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<h2> MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS AND LORD BOTHWELL </h2>
<p>Mary Stuart and Cleopatra are the two women who have most attracted the
fancy of poets, dramatists, novelists, and painters, from their own time
down to the present day.</p>
<p>In some respects there is a certain likeness in their careers. Each was
queen of a nation whose affairs were entangled with those of a much
greater one. Each sought for her own ideal of love until she found it.
Each won that love recklessly, almost madly. Each, in its attainment, fell
from power and fortune. Each died before her natural life was ended. One
caused the man she loved to cast away the sovereignty of a mighty state.
The other lost her own crown in order that she might achieve the whole
desire of her heart.</p>
<p>There is still another parallel which may be found. Each of these women
was reputed to be exquisitely beautiful; yet each fell short of beauty's
highest standards. They are alike remembered in song and story because of
qualities that are far more powerful than any physical charm can be. They
impressed the imagination of their own contemporaries just as they had
impressed the imagination of all succeeding ages, by reason of a strange
and irresistible fascination which no one could explain, but which very
few could experience and resist.</p>
<p>Mary Stuart was born six days before her father's death, and when the
kingdom which was her heritage seemed to be almost in its death-throes.
James V. of Scotland, half Stuart and half Tudor, was no ordinary monarch.
As a mere boy he had burst the bonds with which a regency had bound him,
and he had ruled the wild Scotland of the sixteenth century. He was brave
and crafty, keen in statesmanship, and dissolute in pleasure.</p>
<p>His first wife had given him no heirs; so at her death he sought out a
princess whom he pursued all the more ardently because she was also
courted by the burly Henry VIII. of England. This girl was Marie of
Lorraine, daughter of the Duc de Guise. She was fit to be the mother of a
lion's brood, for she was above six feet in height and of proportions so
ample as to excite the admiration of the royal voluptuary who sat upon the
throne of England.</p>
<p>"I am big," said he, "and I want a wife who is as big as I am."</p>
<p>But James of Scotland wooed in person, and not by embassies, and he
triumphantly carried off his strapping princess. Henry of England gnawed
his beard in vain; and, though in time he found consolation in another
woman's arms, he viewed James not only as a public but as a private enemy.</p>
<p>There was war between the two countries. First the Scots repelled an
English army; but soon they were themselves disgracefully defeated at
Solway Moss by a force much their inferior in numbers. The shame of it
broke King James's heart. As he was galloping from the battle-field the
news was brought him that his wife had given birth to a daughter. He took
little notice of the message; and in a few days he had died, moaning with
his last breath the mysterious words:</p>
<p>"It came with a lass—with a lass it will go!"</p>
<p>The child who was born at this ill-omened crisis was Mary Stuart, who
within a week became, in her own right, Queen of Scotland. Her mother
acted as regent of the kingdom. Henry of England demanded that the infant
girl should be betrothed to his young son, Prince Edward, who afterward
reigned as Edward VI., though he died while still a boy. The proposal was
rejected, and the war between England and Scotland went on its bloody
course; but meanwhile the little queen was sent to France, her mother's
home, so that she might be trained in accomplishments which were rare in
Scotland.</p>
<p>In France she grew up at the court of Catherine de' Medici, that imperious
intriguer whose splendid surroundings were tainted with the corruption
which she had brought from her native Italy. It was, indeed, a singular
training-school for a girl of Mary Stuart's character. She saw about her a
superficial chivalry and a most profound depravity. Poets like Ronsard
graced the life of the court with exquisite verse. Troubadours and
minstrels sang sweet music there. There were fetes and tournaments and
gallantry of bearing; yet, on the other hand, there was every possible
refinement and variety of vice. Men were slain before the eyes of the
queen herself. The talk of the court was of intrigue and lust and evil
things which often verged on crime. Catherine de' Medici herself kept her
nominal husband at arm's-length; and in order to maintain her grasp on
France she connived at the corruption of her own children, three of whom
were destined in their turn to sit upon the throne.</p>
<p>Mary Stuart grew up in these surroundings until she was sixteen, eating
the fruit which gave a knowledge of both good and evil. Her intelligence
was very great. She quickly learned Italian, French, and Latin. She was a
daring horsewoman. She was a poet and an artist even in her teens. She was
also a keen judge of human motives, for those early years of hers had
forced her into a womanhood that was premature but wonderful. It had been
proposed that she should marry the eldest son of Catherine, so that in
time the kingdom of Scotland and that of France might be united, while if
