|  | READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |  | 
| THE
                    WARS OF THE ROSESor stories of the struggle of York and Lancasterby J.G. EDGARD
                 
 
 FIRST PART
 About the
                middle of the ninth century, a warrior named Tertullus, having rendered signal
                services to the King of France, married Petronella, the King’s cousin, and had
                a son who flourished as Count of Anjou. The descendants of Tertullus and
                Petronella rose rapidly, and exercised much influence on French affairs. At
                length, in the twelfth century, Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, summed Plantagenet,
                from wearing a sprig of flowering broom instead of a feather, espoused Maude,
                daughter of Henry Beauclerc, King of England; and Henry Plantagenet, their son,
                succeeded, on the death of Stephen, to the English throne.
                     Having married Eleanor, heiress of Aquitaine, and extended his
                continental empire from the Channel to the Pyrenees, Henry ranked as the most
                potent of European princes. But though enabled to render great services to
                England, he was not an Englishman; and, indeed, it was not till the death of
                John at Swinehead, that the English had a king who
                could be regarded as one of themselves. That king was Henry the Third, born and
                educated in England, and sympathising with the traditions of the people over
                whom he reigned.
   Unfortunately for Henry, he was surrounded by continental kinsmen,
                whose conduct caused such discontent, that clergy, barons, citizens, and
                people, raised the cry of England for the English; and Simon de Montfort,
                though foreign himself, undertook to head a movement against foreigners. A
                Barons’ war was the consequence. Henry, defeated at Lewes, become a prisoner in
                the hands of the oligarchy; and there was some prospect of the crown passing
                from the House of Plantagenet to that of Montfort.
                     At this crisis, however, Edward, eldest son of the King, escaped from
                captivity, destroyed the oligarchy in the battle of Evesham, and entered upon
                his great and glorious career. Space would fail us to expatiate on the services
                which, when elevated to the throne as Edward the First, that mighty prince
                rendered to England. Suffice it to say, that he gave peace, prosperity, and
                freedom to the people, formed hostile races into one great nation, and rendered
                his memory immortal by the laws which he instituted.
                     For the country which the first Edward rendered prosperous and free, the
                third Edward and his heroic son won glory in those wars which made Englishmen,
                for a time, masters of France. Unhappily, the Black Prince died before his
                father; and his only son, who succeeded when a boy as Richard the Second,
                departed from right principles of government. This excited serious discontent,
                and led the English people io that violation of “the lineal succession of their
                monarchs” which caused the Wars of the Roses.
                     Besides the Black Prince, the conqueror of Cressy had by his Queen,
                Philippa—the patroness of Froissart—several sons, among whom were Lionel, Duke
                of Clarence; John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster; and Edmund of Langley, Duke of
                York. Lionel died early; but John of Gaunt survived his father and eldest
                brother, and was suspected of having an eye to the crown which his young nephew
                wore. No usurpation, however, was attempted. But when John was in the grave,
                his son, Henry of Bolingbroke, returning from an irksome exile, deposed
                Richard, and sent him prisoner to Pontefract Castle, where he is understood to
                have been murdered.
                     On the death of Richard, who was childless, Henry the Fourth, as son of
                John of Gaunt, would have had hereditary right on his side, but that Lionel of
                Clarence had left a daughter, Philippa, wife of Mortimer, Earl of March, and
                ancestress of three successive Earls. Of these, Edmund, the last Earl, was a
                boy when Henry of Bolingbroke usurped the throne; and his sister, Anne
                Mortimer, was wife of Richard Plantagenet, Earl of Cambridge, second son of
                Edmund of Langley, Duke of York. “This was that princely branch” says Sandford,
                “by the engrafting of which onto the stock of York, that tree brought forth not
                only White Roses, but crowns and sceptres also.”
                     Henry the Fourth regarded young March with jealousy, and had him
                vigilantly guarded. But Henry the Fifth completely won the Earl’s loyalty, and
                made him a most zealous adherent. March showed no ambition to reign; and the
                nation, intoxicated with Agincourt and glory and conquest, cared not an iota
                for his claims. At the time when the hero-king expired at Vincennes, and the
                Earl of March died in England, the dynastic dispute was scarcely remembered;
                and it would never, in all probability, have been revived had the Lancastrian
                government not become such as could not be submitted to without degradation. It
                was when law and decency were defied, and when Englishmen were in danger of
                being enslaved by a  foreign woman,” that
                they remembered the true heir of the Plantagenets and took up arms to vindicate
                his claims.
   
 
 
 CHAPTER 1.
                THE MONK-MONARCH AND HIS MISLEADERS.
                    
                 On St. Nicholas’s
                Day, in the year 1421, there was joy in the Castle of Windsor and rejoicing in
                the city of London. On that day Katherine de Valois, youthful spouse of the
                fifth Henry, became mother of a prince destined to wear the crown of the
                Plantagenets; and courtiers vied with citizens in expressing gratification that
                a son had been born to the conqueror of Agincourt—an heir to the kingdoms of
                England and France.
                     Henry of Windsor, whose birth was hailed with a degree of enthusiasm
                which no similar event had excited in England, was doomed to misfortune from
                his cradle. He was not quite nine months old when Henry the Fifth departed this
                life at Vincennes; and he was still an infant when Katherine de Valois forgot
                her hero-husband and all dignity for the sake of a Welsh soldier, with a
                handsome person and an imaginary pedigree. The young king, however, was the
                beloved of a thousand hearts. As son of a hero who won imperishable glory for
                England, the heir of Lancaster was regarded by Englishmen with sincere
                affection; the legitimacy of his title even was unquestioned; and the genius of
                his uncles, John, Duke of Bedford, and Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, under
                whose auspices the royal boy was crowned in London and Paris, created a feeling
                of security seldom felt by kingdoms at the beginning of long minorities.
                     For a time the aspect of affairs was cheering. At a critical period,
                however, Bedford expired at Rouen; and, ere long, England was distracted by a
                feud between Gloucester and that spurious son of John of Gaunt, known in
                history as Cardinal Beaufort, and as chief of a house which then enjoyed the
                Dukedom of Somerset. Gloucester charged the Cardinal with contempt for the laws
                of the realm; and the Cardinal avenged himself by accusing Gloucester’s Duchess
                of endeavouring to destroy the King by witchcraft, and banishing her to the
                Isle of Man. It soon appeared that the rivalry between Duke Humphrey and his
                illegitimate kinsman would involve the Sovereign and people of England in
                serious disasters.
                     Nature had not gifted Henry of Windsor with the capacity which would
                have enabled a sovereign to reconcile such foes. Never had the Confessor’s
                crown been placed on so weak a head. Never had the Conqueror’s sceptre been
                grasped by so feeble a band. The son of the fifth Henry was more of a monk than
                a monarch, and in every respect better qualified for the cloister than for
                courts and camps. In one respect, however, the king’s taste was not monastic.
                Notwithstanding his monkish tendencies, he did not relish the idea of celibacy;
                and the rival chiefs, perceiving his anxiety to marry, cast their eyes over
                Europe to discover a princess worthy of electing the part of Queen of England.
                     Gloucester was the first to take the business in hand. Guided at once by
                motives of policy and patriotism, he proposed to unite his nephew to a daughter
                of the Count of Armagnac; and he trusted, by an alliance, to allure that
                powerful French noble to the English interest. The King did not object to the
                Armagnac match. Before striking a bargain, however, he felt a natural desire to
                know something of the appearance of his future spouse; and with this view he
                employed a painter to furnish portraits of the Count’s three daughters. Before
                the portraits could be executed circumstances put an end to the negotiations.
                In fact, the Dauphin, as the English still called the seventh Charles of
                France, having no reason to regard the proposed marriage with favour, placed
                himself at the head of an army, seized upon the Count and his daughters, and
                carried them off as prisoners of state.
                     Meanwhile Beaufort was not idle. Eager to mortify Gloucester and
                increase his own influence, the aged Cardinal was bent on uniting the King to
                Margaret of Anjou, daughter of René of Provence, and niece of the French
                monarch. René, indeed, though titular sovereign of Jerusalem and the two
                Sicilies, was poor, and Margaret, albeit the Carolingian blood flowed in her
                veins, was portionless. But, though not favoured by fortune, the Provencal
                Princess was richly endowed by nature; and young as she was, the unrivalled
                beauty and intellect of King René’s daughter had made her name familiar in
                France and famous in England.
                     Never was intriguer more successful than Beaufort. While Gloucester was negotiating
                with the Count of Armagnac, the Cardinal, aware of Margaret’s charms, contrived
                to have a likeness of the Princess transmitted to the Court of England; and the
                young King became so enamoured of the fair being whom the portrait represented,
                that his wish to espouse her could not decently be combated. Matrimonial negotiations
                were therefore resolved on; and William de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, was sent
                as ambassador to bring home the Princess. René drove a hard bargain. Before
                consenting to the marriage he insisted on the restoration of Maine and Anjou,
                which were among the continental conquests that the English were in no humour
                to surrender. But Suffolk, who was thinking more of his own interests than of
                his country’s honour, yielded without scruple; and the marriage of King René’s
                daughter was made the basis of a treaty which could not fail to prove
                unpopular. At first, however, no complaint was uttered. Suffolk brought the
                royal bride to England, and declared, in allusion to her poverty, that her
                beauty and intellect were worth more than all the gold in the world.
                     One day in April, 1445, the marriage of Henry of Windsor and Margaret of
                Anjou was solemnised at the Abbey of Tichfield—the
                bridegroom being in his twenty-fourth, the bride in her sixteenth, year. The
                religious ceremony having been performed, the wedded pair were conducted to the
                capital of their dominions, and the English being then devotedly loyal, were
                prepared to welcome the spouse of young Henry to London with an enthusiasm
                which could hardly fail to intoxicate so young a princess. The nobles,
                displaying all the pride and pomp of feudalism, wore the Queen’s badge in
                honour of her arrival. At Greenwich, Gloucester, as first prince of the blood,
                though known to have been averse to the match, paid his respects, attended by
                five hundred men, dressed in her livery. At Blackheath appeared the Mayor, Aldermen,
                and Sheriffs of London, arrayed in scarlet robes, and mounted on horseback, to
                escort her through Southwark into the city. Passing under triumphal arches to Westminster,
                she was crowned in the Abbey; and that ceremony was the occasion of general
                rejoicing. The shows, the pageants, the tournaments, the display of feudal
                banners by the nobles, and lend applause of the populace, might well have led
                the royal pair to prognosticate a life of peace and happiness. Nobody, who
                witnessed the universal joy, could have supposed that England was on the eve of
                the bloodiest dynastic struggle recorded in her history.
                 In fact, the people of England, knowing nothing of the restitution of
                Maine and Anjou, were at first delighted with their Queen, and enraptured with
                her beauty. Her appearance was such as could hardly fail to please the eye and
                touch the heart. Imagine a princess in her teens, singularly accomplished, with
                a fair complexion, soft delicate features, bright expressive eyes, and golden
                hair flowing over ivory shoulders; place a crown upon her head, which seemed to
                have been formed to wear such a symbol of power; array her graceful figure in
                robes of state, and a mantle of purple fastened with gold and gems; and you
                will have before your mind’s eye the bride of Henry of Windsor, as on the day
                of her coronation she appeared among peers and prelates and high-born dames in
                the Abbey of Westminster.
                     Unfortunately for Margaret of Anjou, her prudence and intelligence were
                not equal to her wit and beauty. Ere two years passed, the popularity she
                enjoyed vanished into empty air; but she was a woman of defiant courage, and
                far from taking any pains to regain the affections of the people, she openly
                manifested her dislike of Gloucester, who was their favourite and their idol.
                Indeed, the young Queen never could forgive the Duke’s opposition to her
                marriage; and she listened readily to the counsels of Beaufort and Suffolk,
                who, in the spring of 1447 resolved, at all hazards, to accomplish his ruin.
                     With this view, a Parliament was summoned to meet at Bury St. Edmunds;
                and Gloucester, suspecting no snare, rode thither, with a small retinue, from
                the Castle of Devizes. At first, nothing occurred to raise his apprehension;
                but, in a few days, to his surprise, he found himself arrested by the Constable
                of England, on the charge of conspiracy to murder the King and seize the crown.
                     Gloucester was never brought to trial; and it was said that Suffolk and
                the Cardinal, finding that everybody ridiculed the charge of conspiracy,
                caused “The Good Duke” to be assassinated. Appearances rather strengthened the
                popular suspicion. One evening, about the close of February, Gloucester was in
                perfect health: next morning he was found dead in bed. The indecent haste with
                which Suffolk seized upon the Duke’s estates was commented on with severity;
                and Margaret of Anjou shared the suspicions that had been excited.
                     The Cardinal did not long survive the man who was believed to have been
                his victim. Early in the month of April, Beaufort died in despair, bitterly
                reproaching his riches, that they could not prolong his life and Suffolk, now
                without a rival, so conducted himself as to incur the perfect hatred of the
                nation. The English people had a peculiar aversion to favourites, and remembered
                that while weak sovereigns, like the third Henry and the second Edward, had
                been ruined by such creatures, great kings, like the first and third Edward,
                had done excellently well without them. Suffolk was ever  day more and more disliked; and, in 1449, his
                unpopularity reached the highest point.
                 The position of Suffolk now became perilous. Impatient at their
                Continental reverses, and exasperated at the loss of Rouen, the people
                exhibited a degree of indignation that was overwhelming, and the Duke, after
                being attacked in both houses of Parliament, found himself committed to the
                Tower. When brought to the bar of the Lords, Suffolk, aware of his favour at
                court, threw himself on the mercy of the King; and everything having been
                arranged, the Lord Chancellor, in Henry’s name, sentenced him to five years’
                banishment. The peers protested against this proceeding as unconstitutional;
                and the populace were so furious at the idea of the traitor escaping, that, on
                the day of his liberation, they assembled in St. Giles’s Fields to the number
                of two thousand, with the intention of bringing him to justice. But Suffolk
                evaded their vigilance, and at Ipswich embarked for the continent.
                     On the 2nd of May, 1450, however, as the banished Duke was sailing
                between Dover and Calais, he was stopped by an English man-of-war, described as
                the Nicholas of the Tower, and ordered to come immediately on board. As soon as
                Suffolk set foot on deck, the master of the Nicholas exclaimed, “Welcome,
                traitor”, and, for two days, kept his captive in suspense. On the third day,
                however, the Duke was handed into a cockboat, in which appeared an
                executioner, an axe, and a block; and the death’s man having, without delay,
                cut off the head of the disgraced minister, contemptuously cast the headless
                trunk on the sand.
                     While England’s sufferings, from disasters abroad and discord at home,
                were thus avenged on the Queen’s favourite, the King was regarded with pity and
                compassion. Henry, in fact, was looked upon as the victim of Fate; and a
                prophecy, supposed to have been uttered by his father, was cited to account for
                all his misfortunes. The hero-king, according to rumour, had, on hearing of his
                son’s birth at Windsor, shaken his head, and remarked prophetically “I, Henry
                of Monmouth, have gained much in my short reign; Henry of Windsor shall reign
                much longer, and lose all. But God’s will be done.”
                 Margaret of Anjou shared her favourite’s unpopularity; and, when she
                reached the age of twenty, the crown which had been placed on her head amid so
                much applause, became a crown of thorns. Exasperated at the loss of their
                continental conquests, Englishmen recalled to mind that she was a kinswoman and protegée of the King of France; and when it was known
                that, to secure her hand for their sovereign, Maine and Anjou had been
                surrendered, sturdy patriots described her as the cause of a humiliating peace,
                and, with bitter emphasis, denounced her as “The Foreign Woman.”
   These men were not altogether unreasonable. In fact, the case proved
                much worse for England than even they anticipated ; and, ere long, France was
                gratified with a thorough revenge on the foe, by whom she had been humbled to
                the dust, from having placed on the Plantagenets’ throne a princess capable, by
                pride and indiscretion, of rousing a civil war that ruined the Plantagenets’
                monarchy.
                     
