if
+they could hold out Fort St. Elmo till the fleet could be got together; but that
+if this castle were once lost, it would be impossible to bring them aid, and
+they must be left to their fate.</p>
+<p>The Grand Master divided the various posts to the knights according to their
+countries. The Spaniards under the Commander De Guerras, Bailiff of Negropont,
+had the Castle of St. Elmo; the French had Port de la Sangle; the Germans, and
+the few English knights whom the Reformation had left, were charged with the
+defense of the Port of the Borgo, which served as headquarters, and the
+Commander Copier, with a body of troops, was to remain outside the town and
+watch and harass the enemy.</p>
+<p>On the 18th of May, 1565, the Turkish fleet came in sight. It consisted of
+159 ships, rowed by Christian slaves between the decks, and carrying 30,000
+Janissaries and Spahis, the terrible warriors to whom the Turks owed most of
+their victories, and after them came, spreading for miles over the blue waters,
+a multitude of ships of burthen bringing the horses of the Spahis, and such
+heavy battering cannon as rendered the dangers of a siege infinitely greater
+than in former days. These Janissaries were a strange, distorted resemblance of
+the knights themselves, for they were bound in a strict brotherhood of arms, and
+were not married, so as to care for nothing but each other, the Sultan, and the
+honor of their troop. They were not dull, apathetic Turks, but chiefly natives
+of Circassia and Georgia, the land where the human race is most beautiful and
+nobly formed. They were stolen from their homes, or, too often, sold by their
+parents when too young to remember their Christian baptism, and were bred up as
+Mahometans, with no home but their corps, no kindred but their fellow soldiers.
+Their title, given by the Sultan who first enrolled them, meant New Soldiers,
+their ensign was a camp kettle, as that of their Pashas was one, two, or three
+horses' tails, in honor of the old Kurdish chief, the founder of the Turkish
+empire; but there was no homeliness in their appointments, their
+weapons--scimitars, pistols, and carabines--were crusted with gold and jewels;
+their head-dress, though made in imitation of a sleeve, was gorgeous, and their
+garments were of the richest wool and silk, dyed with the deep, exquisite
+colours of the East. Terrible warriors were they, and almost equally dreaded
+were the Spahis, light horsemen from Albania and the other Greek and Bulgarian
+provinces who had entered the Turkish service, and were great plunderers, swift
+and cruel, glittering, both man and horse, with the jewels they had gained in
+their forays.</p>
+<p>These were chiefly troops for the land attack, and they were set on shore at
+Port St. Thomas, where the commanders, Mustafa and Piali, held a council, to
+decide where they should first attack. Piali wished to wait for Dragut, who was
+daily expected, but Mustafa was afraid of losing time, and of being caught by
+the Spanish fleet, and insisted on at once laying siege to Fort St. Elmo, which
+was, he thought, so small that it could not hold out more than five or six days.</p>
+<p>Indeed, it could not hold above 300 men, but these were some of the bravest
+of the knights, and as it was only attacked on the land side, they were able to
+put off boats at night and communicate with the Grand Master and their brethren
+in the Borgo. The Turks set up their batteries, and fired their enormous cannon
+shot upon the fortifications. One of their terrible pieces of ordnance carried
+stone balls of 160 lb., and no wonder that stone and mortar gave way before it,
+and that a breach was opened in a few days' time. That night, when, as usual,
+boatloads of wounded men were transported across to the Borgo, the Bailiff of
+Negropont sent the knight La Cerda to the Grand Master to give an account of the
+state of things and ask for help. La Cerda spoke strongly, and, before a great
+number of knights, declared that there was no chance of so weak a place holding
+out for more than a week.</p>
+<p>'What has been lost,' said the Grand Master, 'since you cry out for help?'</p>
+<p>'Sir,' replied La Cerda, 'the castle may be regarded as a patient in
+extremity and devoid of strength, who can only be sustained by continual
+remedies and constant succor.'</p>
+<p>'I will be doctor myself,' replied the Grand Master, 'and will bring others
+with me who, if they cannot cure you of fear, will at least be brave enough to
+prevent the infidels from seizing the fort.'</p>
+<p>The fact was, as he well knew, that the little fort could not hold out long,
+and he grieved over the fate of his knights; but time was everything, and the
+fate of the whole isle depended upon the white cross being still on that point
+of land when the tardy Sicilian fleet should set sail. He was one who would ask
+no one to run into perils that he would not share, and he was bent on throwing
+himself into St. Elmo, and being rather buried under the ruins than to leave the
+Mussulmans free a moment sooner than could be helped to attack the Borgo and
+Castle of St. Angelo. But the whole Chapter of Knights entreated him to abstain,
+and so many volunteered for this desperate service, that the only difficulty was
+to choose among them. Indeed, La Cerda had done the garrison injustice; no one's
+heart was failing but his own; and the next day there was a respite, for a
+cannon shot from St. Angelo falling into the enemy's camp, shattered a stone, a
+splinter of which struck down the Piali Pasha. He was thought dead, and the camp
+and fleet were in confusion, which enabled the Grand Master to send off his
+nephew, the Chevalier de la Valette Cornusson, to Messina to entreat the Viceroy
+of Sicily to hasten to their relief; to give him a chart of the entrance of the
+harbour, and a list of signals, and to desire in especial that two ships
+belonging to the Order, and filled with the knights who had hurried from distant
+lands too late for the beginning of the siege, might come to him at once. To
+this the Viceroy returned a promise that at latest the fleet should sail on the
+15th of June, adding an exhortation to him at all sacrifices to maintain St.
+Elmo. This reply the Grand Master transmitted to the garrison, and it nerved
+them to fight even with more patience and self-sacrifice. A desperate sally was
+led by the Chevalier de Medran, who fought his way into the trenches where the
+Turkish cannon were planted, and at first drove all before him; but the
+Janissaries rallied and forced back the Christians out of the trenches.
+Unfortunately there was a high wind, which drove the smoke of the artillery down
+on the counter-scarp (the slope of masonry facing the rampart), and while it was
+thus hidden from the Christians, the Turks succeeded in effecting a lodgment
+there, fortifying themselves with trees and sacks of earth and wool. When the
+smoke cleared off, the knights were dismayed to see the horse-tail ensigns of
+the Janissaries so near them, and cannon already prepared to batter the ravelin,
+or outwork protecting the gateway.</p>
+<p>La Cerda proposed to blow this fortification up, and abandon it, but no other
+knight would hear of deserting an inch of wall while it could yet be held.</p>
+<p>But again the sea was specked with white sails from the south-east. Six
+galleys came from Egypt, bearing 900 troops--Mameluke horsemen, troops recruited
+much like the Janissaries and quite as formidable. These ships were commanded by
+Ulucciali, an Italian, who had denied his faith and become a Mahometan, and was
+thus regarded with especial horror by the chivalry of Malta. And the swarm
+thickened for a few days more; like white-winged and beautiful but venomous
+insects hovering round their prey, the graceful Moorish galleys and galliots
+came up from the south, bearing 600 dark-visaged, white-turbaned, lithe-limbed
+Moors from Tripoli, under Dragut himself. The thunders of all the guns roaring
+forth their salute of honor told the garrison that the most formidable enemy of
+all had arrived. And now their little white rock was closed in on every side,
+with nothing but its own firmness to be its aid.</p>
+<p>Dragut did not approve of having begun with attacking Fort St. Elmo; he
+thought that the inland towns should have been first taken, and Mustafa offered
+to discontinue the attack, but this the Corsair said could not now be done with
+honor, and under him the attack went on more furiously than ever. He planted a
+battery of four guns on the point guarding the entrance of Marza Muscat, the
+other gulf, and the spot has ever since been called Dragut's Point. Strange to
+say, the soldiers in the ravelin fell asleep, and thus enabled the enemy to
+scramble up by climbing on one another's shoulders and enter the place. As soon
+as the alarm was given, the Bailiff of Negropont, with a number of knights,
+rushed into the ravelin, and fought with the utmost desperation, but all in
+vain; they never succeeded in dislodging the Turks, and had almost been
+followed by them into the Fort itself. Only the utmost courage turned back the
+enemy at last, and, it was believed, with a loss of 3,000. The Order had twenty
+knights and a hundred soldiers killed, with many more wounded. One knight named
+Abel de Bridiers, who was shot through the body, refused to be assisted by his
+brethren, saying, 'Reckon me no more among the living. You will be doing better
+by defending our brothers.' He dragged himself away, and was found dead before
+the altar in the Castle chapel. The other wounded were brought back to the Borgo
+in boats at night, and La Cerda availed himself of a slight scratch to come with
+them and remain, though the Bailiff of Negropont, a very old man, and with a
+really severe wound, returned as soon as it had been dressed, together with the
+reinforcements sent to supply the place of those who had been slain. The Grand
+Master, on finding how small had been La Cerda's hurt, put him in prison for
+several days; but he was afterwards released, and met his death bravely on the
+ramparts of the Borgo.</p>
+<p>The 15th of June was passed. Nothing would make the Sicilian Viceroy move,
+nor even let the warships of the Order sail with their own knights, and the
+little fort that had been supposed unable to hold out a week, had for full a
+month resisted every attack of the enemy.</p>
+<p>At last Dragut, though severely wounded while reconnoitring, set up a battery
+on the hill of Calcara, so as to command the strait, and hinder the succors from
+being sent across to the fort. The wounded were laid down in the chapel and the
+vaults, and well it was for them that each knight of the Order could be a
+surgeon and a nurse. One good swimmer crossed under cover of darkness with their
+last messages, and La Valette prepared five armed boats for their relief; but
+the enemy had fifteen already in the bay, and communication was entirely cut
+off. It was the night before the 23rd of June when these brave men knew their
+time was come. All night they prayed, and prepared themselves to die by giving
+one another the last rites of the Church, and at daylight each repaired to his
+post, those who could not walk being carried in chairs, and sat ghastly figures,
+sword in hand, on the brink of the breach, ready for their last fight.</p>
+<p>By the middle of the day every Christian knight in St. Elmo had</p>
+<p>died upon his post, and the little heap of ruins was in the hands of the
+enemy. Dragut was dying of his wound, but just lived to hear that the place was
+won, when it had cost the Sultan 8,000 men! Well might Mustafa say, 'If the son
+has cost us so much, what will the father do?'</p>
+<p>It would be too long to tell the glorious story of the three months' further
+siege of the Borgo. The patience and resolution of the knights was unshaken,
+though daily there were tremendous battles, and week after week passed by
+without the tardy relief from Spain. It is believed that Philip II. thought that
+the Turks would exhaust themselves against the Order, and forbade his Viceroy to
+hazard his fleet; but at last he was shamed into permitting the armament to be
+fitted out. Two hundred knights of St. John were waiting at Messina, in despair
+at being unable to reach their brethren in their deadly strait, and constantly
+haunting the Viceroy's palace, till he grew impatient, and declared they did not
+treat him respectfully enough, nor call him 'Excellency'.</p>
+<p>'Senor,' said one of them, 'if you will only bring us in time to save the
+Order, I will call you anything you please, excellency, highness, or majesty
+itself.'</p>
+<p>At last, on the 1st of September, the fleet really set sail, but it hovered
+cautiously about on the farther side of the island, and only landed 6,000 men
+and then returned to Sicily. However, the tidings of its approach had spread
+such a panic among the Turkish soldiers, who were worn out and exhausted by
+their exertions, that they hastily raised the siege, abandoned their heavy
+artillery, and, removing their garrison from Fort St. Elmo, re-embarked in haste
+and confusion. No sooner, however, was the Pasha in his ship than he became
+ashamed of his precipitation, more especially when he learnt that the relief
+that had put 16,000 men to flight consisted only of 6,000, and he resolved to
+land and give battle; but his troops were angry and unwilling, and were actually
+driven out of their ships by blows.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, the Grand Master had again placed a garrison in St. Elmo,
+which the Turks had repaired and restored, and once more the cross of St. John
+waved on the end of its tongue of land, to greet the Spanish allies. A battle
+was fought with the newly arrived troops, in which the Turks were defeated; they
+again took to their ships, and the Viceroy of Sicily, from Syracuse, beheld
+their fleet in full sail for the East.</p>
+<p>Meantime, the gates of the Borgo were thrown open to receive the brethren and
+friends who had been so long held back from coming to the relief of the home of
+the Order. Four months' siege, by the heaviest artillery in Europe, had
+shattered the walls and destroyed the streets, till, to the eyes of the
+newcomers, the town looked like a place taken by assault, and sacked by the
+enemy; and of the whole garrison, knights, soldiers, and sailors altogether,
+only six hundred were left able to bear arms, and they for the most part covered
+with wounds. The Grand Master and his surviving knights could hardly be
+recognized, so pale and altered were they by wounds and excessive fatigue; their
+hair, beards, dress, and armor showing that for four full months they had hardly
+undressed, or lain down unarmed. The newcomers could not restrain their tears,
+but all together proceeded to the church to return thanks for the conclusion of
+their perils and afflictions. Rejoicings extended all over Europe, above all in
+Italy, Spain, and southern France, where the Order of St. John was the sole
+protection against the descents of the Barbary corsairs. The Pope sent La
+Valette a cardinal's hat, but he would not accept it, as unsuited to his office;
+Philip II. presented him with a jeweled sword and dagger. Some thousand
+unadorned swords a few months sooner would have been a better testimony to his
+constancy, and that of the brave men whose lives Spain had wasted by her cruel
+delays.</p>
+<p>The Borgo was thenceforth called Citta Vittoriosa; but La Valette decided on
+building the chief town of the isle on the Peninsula of Fort St. Elmo, and in
+this work he spent his latter days, till he was killed by a sunstroke, while
+superintending the new works of the city which is deservedly known by his name,
+as Valetta.</p>
+<p>The Order of St. John lost much of its character, and was finally swept from
+Malta in the general confusion of the Revolutionary wars. The British crosses
+now float in the harbour of Malta; but the steep white rocks must ever bear the
+memory of the self-devoted endurance of the beleaguered knights, and, foremost
+of all, of those who perished in St. Elmo, in order that the signal banner might
+to the very last summon the tardy Viceroy to their aid.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE VOLUNTARY CONVICT<br>
+1622</h3></center>
+
+<p>In the early summer of the year 1605, a coasting vessel was sailing along the
+beautiful Gulf of Lyons, the wind blowing gently in the sails, the blue
+Mediterranean lying glittering to the south, and the curved line of the French
+shore rising in purple and green tints, dotted with white towns and villages.