Elizabeth of England were to die unmarried her realm also would fall to
this pair of children.</p>
<p>And so Mary, at sixteen, wedded the Dauphin Francis, who was a year her
junior. The prince was a wretched, whimpering little creature, with a
cankered body and a blighted soul. Marriage with such a husband seemed
absurd. It never was a marriage in reality. The sickly child would cry all
night, for he suffered from abscesses in his ears, and his manhood had
been prematurely taken from him. Nevertheless, within a twelvemonth the
French king died and Mary Stuart was Queen of France as well as of
Scotland, hampered only by her nominal obedience to the sick boy whom she
openly despised. At seventeen she showed herself a master spirit. She held
her own against the ambitious Catherine de' Medici, whom she
contemptuously nicknamed "the apothecary's daughter." For the brief period
of a year she was actually the ruler of France; but then her husband died
and she was left a widow, restless, ambitious, and yet no longer having
any of the power she loved.</p>
<p>Mary Stuart at this time had become a woman whose fascination was exerted
over all who knew her. She was very tall and very slim, with chestnut
hair, "like a flower of the heat, both lax and delicate." Her skin was
fair and pale, so clear and so transparent as to make the story plausible
that when she drank from a flask of wine, the red liquid could be seen
passing down her slender throat.</p>
<p>Yet with all this she was not fine in texture, but hardy as a man. She
could endure immense fatigue without yielding to it. Her supple form had
the strength of steel. There was a gleam in her hazel eyes that showed her
to be brimful of an almost fierce vitality. Young as she was, she was the
mistress of a thousand arts, and she exhaled a sort of atmosphere that
turned the heads of men. The Stuart blood made her impatient of control,
careless of state, and easy-mannered. The French and the Tudor strain gave
her vivacity. She could be submissive in appearance while still persisting
in her aims. She could be languorous and seductive while cold within.
Again, she could assume the haughtiness which belonged to one who was
twice a queen.</p>
<p>Two motives swayed her, and they fought together for supremacy. One was
the love of power, and the other was the love of love. The first was
natural to a girl who was a sovereign in her own right. The second was
inherited, and was then forced into a rank luxuriance by the sort of life
that she had seen about her. At eighteen she was a strangely amorous
creature, given to fondling and kissing every one about her, with slight
discrimination. From her sense of touch she received emotions that were
almost necessary to her existence. With her slender, graceful hands she
was always stroking the face of some favorite—it might be only the
face of a child, or it might be the face of some courtier or poet, or one
of the four Marys whose names are linked with hers—Mary Livingstone,
Mary Fleming, Mary Beaton, and Mary Seton, the last of whom remained with
her royal mistress until her death.</p>
<p>But one must not be too censorious in thinking of Mary Stuart. She was
surrounded everywhere by enemies. During her stay in France she was hated
by the faction of Catherine de' Medici. When she returned to Scotland she
was hated because of her religion by the Protestant lords. Her every
action was set forth in the worst possible light. The most sinister
meaning was given to everything she said or did. In truth, we must reject
almost all the stories which accuse her of anything more than a certain
levity of conduct.</p>
<p>She was not a woman to yield herself in love's last surrender unless her
intellect and heart alike had been made captive. She would listen to the
passionate outpourings of poets and courtiers, and she would plunge her
eyes into theirs, and let her hair just touch their faces, and give them
her white hands to kiss—but that was all. Even in this she was only
following the fashion of the court where she was bred, and she was not
unlike her royal relative, Elizabeth of England, who had the same external
amorousness coupled with the same internal self-control.</p>
<p>Mary Stuart's love life makes a piteous story, for it is the life of one
who was ever seeking—seeking for the man to whom she could look up,
who could be strong and brave and ardent like herself, and at the same
time be more powerful and more steadfast even than she herself in mind and
thought. Whatever may be said of her, and howsoever the facts may be
colored by partisans, this royal girl, stung though she was by passion and
goaded by desire, cared nothing for any man who could not match her in
body and mind and spirit all at once.</p>
<p>It was in her early widowhood that she first met the man, and when their
union came it brought ruin on them both. In France there came to her one
day one of her own subjects, the Earl of Bothwell. He was but a few years
older than she, and in his presence for the first time she felt, in her
own despite, that profoundly moving, indescribable, and
never-to-be-forgotten thrill which shakes a woman to the very center of
her being, since it is the recognition of a complete affinity.</p>
<p>Lord Bothwell, like Queen Mary, has been terribly maligned. Unlike her, he
has found only a few defenders. Maurice Hewlett has drawn a picture of him