                 CHAPTER II.THE DUKE OF YORK AND THE KING-MAKER.
                    
                 When Suffolk fell a victim to the popular indignation, Richard, Duke of York, first
                prince of the blood, was governing Ireland, with a courage worthy of his high
                rank, and a wisdom worthy of his great name. Indeed, his success was such as
                much to increase the jealousy with which the Queen had ever regarded the heir
                of the Plantagenets.
                     York was descended, in the male line, from Edmund of Langley, fifth son
                of the third Edward, and was thus heir-presumptive to the crown which the meek
                Henry wore. But the Duke had another claim, which rendered him more formidable
                than, as heir-presumptive, he would over have made himself; for through his
                mother, Anne Mortimer, daughter of an Earl of March, he inherited the blood of
                Lionel of Clarence, elder brother of John of Gaunt, and, in this way; could
                advance claims to the English crown, which, in a hereditary point of view, were
                infinitely superior to those of the House of Lancaster.
                     Richard Plantagenet was nearly ten years older than King Henry. He first
                saw the light in 1412; and, when a mere child, became, by the execution of his
                father, the Earl of Cambridge, at Southampton, and the fall of his uncle, the
                Duke of York, at Agincourt, heir of Edmund of Langley. His father’s misfortune
                placed Richard, for a time, under attainder; but after the accession of Henry,
                the dignities of the House of York were restored; and, in 1424, on the death of
                Edmund, last of the Earls of March, the young Plantagenet succeeded to the
                feudal power of the House of Mortimer.
                     An illustrious pedigree, and a great inheritance, rendered York a most
                important personage; and, as years passed over, he was, by Gloucester’s
                influence, appointed Regent of France. In that situation, the Duke bore himself
                like a brave leader in war, and a wise ruler in peace; but, as it was feared
                that he would obstruct the surrender of Maine and Anjou, he was displaced by Suffolk,
                and succeeded by the Duke of Somerset, who, it was well known, would be most
                accommodating.
                     When York returned to England, the Queen, not relishing a rival so near
                the throne, determined to send him out of the way. She, therefore, caused the
                Duke to be appointed, for ten years, to the Government of Ireland, and then
                despatched armed men to seize him on the road, and imprison him in the Castle
                of Conway. York, however, was fortunate enough to escape the Queen’s snares;
                and, reaching Ireland in safety, he not only gave peace to that country, but,
                by his skilful policy, won much favour among the inhabitants.
                     Time passed on; and the disappearance of Suffolk, of Beaufort, of
                Gloucester, and of Bedford, from the theatre of affairs, opened up a new scene.
                As minister of the King and favourite of the Queen, Beaufort and Suffolk were
                succeeded by Somerset; as first prince of blood and hero of the people, Bedford
                and Gloucester were succeeded by York. Moreover, the absence of the  Duke from the country caused much discontent.
                “If,” said the people, “he who brought the wild savage Irish to civil fashions
                and English urbanity, once ruled in England, he would depose evil counsellors,
                correct evil judges, and reform all unamended matters.”
   Firmly established the House of Lancaster then was ; but York had
                friends sufficiently powerful to make him a formidable rival to any dynasty. In
                youth, he had married Cicely, daughter of Ralph Neville, first Earl of
                Westmoreland; and of all the English magnates of the fifteenth century, the
                Nevilles, who drew strength at once from an illustrious Saxon origin and
                distinguished Norman alliances, were by far the most powerful and popular.
                     The Nevilles derived the descent, in the male line, from the Anglo-Saxon
                Earls of Northumberland. Their ancestor, Cospatrick,
                figured in youth at the Court of Edward the Confessor, and, relishing neither
                the sway of Harold the Usurper, nor of William the Conqueror, passed most of
                his life in adversity and exile. After which suffering, he died at Norham on the south bauk of the Tweed, and left two sons,
                who were more fortunate. One of these founded the House of Dunbar, whose chiefs
                for hundreds of years flourished with honour and renown: the other was
                grandfather of Robert Fitzmaldred, who married the heiress of the Nevilles, and
                was progenitor of that proud family, whose seat was long at Raby. About the
                beginning of the fifteenth century the House of Dunbar fell, and great was the
                fall thereof. About the beginning of the fifteenth century the Nevilles
                attained to the Earldom of Westmoreland and to a point of grandeur unrivalled
                among the nobles of England.
   Among the chiefs of the House of Neville, Ralph, first Earl of
                Westmoreland, was one of the most important. His possessions were so extensive,
                that besides the castle of his Anglo-Saxon ancestors and those of Brancepath,
                Middleham, and Sheriff Hutton, inherited through Norman heiresses of great
                name, he possessed about fifty manor-houses; and his feudal following was so
                grand, that, at times, he assembled in the great hall at Raby, no fewer than
                seven hundred knights, who lived on his lands in time of peace, and followed
                his banner in war. Even the Earl’s children were more numerous than those of
                his neighbours. He was twice married; and the Duchess of York, known among
                northern men as “The Rose of Raby,” was the youngest of a family of twenty-two.
                John Neville, Ralph’s eldest son by his first countess, was progenitor of those
                chiefs who, as Earls of Westmoreland, maintained baronial rank at Raby, till
                one of them risked and lost all in the great northern rebellion against
                Elizabeth. Richard Neville, Ralph’s eldest son by his second countess, obtained
                the hand of the heiress of the Montagues, and with her hand their Earldom of
                Salisbury and their vast possessions.
                     In the continental wars and domestic struggles in which Englishmen
                indulged during the fifteenth Century, Salisbury was recognised as a man of
                military prowess and political influence. But almost ere reaching middle age
                his fame grew pale before that of his eldest son, Richard Neville, who espoused
                the heiress of the Beauchamps, who, in her right,
                obtained the Earldom of Warwick, and who, as time passed on, became celebrated
                throughout Europe as the King-maker.
   At the name of “The Stout Earl,” as the people of England proudly called
                him, the fancy conjures up a mailclad man of the tallest stature, and the
                most majestic proportions; with dark brown hair clustering over a magnificent
                head, resting firmly and gracefully on mighty shoulders: a brow marked with
                thought, perhaps not without traces of core; a complexion naturally fair, but
                somewhat bronzed by exposure to sun and wind; a frank and open countenance
                lighted up with an eye of deep blue, and reflecting the emotions of the soul,
                as clouds arc reflected in a clear lake; and a presence so noble and heroic,
                that, compared with him, the princes and peers of our day would sink into utter
                insignificance. Unfortunately no portrait capable of conveying an adequate idea
                of Warwick’s appearance exists for the instruction of our generation; but traditions
                and chronicles lead to the conclusion, that if a Vandyke or a Reynolds had
                existed in the fifteenth century to transmit to posterity the king-maker as, in
                form and feature, he appeared to his contemporaries in Westminster Hall, in
                Warwick Castle, or on Towton Field—such a portrait,
                by such an artist, would not belie our conceptions as to the personal grandeur
                of the warrior-statesmen of medieval England.
                 But, however that might be, Warwick was the hero of his own times. From
                early youth he was in great favour with the people; and as years passed on his
                frankness, affability, sincerity, love of justice, and hatred of oppression,
                endeared him to their hearts. In an age of falsehood and fraud, his word was
                never broken, nor his honour tarnished. Even the lofty patrician pride, which
                rendered him an object of mingled awe and envy to the Woodvilles,
                the Howards, and the Herberts, recommended him to the
                multitude; for the new men, whom the descendant of Cospatrick would not recognise as his peers, were the instruments used by despotic
                sovereigns to grind the faces of the poor. Moreover, Warwick’s patriotism was
                ardent; and the nation remarked with gratification, that “The Stout Earl” was
                animated by all those English sympathies which, banished from courts and
                parliaments, still found a home in cottage and in grange.
   Besides being the most patriotic, Warwick had the good fortune to be the
                richest, of England’s patricians; and his immense revenues were expended in
                such a way that his praise as the people’s friend was ever on the tongues of
                the poor and needy. His hospitality knew’ no bounds. The gate of his mansion in
                London stood open to all comers; six oxen were usually consumed at a
                breakfast; no human being was sent hungry away: and every fighting man had the
                privilege of walking into the kitchen and helping himself to as much meat as
                could be carried away on the point of a dagger. At the same time, thirty
                thousand persons are said to have feasted daily at the Earl’s mansions and
                castles in various parts of England.
                     And it was not merely as a patriot and a popular patrician that Richard
                Neville was distinguished; for great was his renown as a warrior and a
                statesman. On fields of fight his bearing reminded men of the Paladins of
                romance; and when he broke sword in hand into foemen’s ranks, the cry of “A
                Warwick! A Warwick!  did more service to
                his friends than could the lances of five hundred knights. While Warwick’s
                martial prowess made him the idol of the soldiery, his capacity for affairs
                secured him general confidence and admiration. “The Stout Earl,” said the
                people, “is able to do anything, and without him nothing can be done well.”
   With such a friend as Warwick in England the Duke of York doubtless felt
                secure that his hereditary claims were in little danger of being quite
                forgotten during his absence. The Duke was in Ireland, when an incident,
                immortalised by Shakespeare, gave life and colour to the rival factions. One
                day, a violent dispute as to the rights of the Houses of York and Lancaster
                took place in the Temple Gardens. The disputants, “The Stout Earl” and the Duke
                of Somerset; appealed to their friends to take sides in the controversy: but
                these, being the barons of England, declined to enter upon such  “nice sharp quillets of the. law.” Warwick
                thereupon plucked a white rose, and Somerset a red rose; and each asked his
                friends to follow his example. Thus originated the badges of the chiefs who
                involved England in that sanguinary struggle celebrated by poets and
                chroniclers as the Wars of the Roses.
   
