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<h2> CHAPTER XXVII. </h2>
<p>In my time I have seen a boy do wonders.<br/>
Robin, the red tinker, had a boy<br/>
Would ha run through a cat-hole. —THE COXCOMB.<br/></p>
<p>Amid the universal bustle which filled the Castle and its environs, it was
no easy matter to find out any individual; and Wayland was still less
likely to light upon Tressilian, whom he sought so anxiously, because,
sensible of the danger of attracting attention in the circumstances in
which he was placed, he dared not make general inquiries among the
retainers or domestics of Leicester. He learned, however, by indirect
questions, that in all probability Tressilian must have been one of a
large party of gentlemen in attendance on the Earl of Sussex, who had
accompanied their patron that morning to Kenilworth, when Leicester had
received them with marks of the most formal respect and distinction. He
further learned that both Earls, with their followers, and many other
nobles, knights, and gentlemen, had taken horse, and gone towards Warwick
several hours since, for the purpose of escorting the Queen to Kenilworth.</p>
<p>Her Majesty's arrival, like other great events, was delayed from hour to
hour; and it was now announced by a breathless post that her Majesty,
being detained by her gracious desire to receive the homage of her lieges
who had thronged to wait upon her at Warwick, it would be the hour of
twilight ere she entered the Castle. The intelligence released for a time
those who were upon duty, in the immediate expectation of the Queen's
appearance, and ready to play their part in the solemnities with which it
was to be accompanied; and Wayland, seeing several horsemen enter the
Castle, was not without hopes that Tressilian might be of the number. That
he might not lose an opportunity of meeting his patron in the event of
this being the case, Wayland placed himself in the base-court of the
Castle, near Mortimer's Tower, and watched every one who went or came by
the bridge, the extremity of which was protected by that building. Thus
stationed, nobody could enter or leave the Castle without his observation,
and most anxiously did he study the garb and countenance of every
horseman, as, passing from under the opposite Gallery-tower, they paced
slowly, or curveted, along the tilt-yard, and approached the entrance of
the base-court.</p>
<p>But while Wayland gazed thus eagerly to discover him whom he saw not, he
was pulled by the sleeve by one by whom he himself would not willingly
have been seen.</p>
<p>This was Dickie Sludge, or Flibbertigibbet, who, like the imp whose name
he bore, and whom he had been accoutred in order to resemble, seemed to be
ever at the ear of those who thought least of him. Whatever were Wayland's
internal feelings, he judged it necessary to express pleasure at their
unexpected meeting.</p>
<p>"Ha! is it thou, my minikin—my miller's thumb—my prince of
cacodemons—my little mouse?"</p>
<p>"Ay," said Dickie, "the mouse which gnawed asunder the toils, just when
the lion who was caught in them began to look wonderfully like an ass."</p>
<p>"Thy, thou little hop-the-gutter, thou art as sharp as vinegar this
afternoon! But tell me, how didst thou come off with yonder jolterheaded
giant whom I left thee with? I was afraid he would have stripped thy
clothes, and so swallowed thee, as men peel and eat a roasted chestnut."</p>
<p>"Had he done so," replied the boy, "he would have had more brains in his
guts than ever he had in his noddle. But the giant is a courteous monster,
and more grateful than many other folk whom I have helped at a pinch,
Master Wayland Smith."</p>
<p>"Beshrew me, Flibbertigibbet," replied Wayland, "but thou art sharper than
a Sheffield whittle! I would I knew by what charm you muzzled yonder old
bear."</p>
<p>"Ay, that is in your own manner," answered Dickie; "you think fine
speeches will pass muster instead of good-will. However, as to this honest
porter, you must know that when we presented ourselves at the gate yonder,
his brain was over-burdened with a speech that had been penned for him,
and which proved rather an overmatch for his gigantic faculties. Now this
same pithy oration had been indited, like sundry others, by my learned
magister, Erasmus Holiday, so I had heard it often enough to remember
every line. As soon as I heard him blundering and floundering like a fish
upon dry land, through the first verse, and perceived him at a stand, I
knew where the shoe pinched, and helped him to the next word, when he
caught me up in an ecstasy, even as you saw but now. I promised, as the
price of your admission, to hide me under his bearish gaberdine, and
prompt him in the hour of need. I have just now been getting some food in
the Castle, and am about to return to him."</p>
<p>"That's right—that's right, my dear Dickie," replied Wayland; "haste