more favorable than many, and yet it is a picture that repels. Bothwell,
says he, was of a type esteemed by those who pronounce vice to be their
virtue. He was "a galliard, flushed with rich blood, broad-shouldered,
square-jawed, with a laugh so happy and so prompt that the world,
rejoicing to hear it, thought all must be well wherever he might be. He
wore brave clothes, sat a brave horse, and kept brave company bravely. His
high color, while it betokened high feeding, got him the credit of good
health. His little eyes twinkled so merrily that you did not see they were
like a pig's, sly and greedy at once, and bloodshot. His tawny beard
concealed a jaw underhung, a chin jutting and dangerous. His mouth had a
cruel twist; but his laughing hid that too. The bridge of his nose had
been broken; few observed it, or guessed at the brawl which must have
given it to him. Frankness was his great charm, careless ease in high
places."</p>
<p>And so, when Mary Stuart first met him in her eighteenth year, Lord
Bothwell made her think as she had never thought of any other man, and as
she was not to think of any other man again. She grew to look eagerly for
the frank mockery "in those twinkling eyes, in that quick mouth"; and to
wonder whether it was with him always—asleep, at prayers, fighting,
furious, or in love.</p>
<p>Something more, however, must be said of Bothwell. He was undoubtedly a
roisterer, but he was very much a man. He made easy love to women. His
sword leaped quickly from its sheath. He could fight, and he could also
think. He was no brawling ruffian, no ordinary rake. Remembering what
Scotland was in those days, Bothwell might well seem in reality a princely
figure. He knew Italian; he was at home in French; he could write fluent
Latin. He was a collector of books and a reader of them also. He was
perhaps the only Scottish noble of his time who had a book-plate of his
own. Here is something more than a mere reveler. Here is a man of varied
accomplishments and of a complex character.</p>
<p>Though he stayed but a short time near the queen in France, he kindled her
imagination, so that when she seriously thought of men she thought of
Bothwell. And yet all the time she was fondling the young pages in her
retinue and kissing her maids of honor with her scarlet lips, and lying on
their knees, while poets like Ronsard and Chastelard wrote ardent love
sonnets to her and sighed and pined for something more than the privilege
of kissing her two dainty hands.</p>
<p>In 1561, less than a year after her widowhood, Mary set sail for Scotland,
never to return. The great high-decked ships which escorted her sailed
into the harbor of Leith, and she pressed on to Edinburgh. A depressing
change indeed from the sunny terraces and fields of France! In her own
realm were fog and rain and only a hut to shelter her upon her landing.
When she reached her capital there were few welcoming cheers; but as she
rode over the cobblestones to Holyrood, the squalid wynds vomited forth
great mobs of hard-featured, grim-visaged men and women who stared with
curiosity and a half-contempt at the girl queen and her retinue of
foreigners.</p>
<p>The Scots were Protestants of the most dour sort, and they distrusted
their new ruler because of her religion and because she loved to surround
herself with dainty things and bright colors and exotic elegance. They
feared lest she should try to repeal the law of Scotland's Parliament
which had made the country Protestant.</p>
<p>The very indifference of her subjects stirred up the nobler part of Mary's
nature. For a time she was indeed a queen. She governed wisely. She
respected the religious rights of her Protestant subjects. She strove to
bring order out of the chaos into which her country had fallen. And she
met with some success. The time came when her people cheered her as she
rode among them. Her subtle fascination was her greatest source of
strength. Even John Knox, that iron-visaged, stentorian preacher, fell for
a time under the charm of her presence. She met him frankly and pleaded
with him as a woman, instead of commanding him as a queen. The surly
ranter became softened for a time, and, though he spoke of her to others
as "Honeypot," he ruled his tongue in public. She had offers of marriage
from Austrian and Spanish princes. The new King of France, her
brother-in-law, would perhaps have wedded her. It mattered little to Mary
that Elizabeth of England was hostile. She felt that she was strong enough
to hold her own and govern Scotland.</p>
<p>But who could govern a country such as Scotland was? It was a land of
broils and feuds, of clan enmities and fierce vendettas. Its nobles were
half barbarous, and they fought and slashed at one another with drawn
dirks almost in the presence of the queen herself. No matter whom she
favored, there rose up a swarm of enemies. Here was a Corsica of the
north, more savage and untamed than even the other Corsica.</p>
<p>In her perplexity Mary felt a woman's need of some man on whom she would
have the right to lean, and whom she could make king consort. She thought
that she had found him in the person of her cousin, Lord Darnley, a
Catholic, and by his upbringing half an Englishman. Darnley came to
Scotland, and for the moment Mary fancied that she had forgotten Bothwell.