                 CHAPTER III.
                    THE CAPTAIN OF KENT.
                     
                 In the summer of
                1450, there was a ferment among the commons of Kent. For some time, indeed, the
                inhabitants of that district of England had been discontented with the
                administration of affairs; but now they were roused to action, by rumours that
                Margaret of Anjou, holding them responsible for the execution of Suffolk, had
                vowed revenge; that a process of extermination was to be forthwith commenced and
                that the country, from the Thames to the Straits of Dover, was to be converted
                into a lighting forest for the Queen and her favourites.
                     About the middle of June, while the indignation of the Kentishmen was at its height, a military adventurer, who
                has since been known as “Jack Cade,” but who called himself John Mortimer, and
                gave out that his mother was a Lacy, suddenly appeared among the malcontents,
                informed them that he was related to the Duke of York, and offered to be their
                captain. According to the chroniclers, he was “a young man of goodly stature
                and pregnant wit,” and he told his story so plausibly, that the men of Kent
                believed he was York’s cousin. Delighted with the notion of having found a
                Mortimer to lead them to battle, and to free them from oppression, the people
                crowded by thousands to his standard; and Cade, having assumed the title of
                Captain of Kent, arrayed them in good order, marched towards London, and
                encamped on Blackheath.
                     The men of Kent were not foes to be despised. They had ever claimed the
                privilege of marching in the van of England’s army, and had so borne themselves
                on fields of fight, that their courage was beyond dispute. The determined
                spirit, by which they were known to be animated, rather daunted the Court; and
                the King, in alarm, sent to ask why they had left their homes. Cade replied in
                a manner at which a Government owing its existence to a revolution had little
                reason to take umbrage. He sent a document, entitled “Complaint of the Commons
                of Kent,” containing a statement of grievances, demanding speedy redress, and
                requesting, in respectful language, the dismissal of the corrupt men by whom
                the King was surrounded, and the recall of “the Duke of York, late exiled from
                the royal presence.”
                     The Queen and her friends saw that something must be done, and that
                quickly. An army was, therefore, levied in the King’s name; and, at the head of
                it, Henry advanced to Blackheath; but Cade, wishing to draw the royal force
                into Kent, broke up his camp, and retreated to the quiet old market town of
                Sevenoaks. The Queen, doubtless somewhat surprised at the storm she had raised,
                dreaded the possibility of the King being environed by the insurgents. She,
                therefore, deputed the danger of encountering Cade to a gallant knight named
                Humphrey Stafford, and, having done so, retired to Greenwich.
                     On receiving the Queen’s commands, Stafford, and some of the court
                gallants, put on their rich armour and gorgeous surcoats, mounted their horses,
                and, with a detachment of the royal army, dashed off to engage the insurgents,
                all eagerness, as it seemed, to bring back the leader’s head as a trophy. On
                coming up with the foe, however, ardour of the gay warriors rapidly cooled;
                for, in posting his troops in Sevenoaks Wood, the Captain of Kent had made his
                dispositions with such masterly skill, that the insurgents felt high
                confidence, and presented a formidable front. Nevertheless, Stafford did not
                shrink from an encounter. Boldly dashing onward, he attacked the Kentishmen in their stronghold. His courage, however, was
                of no avail. At the very onslaught, he fell in front of his soldiers; and they,
                fighting with no good will, allowed themselves to be easily defeated.
                 Proud of his victory, the Captain of Kent arrayed himself in Stafford’s
                rich armour, advanced towards London, encamped once more on Blackheath, and
                threatened to attack the metropolis. His success had rendered him so popular a
                hero, that the Kentishmen, under the delusion that
                all abuses were to be reformed, called him “Captain Mendall”;
                and the inhabitants of Surrey and Sussex, catching the enthusiasm, crowded to
                his camp.
   Margaret of Anjou had now cause for serious alarm. The royal army could
                no longer be relied on. Already, many of the soldiers had deserted, and those
                who remained were asking, with indignation, why the Duke of York was not
                recalled. Aware of all this, the King deputed Humphrey Stafford, first Duke of
                Buckingham, a popular favourite, and a prince of the blood, to repair to Cade's
                camp, and expostulate with the rebels. The Captain received the Duke with all
                due respect, but declared that the insurgents could not lay down their arms,
                unless the King would hear their complaints in person, and pledge his royal
                word that their grievances should be redressed.
                     When Buckingham returned with Cade’s answer to Greenwich, there was yet
                time for Henry to save his regal dignity. Had he been capable of laying aside
                his saintly theories for a few hours, bracing on his armour, mounting his
                steed, and riding forth with words of courage and patriotism on his lips, he
                might have won back the hearts of his soldiers, and either scattered the
                insurgent army by forces or dissolved it by persuasion. To do this, a king of
                England did not require the animal courage of a Coeur de Lion, or the
                political genius of an English Justinian. Any of Henry’s predecessors, even the
                second Edward or the second Richard, could have mustered spirit and energy
                sufficient for the occasion. But the Monk-Monarch having neither spirit nor
                energy, quietly resigned himself to his fate; and the Queen, terrified at the
                commotion her imprudences had raised, disbanded the
                royal army, charged Lord Scales to keep the Tower, and, leaving London to its
                fate, departed with her husband to seek security in the strong Castle of
                Kenilworth. There was quite as little discretion as dignity in the King’s
                precipitate retreat. The most devoted adherents of the Red Rose might well
                despair of Hie House of Lancaster standing long, when they heard that the son
                of the conqueror of Agincourt had fled before the ringleader of a rabble.
                 Not slow to take advantage of the King’s absence, the Captain of Kent
                moved from Blackheath to Southwark. From that place he sent to demand entrance
                into London; and, after a debate in the Common Council, Sir Thomas Chalton, the Mayor, intimated that no opposition would be
                offered. Accordingly, on the 3rd of July, the insurgent leader crossed London
                Bridge—the single bridge of which the capital then boasted—and led his
                followers into the city.
   The inhabitants of London must have felt some degree of dismay. Both
                courtiers and citizens had an idea what a mob was—what violence and bloodshed
                the French capital had witnessed during the outbreaks of the Cabochiens—of what horrors each French province had been
                the scene during the Jacquerie. Moreover, the ruins of the Savoy, destroyed
                during Wat Tyler’s insurrection, and towering gloomily on the spot now occupied
                by the northern approach to Waterloo Bridge, formed at least one memorial of
                what mischief even English peasants and artisans were capable, when roused by
                injustice and oppression. At first, however, the Captain of Kent displayed a
                degree of moderation hardly to have been anticipated. Arrayed in Stafford’s
                splendid mail, he commenced his triumphal entry by indulging in a little
                harmless vanity.
   “Now,” said he, stopping, and striking his staff on London Stone, “now
                is Mortimer Lord of London.”
                     “Take heed,” said the Mayor, who was standing on the threshold of his door,
                and witnessed the scene, ‘‘take heed that you attempt nothing against the quiet
                of the city.”
                     “ Sir,” answered Cade, “let the world take, notice of our honest
                intentions by our actions.”
                     All that day the Captain of Kent appeared most anxious to gain the good
                opinion of the citizens. He issued proclamations against plunder, did his
                utmost to preserve discipline, and in the evening he marched quietly back to
                Southwark. Next morning, however, he returned; and, perhaps, no longer able to
                restrain the thirst of his followers for blood, he resolved to gratify them by
                the execution of “a new man.”
                     Among the most obnoxious of the King’s ministers was James Fiennes, who
                held the office of Lord Chamberlain, and enjoyed the dignity of Lord Say. The
                rapid rise of this peer to wealth and power had rendered him an object of
                dislike to the old nobility; and his connexion with Suffolk’s administration
                had rendered him an object of hatred to the people. Besides, he had lately
                purchased Knole Park, in the vicinity of Sevenoaks,
                and perhaps had, as lord of the soil, given offence to the commons of Kent by
                trenching on some of those privileges which they cherished so fondly.
   Ere entering London, the insurgents had made up their minds to have Lord
                Say’s head; and aware of the odium attached to his name, the unpopular minister
                had taken refuge with Lord Scales in the Tower. Scales had seen much service in
                France, and highly distinguished himself in the wars of the fifth Henry; but
                now he had reached his fiftieth summer; his bodily strength had decayed; and
                time had perhaps impaired the martial spirit that had animated his youthful
                exploits. At all events, instead of defending Lord Say to the last, as might
                have been expected, Scales allowed him to be taken from the Tower and carried
                to Guildhall, and on the ill-fated lord's, arrival there the Captain of Kent
                compelled the Mayor and Aldermen to arraign him as a traitor. In vain Say
                protested against the proceeding, and demanded a trial by his peers. The Captain
                twitted him with being a mock-patrician, and insisted upon the judges
                condemning the “buckram lord.” At length the insurgents lost patience, hurried
                their prisoner into Cheapside, and having there beheaded him without further
                ceremony, hastened to execute vengeance upon his son-in-law, Sir James Cromer,
                who, as Sheriff of Kent, had incurred their displeasure.
                     Intoxicated with triumph, as the Captain of Kent might be, the daring
                adventurer felt the reverse of easy while passing himself off as a Mortimer,
                and could not help dreading the consequence of his real origin being revealed
                to those whom he had deluded. Rumours were indeed creeping about that his name
                was Jack Cade; that he was a native of Ireland; that in his own country he had,
                for some time, lived in the household of a knight, but that having killed a
                woman and child he had entered the French service, and acquired the military
                skill which he had displayed against Stafford. Moreover, some chroniclers
                state, that to preclude the possibility of exposure he mercilessly executed
                those who were suspected to know anything of his antecedents, and endeavoured
                to insure the fidelity of his adherents by allowing them to perpetrate various
                kinds of enormity.
                     The citizens had hitherto submitted with patience; but on the 5th of
                July a provoking outrage roused them to resistance. On that day Cade having
                gratified his vanity, and satiated his thirst for blood, began to think of
                spoil. He commenced operations under peculiar circumstances. After dining with
                one of the citizens he requited the hospitality of his host by plundering the
                house, and the example of the captain was so faithfully followed by his men,
                that the Londoners perceived the propriety of doing something for their
                defence. When, therefore, Cade led his forces back to Southwark for the night,
                and the shades of evening settled over London, the inhabitants took counsel
                with Lord Scales, and resolved upon fortifying the bridge so as to prevent his
                return.
                     While Cade was passing the night of the 5th of July at Southwark
                reposing on his laurels, as it were, at the White Hart, news was carried
                to him that Loud Scales and the citizens were preparing to resist his return.
                With characteristic decision the Captain of Kent sprang to arms, declared he
                should force a passage forthwith, mustered his men, and led them to the attack.
                Fortune, however, now declared against him. A fierce combat took place; and the
                citizens defended the bridge so courageously that after a struggle of six hours
                the insurgents were fain to retire to Southwark.
   The courage of the mob now cooled; and the King’s ministers determined
                to try the effect of promises never intended to be Redeemed. Accordingly,
                William Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester, appeared with an offer of pardon to
                all who would return peaceably home. At first the insurgents were divided in
                opinion about accepting the Bishop’s terms. But Cade showed an inclination to
                grasp at the pardon, and finally all dispersed. The Captain of Kent, however,
                had as little intention as the Government to act with honour; and within ten
                days he again appeared in Southwark, with a considerable following. This time,
                however, the citizens, elate with victory, presented a firm front; and,
                dismayed at their threatening aspect, Cade retreated to Rochester. While there,
                terrified at the feuds of his followers, he learned with horror, that a
                thousand marks had been offered*for his apprehension; and alarmed at the
                probability of being delivered up, be galloped across the country toward the
                coast of Sussex, and, for some time, wandered about in disguise.
                     The Captain of Kent was not destined to elude the vengeance of the
                Government which he had defied. An esquire of the county, named Alexander Iden, pursued the despairing insurgent, and found him
                lurking in a garden at Rothfield. Cade did not yield
                to his fate without a struggle. Drawing his sword, he stood upon his defence;
                and both the captain and the esquire being men of strength and courage, a
                desperate conflict ensued. The victory, however, fell to Iden;
                and Cade’s head, after being carried to the King, was set on London Bridge, his
                face turned towards the hills of Kent. Many of his companions, in spite of
                Bishop Waynflete’s promise of pardon, were subsequently taken and
                executed as traitors.
                 Such was the end of a popular tumult, the origin of which remains in
                considerable obscurity. Some asserted that Jack Cade was merely an agent of
                Richard Plantagenet, did not hesitate to describe “Captain Mendall”
                as “one of the Duke of York’s firebrands.” No evidence exists, however, to show
                that the “high and mighty prince,” freely as his great name might have been
                used by the insurgents, had anything to do with the enterprise. Nevertheless
                the insurrection was not without influence on the Duke’s fortunes, and it has
                ever been regarded as a prelude to the fierce struggle between the Houses of
                York and Lancaster.
   
