and feeble character. In the sumptuous train
attendant upon this “Petit Grenouille,”
as he styled himself in one of his babyish epistles
to England’s sovereign majesty, there was a
certain knight more inclined to the study of letters
than to the breaking of lances,—the Sieur
Amadis de Jocelin, who being much about the court
in the wake of his somewhat capricious and hot-tempered
master, came, unfortunately for his own peace of mind,
into occasional personal contact with one of the most
bewitching young women of her time, the Lady Penelope
Devereux, afterwards Lady Rich, she in whom, according
to a contemporary writer, “lodged all attractive
graces and beauty, wit and sweetness of behaviour
which might render her the mistress of all eyes and
hearts.” Surrounded as she was by many suitors,
his passion was hopeless from the first, and that he
found it so was evident from the fact that he suddenly
disappeared from the court and from his master’s
retinue, and was never heard of by the great world
again. Yet he was not far away. He had not
the resolution to leave England, the land which enshrined
the lady of his love,—and he had lost all
inclination to return to France. He therefore
retired into the depths of the sweet English country,
among the then unspoilt forests and woodlands, and
there happening to find a small manor-house for immediate
sale, surrounded by a considerable quantity of land,
he purchased it for the ready cash he had about him
and settled down in it for the remainder of his life.
Little by little, such social ambitions as he had ever
possessed left him, and with every passing year he
grew more and more attached to the simplicity and
seclusion of his surroundings. He had leisure
for the indulgence of his delight in books, and he
was able to give the rein to his passion for poetry,
though it is nowhere recorded that he ever published
the numerous essays, sonnets and rhymed pieces which,
written in the picturesque caligraphy of the period,
and roughly bound by himself in sheepskin, occupied
a couple of shelves in his library. He entered
with animation and interest into the pleasures of farming
and other agricultural pursuits, and by-and-bye as
time went on and the former idol of his dreams descended
from her fair estate of virtue and scandalised the
world by her liaison with Lord Mountjoy, he appears
to have gradually resigned the illusions of his first
love, for he married a simple village girl, remarkable,
so it was said, for her beauty, but more so for her
skill in making butter and cheese. She could
neither read nor write, however, and the traditions
concerning the Sieur Amadis relate that he took a
singular pleasure in teaching her these accomplishments,
as well as in training her to sing and to accompany
herself upon the lute in a very pretty manner.
She made him an excellent wife, and gave him no less
than six children, three boys and three girls, all
of whom were brought up at home under the supervision
of their father and mother, and encouraged to excel