thee, for Heaven's sake! else the poor giant will be utterly disconsolate
for want of his dwarfish auxiliary. Away with thee, Dickie!"</p>
<p>"Ay, ay!" answered the boy—"away with Dickie, when we have got what
good of him we can. You will not let me know the story of this lady, then,
who is as much sister of thine as I am?"</p>
<p>"Why, what good would it do thee, thou silly elf?" said Wayland.</p>
<p>"Oh, stand ye on these terms?" said the boy. "Well, I care not greatly
about the matter—only, I never smell out a secret but I try to be
either at the right or the wrong end of it, and so good evening to ye."</p>
<p>"Nay, but, Dickie," said Wayland, who knew the boy's restless and
intriguing disposition too well not to fear his enmity—"stay, my
dear Dickie—part not with old friends so shortly! Thou shalt know
all I know of the lady one day."</p>
<p>"Ay!" said Dickie; "and that day may prove a nigh one. Fare thee well,
Wayland—I will to my large-limbed friend, who, if he have not so
sharp a wit as some folk, is at least more grateful for the service which
other folk render him. And so again, good evening to ye."</p>
<p>So saying, he cast a somerset through the gateway, and lighting on the
bridge, ran with the extraordinary agility which was one of his
distinguishing attributes towards the Gallery-tower, and was out of sight
in an instant.</p>
<p>"I would to God I were safe out of this Castle again!" prayed Wayland
internally; "for now that this mischievous imp has put his finger in the
pie, it cannot but prove a mess fit for the devil's eating. I would to
Heaven Master Tressilian would appear!"</p>
<p>Tressilian, whom he was thus anxiously expecting in one direction, had
returned to Kenilworth by another access. It was indeed true, as Wayland
had conjectured, that in the earlier part of the day he had accompanied
the Earls on their cavalcade towards Warwick, not without hope that he
might in that town hear some tidings of his emissary. Being disappointed
in this expectation, and observing Varney amongst Leicester's attendants,
seeming as if he had some purpose of advancing to and addressing him, he
conceived, in the present circumstances, it was wisest to avoid the
interview. He, therefore, left the presence-chamber when the High-Sheriff
of the county was in the very midst of his dutiful address to her Majesty;
and mounting his horse, rode back to Kenilworth by a remote and circuitous
road, and entered the Castle by a small sallyport in the western wall, at
which he was readily admitted as one of the followers of the Earl of
Sussex, towards whom Leicester had commanded the utmost courtesy to be
exercised. It was thus that he met not Wayland, who was impatiently
watching his arrival, and whom he himself would have been at least equally
desirous to see.</p>
<p>Having delivered his horse to the charge of his attendant, he walked for a
space in the Pleasance and in the garden, rather to indulge in comparative
solitude his own reflections, than to admire those singular beauties of
nature and art which the magnificence of Leicester had there assembled.
The greater part of the persons of condition had left the Castle for the
present, to form part of the Earl's cavalcade; others, who remained
behind, were on the battlements, outer walls, and towers, eager to view
the splendid spectacle of the royal entry. The garden, therefore, while
every other part of the Castle resounded with the human voice, was silent
but for the whispering of the leaves, the emulous warbling of the tenants
of a large aviary with their happier companions who remained denizens of
the free air, and the plashing of the fountains, which, forced into the
air from sculptures of fantastic and grotesque forms, fell down with
ceaseless sound into the great basins of Italian marble.</p>
<p>The melancholy thoughts of Tressilian cast a gloomy shade on all the
objects with which he was surrounded. He compared the magnificent scenes
which he here traversed with the deep woodland and wild moorland which
surrounded Lidcote Hall, and the image of Amy Robsart glided like a
phantom through every landscape which his imagination summoned up. Nothing
is perhaps more dangerous to the future happiness of men of deep thought
and retired habits than the entertaining an early, long, and unfortunate
attachment. It frequently sinks so deep into the mind that it becomes
their dream by night and their vision by day—mixes itself with every
source of interest and enjoyment; and when blighted and withered by final
disappointment, it seems as if the springs of the heart were dried up
along with it. This aching of the heart, this languishing after a shadow
which has lost all the gaiety of its colouring, this dwelling on the
remembrance of a dream from which we have been long roughly awakened, is