                 
                 CHAPTER IV.THE RIVAL DUKES
                 About the end of August, 1451, a rumour reached the Court of Westminster, that the
                Duke of York had suddenly left Ireland. The Queen was naturally somewhat
                alarmed: for, during Cade’s insurrection, the Duke’s name had been used in such
                a way as to test his influence, and no doubt remained of the popularity he
                enjoyed among the commons.
                     Margaret of Anjou had no wish to see York in London. On the pretext,
                therefore, that the Duke came with too large a force, the Queen, at Somerset’s
                instigation, despatched Lord Lisle, son of the famous Talbot, to prevent his
                landing. York, however, eluded the vigilance of his enemies, made his way to
                London, payed his respects to the King, complained of
                the misgovernment under which the country was suffering; and, still mute as to
                his intentions, retired to Fotheringay, a castle
                which had been built by his ancestor, Edmund of Langley.
                 The absence of York from Court exercised more influence in London than
                his presence could have done, and soon after his return from Ireland, a member
                of the House of Commons boldly proposed that, since Henry had no issue and no
                prospect of any, the Duke should be declared heir to the throne. For his
                temerity this senator was committed to the Tower; but the Commons, who were not
                thus to be daunted, passed a bill of attainder against the deceased Duke of
                Suffolk, and presented a petition to the King for the dismissal of Somerset,
                who was Suffolk’s successor and York’s foe.
                     The name of the Duke of Somerset was Edmund Beaufort. He was the
                illegitimate grandson of John of Gaunt, nephew of Cardinal Beaufort, and
                brother of that fair damsel whom James, the Poet-king of Scots, had wooed at
                Windsor, under circumstances so romantic. He had, for several years, been
                Regent of France, and in that capacity displayed considerable vigour; but the
                loss of Normandy occurred during his government; and this misfortune, coupled
                with his violent temper, and the fact of his enjoying the Queen's favour,
                rendered Somerset’s name as odious to the multitude as that of Suffolk had ever
                been. The Queen, however, not being inclined to bow to popular opinion,
                resisted the demand of the House of Commons for her favourite’s dismissal; and
                the strife between the parties was carried on with a degree of violence, which,
                in any other country, would have produced immediate war and bloodied.
                     The heir of the Plantagenets, however, recognised the necessity of
                acting with prudence. In fact, the Lancastrian dynasty was still so much in
                favour with the nation, that an attempt, on York’s part, to seize the crown
                would inevitably have added to the power of his enemies; but in any efforts to
                put down Somerset, and the men whom that obnoxious minister used as the
                instruments of his tyranny, the Duke well knew that he carried with him the
                hearts of the people, and of those great patricians whom the people regarded as
                their natural leaders.
                     Though the Earl of Westmoreland adhered to the House of Lancaster, the
                alliance of the other Nevilles would, of itself, have rendered York formidable;
                and, besides the Nevilles, there were many feudal magnates who shared York’s
                antipathy to Somerset. Thomas, Lord Stanley, who had married Warwick’s sister;
                John Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, descended from a granddaughter of the first
                Edward; John De Vere, Earl of Oxford, whose ancestors had been great in England
                since the Conquest; and Thomas Courtenay, Earl of Devon, whose pedigree dated
                from the age of Charlemagne; could not witness, without indignation, the
                domination of Beauforts. “We are unwilling,” such men
                must have murmured, “to see the Court of Westminster converted into a sty for the brood of Katherine Swynford.”
   York, for some time, hesitated to strike a blow; but, at length, and not
                without reason, he lost all patience. Indeed, the Yorkists affirmed that a plot
                had been formed for imprisoning their chief, and putting him secretly to death;
                and the memory of Humphrey of Gloucester’s fate rendered people credulous of
                any such report. To baffle any such criminal project, a movement against
                Somerset was resolved upon by the partisans of the White Rose; and, about the
                opening of 1452, York repaired to his Castle of Ludlow, gathered an army among
                the retainers of the House of Mortimer, and, declaring that he had np evil
                intentions against the King, to whom he offered to swear fealty on the
                Sacrament, commenced his march towards London.
                     The Lancastrians were alarmed at the intelligence that the Duke was in
                arms; and forces were mustered to intercept his march. But while the royal army
                went westward by one road, York came eastward by another, and, with several
                thousand men at his back, appeared at the gates of London. The metropolis,
                however, had aided in that revolution which placed Henry of Bolingbroke on the
                throne, and still continued well affected to the House of Lancaster. York did
                not, therefore, meet with such a reception as his friends could have wished.
                The gates, in fact, were shut in his face; and not wishing to exasperate the
                citizens by acts of violence, he marched up the banks of the Thames, crossed
                the river at Kingston, and, having been joined by the Earl of Devon, encamped
                his army on Brent Heath, near Dartford.
                     Henry, meantime, ventured on taking the field, and pitched his pavilion
                on Blackheath. It soon appeared, however, that on neither side was there any inclination
                to involve the country in civil war. Negotiations were therefore opened; and
                two bishops, commissioned to act for the King, proceeded to the camp of the
                Yorkists and demanded of their chief why he had appeared in arm.
                     The Duke, who would seem to have been unaware of the utter insincerity
                of his enemies, answered that repeated attempts had been made to effect his
                ruin, and that he was in arms for his own safety. The bishops, who well knew
                how truly York spoke, admitted that he had been watched with a jealous eye, but
                assigned as a reason, that the treasonable talk of his adherents justified
                suspicion. On the King’s part, however, they acquitted him of all treason,
                saying that Henry esteemed him as a true man and well-beloved cousin; and York,
                maintaining a high tone, insisted that all persons who had broken the laws of
                the realm, especially those who had been indicted for treason, should be put
                upon their trial. The demand was so reasonable that compliance could not with
                decency be refused; and Henry, having promised that every offender should be
                punished, issued an order for the apprehension of Somerset, and gave York to
                understand that, he should have a place in the Council.
                     Far from doubting the King’s good faith, York disbanded his army, and agreed
                to a personal interview with his royal kinsman. The result was not the most
                satisfactory. It proved beyond question that, however saintly his theories,
                Henry was capable of acting with an utter disregard of honour—that he had
                little sympathy with the fine sentiment of his ancestor, John de Valois, who,
                when advised to violate a treaty with our third Edward, exclaimed—“Were truth
                and sincerity banished from every part of the earth, they ought yet to be found
                in the mouths and the hearts of kings.” It appears that the Queen had concealed
                Somerset behind the arras of the King’s tent, and no sooner did York enter, and
                repeat what he had said to the two bishops, than the favourite, stepping from
                behind a curtain, offered to prove his innocence, and called York liar and
                traitor.
                     The scene which followed may easily be imagined. Somerset was violent
                and insolent; Henry, alarmed and silent; York, indignant and scornful. The Duke
                could now entertain no doubt that he had been betrayed; but his courage did not
                desert him. He retorted Somerset’s epithets with interest, and was turning
                haughtily to take his departure, when informed that he was a captive. Somerset
                then proposed a summary trial and execution; but the courtiers shrunk from the
                opprobrium of another murder. The King, who, save in the case of Lollards, had
                no love of executions, took the more moderate view; and the Duke, instead of
                perishing on the scaffold, was sent as a state prisoner to the Tower of London.
                     While the Queen and her friends were still bent on Yor’s destruction, a
                rumour that his eldest son Edward, the Boy-Earl of March, was coming from
                Ludlow, at the head of a strong body of Welshmen, filled the Council with
                alarm. The Duke was thereupon set at liberty, and, after making his submission,
                allowed to retire to the Borders of Wales. Having reached the dominions of the
                Mortimers, the heir-presumptive sought refuge within the walls of the Castles
                of Wigmore and Ludlow, repressed ambitious longings
                and patriotic indignation, and, for the restoration of better days to himself
                and his country, trusted to the chapter of accidents and the course of events.
   
