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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. THE MIDNIGHT QUEEN. </h2>
<p>When Sir Norman Kingsley entered the ancient ruin, his head was full of
Leoline—when he knelt down to look through the aperture in the
flagged floor, head and heart were full of her still. But the moment his
eyes fell on the scene beneath, everything fled far from his thoughts,
Leoline among the rest; and nothing remained but a profound and absorbing
feeling of intensest amaze.</p>
<p>Right below him he beheld an immense room, of which the flag he had raised
seemed to form part of the ceiling, in a remote corner. Evidently it was
one of a range of lower vaults, and as he was at least fourteen feet above
it, and his corner somewhat in shadow, there was little danger of his
being seen. So, leaning far down to look at his leisure, he took the goods
the gods provided him, and stared to his heart's content.</p>
<p>Sir Norman had seen some queer sights during the four-and-twenty years he
had spent in this queer world, but never anything quite equal to this. The
apartment below, though so exceedingly large, was lighted with the
brilliance of noon-day; and every object it contained; from one end to the
other, was distinctly revealed. The floor, from glimpses he had of it in
obscure corners, was of stone; but from end to end it was covered with
richest rugs and mats, and squares of velvet of as many colors as Joseph's
coat. The walls were hung with splendid tapestry, gorgeous in silk and
coloring, representing the wars of Troy, the exploits of Coeur de Lion
among the Saracens, the death of Hercules, all on one side; and on the
other, a more modern representation, the Field of the Cloth of Gold. The
illumination proceeded from a range of wax tapers in silver candelabra,
that encircled the whole room. The air was redolent of perfumes, and
filled with strains of softest and sweetest music from unseen hands. At
one extremity of the room was a huge door of glass and gilding; and
opposite it, at the other extremity, was a glittering throne. It stood on
a raised dais, covered with crimson velvet, reached by two or three steps
carpeted with the same; the throne was as magnificent as gold, and satin,
and ornamentation could make it. A great velvet canopy of the same deep,
rich color, cut in antique points, and heavily hung with gold fringe, was
above the seat of honor. Beside it, to the right, but a little lower down,
was a similar throne, somewhat less superb, and minus a canopy. From the
door to the throne was a long strip of crimson velvet, edged and
embroidered with gold, and arranged in a sweeping semi-circle, on either
side, were a row of great carved, gilded, and cushioned chairs, brilliant,
too, with crimson and gold, and each for every-day Christians, a throne in
itself. Between the blaze of illumination, the flashing of gilding and
gold, the tropical flush of crimson velvet, the rainbow dyes on floor and
walls, the intoxicating gushes of perfume, and the delicious strains of
unseen music, it is no wonder Sir Norman Kingsley's head was spinning like
a bewildered teetotum.</p>
<p>Was he sane—was he sleeping? Had he drank too much wine at the
Golden Crown, and had it all gone to his head? Was it a scene of earnest
enchantment, or were fairy-tales true? Like Abou Hasson when he awoke in
the palace of the facetious Caliph of Bagdad, he had no notion of
believing his own eyes and ears, and quietly concluded it was all an
optical illusion, as ghosts are said to be; but he quietly resolved to
stay there, nevertheless, and see how the dazzling phantasmagoria would
end. The music was certainly ravishing, and it seemed to him, as he
listened with enchanted ears, that he never wanted to wake up from so
heavenly a dream.</p>
<p>One thing struck him as rather odd; strange and bewildered as everything
was, it did not seem at all strange to him, on the contrary, a vague idea
was floating mistily through his mind that he had beheld precisely the
same thing somewhere before. Probably at some past period of his life he
had beheld a similar vision, or had seen a picture somewhere like it in a
tale of magic, and satisfying himself with this conclusion, he began
wondering if the genii of the place were going to make their appearance at
all, or if the knowledge that human eyes were upon them had scared them
back to Erebus.</p>
<p>While still ruminating on this important question, a portion of the
tapestry, almost beneath him, shriveled up and up, and out flocked a
glittering throng, with a musical mingling of laughter and voices. Still
they came, more and more, until the great room was almost filled, and a
dazzling throng they were. Sir Norman had mingled in many a brilliant
scene at Whitehall, where the gorgeous court of Charles shone in all its
splendor, with the "merry monarch" at their head, but all he had ever
witnessed at the king's court fell far short of this pageant. Half the
brilliant flock were ladies, superb in satins, silks, velvets and jewels.