+Suddenly three light, white-sailed ships appeared in the offing, and the
+captain's practiced eye detected that the wings that bore them were those of a
+bird of prey. He knew them for African brigantines, and though he made all sail,
+it was impossible to run into a French port, as on, on they came, not entirely
+depending on the wind, but, like steamers, impelled by unseen powers within
+them. Alas! that power was not the force of innocent steam, but the arms of
+Christian rowers chained to the oar. Sure as the pounce of a hawk upon a
+partridge was the swoop of the corsairs upon the French vessel. A signal to
+surrender followed, but the captain boldly refused, and armed his crew, bidding
+them stand to their guns. But the fight was too unequal, the brave little ship
+was disabled, the pirates boarded her, and, after a sharp fight on deck, three
+of the crew lay dead, all the rest were wounded, and the vessel was the prize of
+the pirates. The captain was at once killed, in revenge for his resistance, and
+all the rest of the crew and passengers were put in chains. Among these
+passengers was a young priest named Vincent de Paul, the son of a farmer in
+Languedoc, who had used his utmost endeavors to educate his son for the
+ministry, even selling the oxen from the plough to provide for the college
+expenses. A small legacy had just fallen to the young man, from a relation who
+had died at Marseilles; he had been thither to receive it, and had been
+persuaded by a friend to return home by sea. And this was the result of the
+pleasant voyage. The legacy was the prey of the pirates, and Vincent, severely
+wounded by an arrow, and heavily chained, lay half-stifled in a corner of the
+hold of the ship, a captive probably for life to the enemies of the faith. It
+was true that France had scandalized Europe by making peace with the Dey of
+Tunis, but this was a trifle to the corsairs; and when, after seven days'
+further cruising, they put into the harbour of Tunis, they drew up an account of
+their capture, calling it a Spanish vessel, to prevent the French Consul from
+claiming the prisoners.</p>
+<p>The captives had the coarse blue and white garments of slaves given them, and
+were walked five or six times through the narrow streets and bazaars of Tunis,
+by way of exhibition. They were then brought back to their ship, and the
+purchasers came thither to bargain for them. They were examined at their meals,
+to see if they had good appetites; their sides were felt like those of oxen;
+their teeth looked at like those of horses; their wounds were searched, and they
+were made to run and walk to show the play of their limbs. All this Vincent
+endured with patient submission, constantly supported by the thought of Him who
+took upon Him the form of a servant for our sakes; and he did his best, ill as
+he was, to give his companions the same confidence.</p>
+<p>Weak and unwell, Vincent was sold cheap to a fisherman; but in his new
+service it soon became apparent that the sea made him so ill as to be of no use,
+so he was sold again to one of the Moorish physicians, the like of whom may
+still be seen, smoking their pipes sleepily, under their white turbans,
+cross-legged, among the drugs in their shop windows--these being small open
+spaces beneath the beautiful stone lacework of the Moorish lattices. The
+physician was a great chemist and distiller, and for four years had been seeking
+the philosopher's stone, which was supposed to be the secret of making gold. He
+found his slave's learning and intelligence so useful that he grew very fond of
+him, and tried hard to persuade him to turn Mahometan, offering him not only
+liberty, but the inheritance of all his wealth, and the secrets that he had
+discovered.</p>
+<p>The Christian priest felt the temptation sufficiently to be always grateful
+for the grace that had carried him through it. At the end of a year, the old
+doctor died, and his nephew sold Vincent again. His next master was a native of
+Nice, who had not held out against the temptation to renounce his faith in order
+to avoid a life of slavery, but had become a renegade, and had the charge of one
+of the farms of the Dey of Tunis. The farm was on a hillside in an extremely hot
+and exposed region, and Vincent suffered much from being there set to field
+labour, but he endured all without a murmur. His master had three wives, and one
+of them, who was of Turkish birth,, used often to come out and talk to him,
+asking him many questions about his religion. Sometimes she asked him to sing,
+and he would then chant the psalm of the captive Jews: 'By the waters of Babylon
+we sat down and wept;' and others of the 'songs' of his Zion. The woman at last
+told her husband that he must have been wrong in forsaking a religion of which
+her slave had told her such wonderful things. Her words had such an effect on
+the renegade that he sought the slave, and in conversation with him soon came to
+a full sense of his own miserable position as an apostate. A change of religion
+on the part of a Mahometan is, however, always visited with death, both to the
+convert and his instructor. An Algerine, who was discovered to have become a
+Christian, was about this time said to have been walled up at once in the
+fortifications he had been building; and the story has been confirmed by the
+recent discovery, by the French engineers, of the remains of a man within a huge
+block of clay, that had taken a perfect cast of his Moorish features, and of the
+surface of his garments, and even had his black hair adhering to it. Vincent's
+master, terrified at such perils, resolved to make his escape in secret with his
+slave. It is disappointing to hear nothing of the wife; and not to know whether
+she would not or could not accompany them. All we know is, that master and slave
+trusted themselves alone to a small bark, and, safely crossing the
+Mediterranean, landed at Aigues Mortes, on the 28th of June, 1607; and that the
+renegade at once abjured his false faith, and soon after entered a brotherhood
+at Rome, whose office it was to wait on the sick in hospitals.</p>
+<p>This part of Vincent de Paul's life has been told at length because it shows
+from what the Knights of St. John strove to protect the inhabitants of the
+coasts. We next find Vincent visiting at a hospital at Paris, where he gave such
+exceeding comfort to the patients that all with one voice declared him a
+messenger from heaven.</p>
+<p>He afterwards became a tutor in the family of the Count de Joigni, a very
+excellent man, who was easily led by him to many good works. M. de Joigni was
+inspector general of the 'Galeres', or Hulks, the ships in the chief harbors of
+France, such as Brest and Marseilles, where the convicts, closely chained, were
+kept to hard labour, and often made to toil at the oar, like the slaves of the
+Africans. Going the round of these prison ships, the horrible state of the
+convicts, their half-naked misery, and still more their fiendish ferocity went
+to the heart of the Count and of the Abbé de Paul; and, with full authority
+from the inspector, the tutor worked among these wretched beings with such good
+effect that on his doings being represented to the King, Louis XIII., he was
+made almoner general to the galleys.</p>
+<p>While visiting those at Marseilles, he was much struck by the broken-down
+looks and exceeding sorrowfulness of one of the convicts. He entered into
+conversation with him, and, after many kind words, persuaded him to tell his
+troubles. His sorrow was far less for his own condition than for the misery to
+which his absence must needs reduce his wife and children. And what was
+Vincent's reply to this? His action was so striking that, though in itself it
+could hardly be safe to propose it as an example, it must be mentioned as the
+very height of self-sacrifice.</p>
+<p>He absolutely changed places with the convict. Probably some arrangement was
+made with the immediate jailor of the gang, who, by the exchange of the priest
+for the convict, could make up his full tale of men to show when his numbers
+were counted. At any rate the prisoner went free, and returned to his home,
+whilst Vincent wore a convict's chain, did a convict's work, lived on convict's
+fare, and, what was worse, had only convict society. He was soon sought out and
+released, but the hurts he had received from the pressure of the chain lasted
+all his life. He never spoke of the event; it was kept a strict secret; and once
+when he had referred to it in a letter to a friend, he became so much afraid
+that the story would become known that he sent to ask for the letter back again.
+It was, however, not returned, and it makes the fact certain. It would be a
+dangerous precedent if prison chaplains were to change places with their
+charges; and, beautiful as was Vincent's spirit, the act can hardly be
+justified; but it should also be remembered that among the galleys of France
+there were then many who had been condemned for resistance to the arbitrary will
+of Cardinal de Richelieu, men not necessarily corrupt and degraded like the
+thieves and murderers with whom they were associated. At any rate, M. de Joigni
+did not displace the almoner, and Vincent worked on the consciences of the
+convicts with infinitely more force for having been for a time one of
+themselves. Many and many were won back to penitence, a hospital was founded for
+them, better regulations established, and, for a time, both prisons and galleys
+were wonderfully improved, although only for the life-time of the good inspector
+and the saintly almoner. But who shall say how many souls were saved in those
+years by these men who did what they could?</p>
+<p>The rest of the life of Vincent de Paul would be too lengthy to tell here,
+though acts of beneficence and self-devotion shine out in glory at each step.
+The work by which he is chiefly remembered is his establishment of the Order of
+Sisters of Charity, the excellent women who have for two hundred years been the
+prime workers in every charitable task in France, nursing the sick, teaching the
+young, tending deserted children, ever to be found where there is distress or
+pain.</p>
+<p>But of these, and of his charities, we will not here speak, nor even of his
+influence for good on the King and Queen themselves. The whole tenor of his life
+was 'golden' in one sense, and if we told all his golden deeds they would fill
+an entire book. So we will only wait to tell how he showed his remembrance of
+what he had gone through in his African captivity. The redemption of the
+prisoners there might have seemed his first thought, but that he did so much in
+other quarters. At different times, with the alms that he collected, and out of
+the revenues of his benefices, he ransomed no less then twelve hundred slaves
+from their captivity. At one time the French Consul at Tunis wrote to him that
+for a certain sum a large number might be set free, and he raised enough to
+release not only these, but seventy more, and he further wrought upon the King
+to obtain the consent of the Dey of Tunis that a party of Christian clergy
+should be permitted to reside in the consul's house, and to minister to the
+souls and bodies of the Christian slaves, of whom there were six thousand in
+Tunis alone, besides those in Algiers, Tangier, and Tripoli!</p>
+<p>Permission was gained, and a mission of Lazarist brothers arrived. This, too,
+was an order founded by Vincent, consisting of priestly nurses like the
+Hospitaliers, though not like them warriors. They came in the midst of a
+dreadful visitation of the plague, and nursed and tended the sick, both
+Christians and Mahometans, with fearless devotion, day and night, till they won
+the honor and love of the Moors themselves.</p>
+<p>The good Vincent de Paul died in the year 1660, but his brothers of St.
+Lazarus, and sisters of charity still tread in the paths he marked out for them,
+and his name scarcely needs the saintly epithet that his church as affixed to it
+to stand among the most honorable of charitable men.</p>
+<p>The cruel deeds of the African pirates were never wholly checked till 1816,
+when the united fleets of England and France destroyed the old den of corsairs
+at Algiers, which has since become a French colony.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE HOUSEWIVES OF LOWENBURG<br>
+1631</h3></center>
+
+<p>Brave deeds have been done by the burgher dames of some of the German cities
+collectively. Without being of the first class of Golden Deeds, there is
+something in the exploit of the dames of Weinsberg so quaint and so touching,
+that it cannot be omitted here.</p>
+<p>It was in the first commencement of the long contest known as the strife
+between the Guelfs and Ghibellines--before even these had become the party words
+for the Pope's and the Emperor's friends, and when they only applied to the
+troops of Bavaria and of Swabia--that, in 1141, Wolf, Duke of Bavaria, was
+besieged in his castle of Weinberg by Friedrich, Duke of Swabia, brother to the
+reigning emperor, Konrad III.</p>
+<p>The siege lasted long, but Wolf was obliged at last to offer to surrender;
+and the Emperor granted him permission to depart in safety. But his wife did not
+trust to this fair offer. She had reason to believe that Konrad had a peculiar
+enmity to her husband; and on his coming to take possession of the castle, she
+sent to him to entreat him to give her a safe conduct for herself and all the
+other women in the garrison, that they might come out with as much of their
+valuables as they could carry.</p>
+<p>This was freely granted, and presently the castle gates opened. From beneath
+them came the ladies--but in strange guise. No gold nor jewels were carried by
+them, but each one was bending under the weight of her husband, whom she thus
+hoped to secure from the vengeance of the Ghibellines. Konrad, who was really a
+generous and merciful man, is said to have been affected to tears by this
+extraordinary performance; he hastened to assure the ladies of the perfect
+safety of their lords, and that the gentlemen might dismount at once, secure
+both of life and freedom. He invited them all to a banquet, and made peace with
+the Duke of Bavaria on terms much more favorable to the Guelfs than the rest of
+his party had been willing to allow. The castle mount was thenceforth called no
+longer the Vine Hill, but the Hill of Weibertreue, or woman's fidelity. We will
+not invidiously translate it woman's truth, for there was in the transaction
+something of a subterfuge; and it must be owned that the ladies tried to the
+utmost the knightly respect for womankind.</p>
+<p>The good women of Lowenburg, who were but citizens' wives, seem to us more
+worthy of admiration for constancy to their faith, shown at a time when they had
+little to aid them. It was such constancy as makes martyrs; and though the trial
+stopped short of this, there is something in the homeliness of the whole scene,
+and the feminine form of passive resistance, that makes us so much honor and
+admire the good women that we cannot refrain from telling the story.</p>
+<p>It was in the year 1631, in the midst of the long Thirty Years' Was between
+Roman Catholics and Protestants, which finally decided that each state should
+have its own religion, Lowenburg, a city of Silesia, originally Protestant, had
+passed into the hands of the Emperor's Roman Catholic party. It was a fine old
+German city, standing amid woods and meadows, fortified with strong walls
+surrounded by a moat, and with gate towers to protect the entrance.</p>
+<p>In the centre was a large market-place, called the Ring, into which looked
+the Council-house and fourteen inns, or places of traffic, for the cloth that
+was woven in no less than 300 factories. The houses were of stone, with
+gradually projecting stories to the number of four or five, surmounted with
+pointed gables. The ground floors had once had trellised porches, but these had
+been found inconvenient and were removed, and the lower story consisted of a
+large hall, and strong vault, with a spacious room behind it containing a
+baking-oven, and a staircase leading to a wooden gallery, where the family used
+to dine. It seems they slept in the room below, though they had upstairs a
+handsome wainscoted apartment.</p>
+<p>Very rich and flourishing had the Lowenburgers always been, and their walls
+were quite sufficient to turn back any robber barons, or even any invading
+Poles; but things were different when firearms were in use, and the bands of
+mercenary soldiers had succeeded the feudal army. They were infinitely more
+formidable during the battle or siege from their discipline, and yet more
+dreadful after it for their want of discipline. The poor Lowneburgers had been
+greatly misused: their Lutheran pastors had been expelled; all the superior
+citizens had either fled or been imprisoned; 250 families spent the summer in
+the woods, and of those who remained in the city, the men had for the most part
+outwardly conformed to the Roman Catholic Church. Most of these were of course
+indifferent at heart, and they had found places in the town council which had
+formerly been filled by more respectable men. However, the wives had almost all
+remained staunch to their Lutheran confession; they had followed their pastors
+weeping to the gates of the city, loading them with gifts, and they hastened at
+every opportunity to hear their preachings, or obtain baptism for their children
+at the Lutheran churches in the neighborhood.</p>
+<p>The person who had the upper hand in the Council was one Julius, who had been
+a Franciscan friar, but was a desperate, unscrupulous fellow, not at all like a
+monk. Finding that it was considered as a reproach that the churches of
+Lowenburg were empty, he called the whole Council together on the 9th of April,
+1631, and informed them that the women must be brought to conformity, or else
+there were towers and prisons for them. The Burgomaster was ill in bed, but the
+Judge, one Elias Seiler, spoke up at once. 'If we have been able to bring the
+men into the right path, why should not we be able to deal with these little
+creatures?'</p>
+<p>Herr Mesnel, a cloth factor, who had been a widower six weeks, thought it
+would be hard to manage, though he quite agreed to the expedient, saying, 'It
+would be truly good if man and wife had one Creed and one Paternoster; as
+concerns the Ten Commandments it is not so pressing.' (A sentiment that he could
+hardly have wished to see put in practice.)</p>
+<p>Another councilor, called Schwob Franze, who had lost his wife a few days
+before, seems to have had an eye to the future, for he said it would be a pity
+to frighten away the many beautiful maidens and widows there were among the
+Lutheran women; but on the whole the men without wives were much bolder and more
+sanguine of success than the married ones. And no one would undertake to deal
+with his own wife privately, so it ended by a message being sent to the more
+distinguished ladies to attend the Council.</p>
+<p>But presently up came tidings that not merely these few dames, whom they
+might have hoped to overawe, were on their way, but that the Judge's wife and
+the Burgomaster's were the first pair in a procession of full 500 housewives,
+who were walking sedately up the stairs to the Council Hall below the chamber
+where the dignitaries were assembled. This was not by any means what had been
+expected, and the message was sent down that only the chief ladies should come
+up. 'No,' replied the Judge's wife, 'we will not allow ourselves to be
+separated,' and to this they were firm; they said, as one fared all should fare;
+and the Town Clerk, going up and down with smooth words, received no better
+answer than this from the Judge's wife, who, it must be confessed, was less
+ladylike in language than resolute in faith.</p>
+<p>'Nay, nay, dear friend, do you think we are so simple as not to perceive the
+trick by which you would force us poor women against our conscience to change
+our faith? My husband and the priest have not been consorting together all these
+days for nothing; they have been joined together almost day and night; assuredly
+they have either boiled or baked a devil, which they may eat up themselves. I
+shall not enter there! Where I remain, my train and following will remain also!
+Women, is this your will?'</p>
+<p>'Yea, yea, let it be so,' they said; 'we will all hold together as one man.'</p>
+<p>His honor the Town Clerk was much affrighted, and went hastily back,
+reporting that the Council was in no small danger, since each housewife had her
+bunch of keys at her side! These keys were the badge of a wife's dignity and
+authority, and moreover they were such ponderous articles that they sometimes
+served as weapons. A Scottish virago has been know to dash out the brains of a
+wounded enemy with her keys; and the intelligence that the good dames had come
+so well furnished, filled the Council with panic. Dr. Melchior Hubner, who had
+been a miller's man, wished for a hundred musketeers to mow them down; but the
+Town Clerk proposed that all the Council should creep quietly down the back
+stairs, lock the doors on the refractory womankind, and make their escape.</p>
+<p>This was effected as silently and quickly as possible, for the whole Council
+'could confess to a state of frightful terror.' Presently the women peeped out,
+and saw the stairs bestrewn with hats, gloves, and handkerchiefs; and perceiving
+how they had put all the wisdom and authority of the town to the rout, there was
+great merriment among them, though, finding themselves locked up, the more
+tenderhearted began to pity their husbands and children. As for themselves,
+their maids and children came round the Town Hall, to hand in provisions to
+them, and all the men who were not of the Council were seeking the magistrates
+to know what their wives had done to be thus locked up.</p>
+<p>The Judge sent to assemble the rest of the Council at his house; and though
+only four came, the doorkeeper ran to the Town Hall, and called out to his wife
+that the Council had reassembled, and they would soon be let out. To which,
+however, that very shrewd dame, the Judge's wife, answered with great composure,
+'Yea, we willingly have patience, as we are quite comfortable here; but tell
+them they ought to inform us why we are summoned and confined without trial.'</p>
+<p>She well knew how much better off she was than her husband without her. He
+paced about in great perturbation, and at last called for something to eat. The
+maid served up a dish of crab, some white bread, and butter; but, in his fury,
+he threw all the food about the room and out the window, away from the poor
+children, who had had nothing to eat all day, and at last he threw all the
+dishes and saucepans out of window. At last the Town Clerk and two others were
+sent to do their best to persuade the women that they had misunderstood--they
+were in no danger, and were only invited to the preachings of Holy Week: and, as
+Master Daniel, the joiner, added, 'It was only a friendly conference. It is not
+customary with my masters and the very wise Council to hang a man before they
+have caught him.'</p>
+<p>This opprobrious illustration raised a considerable clamor of abuse from the
+ruder women; but the Judge's and Burgomaster's ladies silenced them, and
+repeated their resolution never to give up their faith against their conscience.