 CHAPTER V.THE KING’S MALADY.
                    
                 In the autumn of
                1453, the Queen was keeping her Court at Clarendon; the Duke of York was at Wigmore and at Ludlow, maintaining a state befitting the
                heir of the Mortimers; the barons were at their moated castles, complaining
                gloomily of Henry’s indolence and Somerset’s insolence; and the people were
                expressing the utmost discontent at the mismanagement that had, after a brave
                struggle, in which Talbot and his son, Lord Lisle, fell, finally lost Gascony;
                when a strange gloom settled over the countenances of the Lancastrians, and
                mysterious rumours crept about as to the King’s health. At length the terrible
                truth came out, and the Yorkists learned that Henry was suffering from an
                eclipse of reason, similar to that which had afflicted his maternal grandsire,
                the sixth Charles of France. In this state he was slowly removed from Clarendon
                to Westminster.
   About a month after the King’s loss of reason, there occurred another
                event, destined to exercise great influence on the rival parties. At
                Westminster, on the 14th of October, 1453, Margaret of Anjou, after having been
                for eight years a wife, without being a mother, gave birth to an heir to the
                English crown; and the existence of this boy, destined to an end so tragic,
                while reviving the courage of the Lancastrians, inspired the partisans of the
                White Rose with a resolution to adopt bold measures on behalf of their chief.
                     At first, indeed, the Yorkists altogether refused to believe in the
                existence of the infant Prince. When, however, that could no longer be denied,
                they declared that there had been unfair play. Finally, they circulated reports
                injurious to Margaret’s honour as a queen and reputation as a woman; and
                rumour, which, ere this, had whispered light tales of René’s daughter, took the
                liberty of ascribing to Somerset the paternity of her son. Such scandals were
                calculated to repress loyal emotions; and the courtiers attempted to counteract
                the effect by giving the child a popular name. Accordingly, the little Prince,
                who had first seen the light on St. Edward’s Day, was baptised by that name,
                which was dear to the people, as having been borne by the last Anglo-Saxon
                king, and by the greatest of the Plantagenets. Nobody, however, appears to have
                supposed that because the boy was named Edward, he would, therefore, prove
                equal in wisdom and valour to the English Justinian, or the conqueror of
                Creasy, or “the valiant and gentle Prince of Wales, the flower of all chivalry
                in the world”.
                     The insanity of the King, naturally enough, brought about the recal of York to the Council; and when Parliament met in
                February, 1454, the Duke having, as Royal Commissioner, opened the proceedings,
                the Peers determined to arrive at a knowledge of the King's real condition,
                which the Queen had hitherto endeavoured to conceal. An opportunity soon
                occurred.
                     On the 2nd of March, 1454, John Kempe, Primate and Chancellor of
                England, breathed his last. On such occasions it was customary for the House of
                Lords to confer personally with the Sovereign, and, accordingly, Henry being
                then at Windsor, twelve peers were depicted to go thither for that purpose.
                Their reception was not gracious; but they insisted on entering the Castle, and
                found the King utterly incapable of comprehending a word. Three several times
                they presented themselves in his chamber, but in vain; and, returning to
                London, free from any doubts, they made a report to the House, which convinced
                the most incredulous. “We could get,” said they, “no answer or sign from him,
                for no prayer nor desire.” At the request of the twelve peers, this report was
                entered on the records of Parlament; and, ere two
                days passed, Richard, Duke of York, was nominated Protector of England. His power
                was to continue until the King recovered, or, in the event of Henry’s malady
                proving incurable, till young Edward came of age.
                 The Duke, when intrusted by Parliament with the functions of Protector,
                exercised the utmost caution; and, while accepting the duties of the office,
                was careful to obtain from his peers the most explicit declaration, that he
                only followed their noble commandments. It is true that one of his first acts
                was to intrust the great seal to the Earl of Salisbury; but on the whole his
                moderation was conspicuous; and the claims of Prince Edward, as heir of
                England, having been fully recognised, he was created Prince of Wales and Earl
                of Chester; and a splendid provision was made for his maintenance.
                     With York at the head of the Government, matters went smoothly till the
                close of 1454; but in the month of December the King’s recovery threw
                everything into disorder. About Christmas, Henry awoke as from a confused
                dream; and, on St. John’s Day, he sent his almoner with an offering to
                Canterbury, and his secretary on a similar errand to the shrine of St. Edward.
                     The Queen’s hopes were now renewed and her ambitions stimulated. Having
                in vain endeavoured to conceal the plight of her husband from the nation, she
                marked his restoration with joy, and presented the Prince to him with maternal
                pride. Henry was, perhaps, slightly surprised to find himself the father of a
                fine boy; but manifesting a proper degree of parental affection, he asked by
                what name his heir had been called. The Queen replied that he had been named
                Edward; and the King, holding up his hands, thanked God that such was the case.
                He was then informed that Cardinal Kempe was no more; and he remarked—“Then one
                of the wisest lords in the land is dead.”
                     The King's recovery was bruited about; and on the morning after Twelfth
                Day, William Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester, paid the royal invalid a visit.
                Henry spoke to him as rationally as ever he had been capable of doing;
                declaring, moreover, that he was in charity with all the world, and wished his
                lords were in the same frame of mind. The Bishop, on leaving the King, was so
                affected that he wept for joy; the news spread from Thames to Tweed; and, from
                Kent to Northumberland, the partisans of the Red Rose congratulated each other
                on the return of good fortune.
                     
 CHAPTER VI.
                    THE BATTLE OF ST. ALBANS.
                    
                 When Henry recovered from his malady, York resigned, the Protectorship,
                and Margaret of Anjou again became all-powerful. The circumstances were such,
                that the exercise of moderation, towards friends and foes, would have restored
                the Lancastrian Queen to the good opinion of her husband’s subjects.
                Unfortunately for her happiness, Margaret allowed prejudice and passion to
                hurry her into a defiance of law and decency.
                     It happened that, during the King’s illness, Somerset had been arrested
                in the Queen’s great chamber, and sent to keep his Christmas in the Tower, as a
                preliminary to his being brought to trial. No sooner, however, did Margaret
                regain authority, than her favourite was set at liberty; and people learned
                with indignation that, instead of having to answer for his offences against the
                State, the unworthy noble was to be appointed Captain-General of Calais. After
                this, the Yorkists became convinced that the sword alone could settle the
                controversy; and about the spring of 1455, the Duke repairing to Ludlow,
                summoned, for the second time, his retainers, and prepared to display his
                banner in actual war against the royal standard of England. He had soon the
                gratification of being joined by the two great Earls of Salisbury and Warwick;
                by John Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk; and by other men, whose rank and nobility
                lent lustre to the cause. Having armed and arrayed the Marchmen of Wales, York advanced towards the capital.
                 War was now inevitable; and Somerset did not shrink from a conflict with
                the prince whose life he had sought and whose vengeance he had defied. A
                Lancastrian army was forthwith assembled; and at its head, Henry and Somerset,
                accompanied by many men of influence, marched from London to face the Yorkists
                in fight. Sir Philip Wentworth bore the royal standard; and with the King went
                Humphrey, Duke of Buckingham, and his son, Earl Stafford; James Butler, chief
                of the House of Ormond, whom Henry had created Earl of Wiltshire; Thomas, Lord
                Clifford, from the Craven; and Hotspur’s son, Henry Percy, Earl of
                Northumberland, who, having in youth been restored by Henry the Fifth, now went
                out, at the age of three-score, to fight for the crown worn by Henry’s son. The
                people, however, held aloof from the contest; and the army of the Red Rose, composed
                entirely of nobles, with their knights, and squires, and fighting men, does not
                appear to have exceeded two thousand in number.
                     The King had not far to go in search of his kinsman. After passing the
                night of Thursday, the 22nd of May, at Watford, and proceeding next morning to
                St. Albans, the Lancastrians, when about to continue their march, perceived
                that the hills in front of them were covered with armed men, who moved rapidly
                in battle order, towards the ancient historic town. On observing the approach
                of the Yorkist foe, the Lancastrian leaders halted, set up the royal standard,
                placed troops under the command of Lord Clifford to guard the barriers, and
                sent the Duke of Buckingham to confer with the White Rose chiefs, who had
                encamped at Heyfield.
                     Richard Plantagenet, though a warrior of the highest courage, had no
                relish for bloodshed; and he did not forget that those to whom he now stood
                opposed were Englishmen like himself. When, therefore, Buckingham went, in
                Henry’s name, to demand why York thus appeared before his sovereign in hostile
                array, the Duke professed great loyalty, and replied that he would at once lay
                down his arms, if the King would surrender Somerset to justice.
                     Buckingham, whose affection for the Beauforts was not excessive, carried this answer to Henry; and the Duke’s demand for the
                surrender of the Queen’s favourite produced an effect which could hardly have
                been anticipated. For once, the monk-monarch showed some spark of the
                Plantagenet, expressed the utmost scorn at the message, and swore by St.
                Edward, as if he had been a conqueror of Evesham, “that he would as soon
                deliver up his crown, as either Somerset or the meanest soldier in his camp.”
                     Every prospect of an accommodation was now dissipated; and the warriors
                of the White Rose, who had remained inactive for three hours, prepared for an
                encounter. Having addressed his adherents, York advanced, with banners
                streaming and clarions sounding, and at noon commenced that struggle, which,
                thirty years later, was terminated on the field of Bosworth.
                     From occupying St. Albans the Lancastrians had the advantage of
                position, and such hopes of victory, that Somerset’s men were ordered to put to
                death all the Yorkists who should be taken prisoners. Moreover, Clifford made a
                brave defence, and for a time the Duke was kept in check at the barriers. The Yorkiste, among other weapons of offence, had guns; and
                Warwick and Salisbury had such a degree of skill in using them as their enemies
                could not boast of. Yet so steadily were they resisted by Clifford that the
                prospect of coming to close conflict with the foe appeared distant; and the
                partisans of York looked somewhat blank. But Warwick was not a man to yield to
                obstacles. Leading his soldiers round part of the hill on which St. Albans is
                situated, that great war-chief broke down a high wall, ordered his trumpets to
                sound, crossed the gardens which the wall enclosed, and shouting—“A
                Warwick! A Warwick!” charged forward upon the recoiling foe. On the Lancastrian
                ranks Warwick’s presence produced an immediate impression; and the barriers
                having been burst, the Yorkists, encouraged by “The Stout Earl’s” war-cry,
                rushed into the town, and came face to face with their foes.
   A conflict now took place among the houses, in the lanes, in the
                streets, and in the market place. The fight was fierce, as could not fail to be
                the case in a struggle between men who had long cherished, while restraining,
                their mortal hate; and the ancient town was soon strewn with traces of the
                battle, and crimsoned with the blood of the slain. The King’s friends made a
                desperate resistance; and delayed the victory till the clash of mail reached
                the monks in the Abbey. But Warwick cheered on archer and spearman to the
                assault; and York, not to be baffled, reinforced every party that was
                hard-pressed, and pressed forward fresh warriors to relieve the weary and the
                wounded. Humphrey, Earl Stafford, bit the dust; Clifford fell, to be cruelly
                avenged on a more bloody day; and Northumberland, who had seen so many years,
                and fought so many battles, died under the weapons of his foes.
                     Somerset appears at first to have fought with a courage worthy of the
                reputation he had won on the continent; and on hearing that Clifford’s soldiers
                were giving way before Warwick’s mighty onslaught, he rushed gallantly to the
                rescue. The chief of the Beauforts, however, did not
                live to bring aid to the men of the Craven. Years before, the Lancastrian Duke
                had been admonished by a fortune-teller to beware of a castle; and, finding
                himself suddenly under a tavern bearing that sign, the warning occurred to his
                memory. Superstitious like his neighbours, Somerset lost his presence of mind,
                gave himself up for lost, became bewildered, and was beaten down and slain. The
                fortune of the day being decidedly against the Red Rose, the Earl of Wiltshire,
                cast his harness into a ditch and spurred fast from the lost field; while Sir
                Philip Wentworth, equally careful of his own safety, threw away the royal standard,
                and fled toward Suffolk. The Lancastrians, beaten and aware of Somerset’s fall,
                rushed through the gardens and leaped over hedges, leaving their arms in the
                ditches and woods that they might escape the more swiftly.
   Ere this, Henry had been wounded in the neck by an arrow. Sad and
                sorrowful, he sought shelter in a thatched house occupied by a tanner. Thither,
                fresh from victory, went the Duke; and treated his vanquished kinsman with
                every respect. Kneeling respectfully, the conqueror protested his loyalty, and
                declared his readiness to obey the King. “Then,” said Henry, “stop the pursuit
                and slaughter, and I will do whatever you will.” The Duke, having ordered a
                cessation of hostilities, led the King to the Abbey; the royal kinsmen, after
                praying together before the shrine of England’s first martyr, journeyed to
                London; and Margaret of Anjou, then with her son at Greenwich, learned, with
                dismay, that her favourite was a corpse and her husband a captive. At such a
                time, while shedding tears of bitterness and doubt within the palace built by
                Humphrey of Gloucester, the young Queen must have reflected, with remorse, on
                the part she had taken against The Good Duke,” and considered how different a
                face affairs might have worn in 1455, if she had not, in 1447, consented to the
                violent removal of the last stately pillar that supported the House of
                Lancaster.
                     