And such jewels! every gem that ever flashed back the sunlight sparkled
and blazed in blending array on those beautiful bosoms and arms—diamonds,
pearls, opals, emeralds, rubies, garnets, sapphires, amethysts—every
jewel that ever shone. But neither dresses nor gems were half so superb as
the peerless forms they adorned; and such an army of perfectly beautiful
faces, from purest blonde to brightest brunette, had never met and mingled
together before.</p>
<p>Each lovely face was unmasked, but Sir Norman's dazzled eyes in vain
sought among them for one he knew. All that "rosebud garden of girls" were
perfect strangers to him, but not so the gallants, who fluttered among
them like moths around meteors. They, too, were in gorgeous array, in
purple and fine linen, which being interpreted, signifieth in silken hose
of every color under the sun, spangled and embroidered slippers radiant
with diamond buckles, doublets of as many different shades as their
tights, slashed with satin and embroidered with gold. Most of them wore
huge powdered wigs, according to the hideous fashion then in vogue, and
under those same ugly scalps, laughed many a handsome face Sir Norman well
knew. The majority of those richly-robed gallants were strangers to him as
well as the ladies, but whoever they were, whether mortal men or "spirits
from the vasty deep," they were in the tallest sort of clover just then.
Evidently they knew it, too, and seemed to be on the best of terms with
themselves and all the world, and laughed, and flirted, and flattered,
with as much perfection as so many ball-room Apollos of the present day.</p>
<p>Still no one ascended the golden and crimson throne, though many of the
ladies and gentlemen fluttering about it were arrayed as royally as any
common king or queen need wish to be. They promenaded up and down, arm in
arm; they seated themselves in the carved and gilded chairs; they gathered
in little groups to talk and laugh, did everything, in short, but ascend
the throne; and the solitary spectator up above began to grow intensely
curious to know who it was for. Their conversation he could plainly hear,
and to say that it amazed him, would be to use a feeble expression,
altogether inadequate to his feelings. Not that it was the remarks they
made that gave his system each a shook, but the names by which they
addressed each other. One answered to the aspiring cognomen of the Duke of
Northumberland; another was the Earl of Leicester; another, the Duke of
Devonshire; another, the Earl of Clarendon; another, the Duke of
Buckingham; and so on, ad infinitum, dukes and earls alternately, like
bricks and mortar in the wall of a house. There were other dignitaries
besides, some that Sir Norman had a faint recollection of hearing were
dead for some years—Cardinal Wolsey, Sir Thomas More, the Earl of
Bothwell, King Henry Darnley, Sir Walter Raleigh, the Duke of Norfolk, the
Earl of Southampton, the Duke of York, and no end of others with equally
sonorous titles. As for mere lords and baronets, and such small deer,
there was nothing so plebeian present, and they were evidently looked upon
by the distinguished assembly, like small deer in thunder, with pity and
contempt. The ladies, too, were all duchesses, marchionesses, countesses,
and looked fit for princesses, Sir Norman thought, though he heard none of
them styled quite so high as that. The tone of conversation was light and
easy, but at the same time extremely ceremonious and courtly, and all
seemed to be enjoying themselves in the most delightful sort of a way,
which people of, such distinguished rank, I am told, seldom do. All went
merry as a marriage-bell, and sweetly over the gay jingle of voices rose
the sweet, faint strains of the unseen music.</p>
<p>Suddenly all was changed. The great door of glass and gilding opposite the
throne was flung wide, and a grand usher in a grand court livery
flourished a mighty grand wand, and shouted, in a stentorian voice,</p>
<p>"Back: back, ye lieges, and make way for Her Majesty, Queen Miranda!"</p>