+Seeing that no impression was made on them, and that nobody knew what to do
+without them at home, the magistracy decided that they should be released, and
+they went quietly home; but the Judge Seiler, either because he had been
+foremost in the business, or else perhaps because of the devastation he had made
+at home among the pots and pans, durst not meet his wife, but sneaked out of the
+town, and left her with the house to herself.</p>
+<p>The priest now tried getting the three chief ladies alone together, and most
+politely begged them to conform; but instead of arguing, they simply answered;
+'No; we were otherwise instructed by our parents and former preachers.'</p>
+<p>Then he begged them at least to tell the other women that they had asked for
+fourteen days for consideration.</p>
+<p>'No, dear sir,' they replied: 'we were not taught by our parents to tell
+falsehoods, and we will not learn it from you.'</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Schwob Franze rushed to the Burgomaster's bedside, and begged him,
+for Heaven's sake, to prevent the priest from meddling with the women; for the
+whole bevy, hearing that their three leaders were called before the priest, were
+collecting in the marketplace, keys, bundles, and all; and the panic of the
+worthy magistrates was renewed. The Burgomaster sent for the priest, and told
+him plainly, that if any harm befel him from the women, the fault would be his
+own; and thereupon he gave way, the ladies went quietly home, and their stout
+champions laid aside their bundles and keys--not out of reach, however, in case
+of another summons.</p>
+<p>However, the priest was obliged, next year, to leave Lowenburg in disgrace,
+for he was a man of notoriously bad character; and Dr. Melchior became a
+soldier, and was hanged at Prague.</p>
+<p>After all, such a confession as this is a mere trifle, not only compared with
+martyrdoms of old, but with the constancy with which, after the revocation of
+the Edict of Nantes, the Huguenots endured persecution--as, for instance, the
+large number of women who were imprisoned for thirty-eight years at Aigues
+Mortes; or again, with the steady resolution of the persecuted nuns of Port
+Royal against signing the condemnation of the works of Jansen. Yet, in its own
+way, the feminine resistance of these good citizens' wives, without being
+equally high-toned, is worthy of record, and far too full of character to be
+passed over.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>FATHERS AND SONS<br>
+219--1642--1798</h3></center>
+
+<p>One of the noblest characters in old Roman history is the first Scipio
+Africanus, and his first appearance is in a most pleasing light, at the battle
+of the River Ticinus, B.C. 219, when the Carthaginians, under Hannibal, had just
+completed their wonderful march across the Alps, and surprised the Romans in
+Italy itself.</p>
+<p>Young Scipio was then only seventeen years of age, and had gone to his first
+battle under the eagles of his father, the Consul, Publius Cornelius Scipio. It
+was an unfortunate battle; the Romans, when exhausted by long resistance to the
+Spanish horse in Hannibal's army, were taken in flank by the Numidian calvary,
+and entirely broken. The Consul rode in front of the few equites he could keep
+together, striving by voice and example to rally his forces, until he was
+pierced by one of the long Numidian javelins, and fell senseless from his horse.
+The Romans, thinking him dead, entirely gave way; but his young son would not
+leave him, and, lifting him on his horse, succeeded in bringing him safe into
+the camp, where he recovered, and his after days retrieved the honor of the
+Roman arms.</p>
+<p>The story of a brave and devoted son comes to us to light up the sadness of
+our civil wars between Cavaliers and Roundheads in the middle of the seventeenth
+century. It was soon after King Charles had raised his standard at Nottingham,
+and set forth on his march for London, that it became evident that the
+Parliamentary army, under the Earl of Essex, intended to intercept his march.
+The King himself was with the army, with his two boys, Charles and James; but
+the General-in-chief was Robert Bertie, Earl of Lindsay, a brave and experienced
+old soldier, sixty years of age, godson to Queen Elizabeth, and to her two
+favorite Earls, whose Christian name he bore. He had been in her Essex's
+expedition to Cambridge, and had afterwards served in the Low Countries, under
+Prince Maurice of Nassau; for the long Continental wars had throughout King
+James' peaceful reign been treated by the English nobility as schools of arms,
+and a few campaigns were considered as a graceful finish to a gentleman's
+education. As soon as Lord Lindsay had begun to fear that the disputes between
+the King and Parliament must end in war, he had begun to exercise and train his
+tenantry in Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire, of whom he had formed a regiment
+of infantry. With him was his son Montagu Bertie, Lord Willoughby, a
+noble-looking man of thirty-two, of whom it was said, that he was 'as excellent
+in reality as others in pretence,' and that, thinking 'that the cross was an
+ornament to the crown, and much more to the coronet, he satisfied not himself
+with the mere exercise of virtue, but sublimated it, and made it grace.' He had
+likewise seen some service against the Spaniards in the Netherlands, and after
+his return had been made a captain in the Lifeguards, and a Gentleman of the
+Bedchamber. Vandyke has left portraits of the father and the son; the one a
+bald-headed, alert, precise-looking old warrior, with the cuirass and gauntlets
+of elder warfare; the other, the very model of a cavalier, tall, easy, and
+graceful, with a gentle reflecting face, and wearing the long lovelocks and deep
+point lace collar and cuffs characteristic of Queen Henrietta's Court. Lindsay
+was called General-in-chief, but the King had imprudently exempted the cavalry
+from his command, its general, Prince Rupert of the Rhine, taking orders only
+from himself. Rupert was only three-and-twenty, and his education in the wild
+school of the Thirty Years' War had not taught him to lay aside his arrogance
+and opinionativeness; indeed, he had shown great petulance at receiving orders
+from the King through Lord Falkland.</p>
+<p>At eight o'clock, on the morning of the 23rd of October, King Charles was
+riding along the ridge of Edgehill, and looking down into the Vale of Red Horse,
+a fair meadow land, here and there broken by hedges and copses. His troops were
+mustering around him, and in the valley he could see with his telescope the
+various Parliamentary regiments, as they poured out of the town of Keinton, and
+took up their positions in three lines. 'I never saw the rebels in a body
+before,' he said, as he gazed sadly at the subjects arrayed against him. 'I
+shall give them battle. God, and the prayers of good men to Him, assist the
+justice of my cause.' The whole of his forces, about 11,000 in number, were not
+assembled till two o'clock in the afternoon, for the gentlemen who had become
+officers found it no easy matter to call their farmers and retainers together,
+and marshal them into any sort of order. But while one troop after another came
+trampling, clanking, and shouting in, trying to find and take their proper
+place, there were hot words round the royal standard.</p>
+<p>Lord Lindsay, who was an old comrade of the Earl of Essex, the commander of
+the rebel forces, knew that he would follow the tactics they had both together
+studied in Holland, little thinking that one day they should be arrayed one
+against the other in their own native England. He had a high opinion of Essex's
+generalship, and insisted that the situation of the Royal army required the
+utmost caution. Rupert, on the other hand, had seen the swift fiery charges of
+the fierce troopers of the Thirty Years' war, and was backed up by Patrick, Lord
+Ruthven, one of the many Scots who had won honor under the great Swedish King,
+Gustavus Adolphus. A sudden charge of the Royal horse would, Rupert argued,
+sweep the Roundheads from the field, and the foot would have nothing to do but
+to follow up the victory. The great portrait at Windsor shows us exactly how the
+King must have stood, with his charger by his side, and his grave, melancholy
+face, sad enough at having to fight at all with his subjects, and never having
+seen a battle, entirely bewildered between the ardent words of his spirited
+nephew and the grave replies of the well-seasoned old Earl. At last, as time
+went on, and some decision was necessary, the perplexed King, willing at least
+not to irritate Rupert, desired that Ruthven should array the troops in the
+Swedish fashion.</p>
+<p>It was a greater affront to the General-in-chief than the king was likely to
+understand, but it could not shake the old soldier's loyalty. He gravely
+resigned the empty title of General, which only made confusion worse confounded,
+and rode away to act as colonel of his own Lincoln regiment, pitying his
+master's perplexity, and resolved that no private pique should hinder him from
+doing his duty. His regiment was of foot soldiers, and was just opposite to the
+standard of the Earl of Essex.</p>
+<p>The church bell was ringing for afternoon service when the Royal forces
+marched down the hill. The last hurried prayer before the charge was stout old
+Sir Jacob Astley's, 'O Lord, Thou knowest how busy I must be this day; if I
+forget Thee, do not Thou forget me;' then, rising, he said, 'March on, boys.'
+And, amid prayer and exhortation, the other side awaited the shock, as men whom
+a strong and deeply embittered sense of wrong had roused to take up arms. Prince
+Rupert's charge was, however, fully successful. No one even waited to cross
+swords with his troopers, but all the Roundhead horse galloped headlong off the
+field, hotly pursued by the Royalists. But the main body of the army stood firm,
+and for some time the battle was nearly equal, until a large troop of the
+enemy's cavalry who had been kept in reserve, wheeled round and fell upon the
+Royal forces just when their scanty supply of ammunition was exhausted.</p>
+<p>Step by step, however, they retreated bravely, and Rupert, who had returned
+from his charge, sought in vain to collect his scattered troopers, so as to fall
+again on the rebels; but some were plundering, some chasing the enemy, and none
+could be got together. Lord Lindsay was shot through the thigh bone, and fell.
+He was instantly surrounded by the rebels on horseback; but his son, Lord
+Willoughby, seeing his danger, flung himself alone among the enemy, and forcing
+his way forward, raised his father in his arms thinking of nothing else, and
+unheeding his own peril. The throng of enemy around called to him to surrender,
+and, hastily giving up his sword, he carried the Earl into the nearest shed, and
+laid him on a heap of straw, vainly striving to staunch the blood. It was a
+bitterly cold night, and the frosty wind came howling through the darkness. Far
+above, on the ridge of the hill, the fires of the King's army shone with red
+light, and some way off on the other side twinkled those of the Parliamentary
+forces. Glimmering lanterns or torches moved about the battlefield, those of the
+savage plunderers who crept about to despoil the dead. Whether the battle were
+won or lost, the father and son knew not, and the guard who watched them knew as
+little. Lord Lindsay himself murmured, 'If it please God I should survive, I
+never will fight in the same field with boys again!'--no doubt deeming that
+young Rupert had wrought all the mischief. His thoughts were all on the cause,
+his son's all on him; and piteous was that night, as the blood continued to
+flow, and nothing availed to check it, nor was any aid near to restore the old
+man's ebbing strength.</p>
+<p>Toward midnight the Earl's old comrade Essex had time to understand his
+condition, and sent some officers to enquire for him, and promise speedy
+surgical attendance. Lindsay was still full of spirit, and spoke to them so
+strongly of their broken faith, and of the sin of disloyalty and rebellion, that
+they slunk away one by one out of the hut, and dissuaded Essex from coming
+himself to see his old friend, as he had intended. The surgeon, however,
+arrived, but too late, Lindsay was already so much exhausted by cold and loss of
+blood, that he died early in the morning of the 24th, all his son's gallant
+devotion having failed to save him.</p>
+<p>The sorrowing son received an affectionate note the next day from the King,
+full of regret for his father and esteem for himself. Charles made every effort
+to obtain his exchange, but could not succeed for a whole year. He was
+afterwards one of the four noblemen who, seven years later, followed the King's
+white, silent, snowy funeral in the dismantled St. George's Chapel; and from
+first to last he was one of the bravest, purest, and most devoted of those who
+did honor to the Cavalier cause.</p>
+<p>We have still another brave son to describe, and for him we must return away
+from these sad pages of our history, when we were a house divided against
+itself, to one of the hours of our brightest glory, when the cause we fought in
+was the cause of all the oppressed, and nearly alone we upheld the rights of
+oppressed countries against the invader. And thus it is that the battle of the
+Nile is one of the exploits to which we look back with the greatest exultation,
+when we think of the triumph of the British flag.</p>
+<p>Let us think of all that was at stake. Napoleon Bonaparte was climbing to
+power in France, by directing her successful arms against the world. He had
+beaten Germany and conquered Italy; he had threatened England, and his dream was
+of the conquest of the East. Like another Alexander, he hoped to subdue Asia,
+and overthrow the hated British power by depriving it of India. Hitherto, his
+dreams had become earnest by the force of his marvelous genius, and by the ardor
+which he breathed into the whole French nation; and when he set sail from
+Toulon, with 40,000 tried and victorious soldiers and a magnificent fleet, all
+were filled with vague and unbounded expectations of almost fabulous glories. He
+swept away as it were the degenerate Knights of St. john from their rock of
+Malta, and sailed for Alexandria in Egypt, in the latter end of June, 1798.</p>
+<p>His intentions had not become known, and the English Mediterranean fleet was
+watching the course of this great armament. Sir Horatio Nelson was in pursuit,
+with the English vessels, and wrote to the First Lord of the Admiralty: 'Be they
+bound to the Antipodes, your lordship may rely that I will not lose a moment in
+bringing them to action.'</p>
+<p>Nelson had, however, not ships enough to be detached to reconnoitre, and he
+actually overpassed the French, whom he guessed to be on the way to Egypt; he
+arrived at the port of Alexandria on the 28th of June, and saw its blue waters
+and flat coast lying still in their sunny torpor, as if no enemy were on the
+seas. Back he went to Syracuse, but could learn no more there; he obtained
+provisions with some difficulty, and then, in great anxiety, sailed for Greece;
+where at last, on the 28th of July, he learnt that the French fleet had been
+seen from Candia, steering to the southeast, and about four weeks since. In
+fact, it had actually passed by him in a thick haze, which concealed each fleet
+from the other, and had arrived at Alexandria on the 1st of July, three days
+after he had left it!</p>
+<p>Every sail was set for the south, and at four o'clock in the afternoon of the
+1st of August a very different sight was seen in Aboukir Bay, so solitary a
+month ago. It was crowded with shipping. Great castle-like men-of-war rose with
+all their proud calm dignity out of the water, their dark port-holes opening in
+the white bands on their sides, and the tricolored flag floating as their
+ensign. There were thirteen ships of the line and four frigates, and, of these,
+three were 80-gun ships, and one, towering high above the rest, with her three
+decks, was L'Orient, of 120 guns. Look well at her, for there stands the hero
+for whose sake we have chose this and no other of Nelson's glorious fights to
+place among the setting of our Golden Deeds. There he is, a little cadet de
+vaisseau, as the French call a midshipman, only ten years old, with a heart
+swelling between awe and exultation at the prospect of his first battle; but,
+fearless and glad, for is he not the son of the brave Casabianca, the
+flag-captain? And is not this Admiral Brueys' own ship, looking down in scorn on
+the fourteen little English ships, not one carrying more than 74 guns, and one
+only 50?</p>
+<p>Why Napoleon had kept the fleet there was never known. In his usual mean way
+of disavowing whatever turned out ill, he laid the blame upon Admiral Brueys;
+but, though dead men could not tell tales, his papers made it plain that the
+ships had remained in obedience to commands, though they had not been able to
+enter the harbour of Alexandria. Large rewards had been offered to any pilot who
+would take them in, but none could be found who would venture to steer into that
+port a vessel drawing more than twenty feet of water. They had, therefore,
+remained at anchor outside, in Aboukir Bay, drawn up in a curve along the
+deepest of the water, with no room to pass them at either end, so that the
+commissary of the fleet reported that they could bid defiance to a force more
+than double their number. The admiral believed that Nelson had not ventured to
+attack him when they had passed by one another a month before, and when the
+English fleet was signaled, he still supposed that it was too late in the day
+for an attack to be made.</p>
+<p>Nelson had, however, no sooner learnt that the French were in sight than he
+signaled from his ship, the Vanguard, that preparations for battle should be
+made, and in the meantime summoned up his captains to receive his orders during
+a hurried meal. He explained that, where there was room for a large French ship
+to swing, there was room for a small English one to anchor, and, therefore, he
+designed to bring his ships up to the outer part of the French line, and station
+them close below their adversary; a plan that he said Lord Hood had once
+designed, though he had not carried it out.</p>
+<p>Captain Berry was delighted, and exclaimed, 'If we succeed, what will the
+world say?'</p>
+<p>'There is no if in the case,' returned Nelson, 'that we shall succeed is
+certain. Who may live to tell the tale is a very different question.'</p>
+<p>And when they rose and parted, he said, 'before this time to-morrow I shall
+have gained a peerage or Westminster Abbey.'</p>
+<p>In the fleet went, through a fierce storm of shot and shell from a French
+battery in an island in advance. Nelson's own ship, the Vanguard, was the first
+to anchor within half-pistol-shot of the third French ship, the Spartiate. The
+Vanguard had six colours flying, in any case any should be shot away; and such
+was the fire that was directed on her, that in a few minutes every man at the
+six guns in her forepart was killed or wounded, and this happened three times.
+Nelson himself received a wound in the head, which was thought at first to be
+mortal, but which proved but slight. He would not allow the surgeon to leave the
+sailors to attend to him till it came to his turn.</p>
+<p>Meantime his ships were doing their work gloriously. The Bellerophon was,
+indeed, overpowered by L'Orient, 200 of her crew killed, and all her masts and
+cables shot away, so that she drifted away as night came on; but the Swiftsure
+came up in her place, and the Alexander and Leander both poured in their shot.