                 CHAPTER VIITHE QUEEN AND THE YORKIST CHIEFS.
                    
                 When the battle of St. Albans placed the King and kingdom of England under the
                influence of the Yorkists, the Duke and his friends exercised their authority
                with a moderation rarely exhibited in such circumstances. No vindictive malice
                was displayed against the vanquished; not a drop of blood flowed on the
                scaffold; not ail act of attainder passed the legislature. Everything was done
                temperately and in order.
                 As Henry was again attacked by his malady he was intrusted to Margaret’s
                care, and York was again declared Protector of the realm, with a provision
                that he was to hold the office, not as before, at the King’s pleasure, but
                until discharged from it by the Lords in Parliament. Salisbury was, at the same
                time, intrusted with the Great Seal; and Warwick was appointed to the
                Government of Calais. Comines calls Calais “the richest prize in the crown of
                England”, and the Government of the city was an office of greater trust and
                profit than any which an English Sovereign had to bestow.
                     Margaret of Anjou, however, was not quite absorbed in her duties as wife
                and mother. While educating her helpless son and tending her yet more helpless
                husband, she was bent on a struggle for the recovery of that power which she
                had already so fatally abused; and as necessity alone had made her submit to
                the authority of York and his two noble kinsmen, who were satirised as the
                “Triumvirate,” she seized the earliest opportunity of ejecting them from power.
                     One day in spring, while the Queen was pondering projects of ambition,
                and glowing with anticipations of vengeance, two noblemen of high rank and
                great influence appeared at the palace of Greenwich. One of these was Humphrey
                Stafford, Duke of Buckingham; the other, Henry Beaufort, Duke of Somerset;
                and their errand was to confer with Queen Margaret on the present state of
                affairs. The Queen received them with open arms, expressed haughty scorn of
                her potent foes, and reminded Buckingham of the son he had lost at St. Albans,
                and Somerset of the father he had lost on the same fatal day. The Dukes, having
                listened to all this, represented to Margaret the indignity to which the King
                was subjected in being deprived of all share in the government, while York and
                his accomplices managed everything according to their pleasure. The Queen heard
                her friends with delight, vowed that the triumph of the Yorkist chiefs should
                be brief, and resolved upon acting without delay.
                     Accordingly it was determined to hold a Council; and the enemies of York
                were summoned to Greenwich. After some debate as to the most politic method of
                restoring the royal authority, the Council resolved that York should be commanded to resign the office of Protector, seeing that
                the King was of years and discretion sufficient to rule without a guardian, and
                that Salisbury should be commanded to surrender the
                post of Chancellor. “The Great Seal,” they said, “had never been in his
                custody, that which he used having been made since the King’s restraint”.
                Henry, for whose opinion none of the Lancastrians had any respect, was easily
                prevailed upon to give his sanction to their measures, and York and Salisbury
                were discharged from their high offices, and summoned to appear before the
                Council.
                 The Duke and the Earl were much too wise to place themselves in the
                power of enemies who bad, on former occasions, proved so unscrupulous. They answered
                boldly that there existed no power to displace them or command their
                appearance, save in Parliament. When, however, the Houses assembled after
                Christmas, 1456, Henry presented himself and demanded back his regal power.
                Everybody was surprised: but no doubt was expressed as to the King’s sanity,
                and York, without a murmur, resigned the Protectorship.
   The Queen was not content with having deprived the Duke and the Earl of
                power. Her ideas of revenge went far beyond such satisfaction; and she occupied
                her brain with schemes for putting her enemies under her feet. Feigning
                indifference to affairs of state, the artful woman pretended to give herself up
                entirely to the restoration of the King’s health, and announced her intention
                of affording Henry an opportunity to indulge in pastimes likely to restore him
                to vigour of mind and body.
                     On this pretext the King and Queen made a progress into Warwickshire,
                hunting and hawking by the way, till they reached Coventry. While residing in
                that ancient city, and keeping her Court in the Priory, the Queen wrote
                letters, in affectionate terms, to York, Salisbury, and Warwick, earnestly
                entreating them to visit the King on a certain day; and the Duke, with the two
                Earls, suspecting no evil, obeyed the summons, and rode towards Coventry. On
                approaching the city, however, they received warning that foul play was
                intended, and, turning aside, escaped the peril that awaited them. York,
                unattended save by his groom and page, made for Wigmore;
                Salisbury repaired to Middleham, a great castle of the Nevilles in Yorkshire;
                and Warwick took shipping for Calais, which ‘soon became his stronghold and
                refuge.
                 Totally unaware of the mischief projected by his spouse, but sincerely
                anxious for a reconciliation of parties, Henry resolved on acting as
                peacemaker, and, with that view, summoned a great Council. The King was all
                eagerness to reconcile York and his friends with the Beauforts, Percies, and Cliffords,
                whose kinsmen had been slain at St. Albans; and he swore upon his salvation so
                to entertain the Duke and the two Earls, that all discontent should be removed.
                London was fixed upon as the place of meeting; and, at the head of five
                thousand armed men, the Mayor undertook to prevent strife.
   Accompanied by a number of friends and followers, York entered the
                capital, and repaired to Baynard’s Castle; the Earl
                of Salisbury arrived, with a feudal following, at his mansion called the
                Harbour; and Warwick, landing from Calais, rode into the city, attended by six
                hundred men, with his badge, the Ragged Staff, embroidered on each of their red
                coats, and took possession of his residence near the Grey Friars.
   At the same time, the Lancastrian nobles mustered strong. Henry
                Beaufort, Duke of Somerset; Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland; and John, “the blackfaced” Lord Clifford, came riding towards
                London, in feudal array, attended by hundreds of the men of the West, of
                Northumberland, and of the Craven. Each of the three had lost a father in the
                first battle of the Roses; and, albeit young and vigorous, they were to pour
                out their heart’s blood in the struggle, ere a few years passed over. But in no
                wise apprehensive did they seem, as they alighted at their respective lodgings
                to the west of Temple Bar. Thither, at the same time, came Exeter,
                 One circumstance connected with this attempt at pacification was
                particularly noticed. While the Yorkists lodged in the city, the Beauforts, Percies, and Cliffords, sojourned on the west of Temple Bar; and while
                one party held their deliberations in the Black Friars, the other held their
                meetings in the Chapter House at Westminster. The wits of the period had their
                joke on the occasion, and said, that as the Jews disdained the company of the
                Samaritans, so the Lancastrian lords abhorred the idea of familiarity with the
                White Rose chiefs.
                 The farce was played out. The King, who, during the conferences, resided
                at Berkhamstead and acted as umpire, in due time,
                gave his award. The Yorkists appear to have had scanty justice. They were
                heavily mulcted, for the benefit of their living foes, and ordered to build a
                chapel for the good of the souls of the lords slain at St. Albans. Everybody,
                however, appeared satisfied, and agreed to a religious procession to St.
                Paul’s, that they might convince the populace how real was the concord that
                existed. The day of the Conception was appointed for this ceremony; and, to
                take part in it, the King and Queen came from Berkhamstead to London.
   The procession was so arranged as to place in the position of dear
                friends those whose enmity was supposed to be the bitterest. The King, with a
                crown on his head, and wearing royal robes, was naturally the principal figure.
                Before him, hand in hand, walked Salisbury and Somerset, Warwick and Exeter.
                Behind him came York leading Margaret of Anjou. The citizens were, perhaps,
                convinced that Yorkists and Lancastrians were the best of friends. All was
                delusion, however, nought was truth. Though their hands were joined their
                hearts were far asunder, and the blood already shed cried for vengeance. Stem
                grew the brows of Lancastrian lords, pale the cheeks of Lancastrian ladies, at
                the mention of St. Albans. The Beauforts, Percies, and Cliffords, still
                panted for vengeance, and vowed to have an eye for an eye and a tooth for a
                tooth.
                 The procession to. St. Paul’s took place in spring, and ere the summer
                was over events dissipated the illusions which the scene created. Warwick, as
                Captain of Calais, interfered with some ships belonging to the Hans Towns; and
                of this the Hanseatic League complained to the Court of England, as an
                infraction of the law of nations. The Earl was asked for explanations; and to
                render them more clearly presented himself at Westminster.
                     The opportunity for a quarrel was too favourable to be neglected. One
                day when Warwick was attending the Council at Westminster, a yeoman of his
                retinue having been struck by one of the royal household, wounded his
                assailant. The King’s servants assembling at the news watched until the Earl
                was returning from the Council to his barge, and set upon him with desperate
                intentions. A fray ensued, and Warwick, with some difficulty, escaped in a
                wherry to London. Unfortunately, the mischief did not end here. The Queen,
                having heard of the affair, acted with characteristic imprudence, and ordered
                Warwick to be sent to the Tower, and a cry was therefore raised that “The
                Foreign Woman,” who had murdered “The Good Duke Humphrey,” was going to murder
                “The Stout Earl.” Warwick, however, consulted his safety by making for
                Yorkshire, where he took counsel with York and Salisbury. After this conference
                he passed over to Calais, and during the winter employed himself in embodying
                some veteran troops who had served under Bedford and Talbot in the wars of
                France.     
   