the weakness of a gentle and generous heart, and it was that of
Tressilian.</p>
<p>He himself at length became sensible of the necessity of forcing other
objects upon his mind; and for this purpose he left the Pleasance, in
order to mingle with the noisy crowd upon the walls, and view the
preparation for the pageants. But as he left the garden, and heard the
busy hum, mixed with music and laughter, which floated around him, he felt
an uncontrollable reluctance to mix with society whose feelings were in a
tone so different from his own, and resolved, instead of doing so, to
retire to the chamber assigned him, and employ himself in study until the
tolling of the great Castle bell should announce the arrival of Elizabeth.</p>
<p>Tressilian crossed accordingly by the passage betwixt the immense range of
kitchens and the great hall, and ascended to the third story of Mervyn's
Tower, and applying himself to the door of the small apartment which had
been allotted to him, was surprised to find it was locked. He then
recollected that the deputy-chamberlain had given him a master-key,
advising him, in the present confused state of the Castle, to keep his
door as much shut as possible. He applied this key to the lock, the bolt
revolved, he entered, and in the same instant saw a female form seated in
the apartment, and recognized that form to be, Amy Robsart. His first idea
was that a heated imagination had raised the image on which it doted into
visible existence; his second, that he beheld an apparition; the third and
abiding conviction, that it was Amy herself, paler, indeed, and thinner,
than in the days of heedless happiness, when she possessed the form and
hue of a wood-nymph, with the beauty of a sylph—but still Amy,
unequalled in loveliness by aught which had ever visited his eyes.</p>
<p>The astonishment of the Countess was scarce less than that of Tressilian,
although it was of shorter duration, because she had heard from Wayland
that he was in the Castle. She had started up at his first entrance, and
now stood facing him, the paleness of her cheeks having given way to a
deep blush.</p>
<p>"Tressilian," she said, at length, "why come you here?"</p>
<p>"Nay, why come you here, Amy," returned Tressilian, "unless it be at
length to claim that aid, which, as far as one man's heart and arm can
extend, shall instantly be rendered to you?"</p>
<p>She was silent a moment, and then answered in a sorrowful rather than an
angry tone, "I require no aid, Tressilian, and would rather be injured
than benefited by any which your kindness can offer me. Believe me, I am
near one whom law and love oblige to protect me."</p>
<p>"The villain, then, hath done you the poor justice which remained in his
power," said Tressilian, "and I behold before me the wife of Varney!"</p>
<p>"The wife of Varney!" she replied, with all the emphasis of scorn. "With
what base name, sir, does your boldness stigmatize the—the—the—"
She hesitated, dropped her tone of scorn, looked down, and was confused
and silent; for she recollected what fatal consequences might attend her
completing the sentence with "the Countess of Leicester," which were the
words that had naturally suggested themselves. It would have been a
betrayal of the secret, on which her husband had assured her that his
fortunes depended, to Tressilian, to Sussex, to the Queen, and to the
whole assembled court. "Never," she thought, "will I break my promised
silence. I will submit to every suspicion rather than that."</p>
<p>The tears rose to her eyes, as she stood silent before Tressilian; while,
looking on her with mingled grief and pity, he said, "Alas! Amy, your eyes
contradict your tongue. That speaks of a protector, willing and able to
watch over you; but these tell me you are ruined, and deserted by the
wretch to whom you have attached yourself."</p>
<p>She looked on him with eyes in which anger sparkled through her tears, but
only repeated the word "wretch!" with a scornful emphasis.</p>
<p>"Yes, WRETCH!" said Tressilian; "for were he aught better, why are you
here, and alone, in my apartment? why was not fitting provision made for
your honourable reception?"</p>
<p>"In your apartment?" repeated Amy—"in YOUR apartment? It shall
instantly be relieved of my presence." She hastened towards the door; but
the sad recollection of her deserted state at once pressed on her mind,
and pausing on the threshold, she added, in a tone unutterably pathetic,
"Alas! I had forgot—I know not where to go—"</p>
<p>"I see—I see it all," said Tressilian, springing to her side, and
leading her back to the seat, on which she sunk down. "You DO need aid—you
do need protection, though you will not own it; and you shall not need it
long. Leaning on my arm, as the representative of your excellent and
broken-hearted father, on the very threshold of the Castle gate, you shall