+Admiral Brueys received three wounds, but would not quit his post, and at length
+a fourth shot almost cut him in two. He desired not to be carried below, but
+that he might die on deck.</p>
+<p>About nine o'clock the ship took fire, and blazed up with fearful brightness,
+lighting up the whole bay, and showing five French ships with their colours
+hauled down, the others still fighting on. Nelson himself rose and came on deck
+when this fearful glow came shining from sea and sky into his cabin; and gave
+orders that the English boars should immediately be put off for L'Orient, to
+save as many lives as possible.</p>
+<p>The English sailors rowed up to the burning ship which they had lately been
+attacking. The French officers listened to the offer of safety, and called to
+the little favorite of the ship, the captain's son, to come with them. 'No,'
+said the brave child, 'he was where his father had stationed him, and bidden him
+not to move save at his call.' They told him his father's voice would never call
+him again, for he lay senseless and mortally wounded on the deck, and that the
+ship must blow up. 'No,' said the brave child, 'he must obey his father.' The
+moment allowed no delaythe boat put off. The flames showed all that passed in a
+quivering flare more intense than daylight, and the little fellow was then seen
+on the deck, leaning over the prostrate figure, and presently tying it to one of
+the spars of the shivered masts.</p>
+<p>Just then a thundering explosion shook down to the very hold every ship in
+the harbour, and burning fragments of L'Orient came falling far and wide,
+plashing heavily into the water, in the dead, awful stillness that followed the
+fearful sound. English boats were plying busily about, picking up those who had
+leapt overboard in time. Some were dragged in through the lower portholes of the
+English ships, and about seventy were saved altogether. For one moment a boat's
+crew had a sight of a helpless figure bound to a spar, and guided by a little
+childish swimmer, who must have gone overboard with his precious freight just
+before the explosion. They rowed after the brave little fellow, earnestly
+desiring to save him; but in darkness, in smoke, in lurid uncertain light, amid
+hosts of drowning wretches, they lost sight of him again.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The boy, oh where was he!<br>
+Ask of the winds that far around<br>
+With fragments strewed the sea;<br>
+With mast and helm, and pennant fair<br>
+That well had borne their part:<br>
+But the noblest thing that perished there<br>
+Was that young faithful heart!</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>By sunrise the victory was complete. Nay, as Nelson said, 'It was not a
+victory, but a conquest.' Only four French ships escaped, and Napoleon and his
+army were cut off from home. These are the glories of our navy, gained by men
+with hearts as true and obedient as that of the brave child they had tried in
+vain to save. Yet still, while giving the full meed of thankful, sympathetic
+honor to our noble sailors, we cannot but feel that the Golden Deed of Aboukir
+Bay fell to--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'That young faithful heart.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE SOLDIERS IN THE SNOW<br>
+1672</h3></center>
+
+<p>Few generals had ever been more loved by their soldiers than the great
+Viscount de Turenne, who was Marshal of France in the time of Louis XIV. Troops
+are always proud of a leader who wins victories; but Turenne was far more loved
+for his generous kindness than for his successes. If he gained a battle, he
+always wrote in his despatches, 'We succeeded,' so as to give the credit to the
+rest of the army; but if he were defeated, he wrote, 'I lost,' so as to take all
+the blame upon himself. He always shared as much as possible in every hardship
+suffered by his men, and they trusted him entirely. In the year 1672, Turenne
+and his army were sent to make war upon the Elector Frederick William of
+Brandenburg, in Northern Germany. It was in the depth of winter, and the marches
+through the heavy roads were very trying and wearisome; but the soldiers endured
+all cheerfully for his sake. Once when they were wading though a deep morass,
+some of the younger soldiers complained; but the elder ones answered, 'Depend
+upon it, Turenne is more concerned than we are. At this moment he is thinking
+how to deliver us. He watches for us while we sleep. He is our father. It is
+plain that you are but young.'</p>
+<p>Another night, when he was going the round of the camp, he overheard some of
+the younger men murmuring at the discomforts of the march; when an old soldier,
+newly recovered from a severe wound, said: 'You do not know our father. He would
+not have made us go through such fatigue, unless he had some great end in view,
+which we cannot yet make out.' Turenne always declared that nothing had ever
+given him more pleasure than this conversation.</p>
+<p>There was a severe sickness among the troops, and he went about among the
+sufferers, comforting them, and seeing that their wants were supplied. When he
+passed by, the soldiers came out of their tents to look at him, and say, 'Our
+father is in good health: we have nothing to fear.'</p>
+<p>The army had to enter the principality of Halberstadt, the way to which lay
+over ridges of high hills with narrow defiles between them. Considerable time
+was required for the whole of the troops to march through a single narrow
+outlet; and one very cold day, when such a passage was taking place, the
+Marshal, quite spent with fatigue, sat down under a bush to wait till all had
+marched by, and fell asleep. When he awoke, it was snowing fast; but he found
+himself under a sort of tent made of soldiers' cloaks, hung up upon the branches
+of trees planted in the ground, and round it were standing, in the cold and
+snow, all unsheltered, a party of soldiers. Turenne called out to them, to ask
+what they were doing there. 'We are taking care of our father,' they said; 'that
+is our chief concern.' The general, to keep up discipline, seems to have scolded
+them a little for straggling from their regiment; but he was much affected and
+gratified by this sight of their hearty love for him.</p>
+<p>Still greater and more devoted love was shown by some German soldiers in the
+terrible winter of 1812. It was when the Emperor Napoleon I. had made his vain
+attempt to conquer Russia, and had been prevented from spending the winter at
+Moscow by the great fire that consumed all the city. He was obliged to retreat
+through the snow, with the Russian army pursuing him, and his miserable troops
+suffering horrors beyond all imagination. Among them were many Italians, Poles,
+and Germans, whom he had obliged to become his allies; and the 'Golden Deed' of
+ten of these German soldiers, the last remnant of those led from Hesse Darmstadt
+by their gallant young Prince Emilius, is best told in Lord Houghton's verses:--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'From Hessen Darmstadt every step to Moskwa's blazing banks,<br>
+Was Prince Emilius found in flight before the foremost ranks;<br>
+And when upon the icy waste that host was backward cast,<br>
+On Beresina's bloody bridge his banner waved the last.<br>
+'His valor shed victorious grace on all that dread retreat--<br>
+That path across the wildering snow, athwart the blinding sleet;<br>
+And every follower of his sword could all endure and dare,<br>
+Becoming warriors, strong in hope, or stronger in despair.<br>
+'Now, day and dark, along the storm the demon Cossacks sweep--<br>
+The hungriest must not look for food, the weariest must not sleep.<br>
+No rest but death for horse or man, whichever first shall tire;<br>
+They see the flames destroy, but ne'er may feel the saving fire.<br>
+'Thus never closed the bitter night, nor rose the salvage morn,<br>
+But from the gallant company some noble part was shorn;<br>
+And, sick at heart, the Prince resolved to keep his purposed way<br>
+With steadfast forward looks, nor count the losses of the day.<br>
+'At length beside a black, burnt hut, an island of the snow,<br>
+Each head in frigid torpor bent toward the saddle bow;<br>
+They paused, and of that sturdy troop--that thousand banded men--<br>
+At one unmeditated glance he numbered only ten!<br>
+'Of all that high triumphant life that left his German home--<br>
+Of all those hearts that beat beloved, or looked for love to come--<br>
+This piteous remnant, hardly saved, his spirit overcame,<br>
+While memory raised each friendly face, recalled an ancient name.<br>
+'These were his words, serene and firm, 'Dear brothers, it is best<br>
+That here, with perfect trust in Heaven, we give our bodies rest;<br>
+If we have borne, like faithful men, our part of toil and pain,<br>
+Where'er we wake, for Christ's good sake, we shall not sleep in vain.'<br>
+'Some uttered, others looked assent--they had no heart to speak;<br>
+Dumb hands were pressed, the pallid lip approached the callous cheek.<br>
+They laid them side by side; and death to him at last did seem<br>
+To come attired in mazy robe of variegated dream.<br>
+'Once more he floated on the breast of old familiar Rhine,<br>
+His mother's and one other smile above him seemed to shine;<br>
+A blessed dew of healing fell on every aching limb;<br>
+Till the stream broadened, and the air thickened, and all was dim.<br>
+'Nature has bent to other laws if that tremendous night<br>
+Passed o'er his frame, exposed and worn, and left no deadly blight;<br>
+Then wonder not that when, refresh'd and warm, he woke at last,<br>
+There lay a boundless gulf of thought between him and the past.<br>
+'Soon raising his astonished head, he found himself alone,<br>
+Sheltered beneath a genial heap of vestments not his own;<br>
+The light increased, the solemn truth revealing more and more,<br>
+The soldiers' corses, self-despoiled, closed up the narrow door.<br>
+'That every hour, fulfilling good, miraculous succor came,<br>
+And Prince Emilius lived to give this worthy deed to fame.<br>
+O brave fidelity in death! O strength of loving will!<br>
+These are the holy balsam drops that woeful wars distil.'</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>GUNPOWDER PERILS<br>
+1700</h3></center>
+
+<p>The wild history of Ireland contains many a frightful tale, but also many an
+action of the noblest order; and the short sketch given by Maria Edgeworth of
+her ancestry, presents such a chequerwork of the gold and the lead that it is
+almost impossible to separate them.</p>
+<p>At the time of the great Irish rebellion of 1641 the head of the Edgeworth
+family had left his English wife and her infant son at his castle of Cranallagh
+in county Longford, thinking them safe there while he joined the royal forces
+under the Earl of Ormond. In his absence, however, the rebels attacked the
+castle at night, set fire to it, and dragged the lady out absolutely naked. She
+hid herself under a furze bush, and succeeded in escaping and reaching Dublin,
+whence she made her way to her father's house in Derbyshire. Her little son was
+found by the rebels lying in his cradle, and one of them actually seized the
+child by the leg and was about to dash out his brains against the wall; but a
+servant named Bryan Ferral, pretending to be even more ferocious, vowed that a
+sudden death was too good for the little heretic, and that he should be plunged
+up to the throat in a bog-hole and left for the crows to pick out his eyes. He
+actually did place the poor child in the bog, but only to save his life; he
+returned as soon as he could elude his comrades, put the boy into a pannier
+below eggs and chickens, and thus carried him straight though the rebel camp to
+his mother at Dublin. Strange to say, these rebels, who thought being dashed
+against the wall too good a fate for the infant, extinguished the flames of the
+castle out of reverence for the picture of his grandmother, who had been a Roman
+Catholic, and was painted on a panel with a cross on her bosom and a rosary in
+her hand.</p>
+<p>John Edgeworth, the boy thus saved, married very young, and went with his
+wife to see London after the Restoration. To pay their expenses they mortgaged
+an estate and put the money in a stocking, which they kept on the top of the
+bed; and when that store was used up, the young man actually sold a house in
+Dublin to buy a high-crowned hat and feathers. Still, reckless and improvident
+as they were, there was sound principle within them, and though they were great
+favorites, and Charles II. insisted on knighting the husband, their glimpse of
+the real evils and temptations of his Court sufficed them, and in the full tide
+of flattery and admiration the lady begged to return home, nor did she ever go
+back to Court again.</p>
+<p>Her home was at Castle Lissard, in full view of which was a hillock called
+Fairymount, or Firmont, from being supposed to be the haunt of fairies. Lights,
+noises, and singing at night, clearly discerned from the castle, caused much
+terror to Lady Edgeworth, though her descendants affirm that they were fairies
+of the same genus as those who beset Sir John Falstaff at Hearne's oak, and
+intended to frighten her into leaving the place. However, though her nerves
+might be disturbed, her spirit was not to be daunted; and, fairies or no
+fairies, she held her ground at Castle Lissard, and there showed what manner of
+woman she was in a veritable and most fearful peril.</p>
+<p>On some alarm which caused the gentlemen of the family to take down their
+guns, she went to a dark loft at the top of the house to fetch some powder from
+a barrel that was there kept in store, taking a young maid-servant to carry the
+candle; which, as might be expected in an Irish household of the seventeenth
+century, was devoid of any candlestick. After taking the needful amount of
+gunpowder, Lady Edgeworth locked the door, and was halfway downstairs when she
+missed the candle, and asking the girl what she had done with it, received the
+cool answer that 'she had left it sticking in the barrel of black salt'. Lady
+Edgeworth bade her stand still, turned round, went back alone to the loft where
+the tallow candle stood guttering and flaring planted in the middle of the
+gunpowder, resolutely put an untrembling hand beneath it, took it out so
+steadily that no spark fell, carried it down, and when she came to the bottom of
+the stairs dropped on her knees, and broke forth in a thanksgiving aloud for the
+safety of the household in this frightful peril. This high-spirited lady lived
+to be ninety years old, and left a numerous family. One grandson was the Abbe
+Edgeworth, known in France as De Firmont, such being the alteration of
+Fairymount on French lips. It was he who, at the peril of his own life, attended
+Louis XVI. to the guillotine, and thus connected his name so closely with the
+royal cause that when his cousin Richard Lovell Edgeworth, of Edgeworths-town,
+visited France several years after, the presence of a person so called was
+deemed perilous to the rising power of Napoleon. This latter Mr. Edgeworth was
+the father of Maria, whose works we hope are well known to our young readers.</p>
+<p>The good Chevalier Bayard was wont to mourn over the introduction of
+firearms, as destructive of chivalry; and certainly the steel-clad knight, with
+barbed steed, and sword and lance, has disappeared from the battle-field; but
+his most essential qualities, truth, honor, faithfulness, mercy, and
+self-devotion, have not disappeared with him, nor can they as long as Christian
+men and women bear in mind that 'greater love hath no man than this, that he lay
+down his life for his friend'.</p>
+<p>And that terrible compound, gunpowder, has been the occasion of many another
+daring deed, requiring desperate resolution, to save others at the expense of a
+death perhaps more frightful to the imagination than any other. Listen to a
+story of the King's birthday in Jersey 'sixty years since'--in 1804, when that
+4th of June that Eton boys delight in, was already in the forty-fourth year of
+its observance in honor of the then reigning monarch, George III.</p>
+<p>All the forts in the island had done due honor to the birthday of His
+Majesty, who was then just recovered from an attack of insanity. In each the
+guns at noon-day thundered out their royal salute, the flashes had answered one
+another, and the smoke had wreathed itself away over the blue sea of Jersey. The
+new fort on the hill just above the town of St. Heliers had contributed its
+share to the loyal thunders, and then it was shut up, and the keys carried away
+by Captain Salmon, the artillery officer on guard there, locking up therein 209
+barrels of gunpowder, with a large supply of bombshells, and every kind of
+ammunition such as might well be needed in the Channel islands the year before
+Lord Nelson had freed England from the chance of finding the whole French army
+on our coast in the flat-bottomed boats that were waiting at Boulogne for the
+dark night that never came.</p>
+<p>At six o'clock in the evening, Captain Salmon went to dine with the other
+officers in St. Heliers and to drink the King's health, when the soldiers on
+guard beheld a cloud of smoke curling out at the air-hole at the end of the
+magazine. Shouting 'fire', they ran away to avoid an explosion that would have
+shattered them to pieces, and might perhaps endanger the entire town of St.
+Heliers. Happily their shout was heard by a man of different mould. Lieutenant
+Lys, the signal officer, was in the watch-house on the hill, and coming out he
+saw the smoke, and perceived the danger. Two brothers, named Thomas and Edward
+Touzel, carpenters, and the sons of an old widow, had come up to take down a
+flagstaff that had been raised in honor of the day, and Mr. Lys ordered them to
+hasten to the town to inform the commander-in-chief, and get the keys from
+Captain Salmon.</p>
+<p>Thomas went, and endeavored to persuade his brother to accompany him from the
+heart of the danger; but Edward replied that he must die some day or other, and
+that he would do his best to save the magazine, and he tried to stop some of the
+runaway soldiers to assist. One refused; but another, William Ponteney, of the
+3rd, replied that he was ready to die with him, and they shook hands.</p>
+<p>Edward Touzel then, by the help of a wooden bar and an axe, broke open the
+door of the fort, and making his way into it, saw the state of the case, and
+shouted to Mr. Lys on the outside, 'the magazine is on fire, it will blow up, we
+must lose our lives; but no matter, huzza for the King! We must try and save
+it.' He then rushed into the flame, and seizing the matches, which were almost
+burnt out (probably splinters of wood tipped with brimstone), he threw them by
+armfuls to Mr. Lys and the soldier Ponteney, who stood outside and received
+them. Mr. Lys saw a cask of water near at hand; but there was nothing to carry
+the water in but an earthen pitcher, his own hat and the soldier's. These,
+however, they filled again and again, and handed to Touzel, who thus
+extinguished all the fire he could see; but the smoke was so dense, that he
+worked in horrible doubt and obscurity, almost suffocated, and with his face and
+hands already scorched. The beams over his head were on fire, large cases
+containing powder horns had already caught, and an open barrel of gunpowder was
+close by, only awaiting the fall of a single brand to burst into a fatal
+explosion. Touzel called out to entreat for some drink to enable him to endure
+the stifling, and Mr. Lys handed him some spirits-and-water, which he drank, and
+worked on; but by this time the officers had heard the alarm, dispelled the
+panic among the soldiers, and come to the rescue. The magazine was completely
+emptied, and the last smoldering sparks extinguished; but the whole of the
+garrison and citizens felt that they owed their lives to the three gallant men
+to whose exertions alone under Providence, it was owing that succor did not come
+too late. Most of all was honor due to Edward Touzel, who, as a civilian, might
+have turned his back upon the peril without any blame; nay, could even have
+pleaded Mr. Lys' message as a duty, but who had instead rushed foremost into
+what he believe was certain death.</p>
+<p>A meeting was held in the church of St. Heliers to consider of a testimonial
+of gratitude to these three brave men (it is to be hoped that thankfulness to an
+overruling Providence was also manifested there), when 500l. was voted to Mr.
+Lys, who was the father of a large family; 300l. to Edward Touzel; and William
+Ponteney received, at his own request, a life annuity of 20l. and a gold medal,
+as he declared that he had rather continue to serve the King as a soldier than
+be placed in any other course of life.</p>
+<p>In that same year (1804) the same daring endurance and heroism were evinced
+by the officers of H.M.S. Hindostan, where, when on the way from Gibraltar to
+join Nelson's fleet at Toulon, the cry of 'Fire!' was heard, and dense smoke
+rose from the lower decks, so as to render it nearly impossible to detect the
+situation of the fire. Again and again Lieutenants Tailour and Banks descended,
+and fell down senseless from the stifling smoke; then were carried on deck,
+recovered in the free air, and returned to vain endeavor of clearing the
+powder-room. But no man could long preserve his faculties in the poisonous
+atmosphere, and the two lieutenants might be said to have many deaths from it.