                 CHAPTER VIII.
                    THE CITY AND THE COURT.
                    
                 One day, in the year 1456, a citizen of London, passing along Cheapside, happened
                to meet an Italian carrying a dagger. The citizen was a young merchant who had
                lately been on the continent, and who had, in some of the Italian states, been
                prohibited by the magistrates from wearing a weapon, even for the defence of
                his life. Naturally indignant at seeing an Italian doing in the capital of
                England what an Englishman was not allowed to do in the cities of Italy, the
                merchant ventured upon stopping the foreigner, and reminding him of the laws of
                his own country
                     Not having any relish for being thus challenged, the Italian answered
                with some degree of insolence; and the Englishman, stung to the quick, forcibly
                seized the dagger of the foreigner, “and,” according to the chroniclers of the
                period, “with the same a little cut his crown and cracked his pate”. Enraged at
                this assault, the Italian complained of the outrage to the Lord Mayor; and the
                Englishman, having been summoned to the court at Guildhall, was committed to
                Newgate.
                     Between the London merchants of that day and the foreigners carrying on
                business in London no goodwill existed. Free trade was not the fashion of the
                age; and the inhabitants of the city, hating the Italians for interfering with
                their commerce, were ready on any fitting occasion to rise to the tune of
                “England for the English”. No sooner, therefore, was it known that an
                Englishman had been incarcerated for breaking an Italian’s head than he was
                regarded as a martyr to his patriotism; and the Londoners, assembling in
                crowds, compelled the Mayor to deliver the merchant from prison, and took the
                opportunity of attacking the houses of all the Italians in London. The Mayor,
                in the utmost alarm, summoned the elder and graver of the citizens to his
                assistance; and these, with much difficulty, prevailed on the crowd to disperse
                to their homes. As for the merchant, not seeing any security under the
                circumstances, he repaired to Westminster, and there took refuge in the
                Sanctuary.
                     The riot in London created considerable sensation; and unfortunately,
                the Queen, as if she had not already business enough on her hands, took upon
                herself to interfere, and expressed her intention of inflicting signal punishment
                on the offenders. With that purpose in view, she instructed two of her
                dukes—Buckingham and Exeter—to proceed to the city ; and these noblemen with
                the mayor and two justices, opened a commission at Guildhall.
                     At first the business was conducted with all due form, and the inquiry
                was ceremoniously prosecuted. Suddenly, however, a great change occurred in
                the city. Bow bell was rung, and, at its sound, the streets filled with armed
                men, who appeared bent on mischief. The Queen’s high-born commissioners were,
                doubtless, as much taken by surprise as if Jack Cade had come to life again;
                and, probably, not unmindful of Lord Say’s fate, they abandoned the inquiry in
                a state of trepidation hardly consisting with the dignity of a Stafford and a
                Holland. The city, however, was nothing the worse for their absence; indeed,
                the Lord Mayor, having thus got rid of his lordly coadjutors, called some
                discreet citizens to his aid, and dealt so prudently with the multitude, that
                order was restored and justice satisfied.
                   The part enacted by the Queen, in regard to the quarrel between the
                English and Italians, destroyed the last particle of affection which the
                inhabitants of London entertained for the house of Lancaster; and Margaret, for
                many reasons, began to prefer Coventry to the metropolis. This, however, was
                not the only result of her interference. In the eyes of foreigners, it elevated
                the riot to the dignity of an insurrection; and the French mistaking it for one
                of those revolutions in which the Parisians, under the auspices of Jean de
                Troyes and Jean Caboche, were in the habit of
                indulging during the reign of the unfortunate Charles.
   The French were excusable in their delusion. With an insane King and a
                reckless Queen in both cases, the parallel was somewhat close. But the French
                soon discovered their mistake. Having fitted out two expeditions to avail
                themselves of our domestic disorders, they intrusted one to Lord de Pomyers, and the other to Sir Peter de Brezé. Pomyers landed on the coast of Cornwall, and having burned Towcy, sailed back to France without doing serious
                mischief. Brezé, with four thousand men, embarked at Honfleur,
                made a descent on Sandwich, and proceeded to spoil the town, which had been
                deserted by its defenders on account of the plague; but the country people in
                the neighbourhood arriving in great numbers, the invaders were fain to return
                to their ships.
   Such was the end of the riot in London; and from that time the
                metropolitan populace adhered to the chiefs of the White Rose; and to that
                badge of hereditary pride and personal honour they clung with fidelity long
                after it had lost its bloom in the atmosphere of a corrupt court, and been dyed
                red on scaffold and battlefield in the blood of the noble and the brave.
                     
                 CHAPTER IX.
                    A YORKIST VICTORY AND A LANCASTRIAN REVENGE.
                    
                 In the summer of
                1459, Margaret of Anjou carried the Prince of Wales on a progress through
                Chester, of which he was Earl. The Queen’s object being to enlist the
                sympathies of the men of the north, she caused her son, then in his sixth year,
                to present a silver swan, which had been assumed as his badge, to each of the
                principal adherents of the House of Lancaster. Margaret had left the County
                Palatine, and was resting from her fatigues at Eccleshall,
                in Staffordshire, when she received intelligence that the Yorkists were in
                motion; that the Duke was arraying the retainers of Mortimer beneath the
                Plantagenet banner; that Warwick was on his way from Calais with a body of
                warriors trained to arms by Bedford and Talbot; and that Salisbury, at the head
                of five thousand merry men of Yorkshire, was moving from Middleham Castle to
                join his son and his brother- in-law at Ludlow.
                 Notwithstanding the rout of her friends at St. Albans, Margaret was not
                daunted at the prospect of another trial of strength. Perhaps, indeed, she
                rather rejoiced that the Yorkist chiefs afforded a fair opportunity of
                executing her vengeance and effecting their ruin. Her measures, with that
                purpose, were taken with characteristic promptitude. She issued orders to
                James Touchet, Lord Audley, to intercept Salisbury’s
                march; and at the same time, summoned Thomas, Lord Stanley, to join the
                Lancastrian army with all his forces. Stanley, who was son-in-law of Salisbury,
                answered that he would come in all haste, but failed to keep his promise.
                Audley, however, exhibited more devotion to the Red Rose. On receiving the
                Queen’s commands, he undertook to bring her one Yorkist chief dead or alive;
                and hastily assembling a force of ten thousand men in Cheshire and Shropshire,
                boldly threw himself between the Earl and the Duke. On the evening of Saturday,
                the 22nd of September, Audley came face to face with Salisbury, at Bloreheath,
                within a short distance of Drayton, anciently the seat of those Bassets who
                fought with so much distinction in the wars of the first Edward.
                 The position of the Yorkists was the reverse of pleasant. The
                Lancastrian army was greatly superior in number, and Audley had the advantage
                of being posted by the side of a stream, of winch the banks were particularly
                steep. But Salisbury was not to be baffled. Seeing that there was little
                prospect of success in the event of his crossing to attack, the Earl resolved
                on a military stratagem, and gave orders that his army should encamp for the
                night.
                     Early on the morning of Sunday—it was St. Tecla’s Day—Salisbury set his
                men in motion; and, having caused his archers to send a flight of shafts across
                the river, towards Audley’s camp, feigned to retreat. Audley soon showed that
                he was no match for such an enemy. Completely deceived, the Lancastrian lord
                roused his troops to action, caused his trumpets to sound, and gave orders for
                bis army passing the river. His orders were promptly obeyed. The men of
                Cheshire, who composed the van, dashed into the water, and plunged through the
                stream; but, scarcely had they commenced ascending the opposite banks, when
                Salisbury turned, and attacked them with that degree of courage, against which
                superiority of numbers is vain. The battle was, nevertheless, maintained for
                hours, and proved most sanguinary. The loss of the Yorkists was, indeed, trifling;
                but more than two thousand of the Red Rose warriors perished in the encounter.
                Audley himself was slain, and with him some of the foremost gentlemen of
                Cheshire and Lancashire, among whom were the heads of the families of Venables,
                Molyneux, Legh, and Egerton. The Queen, who witnessed the defeat of her
                adherents from the tower of a neighbouring church, fled back to digest her
                mortification at Eccleshall.
   The Earl of Salisbury soon found that his success was calculated to
                convert neutrals into allies. Lord Stanley, on receiving the Queen’s message,
                had gathered a force of two thousand men; but, being reluctant to commit himself
                on either side, he contrived, on the day of battle, to be six miles from the
                scene of action. On hearing of the result, however, he sent a congratulatory
                letter to his father-in-law; and Salisbury, showing the epistle to Sir John
                Harrington, and others of his knights, said, jocosely—“Sirs, be merry, for we
                have yet more friends.”
                     The contest between York and Lancaster now assumed a new aspect.
                Salisbury, rejoicing in a victory so complete as that of Bloreheath, formed a junction
                with York at Ludlow; and the Duke perceiving that moderation had been of so
                little Avail, and believing that his life would be in danger so long as
                Margaret of Anjou ruled England, resolved henceforth upon pursuing a bolder
                course. He could not help remembering that he was turned of forty, an age at which, as the poet tells us, there is no dallying with life;
                and he began to consider that the time had arrived to claim the crown which was
                his by hereditary right.
   Having resolved no longer, by timidity in politics, to play the game of
                his enemies, York set up his standard and summoned his friends to Ludlow.
                Fighting men came from various parts of England, and assembled cheerily and in
                good order at the rendezvous; while, to take part in the civil war, Warwick
                brought from Calais those veterans who, in other days, had signalised their
                valour against foreign foes. The projects of the Yorkists seemed to flourish.
                Salisbury’s experience, knowledge, and military skill, were doubtless of great
                service to his friends; and having thrown up entrenchments, and disposed in
                battery a number of bombards and cannon, they confidently awaited the enemy.
                   Meanwhile the Lancastrians were by no means in despair. The King, having
                with the aid of the young Dukes of Somerset and Exeter drawn together a mighty
                army at Worcester, sent the Bishop of Salisbury to promise the Yorkists a
                general pardon if they would lay down their arms. The Yorkists, however, had
                learned by severe experience what the King's promises were worth, and received
                the Bishop like men who were no longer to be deluded. “So long,” said they, “as
                the Queen has supreme power we have no faith in the King’s pardon; but,” they
                added, “could we have assurance of safety, we should express our loyalty, and
                humbly render ourselves at the King's service.”
                     The King, having received the answer of the insurgent chiefs, advanced
                on the 13th of October to the Yorkist camp, and made proclamation, that whoever
                abandoned the Duke should have the royal pardon. Though this appeared to be
                without effect the King’s army did not commence the attack. Indeed, the Yorkist
                ranks were most imposing; and the Duke’s guns wrought considerable havoc in the
                Lancastrian lines. Observing the formidable attitude of his foes, the King
                resolved to delay the assault until the morrow; and, ere the sun again shone,
                an unexpected incident had changed the face of matters, and thrown the Yorkists
                into utter confusion.
                     Among those who heard the King’s proclamation, was Andrew Trollope,
                captain of the veterans whom Warwick had brought from Calais. This mighty man
                at arms had served long in the French wars, and cared not to draw his sword
                against the son of the Conqueror of Agincourt. After listening to the King’s
                offers of pardon, and considering the consequences of refusing them, Trollope
                resolved upon deserting; and, at dead of night, he quietly carried off the
                Calais troops, and making for the royal camp, revealed the whole of York’s
                plans.
                     When morning dawned, and Trollope’s treachery was discovered, the
                adherents of the White Rose were in dismay and consternation. Every man became
                suspicious of his neighbour; and the Duke was driven to the conclusion that he
                must submit to circumstances. No prospect of safety appearing but in flight,
                York, with his second son, the ill-fated Earl of Rutland, departed into Wales,
                and thence went to Ireland; While Salisbury and Warwick, with the Duke’s eldest
                son, Edward, escaped to Devonshire, bought a ship at Exmouth, sailed to
                Guernsey, and then passed over to Calais.
                     The King, on finding that his enemies had fled, became very bold; and
                having spoiled the town and castle of Ludlow, and taken the Duchess of York
                prisoner, he called a Parliament. As measures were to be taken to extinguish
                the Yorkists, no temporal peer, unless known as a staunch adherent of the Red
                Rose, received a summons; and Coventry was selected as the scene of revenge;
                for since the unfortunate result of flic Commission at Guildhall, the Queen
                looked upon London as no place for the execution of those projects on which she
                had set her heart. Away from the metropolis, however, Margaret found herself
                in a position to do as she pleased; and, at Coventry, Bloreheath was fearfully
                avenged. With little regard to law, and still less regard to prudence, the most
                violent courses were pursued: York, Salisbury, Warwick, and their friends, were
                declared traitors; and, their estates being confiscated, were bestowed on the
                Queen's favourites. The chiefs of the White Rose appeared utterly ruined: and
                England was once more at the feet of “The Foreign Woman.”
                     