meet Elizabeth; and the first deed she shall do in the halls of Kenilworth
shall be an act of justice to her sex and her subjects. Strong in my good
cause, and in the Queen's justice, the power of her minion shall not shake
my resolution. I will instantly seek Sussex."</p>
<p>"Not for all that is under heaven!" said the Countess, much alarmed, and
feeling the absolute necessity of obtaining time, at least, for
consideration. "Tressilian, you were wont to be generous. Grant me one
request, and believe, if it be your wish to save me from misery and from
madness, you will do more by making me the promise I ask of you, than
Elizabeth can do for me with all her power."</p>
<p>"Ask me anything for which you can allege reason," said Tressilian; "but
demand not of me—"</p>
<p>"Oh, limit not your boon, dear Edmund!" exclaimed the Countess—"you
once loved that I should call you so—limit not your boon to reason;
for my case is all madness, and frenzy must guide the counsels which alone
can aid me."</p>
<p>"If you speak thus wildly," said Tressilian, astonishment again
overpowering both his grief and his resolution, "I must believe you indeed
incapable of thinking or acting for yourself."</p>
<p>"Oh, no!" she exclaimed, sinking on one knee before him, "I am not mad—I
am but a creature unutterably miserable, and, from circumstances the most
singular, dragged on to a precipice by the arm of him who thinks he is
keeping me from it—even by yours, Tressilian—by yours, whom I
have honoured, respected—all but loved—and yet loved, too—loved,
too, Tressilian—though not as you wished to be."</p>
<p>There was an energy, a self-possession, an abandonment in her voice and
manner, a total resignation of herself to his generosity, which, together
with the kindness of her expressions to himself, moved him deeply. He
raised her, and, in broken accents, entreated her to be comforted.</p>
<p>"I cannot," she said, "I will not be comforted, till you grant me my
request! I will speak as plainly as I dare. I am now awaiting the commands
of one who has a right to issue them. The interference of a third person—of
you in especial, Tressilian—will be ruin—utter ruin to me.
Wait but four-and-twenty hours, and it may be that the poor Amy may have
the means to show that she values, and can reward, your disinterested
friendship—that she is happy herself, and has the means to make you
so. It is surely worth your patience, for so short a space?"</p>
<p>Tressilian paused, and weighing in his mind the various probabilities
which might render a violent interference on his part more prejudicial
than advantageous, both to the happiness and reputation of Amy;
considering also that she was within the walls of Kenilworth, and could
suffer no injury in a castle honoured with the Queen's residence, and
filled with her guards and attendants—he conceived, upon the whole,
that he might render her more evil than good service by intruding upon her
his appeal to Elizabeth in her behalf. He expressed his resolution
cautiously, however, doubting naturally whether Amy's hopes of extricating
herself from her difficulties rested on anything stronger than a blinded
attachment to Varney, whom he supposed to be her seducer.</p>
<p>"Amy," he said, while he fixed his sad and expressive eyes on hers, which,
in her ecstasy of doubt, terror, and perplexity, she cast up towards him,
"I have ever remarked that when others called thee girlish and wilful,
there lay under that external semblance of youthful and self-willed folly
deep feeling and strong sense. In this I will confide, trusting your own
fate in your own hands for the space of twenty-four hours, without my
interference by word or act."</p>
<p>"Do you promise me this, Tressilian?" said the Countess. "Is it possible
you can yet repose so much confidence in me? Do you promise, as you are a
gentleman and a man of honour, to intrude in my matters neither by speech
nor action, whatever you may see or hear that seems to you to demand your
interference? Will you so far trust me?"</p>
<p>"I will upon my honour," said Tressilian; "but when that space is expired—"</p>
<p>"Then that space is expired," she said, interrupting him, "you are free to
act as your judgment shall determine."</p>
<p>"Is there nought besides which I can do for you, Amy?" said Tressilian.</p>
<p>"Nothing," said she, "save to leave me,—that is, if—I blush to
acknowledge my helplessness by asking it—if you can spare me the use
of this apartment for the next twenty-four hours."</p>
<p>"This is most wonderful!" said Tressilian; "what hope or interest can you
have in a Castle where you cannot command even an apartment?"</p>
<p>"Argue not, but leave me," she said; and added, as he slowly and
unwillingly retired, "Generous Edmund! the time may come when Amy may show
she deserved thy noble attachment."</p>
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