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.

He pored over it, with dim eyes almost out of his keeping, searching for the names at the top.  So he found what he had dreaded—­’John Count of Mortain.’  Shaking fearfully, he began to point at the wall as if he saw the man before him.  ’Jesu!  Count by me, King by me, and Judas by me!  Now, God, let me serve Thee as Thou deservest.  Thou hast taken away all my sons.  Now then the devil may have my soul, for Thou shalt never have it.’  The death-rattle was heard in his throat, and Hugh sprang forward to help him:  he was still stiffly upright, still looking (though with filmy eyes) at the wall, still trying to shape in words his wicked vaunts.  No words came from him; his jaw dropped before his strong old body.  They brought him the Sacrament; his soul rejected it—­too clean food.  Hugh and others about him, all in a sweat, got him down at last.  They anointed him and said a few prayers, for they were in a desperate hurry when it came to the end.  It was near midnight when he died, and at that hour, they terribly report, the wind sprang up and howled about the turrets of Chinon, as if all hell was out hunting for that which he had promised them.  But, if the truth must be told, he had never kept his promises, and there is no reason to suppose that he kept that one either.  Milo adds, So died this great, puissant, and terrible king, cursing his children, cursed in them, as they in him.  All power was given over to him from his birth, save one only, power over himself.  He was indeed a slave more wretched than those hinds, glebae ascriptitii, whom at a distance he ruled in his lands:  he was slave of his baser parts.  With God he was always at war, and with God’s elect.  What of blessed Thomas?  Let Thomas answer on the Last Day.  I deny him none of his properties; he was open-handed, open-minded, as bold as a lion.  But his vices ate him up.  Peace be with the man; he was a mighty king.  He left a wife in prison, two sons in arms against him, and many bastards.’

As soon as he was dead his people came about like flies and despoiled the Castle of Chinon, the bed where he lay (smiling grimly, as if death had made him a cynic), his very body of the rings on its fingers, the gold circlet, the Christ round his neck.  Such flagrancy was the penalty of death, who had made himself too cheap in those days; nor were there any left with him who might have said, Honour my dead father, or dead master.  William the Marshal had gone to Rouen, afraid of Richard; Geoffrey was half way to Angers after treasure; the Bishop of Durham (for purposes) had hastened off to Poictiers to be the first to hail the new King.  All that remained faithful in that den of thieves were a couple of poor girls with whom the old sinner had lately had to do.  Seeing he was left naked on his bed, one of these—­Nicolete her name was, from Harfleur—­touched the other on the shoulder—­Kentish Mall they called her—­and said, ’They have robbed our master of so much as a shirt to be buried in.  What shall we do?’

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