Then Etienne repaired to Oxenford, where he was the guest of the new governor, Robert D’Oyly, for the night, who sent him on by boat to meet the king at Abingdon, whither William was daily expected to arrive to keep Ascensiontide, for he was still observant of such duties.
The servitors, seeing a boat arrive thus manned, were sensible at once it must contain a traveller or pilgrim of some importance— probably the latter; for, as we have already hinted, they had a wonder-working relic, in the shape of a cross, said to have been given to the abbey by the Empress Helena, and to contain a fragment of the true cross itself.
True, it had failed to prosper the poor English, who knelt before it, ere they went to die at Senlac; but of course that was because the Pope was against them, and had suspended the flow of spiritual benediction.
At least, so said the Normans, and they extolled the Black Cross as much as their predecessors.
“Pax vobiscum, domine,” said the chamberlain, who happened to be at the quay; “thou art come, doubtless, to bewail thy sins before the cross of St. Mary’s Abbey?”
“When my leisure permits, reverendissime pater; at present I seek an immediate audience of the abbot, for whom I bear sad news.”
“He is riding to meet the king. Listen, dost thou not hear the trumpets?—that blast tells of their return together.”
“Wilt thou grant me a chamber, that I may don meet apparel for the presence?”
“It is my duty; but of thy grace—tell me whom I entertain.”
“The Lord of Aescendune, and patron of your branch house there.”
The chamberlain bowed low, and turned to lead his guest within the precincts. The rowers cried “largesse,” and the young noble threw them a handful of coin.
Soon Etienne was alone in a comfortable cell, and was attiring his person, a duty a Norman seldom neglected; nor did he despise the luxury of a bath, to the scorn of the un-laving natives. The Norman was the gentleman of the period, alike in etiquette, attire, and food.
And likewise, some of the most beautiful of the animal creation are the fiercest carnivora.
The abbot had put off his riding attire; he had clothed his feet in dainty slippers instead of sandals, and had thrown a soft robe around his monastic garb—contrasting strongly with the stern attire prescribed by St. Benedict, and he was about to descend to the hall, when the chamberlain in person told him of the arrival of Etienne.
“Bid him share our poor meal; we will hear no bad news till we have broken our fast; they sit ill on an empty stomach.”
The chamberlain retired.
And there at the guest table in the refectory sat Etienne, and marvelled to see how well the ascetics fared. Yet there was refinement in their dishes; and there was little or no excess; they drank the light wines of France, not the heavier ale and mead of their predecessors.