Here again she was in love with love, and she idealized the man who came
to give it to her. Darnley seemed, indeed, well worthy to be loved, for he
was tall and handsome, appearing well on horseback and having some of the
accomplishments which Mary valued.</p>
<p>It was a hasty wooing, and the queen herself was first of all the wooer.
Her quick imagination saw in Darnley traits and gifts of which he really
had no share. Therefore, the marriage was soon concluded, and Scotland had
two sovereigns, King Henry and Queen Mary. So sure was Mary of her
indifference to Bothwell that she urged the earl to marry, and he did
marry a girl of the great house of Gordon.</p>
<p>Mary's self-suggested love for Darnley was extinguished almost on her
wedding-night. The man was a drunkard who came into her presence befuddled
and almost bestial. He had no brains. His vanity was enormous. He loved no
one but himself, and least of all this queen, whom he regarded as having
thrown herself at his empty head.</p>
<p>The first-fruits of the marriage were uprisings among the Protestant
lords. Mary then showed herself a heroic queen. At the head of a motley
band of soldiery who came at her call—half-clad, uncouth, and savage—she
rode into the west, sleeping at night upon the bare ground, sharing the
camp food, dressed in plain tartan, but swift and fierce as any eagle. Her
spirit ran like fire through the veins of those who followed her. She
crushed the insurrection, scattered its leaders, and returned in triumph
to her capital.</p>
<p>Now she was really queen, but here came in the other motive which was
interwoven in her character. She had shown herself a man in courage.
Should she not have the pleasures of a woman? To her court in Holyrood
came Bothwell once again, and this time Mary knew that he was all the
world to her. Darnley had shrunk from the hardships of battle. He was
steeped in low intrigues. He roused the constant irritation of the queen
by his folly and utter lack of sense and decency. Mary felt she owed him
nothing, but she forgot that she owed much to herself.</p>
<p>Her old amorous ways came back to her, and she relapsed into the joys of
sense. The scandal-mongers of the capital saw a lover in every man with
whom she talked. She did, in fact, set convention at defiance. She dressed
in men's clothing. She showed what the unemotional Scots thought to be
unseemly levity. The French poet, Chastelard, misled by her external signs
of favor, believed himself to be her choice. At the end of one mad revel
he was found secreted beneath her bed, and was driven out by force. A
second time he ventured to secrete himself within the covers of the bed.
