The Chaplet of Pearls by Charlotte M. Yonge (i am reading a book .txt) ๐
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- Author: Charlotte M. Yonge
Read book online ยซThe Chaplet of Pearls by Charlotte M. Yonge (i am reading a book .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Charlotte M. Yonge
Eustacie gladly retreated to housewifery at Combe Walwyn, but a strenuous endeavour on Lady Thistlewoodโs part to marry her stepson to a Dorset kingโs daughter, together with the tidings of the renewed war in France, spurred Philip into writing permission from his father to join the King of Navarre as a volunteer.
Years went by, and Philip was only heard of in occasional letters, accompanied by presents to his sisters and to little Rayonette, and telling of marches, exploits, and battles,โhow he had taken a standard of the League at Coutras, and how he had led a charge of pikemen at Ivry, for which he received the thanks of Henry IV. But, though so near home, he did not set foot on English ground till the throne of France was secured to the hero of Navarre, and he had marched into Paris in guise very unlike the manner he had left it.
Then home he came, a bronzed gallant-looking warrior, the pride of the county, ready for repose and for aid to his father in his hearty old age, and bearing with him a pressing invitation from the King to Monsieur and Madame de Ribaumont to resume their rank at court. Berenger, who had for many years only known himself as Lord Walwyn, shook his head. โI thank the King,โ he said, โbut I am better content to breed up my children as wholly English. He bade me to return when he should have stirred the witchโs caldron into clearness. Alas! all he has done is to make brilliant colours shine on the vapour thereof. Nay, Phil; I know your ardent love for him, and marvel not at it. Before he joined the Catholic Church I trusted that he might have given truth to the one party, and unity to the other; but when the clergy accepted him with all his private vices, and he surrendered unconditionally, I lost hope. I fear there is worse in store. Queen Catherine did her most fatal work of evil when she corrupted Henry of Navarre.โ
โIf you say more, Berry, I shall be ready to challenge you!โ said Philip. โWhen you saw him, you little knew the true king of souls that he is, is greatness, or his love for his country.โ
โNay, I believe it; but tell me, Philip, did you not hint that you had been among former friendsโat Lucon, you said, I think?โ
Philipโs face changed. โYes; it was for that I wished to see you alone. My troop had to occupy the place. I had to visit the convent to arrange for quartering my men so as least to scandalize the sisters. The Abbess came to speak to me. I knew her only by her eyes! She is changedโaged, wan, thin with their discipline and fastsโbut she once or twice smiled as she alone in old times could smile. The place rings with her devotion, her charity, her penances, and truly her face isโโhe could hardly speakโโlike that of a saint. She knew me at once, asked for you all, and bade me tell you that NOW she prays for you and yours continually, and blesses you for having opened to her the way of peace. Ah! Berry, I always told you she had not her equal.โ
โThink you so even now?โ
โHow should I not, when I have seen what repentance has made of her?โ
โSo!โ said Berenger, rather sorrowfully, โour great Protestant champion has still left his heart behind in a French convent.โ
โStay, Berenger! do you remember yonder villain conjurerโs prediction that I should wed none but a lady whose cognizance was the leopard?โ
โAnd you seem bent on accomplishing it,โ said Berenger.
โNay, but in another mannerโthat which you devised on the spur of the moment. Berenger, I knew the sorcerer spake sooth when that little moonbeam child of yours brought me the flowers from the rampart. I had speech with her last night. She has all the fair loveliness that belongs of right to your motherโs grandchild, but her eye, blue as it is, has the Ribaumont spirit; the turn of the head and the smile are what I loved long ago in yonder lady, and, above all, she is her own sweet self. Berenger, give me your daughter Berangere, and I ask no portion with her but the silver bullet. Keep the pearls for your sonโs heirloom; all I ask with Rayonette is the silver bullet.โ
THE END
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