+At last the fire gained so much head, that it was impossible to save the vessel,
+which had in the meantime been brought into the Bay of Rosas, and was near
+enough to land to enable the crew to escape in boats, after having endured the
+fire six hours. Nelson himself wrote: 'The preservation of the crew seems little
+short of a miracle. I never read such a journal of exertions in my life.'</p>
+<p>Eight years after, on the taking of Ciudad Rodrigo, in 1812, by the British
+army under Wellington, Captain William Jones, of the 52nd Regiment, having
+captured a French officer, employed his prisoner in pointing out quarters for
+his men. The Frenchman could not speak English, and Captain Jones--a fiery
+Welshman, whom it was the fashion in the regiment to term 'Jack Jones'--knew no
+French; but dumb show supplied the want of language, and some of the company
+were lodged in a large store pointed out by the Frenchman, who then led the way
+to a church, near which Lord Wellington and his staff were standing. But no
+sooner had the guide stepped into the building than he started back, crying,
+'Sacre bleu!' and ran out in the utmost alarm. The Welsh captain, however, went
+on, and perceived that the church had been used as a powder-magazine by the
+French; barrels were standing round, samples of their contents lay loosely
+scattered on the pavement, and in the midst was a fire, probably lighted by some
+Portuguese soldiers. Forthwith Captain Jones and the sergeant entered the
+church, took up the burning embers brand by brand, bore them safe over the
+scattered powder, and out of the church, and thus averted what might have been
+the most terrific disaster that could have befallen our army. [Footnote: The
+story has been told with some variation, as to whether it was the embers or a
+barrel of powder that he and the sergeant removed. In the Record of the 52d it
+is said to have been the latter; but the tradition the author has received from
+officers of the regiment distinctly stated that it was the burning brands, and
+that the scene was a reserve magazine--not, as in the brief mention in Sir
+William Napier's History, the great magazine of the town.]</p>
+<p>Our next story of this kind relates to a French officer, Monsieur Mathieu
+Martinel, adjutant of the 1st Cuirassiers. In 1820 there was a fire in the
+barracks at Strasburg, and nine soldiers were lying sick and helpless above a
+room containing a barrel of gunpowder and a thousand cartridges. Everyone was
+escaping, but Martinel persuaded a few men to return into the barracks with him,
+and hurried up the stairs through smoke and flame that turned back his
+companions. He came alone to the door of a room close to that which contained
+the powder, but found it locked. Catching up a bench, he beat the door in, and
+was met by such a burst of fire as had almost driven him away; but, just as he
+was about to descend, he thought that, when the flames reached the powder, the
+nine sick men must infallibly be blown up, and returning to the charge, he
+dashed forward, with eyes shut, through the midst, and with face, hands, hair,
+and clothes singed and burnt, he made his way to the magazine, in time to tear
+away, and throw to a distance from the powder, the mass of paper in which the
+cartridges were packed, which was just about to ignite, and appearing at the
+window, with loud shouts for water, thus showed the possibility of penetrating
+to the magazine, and floods of water were at once directed to it, so as to
+drench the powder, and thus save the men.</p>
+<p>This same Martinel had shortly before thrown himself into the River Ill,
+without waiting to undress, to rescue a soldier who had fallen in, so near a
+water mill, that there was hardly a chance of life for either. Swimming straight
+towards the mill dam, Martinel grasped the post of the sluice with one arm, and
+with the other tried to arrest the course of the drowning man, who was borne by
+a rapid current towards the mill wheel; and was already so far beneath the
+surface, that Martinel could not reach him without letting go of the post.
+Grasping the inanimate body, he actually allowed himself to be carried under the
+mill wheel, without loosing his hold, and came up immediately after on the other
+side, still able to bring the man to land, in time for his suspended animation
+to be restored.</p>
+<p>Seventeen years afterwards, when the regiment was at Paris, there was, on the
+night of the 14th of June, 1837, during the illuminations at the wedding
+festival of the Duke and Duchess of Orleans, one of those frightful crushes that
+sometimes occur in an ill-regulated crowd, when there is some obstruction in the
+way, and there is nothing but a horrible blind struggling and trampling, violent
+and fatal because of its very helplessness and bewilderment. The crowd were
+trying to leave the Champ de Mars, where great numbers had been witnessing some
+magnificent fireworks, and had blocked up the passage leading out by the
+Military College. A woman fell down in a fainting fit, others stumbled over her,
+and thus formed an obstruction, which, being unknown to those in the rear, did
+not prevent them from forcing forward the persons in front, so that they too
+were pushed and trodden down into one frightful, struggling, suffocating mass of
+living and dying men, women, and children, increasing every moment.</p>
+<p>M. Martinel was passing, on his way to his quarters, when, hearing the
+tumult, he ran to the gate from the other side, and meeting the crowd tried by
+shouts and entreaties to persuade them to give back, but the hindmost could not
+hear him, and the more frightened they grew, the more they tried to hurry home,
+and so made the heap worse and worse, and in the midst an illuminated yew-tree,
+in a pot, was upset, and further barred the way. Martinel, with imminent danger
+to himself, dragged out one or two persons; but finding his single efforts
+almost useless among such numbers, he ran to the barracks, sounded to horse, and
+without waiting till his men could be got together, hurried off again on foot,
+with a few of his comrades, and dashed back into the crowd, struggling as
+vehemently to penetrate to the scene of danger, as many would have done to get
+away from it.</p>
+<p>Private Spenlee alone kept up with him, and, coming to the dreadful heap,
+these two labored to free the passage, lift up the living, and remove the dead.
+First he dragged out an old man in a fainting fit, then a young soldier, next a
+boy, a woman, a little girl--he carried them to freer air, and came back the
+next moment, though often so nearly pulled down by the frantic struggles of the
+terrified stifled creatures, that he was each moment in the utmost peril of
+being trampled to death. He carried out nine persons one by one; Spenlee brought
+out a man and a child; and his brother officers, coming up, took their share.
+One lieutenant, with a girl in a swoon in his arms, caused a boy to be put on
+his back, and under this double burthen was pushing against the crowd for half
+and hour, till at length he fell, and was all but killed.</p>
+<p>A troop of cuirassiers had by this time mounted, and through the Champ de
+Mars came slowly along, step by step, their horses moving as gently and
+cautiously as if they knew their work. Everywhere, as they advanced, little
+children were held up to them out of the throng to be saved, and many of their
+chargers were loaded with the little creatures, perched before and behind the
+kind soldiers. With wonderful patience and forbearance, they managed to insert
+themselves and their horses, first in single file, then two by two, then more
+abreast, like a wedge, into the press, until at last they formed a wall, cutting
+off the crowd behind from the mass in the gateway, and thus preventing the
+encumbrance from increasing. The people came to their senses, and went off to
+other gates, and the crowd diminishing, it became possible to lift up the many
+unhappy creatures, who lay stifling or crushed in the heap. They were carried
+into the barracks, the cuirassiers hurried to bring their mattresses to lay them
+on in the hall, brought them water, linen, all they could want, and were as
+tender to them as sisters of charity, till they were taken to the hospitals or
+to their homes. Martinel, who was the moving spirit in this gallant rescue,
+received in the following year one of M. Monthyon's prizes for the greatest acts
+of virtue that could be brought to light.</p>
+<p>Nor among the gallant actions of which powder has been the cause should be
+omitted that of Lieutenant Willoughby, who, in the first dismay of the mutiny in
+India, in 1858, blew up the great magazine at Delhi, with all the ammunition
+that would have armed the sepoys even yet more terribly against ourselves. The
+'Golden Deed' was one of those capable of no earthly meed, for it carried the
+brave young officer where alone there is true reward; and all the Queen and
+country could do in his honor was to pension his widowed mother, and lay up his
+name among those that stir the heart with admiration and gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>HEROES OF THE PLAGUE<br>
+1576--1665--1721</h3></center>
+
+<p>When our Litany entreats that we may be delivered from 'plague, pestilence,
+and famine', the first of these words bears a special meaning, which came home
+with strong and painful force to European minds at the time the Prayer Book was
+translated, and for the whole following century.</p>
+<p>It refers to the deadly sickness emphatically called 'the plague', a typhoid
+fever exceedingly violent and rapid, and accompanied with a frightful swelling
+either under the arm or on the corresponding part of the thigh. The East is the
+usual haunt of this fatal complaint, which some suppose to be bred by the
+marshy, unwholesome state of Egypt after the subsidence of the waters of the
+Nile, and which generally prevails in Egypt and Syria until its course is
+checked either by the cold of winter or the heat in summer. At times this
+disease has become unusually malignant and infectious, and then has come beyond
+its usual boundaries and made its way over all the West. These dreadful
+visitations were rendered more frequent by total disregard of all precautions,
+and ignorance of laws for preserving health. People crowded together in towns
+without means of obtaining sufficient air or cleanliness, and thus were sure to
+be unhealthy; and whenever war or famine had occasioned more than usual poverty,
+some frightful epidemic was sure to follow in its train, and sweep away the poor
+creatures whose frames were already weakened by previous privation. And often
+this 'sore judgment' was that emphatically called the plague; and especially
+during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, a time when war had become far
+more cruel and mischievous in the hands of hired regiments than ever it had been
+with a feudal army, and when at the same time increasing trade was filling the
+cities with more closely packed inhabitants, within fortifications that would
+not allow the city to expand in proportion to its needs. It has been only the
+establishment of the system of quarantine which has succeeded in cutting off the
+course of infection by which the plague was wont to set out on its frightful
+travels from land to land, from city to city.</p>
+<p>The desolation of a plague-stricken city was a sort of horrible dream. Every
+infected house was marked with a red cross, and carefully closed against all
+persons, except those who were charged to drive carts through the streets to
+collect the corpses, ringing a bell as they went. These men were generally
+wretched beings, the lowest and most reckless of the people, who undertook their
+frightful task for the sake of the plunder of the desolate houses, and wound
+themselves up by intoxicating drinks to endure the horrors. The bodies were
+thrown into large trenches, without prayer or funeral rites, and these were
+hastily closed up. Whole families died together, untended save by one another,
+with no aid of a friendly hand to give drink or food; and, in the Roman Catholic
+cities, the perishing without a priest to administer the last rites of the
+Church was viewed as more dreadful than death itself.</p>
+<p>Such visitations as these did indeed prove whether the pastors of the
+afflicted flock were shepherds or hirelings. So felt, in 1576, Cardinal Carlo
+Borromeo, Archbishop of Milan, the worthiest of all the successors of St.
+Ambrose, when he learnt at Lodi that the plague had made its appearance in his
+city, where, remarkably enough, there had lately been such licentious revelry
+that he had solemnly warned the people that, unless they repented, they would
+certainly bring on themselves the wrath of heaven. His council of clergy advised
+him to remain in some healthy part of his diocese till the sickness should have
+spent itself, but he replied that a Bishop, whose duty it is to give his life
+for his sheep, could not rightly abandon them in time of peril. They owned that
+to stand by them was the higher course. 'Well,' he said, 'is it not a Bishop's
+duty to choose the higher course?'</p>
+<p>So back into the town of deadly sickness he went, leading the people to
+repent, and watching over them in their sufferings, visiting the hospitals, and,
+by his own example, encouraging his clergy in carrying spiritual consolation to
+the dying. All the time the plague lasted, which was four months, his exertions
+were fearless and unwearied, and what was remarkable was, that of his whole
+household only two died, and they were persons who had not been called to go
+about among the sick. Indeed, some of the rich who had repaired to a villa,
+where they spent their time in feasting and amusement in the luxurious Italian
+fashion, were there followed by the pestilence, and all perished; their dainty
+fare and the excess in which they indulged having no doubt been as bad a
+preparation as the poverty of the starving people in the city.</p>
+<p>The strict and regular life of the Cardinal and his clergy, and their home in
+the spacious palace, were, no doubt, under Providence, a preservative; but, in
+the opinions of the time, there was little short of a miracle in the safety of
+one who daily preached in the cathedral,--bent over the beds of the sick, giving
+them food and medicine, hearing their confessions, and administering the last
+rites of the Church,--and then braving the contagion after death, rather than
+let the corpses go forth unblest to their common grave. Nay, so far was he from
+seeking to save his own life, that, kneeling before the altar in the cathedral,
+he solemnly offered himself, like Moses, as a sacrifice for his people. But,
+like Moses, the sacrifice was passed by--'it cost more to redeem their
+souls'--and Borromeo remained untouched, as did the twenty-eight priests who
+voluntarily offered themselves to join in his labors.</p>
+<p>No wonder that the chief memories that haunt the glorious white marble
+cathedral of Milan are those of St. Ambrose, who taught mercy to an emperor, and
+of St. Carlo Borromeo, who practiced mercy on a people.</p>
+<p>It was a hundred years later that the greatest and last visitation of the
+plague took place in London. Doubtless the scourge called forth--as in Christian
+lands such judgments always do--many an act of true and blessed self-devotion;
+but these are not recorded, save where they have their reward: and the tale now
+to be told is of one of the small villages to which the infection
+spread--namely, Eyam, in Derbyshire.</p>
+<p>This is a lovely place between Buxton and Chatsworth, perched high on a
+hillside, and shut in by another higher mountain--extremely beautiful, but
+exactly one of those that, for want of free air, always become the especial prey
+of infection. At that time lead works were in operation in the mountains, and
+the village was thickly inhabited. Great was the dismay of the villagers when
+the family of a tailor, who had received some patterns of cloth from London,
+showed symptoms of the plague in its most virulent form, sickening and dying in
+one day.</p>
+<p>The rector of the parish, the Rev. William Mompesson, was still a young man,
+and had been married only a few years. His wife, a beautiful young woman, only
+twenty-seven years old, was exceedingly terrified at the tidings from the
+village, and wept bitterly as she implored her husband to take her, and her
+little George and Elizabeth, who were three and fours years old, away to some
+place of safety. But Mr. Mompesson gravely showed her that it was his duty not
+to forsake his flock in their hour of need, and began at once to make
+arrangements for sending her and the children away. She saw he was right in
+remaining, and ceased to urge him to forsake his charge; but she insisted that
+if he ought not to desert his flock, his wife ought not to leave him; and she
+wept and entreated so earnestly, that he at length consented that she should be
+with him, and that only the two little ones should be removed while yet there
+was time.</p>
+<p>Their father and mother parted with the little ones as treasures that they
+might never see again. At the same time Mr. Mompesson wrote to London for the
+most approved medicines and prescriptions; and he likewise sent a letter to the
+Earl of Devonshire, at Chatsworth, to engage that his parishioners should
+exclude themselves from the whole neighborhood, and thus confine the contagion
+within their own boundaries, provided the Earl would undertake that food,
+medicines, and other necessaries, should be placed at certain appointed spots,
+at regular times, upon the hills around, where the Eyamites might come, leave
+payment for them, and take them up, without holding any communication with the
+bringers, except by letters, which could be placed on a stone, and then
+fumigated, or passed through vinegar, before they were touched with the hand. To
+this the Earl consented, and for seven whole months the engagement was kept.</p>
+<p>Mr. Mompesson represented to his people that, with the plague once among
+them, it would be so unlikely that they should not carry infection about with
+them, that it would be selfish cruelty to other places to try to escape amongst
+them, and thus spread the danger. So rocky and wild was the ground around them,
+that, had they striven to escape, a regiment of soldiers could not have
+prevented them. But of their own free will they attended to their rector's
+remonstrance, and it was not known that one parishoner of Eyam passed the
+boundary all that time, nor was there a single case of plague in any of the
+villages around.</p>
+<p>The assembling of large congregations in churches had been thought to
+increase the infection in London, and Mr. Mompesson, therefore, thought it best
+to hold his services out-of-doors. In the middle of the village is a dell,
+suddenly making a cleft in the mountain-side, only five yards wide at the
+bottom, which is the pebble bed of a wintry torrent, but is dry in the summer.
+On the side towards the village, the slope upwards was of soft green turf,
+scattered with hazel, rowan, and alder bushes, and full of singing birds. On the
+other side, the ascent was nearly perpendicular, and composed of sharp rocks,
+partly adorned with bushes and ivy, and here and there rising up in fantastic
+peaks and archways, through which the sky could be seen from below. One of these
+rocks was hollow, and could be entered from above--a natural gallery, leading to
+an archway opening over the precipice; and this Mr. Mompesson chose for his
+reading-desk and pulpit. The dell was so narrow, that his voice could clearly be
+heard across it, and his congregation arranged themselves upon the green slop
+opposite, seated or kneeling upon the grass.</p>
+<p>On Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays arose the earnest voice of prayer from
+that rocky glen, the people's response meeting the pastor's voice; and twice on
+Sundays he preached to them the words of life and hope. It was a dry, hot
+summer; fain would they have seen thunder and rain to drive away their enemy;
+and seldom did weather break in on the regularity of these service. But there
+was another service that the rector had daily to perform; not in his
+churchyard--that would have perpetuated the infection--but on a healthy hill
+above the village. There he daily read of 'the Resurrection and the Life', and
+week by week the company on the grassy slope grew fewer and scantier. His
+congregation were passing from the dell to the healthy mound.</p>
+<p>Day and night the rector and his wife were among the sick, nursing, feeding,
+and tending them with all that care and skill could do; but, in spite of all
+their endeavors, only a fifth part of the whole of their inhabitants lived to
+spend the last Sunday in Cucklet Church, as the dell is still called. Mrs.
+Mompesson had persuaded her husband to have a wound made in his leg, fancying
+that this would lessen the danger of infection, and he yielded in order to
+satisfy her. His health endured perfectly, but she began to waste under her
+constant exertions, and her husband feared that he saw symptoms of consumption;
+but she was full of delight at some appearances in his wound that made her
+imagine that it had carried off the disease, and that his danger was over.</p>
+<p>A few days after, she sickened with symptoms of the plague, and her frame was
+so weakened that she sank very quickly. She was often delirious; but when she
+was too much exhausted to endure the exertion of taking cordials, her husband
+entreated her to try for their children's sake, she lifted herself up and made
+the endeavor. She lay peacefully, saying, 'she was but looking for the good hour
+to come', and calmly died, making the responses to her husband's prayers even to
+the last. Her he buried in the churchyard, and fenced the grave in afterwards
+with iron rails. There are two beautiful letters from him written on her
+death--one to his little children, to be kept and read when they would be old
+enough to understand it; the other to his patron, Sir George Saville, afterwards
+Lord Halifax. 'My drooping spirits', he says, 'are much refreshed with her joys,
+which I assure myself are unutterable.' He wrote both these letters in the
+belief that he should soon follow her, speaking of himself to Sir George as 'his
+dying chaplain', commending to him his 'distressed orphans', and begging that a
+'humble pious man' might be chosen to succeed him in his parsonage. 'Sire, I
+thank God that I am willing to shake hands in peace with all the world; and I
+have comfortable assurance that He will accept me for the sake of His Son, and I
+find God more good than ever I imagined, and wish that his goodness were not so
+much abused and contemned', writes the widowed pastor, left alone among his
+dying flock. And he concludes, 'and with tears I entreat that when you are
+praying for fatherless and motherless infants, you would then remember my two
+pretty babes'.</p>
+<p>These two letters were written on the last day of August and first of
+September, 1666; but on the 20th of November, Mr. Mompesson was writing to his
+uncle, in the lull after the storm. 'The condition of this place hath been so
+dreadful, that I persuade myself it exceedeth all history and example. I may
+truly say our town has become a Golgotha, a place of skulls; and had there not
+been a small remnant of us left, we had been as Sodom, and like unto Gomorrah.