<p>Instantly the unseen band thundered forth the national anthem. The
splendid throng fell back on either hand in profoundest silence and
expectation. The grand usher mysteriously disappeared, and in his place
there stalked forward a score of soldiers, with clanking swords and fierce
moustaches, in the gorgeous uniform of the king's body-guard. These showy
warriors arranged themselves silently on either side of the crimson
throne, and were followed by half a dozen dazzling personages, the
foremost crowned with mitre, armed with crozier, and robed in the
ecclesiastical glory of an archbishop, but the face underneath, to the
deep surprise and scandal of Sir Norman, was that of the fastest young
roue of Charles court, after him came another pompous dignitary, in such
unheard of magnificence that the unseen looker-on set him down for a prime
minister, or a lord high chancellor, at the very least. The somewhat
gaudy-looking gentlemen who stepped after the pious prelate and peer wore
the stars and garters of foreign courts, and were evidently embassadors
extraordinary to that of her midnight majesty. After them came a snowy
flock of fair young girls, angels all but the wings, slender as sylphs,
and robed in purest white. Each bore on her arm a basket of flowers, roses
and rosebuds of every tint, from snowy white to darkest crimson, and as
they floated in they scattered them lightly as they went. And then after
all came another vision, "the last, the brightest, the best—the
Midnight Queen," herself. One other figure followed her, and as they
entered, a shout arose from the whole assemblage, "Long live Queen
Miranda!" And bowing gracefully and easily to the right and left, the
queen with a queenly step, trod the long crimson carpet and mounted the
regal throne.</p>
<p>From the first moment of his looking down, Sir Norman had been staring
with all the eyes in his head, undergoing one shock of surprise after
another with the equanimity of a man quite new to it; but now a cry arose
to his lips, and died there in voiceless consternation. For he recognized
the queen—well he might!—he had seen her before, and her face
was the face of Leoline!</p>
<p>As she mounted the stairs, she stood there for a moment crowned and
sceptred, before sitting down, and in that moment he recognized the whole
scene. That gorgeous room and its gorgeous inmates; that regal throne and
its regal owner, all became palpable as the sun at noonday; that slender,
exquisite figure, robed in royal purple and ermine; the uncovered neck and
arms, snowy and perfect, ablaze with jewels; that lovely face, like snow,
like marble, in its whiteness and calm, with the great, dark, earnest eyes
looking out, and the waving wealth of hair falling around it. It was the
very scene, and room, and vision, that La Masque had shown him in the
caldron, and that face was the face of Leoline, and the earl's page.</p>
<p>Could he be dreaming? Was he sane or mad, or were the three really one?</p>
<p>While he looked, the beautiful queen bowed low, and amid the profoundest
and most respectful silence, took her seat. In her robes of purple,
wearing the glittering crown, sceptre in hand, throned and canopied,
royally beautiful she looked indeed, and a most vivid contrast to the
gentleman near her, seated very much at his ease, on the lower throne. The
contrast was not of dress—for his outward man was resplendent to
look at; but in figure and face, or grace and dignity, he was a very mean
specimen of the lords of creation, indeed. In stature, he scarcely reached
to the queen's royal shoulder, but made up sideways what he wanted in
length—being the breadth of two common men; his head was in
proportion to his width, and was decorated with a wig of long, flowing,
flaxen hair, that scarcely harmonized with a profusion of the article
whiskers, in hue most unmitigated black; his eyes were small, keen,
bright, and piercing, and glared on the assembled company as they had done
half an hour before on Sir Norman Kingsley, in the bar-room of the Golden
Crown; for the royal little man was no other than Caliban, the dwarf.
