Windsor Castle by William Harrison Ainsworth (read along books TXT) ๐
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- Author: William Harrison Ainsworth
Read book online ยซWindsor Castle by William Harrison Ainsworth (read along books TXT) ๐ยป. Author - William Harrison Ainsworth
โFar be it from me to thwart your majesty's generous impulses,โ rejoined Suffolk. โIt is true that Wyat has saved your life; and if he had been disposed to take it, you have this moment exposed yourself to him.โ
โSir Thomas Wyat,โ said the king, turning to him, โyou have my full and free pardon. Quit this forest instantly, and make your way to Paris. If you are found within it to-morrow you will be lodged in the Tower.โ
Wyat knelt down, and would have pressed Henry's hand to his lips, but the latter pushed him aside.
โNoโno! Not nowโon your return.โ
Thus rebuffed, Wyat strode away, and as he passed the tree he heard a voice exclaim, โYou have escaped him, but think not to escape me!โ
โAnd now, sweetheart,โ said Henry, turning to Mabel, โsince you are so far on the way, you shall go with me to the castle.โ
โOn no account, my liege,โ she returned; โmy grandsire will wonder what has become of me. He must already be in great alarm.โ
โBut I will send an attendant to quiet his fears,โ urged Henry.
โThat would only serve to increase them,โ she rejoined. โNay, I must go.โ
And breaking from him, she darted swiftly down the hill, and glanced across the marsh like a moonbeam.
โPlague on it!โ cried Henry, โI have again forgotten to question her about her birth.โ
โShall I despatch this knave, my liege?โ cried Suffolk, pointing with his sword to Fenwolf.
โBy no means,โ said the king; โsomething may be learnt from him. Hark thee, thou felon hound; if thou indeed servest the fiend, thou seest he deserts thee, as he does all who put faith in him.โ
โI see it,โ replied Fenwolf, who, finding resistance vain, had folded his hands doggedly upon his breast.
โThen confess thy evil practices,โ said the king.
โGive me my life, and I will,โ replied Fenwolf. And as he uttered the words, he caught sight of the dark figure of Herne, stationed at the side of the oak, with its right arm raised menacingly.
โWhat seest thou?โ cried Henry, remarking his fixed gaze towards the tree, and glancing in that direction.
Fenwolf made no reply.
Henry went up to the tree, and walked round it, but he could see nothing.
โI will scour the forest to-morrow,โ he muttered, โand hang every knave I find within it who cannot give a good account of himself.โ
โHo! ho! ho!โ laughed a voice, which seemed to proceed from the branches of the tree. Henry looked up, but no one was visible.
โGod's deathโderided!โ he roared. โMan or devil, thou shalt feel my wrath.โ
โHo! ho! ho!โ again laughed the voice.
Stamping with rage, Henry swore a great oath, and smote the trunk of the tree with his sword.
โYour majesty will search in vain,โ said Suffolk; โit is clearly the fiend with whom you have to deal, and the aid of holy priests must be obtained to drive him from the forest.โ
โHo! ho! ho!โ again laughed the voice.
A party of horsemen now appeared in view. They proved to be the royal attendants, who had ridden forward in search of the king, and were instantly hailed by Henry and Suffolk. They were headed by Captain Bouchier, who at a sign from the king instantly dismounted.
โGive me your horse, Bouchier,โ said Henry, โand do you and half-a-dozen of your men remain on guard at this tree till I send a troop of arquebusiers to relieve you. When they arrive, station them near it, and let them remain here till I return in the morning. If any one appears, make him a prisoner.โ
โYour majesty's orders shall be faithfully obeyed,โ replied Bouchier.
Bound hand and foot, Fenwolf was thrown upon the back of a horse, and guarded by two halberdiers, who were prepared to strike him dead on the slightest movement. In this way he was conveyed to the castle, and placed in the guard-chamber of the lower gate till further orders should be issued respecting him.
IX. Showing how Morgan Fenwolf escaped from the Garter Tower.
Half-an-hour afterwards Fenwolf was visited by the Duke of Suffolk and a canon of the college; and the guard-chamber being cleared, the duke enjoined him to make clear his bosom by confession.
โI hold it my duty to tell you, prisoner,โ said Suffolk, โthat there is no hope of your life. The king's highness is determined to make a fearful example of you and all your companions in crime; but he does not seek to destroy your soul, and has therefore sent this holy man to you, with the desire that you may open your heart to him, and by confession and repentance save yourself from eternal perdition.โ
โConfession will profit me nothing,โ said Fenwolf moodily. โI cannot pray if I would.โ
โYou cannot be so utterly lost, my son,โ rejoined the canon. โHell may have woven her dark chains round you, but not so firmly but that the hand of Heaven can burst them.โ
โYou waste time in seeking to persuade me,โ returned Fenwolf.
โYou are not ignorant of the punishment inflicted upon those condemned for sorcery, my son?โ demanded the canon.
โIt is the stake, is it not?โ replied Fenwolf
โAy,โ replied the canon; โbut even that fiery trial will fail to purge out your offences without penitence. My lord of Suffolk, this wretched man's condition demands special attention. It will profit the Church much to win his soul from the fiend. Let him, I pray you, be removed to the dungeon beneath the Garter Tower, where a priest shall visit him, and pray by his side till daybreak.โ
โIt will be useless, father,โ said Fenwolf.
โI do not despair, my son,โ replied the canon; โand when I see you again in the morning I trust to find you in a better frame of mind.โ
The duke then gave directions to the guard to remove the prisoner, and after some further conference with the canon, returned to the royal apartments.
Meanwhile, the canon shaped his course towards the Horseshoe Cloisters, a range of buildings so designated from their form, and situated at the west end of St. George's Chapel, and he had scarcely entered them when he heard footsteps behind him, and turning at the sound, beheld a Franciscan friar, for so his habit of the coarsest grey cloth, tied with a cord round the waist, proclaimed him. The friar was very tall and gaunt,
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