+My ears never heard such doleful lamentations, my nose never smelt such noisome
+smells, and my eyes never beheld such ghastly spectacles. Here have been
+seventy-six families visited within my parish, out of which died 259 persons.'</p>
+<p>However, since the 11th of October there had been no fresh cases, and he was
+now burning all woolen cloths, lest the infection should linger in them. He
+himself had never been touched by the complaint, nor had his maid-servant; his
+man had had it but slightly. Mr. Mompesson lived many more years, was offered
+the Deanery of Lincoln, but did not accept it, and died in 1708. So virulent was
+the contagion that, ninety-one years after, in 1757, when five laboring men, who
+were digging up land near the plague- graves for a potato-garden, came upon what
+appeared to be some linen, though they buried it again directly, they all
+sickened with typhus fever, three of them died, and it was so infectious that no
+less than seventy persons in the parish were carried off.</p>
+<p>The last of these remarkable visitations of the plague, properly so called,
+was at Marseilles, in 1721. It was supposed to have been brought by a vessel
+which sailed from Seyde, in the bay of Tunis, on the 31st of January, 1720,
+which had a clean bill of health when it anchored off the Chateau d'If, at
+Marseilles, on the 25th of May; but six of the crew were found to have died on
+the voyage, and the persons who handled the freight also died, though, it was
+said, without any symptoms of the plague, and the first cases were supposed to
+be of the fevers caused by excessive poverty and crowding. The unmistakable
+Oriental plague, however, soon began to spread in the city among the poorer
+population, and in truth the wars and heavy expenses of Louis XIV. had made
+poverty in France more wretched than ever before, and the whole country was like
+one deadly sore, festering, and by and by to come to a fearful crisis.
+Precautions were taken, the infected families were removed to the infirmaries
+and their houses walled up, but all this was done at night in order not to
+excite alarm. The mystery, however, made things more terrible to the
+imagination, and this was a period of the utmost selfishness. All the richer
+inhabitants who had means of quitting the city, and who were the very people who
+could have been useful there, fled with one accord. Suddenly the lazaretto was
+left without superintendents, the hospitals without stewards; the judges, public
+officers, notaries, and most of the superior workmen in the most necessary
+trades were all gone. Only the Provost and four municipal officers remained,
+with 1,100 livres in their treasury, in the midst of an entirely disorganized
+city, and an enormous population without work, without restraint, without food,
+and a prey to the deadliest of diseases.</p>
+<p>The Parliament which still survived in the ancient kingdom of Provence
+signalized itself by retreating to a distance, and on the 31st of May putting
+out a decree that nobody should pass a boundary line round Marseilles on pain of
+death; but considering what people were trying to escape from, and the utter
+overthrow of all rule and order, this penalty was not likely to have much
+effect, and the plague was carried by the fugitives to Arles, Aix, Toulon, and
+sixty-three lesser towns and villages. What a contrast to Mr. Mompesson's moral
+influence!</p>
+<p>Horrible crimes were committed. Malefactors were released from the prisons
+and convicts from the galleys, and employed for large payment to collect the
+corpses and carry the sick to the infirmaries. Of course they could only be
+wrought up to such work by intoxication and unlimited opportunities of plunder,
+and their rude treatment both of the dead and of the living sufferers added
+unspeakably to the general wretchedness. To be carried to the infirmary was
+certain death,--no one lived in that heap of contagion; and even this shelter
+was not always to be had,--some of the streets were full of dying creatures who
+had been turned out of their houses and could crawl no farther.</p>
+<p>What was done to alleviate all these horrors? It was in the minority of Louis
+XV., and the Regent Duke of Orleans, easy, good-natured man that he was, sent
+22,000 marks to the relief of the city, all in silver, for paper money was found
+to spread the infection more than anything else. He also sent a great quantity
+of corn, and likewise doctors for the sick, and troops to shut in the infected
+district. The Pope, Clement XI., sent spiritual blessings to the sufferers, and,
+moreover, three shiploads of wheat. The Regent's Prime Minister, the Abbe
+Dubois, the shame of his Church and country, fancied that to send these supplies
+cast a slight upon his administration, and desired his representative at Rome to
+prevent the sailing of the ships, but his orders were not, for very shame,
+carried out, and the vessels set out. On their way they were seized by a Moorish
+corsair, who was more merciful than Dubois, for he no sooner learnt their
+destination than he let them go unplundered.</p>
+<p>And in the midst of the misery there were bright lights 'running to and fro
+among the stubble'. The Provost and his five remaining officers, and a gentleman
+call Le Chevalier Rose, did their utmost in the bravest and most unselfish way
+to help the sufferers, distribute food, provide shelter, restrain the horrors
+perpetrated by the sick in their ravings, and provide for the burial of the
+dead. And the clergy were all devoted to the task of mercy. There was only one
+convent, that of St. Victor, where the gates were closed against all comers in
+the hope of shutting out infection. Every other monastic establishment freely
+devoted itself. It was a time when party spirit ran high. The bishop, Henri
+Francois Xavier de Belzunce, a nephew of the Duke de Lauzun, was a strong and
+rigid Jesuit, and had joined so hotly in the persecution of the Jansenists that
+he had forbidden the brotherhood called Oratorian fathers to hear confessions,
+because he suspected them of a leaning to Jansenist opinions; but he and they
+both alike worked earnestly in the one cause of mercy. They were content to obey
+his prejudiced edict, since he was in lawful authority, and threw themselves
+heartily into the lower and more disdained services to the sick, as nurses and
+tenders of the body alone, not of the soul, and in this work their whole
+community, Superior and all, perished, almost without exception. Perhaps these
+men, thus laying aside hurt feeling and sense of injustice, were the greatest
+conquerors of all whose golden deeds we have described.</p>
+<p>Bishop Belzunce himself, however, stands as the prominent figure in the
+memory of those dreadful five months. He was a man of commanding stature,
+towering above all around him, and his fervent sermons, aided by his example of
+severe and strict piety, and his great charities, had greatly impressed the
+people. He now went about among the plague-stricken, attending to their wants,
+both spiritual and temporal, and sold or mortgaged all his property to obtain
+relief for them, and he actually went himself in the tumbrils of corpses to give
+them the rites of Christian burial. His doings closely resembled those of
+Cardinal Borromeo, and like him he had recourse to constant preaching of
+repentance, processions and assemblies for litanies in the church. It is
+curiously characteristic that it was the English clergyman, who, equally pious,
+and sensible that only the Almighty could remove the scourge, yet deemed it
+right to take precautions against the effects of bringing a large number of
+persons into one building. How Belzunce's clergy seconded him may be gathered
+from the numbers who died of the disease. Besides the Oratorians, there died
+eighteen Jesuits, twenty-six of the order called Recollets, and forty-three
+Capuchins, all of whom had freely given their lives in the endeavor to alleviate
+the general suffering. In the four chief towns of Provence 80,000 died, and
+about 8,000 in the lesser places. The winter finally checked the destroyer, and
+then, sad to say, it appeared how little effect the warning had had on the
+survivors. Inheritances had fallen together into the hands of persons who found
+themselves rich beyond their expectations, and in the glee of having escaped the
+danger, forgot to be thankful, and spent their wealth in revelry. Never had the
+cities of Provence been so full of wild, questionable mirth as during the
+ensuing winter, and it was remarked that the places which had suffered most
+severely were the most given up to thoughtless gaiety, and even licentiousness.</p>
+<p>Good Bishop Belzunce did his best to protest against the wickedness around
+him, and refused to leave his flock at Marseilles, when, four years after, a far
+more distinguished see was offered to him. He died in 1755, in time to escape
+the sight of the retribution that was soon worked out on the folly and vice of
+the unhappy country.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE SECOND OF SEPTEMBER<br>
+1792</h3></center>
+
+<p>The reign of the terrible Tzar was dreadful, but there was even a more
+dreadful time, that which might be called the reign of the madness of the
+people. The oppression and injustice that had for generations past been worked
+out in France ended in the most fearful reaction that history records, and the
+horrors that took place in the Revolution pass all thought or description. Every
+institution that had been misused was overthrown at one fell swoop, and the
+whole accumulated vengeance of generations fell on the heads of the persons who
+occupied the positions of the former oppressors. Many of these were as pure and
+guiltless as their slaughterers were the reverse, but the heads of the
+Revolution imagined that to obtain their ideal vision of perfect justice and
+liberty, all the remnants of the former state of things must be swept away, and
+the ferocious beings who carried out their decrees had become absolutely frantic
+with delight in bloodshed. The nation seemed delivered up to a delirium of
+murder. But as</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'Even as earth's wild war cries heighten,<br>
+The cross upon the brow will brighten',</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>These times of surpassing horror were also times of surpassing devotion and
+heroism. Without attempting to describe the various stages of the Revolution,
+and the different committees that under different titles carried on the work of
+destruction, we will mention some of the deeds that shine out as we look into
+that abyss of horror, the Paris of 1792 and the following years.</p>
+<p>Think of the Swiss Guards, who on the 10th of August, 1792, the miserable day
+when the King, Queen, and children were made the captives of the people, stood
+resolutely at their posts, till they were massacred almost to a man. Well is
+their fidelity honored by the noble sculpture near Lucerne, cut out in the
+living rock of their own Alps, and representing a lion dying to defend the
+fleur-de-lis.</p>
+<p>A more dreadful day still was in preparation. The mob seemed to have imagined
+that the King and nobility had some strange dreadful power, and that unless they
+were all annihilated they would rise up and trample all down before them, and
+those who had the direction of affairs profited by this delusion to multiply
+executioners, and clear away all that they supposed to stand in the way of the
+renewal of the nation. And the attempts of the emigrant nobility and of the
+German princes to march to the rescue of the royal family added to the fury of
+their cowardly ferocity. The prisons of Paris were crowded to overflowing with
+aristocrats, as it was the fashion to call the nobles and gentry, and with the
+clergy who had refused their adhesion to the new state of things. The whole
+number is reckoned at not less than 8,000.</p>
+<p>Among those at the Abbaye de St. Germain were M. Jacques Cazotte, an old
+gentleman of seventy-three, who had been for many years in a government office,
+and had written various poems. He was living in the country, in Champagne, when
+on the 18th of August he was arrested. His daughter Elizabeth, a lovely girl of
+twenty, would not leave him, and together they were taken first to Epernay and
+then to Paris, where they were thrown into the Abbaye, and found it crowded with
+prisoners. M. Cazotte's bald forehead and grey looks gave him a patriarchal
+appearance, and his talk, deeply and truly pious, was full of Scripture
+language, as he strove to persuade his fellow captives to own the true blessings
+of suffering.</p>
+<p>Here Elizabeth met the like-minded Marie de Sombreuil, who had clung to her
+father, Charles Viscount de Sombreuil, the Governor of the Invalides, or
+pensioners of the French army; and here, too, had Madame de Fausse Lendry come
+with her old uncle the Abbé de Rastignac, who had been for three months
+extremely ill , and was only just recovering when dragged to the prison, and
+there placed in a room so crowded that it was not possible to turn round, and
+the air in the end of August was fearfully close and heated. Not once while
+there was the poor old man able to sleep. His niece spent the nights in a room
+belonging to the jailer, with the Princess de Tarente, and Mademoiselle de
+Sombreuil.</p>
+<p>On the 2nd of September these slaughter-houses were as full as they could
+hold, and about a hundred ruffians, armed with axes and guns, were sent round to
+all the jails to do the bloody work. It was a Sunday, and some of the victims
+had tried to observe it religiously, though little divining that, it was to be
+their last. They first took alarm on perceiving that their jailer had removed
+his family, and then that he sent up their dinner earlier than usual, and
+removed all the knives and forks. By and by howls and shouts were heard, and the
+tocsin was heard, ringing, alarm guns firing, and reports came in to the
+prisoners of the Abbaye that the populace were breaking into the prisons.</p>
+<p>The clergy were all penned up together in the cloisters of the Abbaye,
+whither they had been brought in carriages that morning. Among them was the
+Abbé Sicard, an admirable priest who had spent his whole lifetime in
+instructing the deaf and dumb in his own house, where--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>'The cunning finger finely twined<br>
+The subtle thread that knitteth mind to mind;<br>
+There that strange bridge of signs was built where roll<br>
+The sunless waves that sever soul from soul,<br>
+And by the arch, no bigger than a hand,<br>
+Truth travell'd over to the silent land'.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He had been arrested, while teaching his pupils, on the 26th of August, 1792,
+and shut up among other clergy in the prison of the Mayoralty; but the lads whom
+he had educated came in a body to ask leave to claim him at the bar of the
+National Assembly. Massieu, his best scholar, had drawn up a most touching
+address, saying, that in him the deaf and dumb were deprived of their teacher,
+nurse, and father. 'It is he who has taught us what we know, without him we
+should be as the beasts of the field.' This petition, and the gestures of the
+poor silent beings, went to the heart of the National Assembly. One young man,
+named Duhamel, neither deaf nor dumb, from pure admiration of the good work,
+went and offered to be imprisoned in the Abbé's place. There was great
+applause, and a decree was passed that the cause of the arrest should be
+enquired into, but this took no effect, and on that dreadful afternoon, M.
+Sicard was put into one of a procession of carriages, which drove slowly through
+the streets full of priests, who were reviled, pelted, and wounded by the
+populace till they reached the Abbaye.</p>
+<p>In the turnkey's rooms sat a horrible committee, who acted as a sort of
+tribunal, but very few of the priests reached it. They were for the most part
+cut down as they stepped out into the throng in the court--consisting of
+red-capped ruffians, with their shirt sleeves turned up, and still more fiendish
+women, who hounded them on to the butchery, and brought them wine and food.
+Sicard and another priest contrived, while their companions fell, to rush into
+the committee room, exclaiming, 'Messieurs, preserve an unfortunate!'</p>
+<p>'Go along!' they said, 'do you wish us to get ourselves massacred?'</p>
+<p>But one, recognizing him, was surprised, knowing that his life was to be
+spared, and took him into the room, promising to save him as long as possible.