Then he was dragged forth, imprisoned, and condemned to death. He met his
fate without a murmur, save at the last when he stood upon the scaffold
and, gazing toward the palace, cried in French:</p>
<p>"Oh, cruel queen! I die for you!"</p>
<p>Another favorite, the Italian, David Rizzio, or Riccio, in like manner
wrote love verses to the queen, and she replied to them in kind; but there
is no evidence that she valued him save for his ability, which was very
great. She made him her foreign secretary, and the man whom he supplanted
worked on the jealousy of Darnley; so that one night, while Mary and
Rizzio were at dinner in a small private chamber, Darnley and the others
broke in upon her. Darnley held her by the waist while Rizzio was stabbed
before her eyes with a cruelty the greater because the queen was soon to
become a mother.</p>
<p>From that moment she hated Darnley as one would hate a snake. She
tolerated him only that he might acknowledge her child as his son. This
child was the future James VI. of Scotland and James I. of England. It is
recorded of him that never throughout his life could he bear to look upon
drawn steel.</p>
<p>After this Mary summoned Bothwell again and again. It was revealed to her
as in a blaze of light that, after all, he was the one and only man who
could be everything to her. His frankness, his cynicism, his mockery, his
carelessness, his courage, and the power of his mind matched her moods
completely. She threw away all semblance of concealment. She ignored the
fact that he had married at her wish. She was queen. She desired him. She
must have him at any cost.</p>
<p>"Though I lose Scotland and England both," she cried in a passion of
abandonment, "I shall have him for my own!"</p>
<p>Bothwell, in his turn, was nothing loath, and they leaped at each other
like two flames.</p>
<p>It was then that Mary wrote those letters which were afterward discovered
in a casket and which were used against her when she was on trial for her
life. These so-called Casket Letters, though we have not now the
originals, are among the most extraordinary letters ever written. All
shame, all hesitation, all innocence, are flung away in them. The writer
is so fired with passion that each sentence is like a cry to a lover in
the dark. As De Peyster says: "In them the animal instincts override and
spur and lash the pen." Mary was committing to paper the frenzied madness
of a woman consumed to her very marrow by the scorching blaze of
unendurable desire.</p>
<p>Events moved quickly. Darnley, convalescent from an attack of smallpox,
was mysteriously destroyed by an explosion of gunpowder. Bothwell was
divorced from his young wife on curious grounds. A dispensation allowed
Mary to wed a Protestant, and she married Bothwell three months after
Darnley's death.</p>
<p>Here one sees the consummation of what had begun many years before in
France. From the moment that she and Bothwell met, their union was
inevitable. Seas could not sunder them. Other loves and other fancies were
as nothing to them. Even the bonds of marriage were burst asunder so that
these two fiery, panting souls could meet.</p>
<p>It was the irony of fate that when they had so met it was only to be
parted. Mary's subjects, outraged by her conduct, rose against her. As she
passed through the streets of Edinburgh the women hurled after her
indecent names. Great banners were raised with execrable daubs
representing the murdered Darnley. The short and dreadful monosyllable
which is familiar to us in the pages of the Bible was hurled after her
wherever she went.</p>
<p>With Bothwell by her side she led a wild and ragged horde of followers
against the rebellious nobles, whose forces met her at Carberry Hill. Her
motley followers melted away, and Mary surrendered to the hostile
chieftains, who took her to the castle at Lochleven. There she became the
mother of twins—a fact that is seldom mentioned by historians. These
children were the fruit of her union with Bothwell. From this time forth
she cared but little for herself, and she signed, without great
reluctance, a document by which she abdicated in favor of her infant son.</p>
<p>Even in this place of imprisonment, however, her fascination had power to
charm. Among those who guarded her, two of the Douglas family—George
Douglas and William Douglas—for love of her, effected her escape.
The first attempt failed. Mary, disguised as a laundress, was betrayed by
the delicacy of her hands. But a second attempt was successful. The queen
passed through a postern gate and made her way to the lake, where George
Douglas met her with a boat. Crossing the lake, fifty horsemen under Lord
Claude Hamilton gave her their escort and bore her away in safety.</p>
<p>But Mary was sick of Scotland, for Bothwell could not be there. She had
tasted all the bitterness of life, and for a few months all the sweetness;
but she would have no more of this rough and barbarous country. Of her own
free will she crossed the Solway into England, to find herself at once a
prisoner.</p>
<p>Never again did she set eyes on Bothwell. After the battle of Carberry
Hill he escaped to the north, gathered some ships together, and preyed
upon English merchantmen, very much as a pirate might have done. Ere long,
however, when he had learned of Mary's fate, he set sail for Norway. King
Frederick of Denmark made him a prisoner of state. He was not confined
within prison walls, however, but was allowed to hunt and ride in the
vicinity of Malmo Castle and of Dragsholm. It is probably in Malmo Castle
that he died. In 1858 a coffin which was thought to be the coffin of the
earl was opened, and a Danish artist sketched the head—which
corresponds quite well with the other portraits of the ill-fated Scottish
noble.</p>
<p>It is a sad story. Had Mary been less ambitious when she first met
Bothwell, or had he been a little bolder, they might have reigned together
and lived out their lives in the plenitude of that great love which held
them both in thrall. But a queen is not as other women; and she found too
late that the teaching of her heart was, after all, the truest teaching.
She went to her death as Bothwell went to his, alone, in a strange,
unfriendly land.</p>
<p>Yet, even this, perhaps, was better so. It has at least touched both their
lives with pathos and has made the name of Mary Stuart one to be
remembered throughout all the ages.</p>
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