The Last of the Barons โ Complete by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (books to read for self improvement TXT) ๐
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The servitor announced Alwyn, and retired; the queen turnedโโWhat news, Master Alwyn? Quick! What tidings from the lord mayor?โ
โGracious my queen and lady,โ said Alwyn, falling on his knees, โyou have but one course to pursue. Below yon casement lies your barge, to the right see the round gray tower of Westminster Sanctuary; you have time yet, and but time!โ
The old Duchess of Bedford turned her sharp, bright, gray eyes from the pale and trembling friar to the goldsmith, but was silent. The queen stood aghast. โMean you,โ she faltered, at last, โthat the city of London forsakes the king? Shame on the cravens!โ
โNot cravens, my lady and queen,โ said Alwyn, rising. โHe must have iron nails that scratches a bear,โand the white bear above all. The king has fled, the barons have fled, the soldiers have fled, the captains have fled,โthe citizens of London alone fly not; but there is nothing save life and property left to guard.โ
โIs this thy boasted influence with the commons and youths of the city?โ
โMy humble influence, may it please your Grace (I say it now openly, and I will say it a year hence, when King Edward will hold his court in these halls once again), my influence, such as it is, has been used to save lives which resistance would waste in vain. Alack, alack! โNo gaping against an oven,โ gracious lady! Your barge is below. Again I say there is yet time,โwhen the bell tolls the next hour that time will be past!โ
โThen Jesu defend these children!โ said Elizabeth, bending over her infants, and weeping bitterly; โI will go!โ
โHold!โ said the Duchess of Bedford, โmen desert us, but do the spirits also forsake us?โSpeak, friar! canst thou yet do aught for us?โand if not, thinkest thou it is the right hour to yield and fly?โ
โDaughter,โ said the friar, whose terror might have moved pity, โas I said before, thank yourself. This Warner, thisโin short, the lesser magician hath been aided and cockered to countervail the greater, as I forewarned. Fly! run! fly! Verily and indeed it is the prosperest of all times to save ourselves; and the stars and the book and my familiar all call out, โOff and away!โโ
โโFore heaven!โ exclaimed Alwyn, who had hitherto been dumb with astonishment at this singular interlude, โsith he who hath shipped the devil must make the best of him, thou art for once an honest man and a wise counsellor. Hark! the second gun! The earl is at the gates of the city!โ
The queen lingered no longer; she caught her youngest child in her arms; the Lady Scrope followed with the two others. โCome, follow, quick, Master Alwyn,โ said the duchess, who, now that she was compelled to abandon the world of prediction and soothsaying, became thoroughly the sagacious, plotting, ready woman of this life; โcome, your face and name will be of service to us, anโ we meet with obstruction.โ
Before Alwyn could reply, the door was thrown abruptly open, and several of the officers of the household rushed pell-mell into the royal presence.
โGracious queen!โ cried many voices at once, each with a different sentence of fear and warning, โfly! We cannot depend on the soldiers; the populace are up,โthey shout for King Henry; Dr. Godard is preaching against you at St. Paulโs Cross; Sir Geoffrey Gates has come out of the sanctuary, and with him all the miscreants and outlaws; the mayor is now with the rebels! Fly! the sanctuary, the sanctuary!โ
โAnd who amongst you is of highest rank?โ asked the duchess, calmly; for Elizabeth, completely overwhelmed, seemed incapable of speech or movement.
โI, Giles de Malvoisin, knight banneret,โ said an old warrior armed cap-a-pie, who had fought in France under the hero Talbot.
โThen, sir,โ said the duchess, with majesty, โto your hands I confide the eldest daughter of your king. Lead on!โwe follow you. Elizabeth, lean on me.โ
With this, supporting Elizabeth, and leading her second grandchild, the duchess left the chamber.
The friar followed amidst the crowd, for well he knew that if the soldiers of Warwick once caught hold of him, he had fared about as happily as the fox amidst the dogs; and Alwyn, forgotten in the general confusion, hastened to Adamโs chamber.
The old man, blessing any cause that induced his patroness to dispense with his astrological labours and restored him to the care of his Eureka, was calmly and quietly employed in repairing the mischief effected by the bungling friar; and Sibyll, who at the first alarm had flown to his retreat, joyfully hailed the entrance of the friendly goldsmith.
Alwyn was indeed perplexed what to advise, for the principal sanctuary would, no doubt, be crowded by ruffians of the worst character; and the better lodgments which that place, a little town in itself, [the Sanctuary of Westminster was fortified] contained, be already preoccupied by the Yorkists of rank; and the smaller sanctuaries were still more liable to the same objection. Moreover, if Adam should be recognized by any of the rabble that would meet them by the way, his fate, by the summary malice of a mob, was certain. After all, the Tower would be free from the populace; and as soon as, by a few rapid questions, Alwyn learned from Sibyll that she had reason to hope her father would find protection with Lord Warwick, and called to mind that Marmaduke Nevile was necessarily in the earlโs train, he advised them to remain quiet and concealed in their apartments, and promised to see and provide for them the moment the Tower was yielded up to the new government.
The counsel suited both Sibyll and Warner. Indeed, the philosopher could not very easily have been induced to separate himself again from the beloved Eureka; and Sibyll was more occupied at that hour with thoughts and prayers for the beloved Hastings,โafar, a wanderer and an exile,โthan with the turbulent events amidst which her lot was cast.
In the storms of a revolution which convulsed a kingdom and hurled to the dust a throne, Love saw but a single object, Science but its tranquil toil. Beyond the realm of men lies ever with its joy and sorrow, its vicissitude and change, the domain of the human heart. In the revolution, the toy of the scholar was restored to him; in the revolution, the maiden mourned her lover. In the movement of the mass, each unit hath its separate passion. The blast that rocks the trees shakes a different world in every leaf.
CHAPTER XI. THE TOWER IN COMMOTION.
On quitting the Tower, Alwyn regained the boat, and took his way to the city; and here, whatever credit that worthy and excellent personage may lose in certain eyes, his historian is bound to confess that his anxiety for Sibyll did not entirely distract his attention from interest or ambition. To become the head of his class, to rise to the first honours of his beloved city of London, had become to Nicholas Alwyn a hope and aspiration which made as much a part of his being as glory to a warrior, power to a king, a Eureka to a scholar; and, though more mechanically than with
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