+Here the two priests would have been safe but for a wretched woman, who shrieked
+out to the murderers that they had been admitted, and loud knocks and demands
+for them came from without. Sicard thought all lost, and taking out his watch,
+begged one of the committee to give it to the first deaf mute who should come
+and ask for him, sure that it would be the faithful Massieu. At first the man
+replied that the danger was not imminent enough; but on hearing a more furious
+noise at the door, as if the mob were going to break in, he took the watch; and
+Sicard, falling on his knees, commended his soul to God, and embraced his
+brother priest.</p>
+<p>In rushed the assassins, they paused for a moment, unable to distinguish the
+priests from the committee, but the two pikemen found them out, and his
+companion was instantly murdered. The weapons were lifted against Sicard, when a
+man pushed through the crowd, and throwing himself before the pike, displayed
+his breast and cried, 'Behold the bosom through which you must pass to reach
+that of this good citizen. You do not know him. He is the Abbé Sicard, one of
+the most benevolent of men, the most useful to his country, the father of the
+deaf and dumb!'</p>
+<p>The murderer dropped his pike; but Sicard, perceiving that it was the
+populace who were the real dispensers of life or death, sprang to the window,
+and shouted, 'Friends, behold an innocent man. Am I to die without being heard?'</p>
+<p>'You were among the rest,' the mob shouted, 'therefore you are as bad as the
+others.'</p>
+<p>But when he told his name, the cry changed. 'He is the father of the deaf and
+dumb! he is too useful to perish; his life is spent in doing good; he must be
+saved.' And the murderers behind took him up in their arms, and carried him out
+into the court, where he was obliged to submit to be embraced by the whole gang
+of ruffians, who wanted to carry him home in triumph; but he did not choose to
+go without being legally released, and returning into the committee room, he
+learnt for the first time the name of his preserver, one Monnot, a watchmaker,
+who, though knowing him only by character, and learning that he was among the
+clergy who were being driven to the slaughter, had rushed in to save him.</p>
+<p>Sicard remained in the committee room while further horrors were perpetrated
+all round, and at night was taken to the little room called Le Violon, with two
+other prisoners. A horrible night ensued; the murders on the outside varied with
+drinking and dancing; and at three o'clock the murderers tried to break into Le
+Violon. There was a loft far overhead, and the other two prisoners tried to
+persuade Sicard to climb on their shoulders to reach it, saying that his life
+was more useful than theirs. However, some fresh prey was brought in, which drew
+off the attention of the murderers, and two days afterwards Sicard was released
+to resume his life of charity.</p>
+<p>At the beginning of the night, all the ladies who had accompanied their
+relatives were separated from them, and put into the women's room; but when
+morning came they entreated earnestly to return to them, but Mademoiselle de
+Fausse Lendry was assured that her uncle was safe, and they were told soon after
+that all who remained were pardoned. About twenty-two ladies were together, and
+were called to leave the prison, but the two who went first were at once
+butchered, and the sentry called out to the others, 'It is a snare, go back, do
+not show yourselves.' They retreated; but Marie de Sombreuil had made her way to
+her father, and when he was called down into the court, she came with him. She
+hung round him, beseeching the murderers to have pity on his grey hairs, and
+declaring that they must strike him only through her. One of the ruffians,
+touched by her resolution, called out that they should be allowed to pass if the
+girl would drink to the health of the nation. The whole court was swimming with
+blood, and the glass he held out to her was full of something red. Marie would
+not shudder. She drank, and with the applause of the assassins ringing in her
+ears, she passed with her father over the threshold of the fatal gates, into
+such freedom and safety as Paris could then afford. Never again could she see a
+glass of red wine without a shudder, and it was generally believed that it was
+actually a glass of blood that she had swallowed, though she always averred that
+this was an exaggeration, and that it had been only her impression before
+tasting it that so horrible a draught was offered to her.</p>
+<p>The tidings that Mademoiselle de Sombreuil had saved her father came to
+encourage the rest of the ladies, and when calls were heard for 'Cazotte',
+Elizabeth flew out and joined her father, and in like manner stood between him
+and the butchers, till her devotion made the crowd cry 'Pardon!' and one of the
+men employed about the prison opened a passage for her, by which she, too, led
+her father away.</p>
+<p>Madame de Fausse Lendry was not so happy. Her uncle was killed early in the
+day, before she was aware that he had been sent for, but she survived to relate
+the history of that most horrible night and day. The same work was going on at
+all the other prisons, and chief among the victims of La Force was the beautiful
+Marie Louise of Savoy, the Princess de Lamballe, and one of the most intimate
+friends of the Queen. A young widow without children, she had been the ornament
+of the court, and clever learned ladies thought her frivolous, but the depth of
+her nature was shown in the time of trial. Her old father-in-law had taken her
+abroad with him when the danger first became apparent, but as soon as she saw
+that the Queen herself was aimed at, she went immediately back to France to
+comfort her and share her fate.</p>
+<p>Since the terrible 10th of August, the friends had been separated, and Madame
+de Lamballe had been in the prison of La Force. There, on the evening of the 2nd
+of September, she was brought down to the tribunal, and told to swear liberty,
+equality, and hatred to the King and Queen.</p>
+<p>'I will readily swear the two former. I cannot swear the latter. It is not in
+my heart.'</p>
+<p>'Swear! If not, you are dead.'</p>
+<p>She raised her eyes, lifted her hands, and made a step to the door. Murderers
+closed her in, and pike thrusts in a few moments were the last 'stage that
+carried from earth to heaven' the gentle woman, who had loved her queenly friend
+to the death. Little mattered it to her that her corpse was soon torn limb from
+limb, and that her fair ringlets were floating round the pike on which her head
+was borne past her friend's prison window. Little matters it now even to Marie
+Antoinette. The worst that the murderers could do for such as these, could only
+work for them a more exceeding weight of glory.</p>
+<p>M. Cazotte was imprisoned again on the 12th of September, and all his
+daughter's efforts failed to save him. She was taken from him, and he died on
+the guillotine, exclaiming, 'I die as I have lived, faithful to my God and to my
+King.' And the same winter, M. de Sombreuil was also imprisoned again. When he
+entered the prison with his daughter, all the inmates rose to do her honor. In
+the ensuing June, after a mock trial, her father and brother were put to death,
+and she remained for many years alone with only the memory of her past days.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE VENDEANS<br>
+1793</h3></center>
+
+<p>While the greater part of France had been falling into habits of
+self-indulgence, and from thence into infidelity and revolution, there was one
+district where the people had not forgotten to fear God and honor the King.</p>
+<p>This was in the tract surrounding the Loire, the south of which is now called
+La Vendee, and was then termed the Bocage, or the Woodland. It is full of low
+hills and narrow valleys, divided into small fields, enclosed by high thick
+hedgerows; so that when viewed from the top of one of the hills, the whole
+country appears perfectly green, excepting near harvest-time, when small patches
+of golden corn catch the eye, or where here and there a church tower peeps above
+the trees, in the midst of the flat red-tiled roofs of the surrounding village.
+The roads are deep lanes, often in the winter beds of streams, and in the summer
+completely roofed by the thick foliage of the trees, whose branches meet
+overhead.</p>
+<p>The gentry of La Vendee, instead of idling their time at Paris, lived on
+their own estates in kindly intercourse with their neighbours, and constantly
+helping and befriending their tenants, visiting them at their farms, talking
+over their crops and cattle, giving them advice, and inviting them on holidays
+to dance in the courts of their castles, and themselves joining in their sports.
+The peasants were a hardworking, sober, and pious people, devoutly attending
+their churches, reverencing their clergy, and, as well they might, loving and
+honoring their good landlords.</p>
+<p>But as the Revolution began to make its deadly progress at Paris, a gloom
+spread over this happy country. The Paris mob, who could not bear to see anyone
+higher in station than themselves, thirsted for noble blood, and the gentry were
+driven from France, or else imprisoned and put to death. An oath contrary to the
+laws of their Church was required of the clergy, those who refused it were
+thrust out of their parishes, and others placed in their room; and throughout
+France all the youths of a certain age were forced to draw lots to decide who
+should serve in the Republican army.</p>
+<p>This conscription filled up the measure. The Vendeans had grieved over the
+flight of their landlords, they had sheltered and hidden their priests, and
+heard their ministrations in secret; but when their young men were to be carried
+way from them, and made the defenders and instruments of those who were
+murdering their King, overthrowing their Church, and ruining their country, they
+could endure it no longer, but in the spring of 1793, soon after the execution
+of Louis XVI., a rising took place in Anjou, at the village of St. Florent,
+headed by a peddler named Cathelineau, and they drove back the Blues, as they
+called the revolutionary soldiers, who had come to enforce the conscription.
+They begged Monsieur de Bonchamp, a gentleman in the neighborhood, to take the
+command; and, willing to devote himself to the cause of his King, he complied,
+saying, as he did so, 'We must not aspire to earthly rewards; such would be
+beneath the purity of our motives, the holiness of our cause. We must not even
+aspire to glory, for a civil war affords none. We shall see our castles fall, we
+shall be proscribed, slandered, stripped of our possessions, perhaps put to
+death; but let us thank God for giving us strength to do our duty to the end.'</p>
+<p>The next person on whom the peasants cast their eyes possessed as true and
+strong a heart, though he was too young to count the cost of loyalty with the
+same calm spirit of self-devotion. The Marquis de la Rochejacquelein, one of the
+most excellent of the nobles of Poitou, had already emigrated with his wife and
+all his family, excepting Henri, the eldest son, who, though but eighteen years
+of age, had been placed in the dangerous post of an officer in the Royal Guards.
+When Louis XVI. had been obliged to dismiss these brave men, he had obtained a
+promise from each officer that he would not leave France, but wait for some
+chance of delivering that unhappy country. Henri had therefore remained at
+Paris, until after the 10th of August, 1792, when the massacre at the Tuileries
+took place, and the imprisonment of the royal family commenced; and then every
+gentleman being in danger in the city, he had come to his father's deserted
+castle of Durballiere in Poitou.</p>
+<p>He was nearly twenty, tall and slender, with fair hair, an oval face, and
+blue eyes, very gentle, although full of animation. He was active and dexterous
+in all manly sports, especially shooting and riding; he was a man of few words;
+and his manners were so shy, modest, and retiring, that his friends used to say
+he was more like an Englishman than a Frenchman.</p>
+<p>Hearing that he was alone at Durballière, and knowing that as an officer in
+the Guards, and also as being of the age liable to the conscription, he was in
+danger from the Revolutionists in the neighboring towns, his cousin, the Marquis
+de Lescure, sent to invite him to his strong castle of Clisson, which was
+likewise situated in the Bocage. This castle afforded a refuge to many others
+who were in danger--to nuns driven from their convents, dispossessed clergy, and
+persons who dreaded to remain at their homes, but who felt reassured under the
+shelter of the castle, and by the character of its owner, a young man of
+six-and-twenty, who, though of high and unshaken loyalty, had never concerned
+himself with politics, but led a quiet and studious life, and was everywhere
+honored and respected.</p>
+<p>The winter passed in great anxiety, and when in the spring the rising at
+Anjou took place, and the new government summoned all who could bear arms to
+assist in quelling it, a council was held among the party at Clisson on the
+steps to be taken. Henri, as the youngest, spoke first, saying he would rather
+perish than fight against the peasants; nor among the whole assembly was there
+one person willing to take the safer but meaner course of deserting the cause of
+their King and country. 'Yes,' said the Duchess de Donnissan, mother to the
+young wife of the Marquis de Lescure, 'I see you are all of the same opinion.
+Better death than dishonor. I approve your courage. It is a settled thing:' and
+seating herself in her armchair, she concluded, 'Well, then, we must die.'</p>
+<p>For some little time all remained quiet at Clisson; but at length the order
+for the conscription arrived, and a few days before the time appointed for the
+lots to be drawn, a boy came to the castle bringing a note to Henri from his
+aunt at St. Aubin. 'Monsieur Henri,' said the boy, 'they say you are to draw
+for the conscription next Sunday; but may not your tenants rise against it in
+the meantime? Come with me, sir, the whole country is longing for you, and will
+obey you.'</p>
+<p>Henri instantly promised to come, but some of the ladies would have persuaded
+him not to endanger himself--representing, too, that if he was missing on the
+appointed day, M. de Lescure might be made responsible for him. The Marquis,
+however, silenced them, saying to his cousin, 'You are prompted by honor and
+duty to put yourself at the head of your tenants. Follow out your plan, I am
+only grieved at not being able to go with you; and certainly no fear of
+imprisonment will lead me to dissuade you from doing your duty.'</p>
+<p>'Well, I will come and rescue you,' said Henri, embracing him, and his eyes
+glancing with a noble soldier-like expression and an eagle look.</p>
+<p>As soon as the servants were gone to bed, he set out with a guide, with a
+stick in his hand and a pair of pistols in his belt; and traveling through the
+fields, over hedges and ditches, for fear of meeting with the Blues, arrived at
+St. Aubin, and from thence went on to meet M. de Bonchamp and his little army.
+But he found to his disappointment that they had just been defeated, and the
+chieftains, believing that all was lost, had dispersed their troops. He went to
+his own home, dispirited and grieved; but no sooner did the men of St. Aubin
+learn the arrival of their young lord, than they came trooping to the castle,
+entreating him to place himself at their head.</p>
+<p>In the early morning, the castle court, the fields, the village, were
+thronged with stout hardy farmers and laborers, in grey coats, with broad
+flapping hats, and red woolen handkerchiefs round their necks. On their
+shoulders were spits, scythes, and even sticks; happy was the man who could
+bring an old fowling-piece, and still more rejoiced the owner of some powder,
+intended for blasting some neighboring quarry. All had bold true hearts, ready
+to suffer and to die in the cause of their Church and of their young innocent
+imprisoned King.</p>
+<p>A mistrust of his own powers, a fear of ruining these brave men, crossed the
+mind of the youth as he looked forth upon them, and he exclaimed, 'If my father
+was but here, you might trust to him. Yet by my courage I will show myself
+worthy, and lead you. If I go forward, follow me: if I draw back, kill me; if I
+am slain, avenge me!' They replied with shouts of joy, and it was instantly
+resolved to march upon the next village, which was occupied by the rebel troops.
+They gained a complete victory, driving away the Blues, and taking two small
+pieces of cannon, and immediately joined M. de Bonchamp and Cathelineau, who,
+encouraged by their success, again gathered their troops and gained some further
+advantages.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, the authorities had sent to Clisson and arrested M. de
+Lescure, his wife, her parents, and some of their guests, who were conducted to
+Bressuire, the nearest town, and there closely guarded. There was great danger
+that the Republicans would revenge their losses upon them, but the calm
+dignified deportment of M. de Lescure obliged them to respect him so much that
+no injury was offered to him. At last came the joyful news that the Royalist
+army was approaching. The Republican soldiers immediately quitted the town, and
+the inhabitants all came to ask the protection of the prisoners, desiring to
+send their goods to Clisson for security, and thinking themselves guarded by the
+presence of M. and Madame de Lescure.</p>
+<p>M. de Lescure and his cousin Bernard de Marigny mounted their horses and rode
+out to meet their friends. In a quarter of an hour afterwards, Madame de Lescure
+heard the shouts 'Long live the King!' and the next minute, Henri de la
+Rochejacquelein hurried into the room, crying, 'I have saved you.' The peasants
+marched in to the number of 20,000, and spread themselves through the town, but
+in their victory they had gained no taste for blood or plunder--they did not
+hurt a single inhabitant, nor touch anything that was not their own. Madame de
+Lescure heard some of them wishing for tobacco, and asked if there was none in
+the town. 'Oh yes, there is plenty to be sold, but we have no money;' and they
+were very thankful to her for giving the small sum they required. Monsieur de
+Donnissan saw two men disputing in the street, and one drew his sword, when he
+interfered, saying, 'Our Lord prayed for His murderers, and would one soldier of
+the Catholic army kill another?' The two instantly embraced.</p>
+<p>Three times a day these peasant warriors knelt at their prayers, in the
+churches if they were near them, if not, in the open field, and seldom have ever
+been equaled the piety, the humility, the self-devotion alike of chiefs and of
+followers. The frightful cruelties committed by the enemy were returned by
+mercy; though such of them as fell into the hands of the Republicans were shot
+without pity, yet their prisoners were instantly set at liberty after being made
+to promise not to serve against them again, and having their hair shaved off in
+order that they might be recognized.</p>
+<p>Whenever an enterprise was resolved on, the curates gave notice to their
+parishioners that the leaders would be at such a place at such a time, upon
+which they crowded to the spot, and assembled around the white standard of
+France with such weapons as they could muster.</p>
+<p>The clergy then heard them confess their sins, gave them absolution, and
+blessed them; then, while they set forward, returned to the churches where their
+wives and children were praying for their success. They did not fight like
+regular soldiers, but, creeping through the hedgerows and coppices, burst
+unexpectedly upon the Blues, who, entangled in the hollow lanes, ignorant of the
+country, and amazed by the suddenness of the attack, had little power to resist.
+The chieftains were always foremost in danger; above all the eager young Henri,
+with his eye on the white standard, and on the blue sky, and his hand making the
+sign of the cross without which he never charged the enemy, dashed on first,
+fearless of peril, regardless of his life, thinking only of his duty to his king
+and the protection of his followers.</p>
+<p>It was calmness and resignation which chiefly distinguished M. de Lescure,
+the Saint of Poitou, as the peasants called him from his great piety, his even
+temper, and the kindness and the wonderful mercifulness of his disposition.
+Though constantly at the head of his troops, leading them into the most
+dangerous places, and never sparing himself, not one man was slain by his hand,
+nor did he even permit a prisoner to receive the least injury in his presence.
+When one of the Republicans once presented his musket close to his breast, he
+quietly put it aside with his hand, and only said, 'Take away the prisoner'. His
+calmness was indeed well founded, and his trust never failed. Once when the
+little army had received a considerable check, and his cousin M. de Marigny was
+in despair, and throwing his pistols on the table, exclaimed, 'I fight no
+longer', he took him by the arm, led him to the window, an pointing to a troop
+of peasants kneeling at their evening prayers, he said, 'See there a pledge of
+our hopes, and doubt no longer that we shall conquer in our turn.'</p>
+<p>Their greatest victory was at Saumur, owing chiefly to the gallantry of
+Henri, who threw his hat into the midst of the enemy, shouting to his followers,
+'Who will go and fetch it for me?' and rushing forward, drove all before him,
+and made his way into the town on one side, while M. de Lescure, together with
+Stofflet, a game-keeper, another of the chiefs, made their entrance on the other
+side. M. de Lescure was wounded in the arm, and on the sight of his blood the
+peasants gave back, and would have fled had not Stofflet threatened to shoot the
+first who turned; and in the meantime M. de Lescure, tying up his arm with a
+handkerchief, declared it was nothing, and led them onwards.</p>
+<p>The city was entirely in their hands, and their thankful delight was
+excessive; but they only displayed it by ringing the bells, singing the Te Deum,
+and parading the streets. Henri was almost out of his senses with exultation;
+but at last he fell into a reverie, as he stood, with his arms folded, gazing on
+the mighty citadel which had yielded to efforts such as theirs. His friends
+roused him from his dream by their remarks, and he replied, 'I am reflecting on
+our success, and am confounded'.</p>
+<p>They now resolved to elect a general-in-chief, and M. de Lescure was the
+first to propose Cathelineau, the peddler, who had first come forward in the
+cause. It was a wondrous thing when the nobles, the gentry, and experienced
+officers who had served in the regular army, all willingly placed themselves
+under the command of the simple untrained peasant, without a thought of
+selfishness or of jealousy. Nor did Cathelineau himself show any trace of pride,
+or lose his complete humility of mind or manner; but by each word and deed he
+fully proved how wise had been their judgment, and well earned the title given
+him by the peasants of the 'Saint of Anjou'.</p>
+<p>It was now that their hopes were highest; they were more numerous and better
+armed than they had ever been before, and they even talked of a march to Paris
+to 'fetch their little king, and have him crowned at Chollet', the chief town of
+La Vendee. But martyrdom, the highest glory to be obtained on this earth, was
+already shedding its brightness round these devoted men who were counted worthy
+to suffer, and it was in a higher and purer world that they were to meet their
+royal child.</p>
+<p>Cathelineau turned towards Nantes, leaving Henri de la Rochejaquelein, to his
+great vexation, to defend Saumur with a party of peasants. But he found it
+impossible to prevent these poor men from returning to their homes; they did not
+understand the importance of garrison duty, and gradually departed, leaving
+their commander alone with a few officers, with whom he used to go through the
+town at night, shouting out, 'Long live the king!' at the places where there
+ought to have been sentinels. At last, when his followers were reduced to eight,
+he left the town, and, rejoicing to be once more in the open field, overtook his
+friends at Angers, where they had just rescued a great number of clergy who had
+been imprisoned there, and daily threatened with death. 'Do not thank us,' said
+the peasants to the liberated priests; 'it is for you that we fight. If we had
+not saved you, we should not have ventured to return home. Since you are freed,
+we see plainly that the good God is on our side.'</p>
+<p>But the tide was now about to turn. The Government in Paris sent a far
+stronger force into the Bocage, and desolated it in a cruel manner. Clisson was
+burnt to the ground with the very fireworks which had been prepared for the
+christening of its master's eldest child, and which had not been used because of
+the sorrowful days when she was born. M. de Lescure had long expected its
+destruction, but had not chosen to remove the furniture, lest he should
+discourage the peasants. His family were with the army, where alone there was
+now any safety for the weak and helpless. At Nantes the attack was unsuccessful,
+and Cathelineau himself received a wound of which he died in a few days,
+rejoicing at having been permitted to shed his blood in such a cause.</p>
+<p>The army, of which M. d'Elbee became the leader, now returned to Poitou, and
+gained a great victory at Chatillon; but here many of them forgot the mercy they
+had usually shown, and, enraged by the sight of their burnt cottages, wasted
+fields, and murdered relatives, they fell upon the prisoners and began to
+slaughter them. M. de Lescure, coming in haste, called out to them to desist.