Behind the thrones the flock of floral angels grouped themselves;
archbishop, prime minister, and embassadors, took their stand within the
lines of the soldiery, and the music softly and impressively died sway in
the distance; dead silence reigned.</p>
<p>"My lord Duke," began the queen, in the very voice he had heard at the
plague-pit, as she turned to the stylish individual next the archbishop,
"come forward and read us the roll of mortality since our last meeting."</p>
<p>His grace, the duke, instantly stepped forward, bowing so low that nothing
was seen of him for a brief space, but the small of his back, and when he
reared himself up, after this convulsion of nature, Sir Norman beheld a
face not entirely new to him. At first, he could not imagine where he had
seen it, but speedily she recollected it was the identical face of the
highwayman who had beaten an inglorious retreat from him and Count
L'Estrange, that very night. This ducat robber drew forth a roll of
parchment, and began reading, in lachrymose tones, a select litany of
defunct gentlemen, with hifalutin titles who had departed this life during
the present week. Most of them had gone with the plague, but a few had
died from natural causes, and among these were the Earls of Craven and
Ashley.</p>
<p>"My lords Craven and Ashley dead!" exclaimed the queen, in tones of some
surprise, but very little anguish; "that is singular, for we saw them not
two hours ago, in excellent health and spirits."</p>
<p>"True, poor majesty," said the duke, dolefully, "and it is not an hour
since they quitted this vale of tears. They and myself rode forth at
nightfall, according to Custom, to lay your majesty's tax on all
travelers, and soon chanced to encounter one who gave vigorous battle;
still, it would have done him little service, had not another person come
suddenly to his aid, and between them they clove the skulls of Ashley and
Craven; and I," said the duke, modestly, "I left."</p>
<p>"Were either of the travelers young, and tall, and of courtly bearing?"
exclaimed the dwarf with sharp rudeness.</p>
<p>"Both were, your highness," replied the duke, bowing to the small speaker,
"and uncommonly handy with their weapons."</p>
<p>"I saw one of them down at the Golden Crown, not long ago," said the
dwarf; "a forward young popinjay, and mighty inquisitive about this, our
royal palace. I promised him, if he came here, a warm reception—a
promise I will have the greatest pleasure in fulfilling."</p>
<p>"You may stand aside, my lord duke," said the queen, with a graceful wave
of her hand, "and if any new subjects have been added to our court since
our last weekly meeting, let them come forward, and be sworn."</p>
<p>A dozen or more courtiers immediately stepped forward, and kneeling before
the queen, announced their name and rank, which were both ambitiously
high. A few silvery-toned questions were put by that royal lady and
satisfactorily answered, and then the archbishop, armed with a huge tome,
administered a severe and searching oath, which the candidates took with a
great deal of sang froid, and were then permitted to kiss the hand of the
queen—a privilege worth any amount of swearing—and retire.</p>
<p>"Let any one who has any reports to make, make them immediately," again
commanded her majesty.</p>
<p>A number of gentlemen of high rank, presented themselves at this summons,
and began relating, as a certain sect of Christians do in church, their
experience! Many of these consisted, to the deep disapproval of Sir
Norman, of accounts of daring highway robberies, one of them perpetrated
on the king himself, which distinguished personage the duplicate of
Leoline styled "our brother Charles," and of the sums thereby attained.
The treasurer of state was then ordered to show himself, and give an
account of the said moneys, which he promptly did; and after him came a
number of petitioners, praying for one thing and another, some of which
the queen promised to grant, and some she didn't. These little affairs of
state being over, Miranda turned to the little gentleman beside her, with
the observation,</p>
<p>"I believe, your highness, it is on this night the Earl of Gloucester is
to be tried on a charge of high treason, is it not?"</p>
<p>His highness growled a respectful assent.</p>
<p>"Then let him be brought before us," said the queen. "Go, guards, and
fetch him."</p>
<p>Two of the soldiers bowed low, and backed from the royal presence, amid
dead and ominous silence. At this interesting stage of the proceedings, as
Sir Norman was leaning forward, breathless and excited, a footstep sounded
on the flagged floor beside him, and some one suddenly grasped his
shoulder with no gentle hand.</p>
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