The Life and Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 402 pages of information about The Life and Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay.

The Life and Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 402 pages of information about The Life and Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay.

The Duke of Burgundy looked heavily at the Bishop.  The Bishop said, ‘Sire, Ascalon is besieged.’

Said Richard, ’You old fool, do you not know the Soldan better than that?  Or do you put him on a parity with this Duke?  It was under siege three weeks ago, as you remember perfectly well.’

The Duke still looked at the Bishop.  Driven again to say something, the latter began—­’Sire, your words are injurious; but I have spoken advisedly.  The Count of Saint-Pol—­’

‘Ah,’ said Richard, ’the Count of Saint-Pol?  Now I begin to understand you.  Please to fetch in your Count of Saint-Pol.’

Saint-Pol was sent for, and he came, darkly smiling, respectful, but aware.  King Richard held his voice, but not his hand, on the curb.  The hand shook a little.

‘Saint-Pol,’ he said, ’the Duke of Burgundy refers me to the Bishop, the Bishop to you.  This seems the order of command in King Philip’s host.  Between the three of you I conceive to lie the honour of France.  Now observe me.  Three weeks ago I was for Ascalon, and you for Jerusalem.  Now that I have brought you within two days of your desire—­two days, observe—­you are for Ascalon, and I for Jerusalem.  What is the meaning of this?’

‘Sire,’ said Saint-Pol, reasonably, ’it means that we believe the Holy City impregnable at this season, or untenable; and Ascalon still pregnable.’

The King put a hand to the table.  ’It means nothing of the sort, man.  You do not believe Ascalon can be taken.  It is eight days’ journey, and was in straits a month ago.  You make me ashamed of the men I am forced to lead.  What faith have you?  What religion?  The faith of your sick master the Runagate!  The religion of your white Marquess of Montferrat!  And I had taken you for men.  Foh! you are rats.’

This was dreadful hearing:  Saint-Pol bit his lip, but made no other answer.

‘Sire,’ said the Bishop with heat, ’my manhood has never been reproached before.  When you carried war into my country in the King your father’s time, I met you in a hauberk of mail.  If I met your Grace, judge if I should fear the Soldan.  It is my devout hope to kiss the Holy Sepulchre and touch the Holy Cross, but before I die, not afterwards.’

‘Pish!’ said King Richard.

‘Sire,’ Beauvais ventured again, ’our master King Philip set us over his host as foster-fathers of his children.  We dare not imperil so many lives unadvisedly.’

‘Unadvisedly!’ the King thundered at him, red to the roots of his hair.

‘I withdraw the word, sire,’ said the Bishop in a hurry; ’yet it is the mature opinion of us all that we should seek the coast for winter-quarters, not the high lands.  We claim, at least, the duty of choosing for those whose guardians we are.’

If Richard had been himself of two years earlier he would have killed then and there a second Count of Saint-Pol; and for a pulse or two the young man saw his death bright in the King’s eyes.  That the angry man commanded himself is, I think, to his credit.  As it was, he did what he had certainly never done before:  he tried to reason with the Duke of Burgundy.

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The Life and Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.