+'No, no,' cried M. de Marigny; 'let me slay these monsters who have burnt your
+castle.' 'Then, Marigny,' said his cousin, 'you must fight with me. You are too
+cruel; you will perish by the sword.' And he saved these unhappy men for the
+time; but they were put to death on their way to their own army.</p>
+<p>The cruelties of the Republicans occasioned a proclamation on the part of the
+Royalists that they would make reprisals; but they could never bring themselves
+to act upon it. When M. de Lescure took Parthenay, he said to the inhabitants,
+'It is well for you that it is I who have taken your town; for, according to our
+proclamation, I ought to burn it; but, as you would think it an act of private
+revenge for the burning of Clisson, I spare you'.</p>
+<p>Though occasional successes still maintained the hopes of the Vendeans,
+misfortunes and defeats now became frequent; they were unable to save their
+country from the devastations of the enemy, and disappointments began to thin
+the numbers of the soldiers. Henri, while fighting in a hollow road, was struck
+in the right hand by a ball, which broke his thumb in three places. He continued
+to direct his men, but they were at length driven back from their post. He was
+obliged to leave the army for some days; and though he soon appeared again at
+the head of the men of St. Aubin, he never recovered the use of his hand.</p>
+<p>Shortly after, both D'Elbee and Bonchamp were desperately wounded; and M. de
+Lescure, while waving his followers on to attack a Republican post, received a
+ball in the head. The enemy pressed on the broken and defeated army with
+overwhelming force, and the few remaining chiefs resolved to cross the Loire and
+take refuge in Brittany. It was much against the opinion of M. de Lescure; but,
+in his feeble and suffering state, he could not make himself heard, nor could
+Henri's representations prevail; the peasants, in terror and dismay, were
+hastening across as fast as they could obtain boats to carry them. The enemy was
+near at hand, and Stofflet, Marigny, and the other chiefs were only deliberating
+whether they should not kill the prisoners whom they could not take with them,
+and, if set at liberty, would only add to the numbers of their pursuers. The
+order for their death had been given; but, before it could be executed, M. de
+Lescure had raised his head to exclaim, 'It is too horrible!' and M. de Bonchamp
+at the same moment said, almost with his last breath, 'Spare them!' The officers
+who stood by rushed to the generals, crying out that Bonchamp commanded that
+they should be pardoned. They were set at liberty; and thus the two Vendean
+chiefs avenged their deaths by saving five thousand of their enemies!</p>
+<p>M. de Bonchamp expired immediately after; but M. de Lescure had still much to
+suffer in the long and painful passage across the river, and afterwards, while
+carried along the rough roads to Varades in an armchair upon two pikes, his wife
+and her maid supporting his feet. The Bretons received them kindly, and gave him
+a small room, where, the next day, he sent for the rest of the council, telling
+them they ought to choose a new general, since M. d'Elbee was missing. They
+answered that he himself alone could be commander. 'Gentlemen,' he answered: 'I
+am mortally wounded; and even if I am to live, which I do not expect, I shall be
+long unfit to serve. The army must instantly have an active chief, loved by all,
+known to the peasants, trusted by everyone. It is the only way of saving us. M.
+de la Rochejaquelein alone is known to the soldiers of all the divisions. M. de
+Donnissan, my father-in-law, does not belong to this part of the country, and
+would not be as readily followed. The choice I propose would encourage the
+soldiers; and I entreat you to choose M. de 1a Rochejaquelein. As to me, if I
+live, you know I shall not quarrel with Henri; I shall be his aide-de-camp.'</p>
+<p>His advice was readily followed, Henri was chosen; but when a second in
+command was to be elected, he said no, he was second, for he should always obey
+M. de Donnissan, and entreated that the honor might not be given to him, saying
+that at twenty years of age he had neither weight nor experience, that his valor
+led him to be first in battle, but in council his youth prevented him from being
+attended to; and, indeed, after giving his opinion, he usually fell asleep while
+others were debating. He was, however, elected; and as soon as M. de Lescure
+heard the shouts of joy with which the peasants received the intelligence, he
+sent Madame de Lescure to bring him to his bedside. She found him hidden in a
+corner, weeping bitterly; and when he came to his cousin, he embraced him,
+saving earnestly, again and again, that he was not fit to be general, he only
+knew how to fight, he was too young and could never silence those who opposed
+his designs, and entreated him to take the command as soon as he was cured.
+'That I do not expect,' said M. de Lescure; 'but if it should happen, I will be
+your aide-de-camp, and help you to conquer the shyness which prevents your
+strength of character from silencing the murmurers and the ambitious.'</p>
+<p>Henri accordingly took the command; but it was a melancholy office that
+devolved upon him of dragging onward his broken and dejected peasants,
+half-starved, half-clothed, and followed by a wretched train of women, children,
+and wounded; a sad change from the bright hopes with which, not six months
+before, he had been called to the head of his tenants. Yet still his high
+courage gained some triumphs, which for a time revived the spirits of his forces
+and restored their confidence. He was active and undaunted, and it was about
+this time, when in pursuit of the Blues, he was attacked by a foot soldier when
+alone in a narrow lane. His right hand was useless, but he seized the man's
+collar with his 1eft, and held him fast, managing his horse with his legs till
+his men came up. He would not allow them to kill the soldier, but set him free,
+saying 'Return to the Republicans, and tell them that you were alone with the
+general of the brigands, who had but one hand and no weapons, yet you could not
+kill him'. Brigands was the name given by the Republicans, the true robbers, to
+the Royalists, who, in fact, by this time, owing to the wild life they had so
+long led, had acquired a somewhat rude and savage appearance. They wore grey
+cloth coats and trousers, broad hats, white sashes with knots of different
+colours to mark the rank of the officers, and red woolen handkerchiefs. These
+were made in the country, and were at first chiefly worn by Henri, who usually
+had one round his neck, another round his waist, and a third to support his
+wounded hand; but the other officers, having heard the Blues cry out to aim at
+the red handkerchief, themselves adopted the same badge, in order that he might
+be less conspicuous.</p>
+<p>In the meantime a few days' rest at Laval had at first so alleviated the
+sufferings of M. de Lescure, that hopes were entertained of his recovery; but he
+ventured on greater exertions of strength than he was able to bear, and fever
+returned, which had weakened him greatly before it became necessary to travel
+onwards. Early in the morning, a day or two before their departure, he called to
+his wife, who was lying on a mattress on the floor, and desired her to open the
+curtains, asking, as she did so, if it was a clear day. 'Yes,' said she. 'Then,'
+he answered, 'I have a sort of veil before my eyes, I cannot see distinctly; I
+always thought my wound was mortal, and now I no longer doubt. My dear, I must
+leave you, that is my only regret, except that I could not restore my king to
+the throne; I leave you in the midst of a civil war, that is what afflicts me.
+Try to save yourself. Disguise yourself, and attempt to reach England.' Then
+seeing her choked with tears, he continued: 'Yes, your grief alone makes me
+regret life; for my own part, I die tranquil; I have indeed sinned, but I have
+always served God with piety; I have fought, and I die for Him, and I hope in
+His mercy. I have often seen death, and I do not fear it I go to heaven with a
+sure trust, I grieve but for you; I hoped to have made you happy; if I ever have
+given you any reason to complain, forgive me.' Finding her grief beyond all
+consolation, he allowed her to call the surgeons, saying that it was possible he
+might be mistaken. They gave some hope, which cheered her spirits, though he
+still said he did not believe them. The next day they left Laval; and on the
+way, while the carriage was stopping, a person came to the door and read the
+details of the execution of Marie Antoinette which Madame de Lescure had kept
+from his knowledge. It was a great shock to him, for he had known the Queen
+personally, and throughout the day he wearied himself with exclamations on the
+horrible crime. That night at Ernee he received the Sacrament, and at the same
+time became speechless, and could only lie holding his wife's hand and looking
+sometimes at her, sometimes toward heaven. But the cruel enemy were close
+behind, and there was no rest on earth even for the dying. Madame de Lescure
+implored her friends to leave them behind; but they told her she would be
+exposed to a frightful death, and that his body would fall into the enemy's
+hands; and she was forced to consent to his removal. Her mother and her other
+friends would not permit her to remain in the carriage with him; she was placed
+on horseback and her maid and the surgeon were with him. An hour after, on the
+3rd of November, he died, but his wife did not know her loss till the evening
+when they arrived at Fongeres; for though the surgeon left the carriage on his
+death, the maid, fearing the effect which the knowledge might have upon her in
+the midst of her journey, remained for seven hours in the carriage by his side,
+during two of which she was in a fainting fit.</p>
+<p>When Madame de Lescure and Henri de la Rochejaquelein met the next morning,
+they sat for a quarter of an hour without speaking, and weeping bitterly. At
+last she said 'You have lost your best friend,' and he replied, 'Take my life,
+if it could restore him.'</p>
+<p>Scarcely anything can be imagined more miserable than the condition of the
+army, or more terrible than the situation of the young general, who felt himself
+responsible for its safety, and was compelled daily to see its sufferings and
+find his plans thwarted by the obstinacy and folly of the other officers,
+crushed by an overwhelming force, knowing that there was no quarter from which
+help could come, yet still struggling on in fulfillment of his sad duty. The
+hopes and expectations which had filled his heart a few months back had long
+passed away; nothing was around him but misery, nothing before him but
+desolation; but still he never failed in courage, in mildness, in confidence in
+Heaven.</p>
+<p>At Mans he met with a horrible defeat; at first, indeed, with a small party
+he broke the columns of the enemy, but fresh men were constantly brought up, and
+his peasants gave way and retreated, their officers following them. He tried to
+lead them back through the hedges, and if he had succeeded, would surely have
+gained the victory. Three times with two other officers he dashed into the midst
+of the Blues; but the broken, dispirited peasants would not follow him, not one
+would even turn to fire a shot. At last, in leaping a hedge, his saddle turned,
+and he fell, without indeed being hurt, but the sight of his fall added to the
+terror of the miserable Vendeans. He struggled long and desperately through the
+long night that followed to defend the gates of the town, but with the light of
+morning the enemy perceived his weakness and effected their entrance. His
+followers had in the meantime gradually retired into the country beyond, but
+those who could not escape fell a prey to the cruelty of the Republicans. 'I
+thought you had perished,' said Madame de Lescure, when he overtook her. 'Would
+that I had,' was his answer.</p>
+<p>He now resolved to cross the Loire, and return to his native Bocage, where
+the well-known woods would afford a better protection to his followers. It was
+at Craon, on their route to the river, that Madame de Lescure saw him for the
+last time, as he rallied his men, who had been terrified by a false alarm.</p>
+<p>She did not return to La Vendee, but, with her mother, was sheltered by the
+peasants of Brittany throughout the winter and spring until they found means to
+leave the country.</p>
+<p>The Vendeans reached the Loire at Ancenis, but they were only able to find
+two small boats to carry them over. On the other side, however, were four great
+ferry boats loaded with hay; and Henri, with Stofflet, three other officers, and
+eighteen soldiers crossed the river in their two boats, intending to take
+possession of them, send them back for the rest of the army, and in the meantime
+protect the passage from the Blues on the Vendean side. Unfortunately, however,
+he had scarcely crossed before the pursuers came down upon his troops, drove
+them back from Ancenis, and entirely prevented them from attempting the passage,
+while at the same time Henri and his companions were attacked and forced from
+the river by a body of Republicans on their side. A last resistance was
+attempted by the retreating Vendeans at Savenay, where they fought nobly but in
+vain; four thousand were shot on the field of battle, the chiefs were made
+prisoners and carried to Nantes or Angers, where they were guillotined, and a
+few who succeeded in escaping found shelter among the Bretons, or one by one
+found their way back to La Vendee. M. de Donnissan was amongst those who were
+guillotined, and M. d'Elbee, who was seized shortly after, was shot with his
+wife.</p>
+<p>Henri, with his few companions, when driven from the banks of the Loire,
+dismissed the eighteen soldiers, whose number would only have attracted
+attention without being sufficient for protection; but the five chiefs crossed
+the fields and wandered through the country without meeting a single
+inhabitant--all the houses were burnt down, and the few remaining peasants
+hidden in the woods. At last, after four-and-twenty hours, walking, they came to
+an inhabited farm, where they lay down to sleep on the straw. The next moment
+the farmer came to tell them the Blues were coming; but they were so worn out
+with fatigue, that they would not move. The Blues were happily, also, very
+tired, and, without making any search, laid down on the other side of the heap
+of straw, and also fell asleep. Before daylight the Vendeans rose and set out
+again, walking miles and miles in the midst of desolation, until, after several
+days, they came to Henri's own village of St. Aubin, where he sought out his
+aunt, who was in concealment there, and remained with her for three days,
+utterly overwhelmed with grief at his fatal separation from his army, and only
+longing for an opportunity of giving his life in the good cause.</p>
+<p>Beyond all his hopes, the peasants no sooner heard his name, than once more
+they rallied round the white standard, as determined as ever not to yield to the
+Revolutionary government; and the beginning of the year 1794 found him once more
+at the head of a considerable force, encamped in the forests of Vesins, guarding
+the villages around from the cruelties of the Blues. He was now doubly beloved
+and trusted by the followers who had proved his worth, and who even yet looked
+forward to triumphs beneath his brave guidance; but it was not so with him, he
+had learnt the lesson of disappointment, and though always active and cheerful,
+his mind was made up, and the only hope he cherished was of meeting the death of
+a soldier. His headquarters were in the midst of a forest, where one of the
+Republican officers, who was made prisoner, was much surprised to find the
+much-dreaded chieftain of the Royalists living in a hut formed of boughs of
+trees, dressed almost like a peasant, and with his arm still in a sling. This
+person was shot, because he was found to be commissioned to promise pardon to
+the peasants, and afterwards to massacre them; but Henri had not learnt cruelty
+from his persecutors, and his last words were of forgiveness.</p>
+<p>It was on Ash Wednesday that he had repulsed an attack of the enemy, and had
+almost driven them out of the wood, when, perceiving two soldiers hiding behind
+a hedge, he stopped, crying out, 'Surrender, I spare you.' As he spoke one of
+them leveled his musket, fired, and stretched him dead on the ground without a
+groan. Stofflet, coming up the next moment, killed the murderer with one stroke
+of his sword; but the remaining soldier was spared out of regard to the last
+words of the general. The Vendeans wept bitterly, but there was no time to
+indulge their sorrow, for the enemy were returning upon them; and, to save their
+chieftain's corpse from insult, they hastily dug a grave, in which they placed
+both bodies, and retreated as the Blues came up to occupy the ground. The
+Republicans sought for the spot, but it was preserved from their knowledge; and
+the high-spirited, pure-hearted Henri de la Rochejaquelein sleeps beside his
+enemy in the midst of the woodlands where be won for himself eternal honor. His
+name is still loved beyond all others; the Vendeans seldom pronounce it without
+touching their hats, and it is the highest glory of many a family that one of
+their number has served under Monsieur Henri.</p>
+<p>Stofflet succeeded to the command, and carried on the war with great skill
+and courage for another year, though with barbarities such as had never been
+permitted by the gentle men; but his career was stained by the death of Marigny,
+whom, by false accusations, he was induced to sentence to be shot. Marigny
+showed great courage and resignation, himself giving the word to fire--perhaps
+at that moment remembering the warning of M. de Lescure. Stofflet repented
+bitterly, and never ceased to lament his death. He was at length made prisoner,
+and shot, with his last words declaring his devotion to his king and his faith.</p>
+<p>Thus ends the tale of the Vendean war, undertaken in the best of causes, for
+the honor of God and His Church, and the rescue of one of the most innocent of
+kings, by men whose saintly characters and dauntless courage have seldom been
+surpassed by martyrs or heroes of any age. It closed with blood, with fire, with
+miseries almost unequalled; yet who would dare to say that the lives of
+Cathelineau, Bonchamp, Lescure, La Rochejaquelein, with their hundreds of brave
+and pious followers, were devoted in vain? Who could wish to see their
+brightness dimmed with earthly rewards?</p>
+<p>And though the powers of evil were permitted to prevail on earth, yet what
+could their utmost triumph effect against the faithful, but to make for them, in
+the words of the child king for whom they fought, one of those thorny paths that
+lead to glory!</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center><h3>THE END.</h3></center>
+
+
+<PRE>
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's A Book of Golden Deeds, by Charlotte M. Yonge
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