                 CHAPTER X.THE BATTLE OF NORTHAMPTON.
                    
                 In the month of June,
                1460, while the Duke of York was in Ireland, while Margaret of Anjou was with
                her feeble husband at Coventry, and while Henry Holland, Duke of Exeter, York’s
                son-in-law, was, as Lord High Admiral, guarding the Channel with a strong
                fleet, Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, sailed from Calais for the shores of
                England. It was in vain that Exeter endeavoured to do his duty as Admiral; for
                on the sea as on the land, “The Stout Earl” was a favourite hero; and the
                sailors refused to haul an anchor or hoist a sail to prevent his landing. At
                Sandwich, he safely set foot on English ground, and prepared to strike a
                shattering blow at the House of Lancaster.
                     Warwick was accompanied by the Earl of Salisbury and the Earl of March;
                but the army with which he came to change the dynasty, did not consist of more than
                fifteen hundred men! The Earl, however, was not dismayed at the weakness of his
                force. Indeed, his own great name was a tower of strength; and when, on
                landing, he proclaimed that his motive for taking up arms was to deliver his
                countrymen from oppression, and to maintain the ancient laws and liberties of
                England, he knew that the people would rally around his banner. Ere this, the
                White Rose, in addition to being the emblem of hereditary right, had become
                identified with the cause of civil and religious freedom.
                     The Earl’s confidence in the people of England was not misplaced. As he
                marched towards London, the fighting men of Kent, and of all the south, flocked
                to his standard, and on reaching Blackheath, he was at the head of thirty
                thousand men. As the patrician hero entered the capital, he was hailed with
                enthusiasm, and cheered with the hope of crowning his enterprise with success.
                     The King and Queen were still at Coventry when informed of Warwick’s
                landing; and Margaret lost no time in taking measures to resist the Yorkist
                invasion. Money was borrowed from the Lancastrian clergy and nobles; and
                troops, under Percies, Staffords, Beauforts, Talbots, and Beaumonts,
                gathered rapidly to the royal standard. The respect which, on his heroic
                father’s account, people still entertained for Henry, and the fear with which
                Margaret inspired them, were powerful motives; and a great army having been
                assembled, the Lancastrian King and his haughty spouse, accompanied by Somerset
                and Buckingham, removed to Northampton, and took up their quarters in the
                Friary.
   Meanwhile, leaving his father in London to defend the city and besiege
                the Tower, still held for the King by Lord Scales, Warwick marched through the
                midland counties. Having taken up a position between Towcester and Northampton,
                he sent the Bishop of Salisbury to the King with pacific overtures. The Bishop
                returned without satisfaction, and Warwick, having thrice ineffectually
                attempted to obtain an audience of the King, gave the Lancastrians notice to
                prepare for battle.
                     The Queen was not less willing than the Earl to try conclusions.
                Believing the Lancastrians equal to an encounter with the army of War wick, she
                addressed her partisans and encouraged them with promises of honours and
                rewards. Confident in their strength, she ordered them to cross the Nene; and,
                Lord Grey de Ruthin leading the van, the royal army passed through the river
                and encamped hard by the Abbey of Delapré in the
                meadows to the south of the town. There the Lancastrians encompassed themselves
                with high banks and deep trenches; and, having fortified their position with
                piles and sharp stakes and artillery, they awaited the approach of the Yorkist
                foe.
   Warwick was not the man to keep his enemies long waiting under such
                circumstances. After charging his soldiers to strike down every knight and
                noble, but to spare the common men, he prepared for the encounter; and ere the
                morning of the 9tli of July—it was gloomy and wet—dawned on the towers and
                turrets of the ancient town on the winding Nene, his army was in motion.
                Setting their faces northward, the Yorkists passed the cross erected two
                centuries earlier in memory of Eleanor of Castille, and, in feudal array,
                advanced upon the foe—“The Stout Earl” towering in front, and Edward of March,
                York's youthful heir, following with his father’s banner.
                     At news of Warwick’s approach, the Lancastrian chiefs aroused themselves
                to activity, donned their mail, mounted their steeds, set their men in battle
                order, and then alighted to fight on foot. The King, in his tent, awaited the
                issue of the conflict; but Margaret of Anjou repaired to an elevated situation,
                and thither carried her son, to witness the fight. Her hopes were, doubtless,
                high; for gallant looked the army that was to do battle in her cause, and well
                provided were the Lancastrians with the artillery which had, in the previous
                autumn, rendered the Yorkists so formidable at Ludlow.
                     By seven o’clock, the Yorkists assailed the entrenched camp at Delapré; and the war-cries of the Lancastrian leaders
                answered the shouts of Warwick and March. At first the contest was vigorously maintained;
                but, unfortunately for the Queen's hopes, the rain had rendered the artillery
                incapable of doing the service that had been anticipated. In spite of this disheartening
                circumstance the warriors of the Red Rose bravely met their antagonists, and
                both Yorkists and Lancastrians fought desperately and well. But in the heat of
                action, Lord Grey de Ruthin, betraying his trust, deserted to the enemy.
                Consternation thereupon fell upon the King’s army, and the Yorkists having,
                with the aid of Lord Grey’s soldiers, got within the entrenchments, wrought
                fearful havoc. The conflict was, nevertheless, maintained with obstinacy till
                nine o’clock; but after two hours of hard fighting the King’s men were seen
                flying in all directions, and many, while attempting to cross the Nene, were
                drowned in its waters.
                     In consequence of Warwick’s order to spare the commons, the slaughter
                fell chiefly on the knights and nobles. The Duke of Buckingham, the Earl of
                Shrewsbury, Thomas Percy, Lord Egremont, and John, Viscount Beaumont, were
                among the slain. Somerset narrowly escaped, and fled after the Queen in the
                direction of North Wales.
                     When intelligence of Warwick’s victory reached London, the populace
                broke loose from all restraint.
                     Lord Scales, who, while keeping the Tower, had incurred their hatred,
                disguised himself and endeavoured to escape. The watermen, however, recognised
                him, and, notwithstanding his three-score years, cut off his head and cast the
                body carelessly on the sands. Thomas Thorpe, one of the Barons of the
                Exchequer, met a similar fate. While attempting to fly, he was captured and
                committed to the Tower; but afterwards he was taken possession of by the mob,
                and executed at Highgate. With such scenes enacting before their eyes, the
                citizens recognised the necessity of a settled government; and the adherents of
                the White Rose intimated to their chief the expediency of his immediate return
                from Ireland.
                     King Henry, after the defeat of his adherents at Northampton, was found
                in his tent, lamenting the slaughter. As at St. Albans, he was treated by the
                victors with respectful compassion, and by them conducted, with the utmost
                deference, to London.
                     
                 CHAPTER XI.YORK’S CLAIM TO THE CROWN.
                    
                 On the 7th of
                October, 1460, a Parliament, summoned in King Henry’s name, met at Westminster,
                in the Painted Chamber, for centuries regarded with veneration as the place
                where St. Edward had breathed his last, and with admiration on account of the
                pictures representing incidents of die Confessor’s life and canonization,
                executed by command of the third Henry to adorn the walls.
                     On this occasion, the King sat in the Chair of State; and Warwick’s
                brother, George Neville, Bishop of Exeter, who, though not yet thirty, had been
                appointed Chancellor, opened the proceedings with a notable declamation, taking
                for his text—Congregate populum, sanctificate ecclesiam. The Houses then entered upon business,
                repealed all the acts passed at Coventry, and declared that the Parliament
                there held had not been duly elected.
   While this was going on, the Duke of York, who had landed at Chester,
                came towards London; and three days after the meeting of Parliament,
                accompanied by a splendid retinue, all armed and mounted, he entered the
                capital with banners flying, trumpets sounding, and a naked sword carried
                before him. Riding along with princely dignity, the Duke dismounted at
                Westminster, and proceeded to the House of Lords. Walking straight to the
                Throne, he laid his hand on the Cloth of Gold, and, pausing, looked round, as
                if to read the sentiments of the peers in the faces. At that moment, the
                Archbishop of Canterbury, who had been with Henry, entered the House, and made
                the usual reverence to the Duke.
                     “Will not my Lord of York go and pay his respects to the King?”  asked the Archbishop.
                     “I know no one,” answered York, colouring, “to whom I owe that title.”
                     The Archbishop, on hearing the Duke’s answer, went back to the King; and
                York following, took possession of the Palace. Then, returning to the House,
                and standing on the steps of the Throne, he claimed the Crown of England, as
                heir of Lionel of Clarence. When the Duke concluded his speech, the peers sat
                motionless as graven images; and perceiving that not a word was uttered, nor a
                whisper exchanged, York sharply asked them to deliberate. “Think of this
                matter, my lords”, said he; “I have taken my course, take yours”.
                     The Duke left the house in some chagrin; and the peers took his request
                into consideration. After discussing the claim to the crown as calmly as if it
                had been an ordinary peerage case, they resolved that the question should be
                argued by counsel at the bar.
                     Most of the lords were under essential obligations to the House of
                Lancaster, and therefore in no haste to take York’s claim into consideration.
                When a week elapsed, therefore, the Duke deemed it politic to send a formal
                demand of the crown, and to request an immediate answer. The peers, somewhat
                startled, replied that they refused justice to no man, but, in this case, could
                decide nothing without the advice and consent of the King. Henry was
                consulted; and he recommended that the Judges should be summoned to give their
                opinion. These legal functionaries, however, declined to meddle with a matter
                so dangerous; and the peers wore under the necessity of proceeding without the
                aid of their learning and experience. The Duke was then heard by his counsel;
                and an order having been made “that every man might freely and indifferently
                speak his mind without fear of impeachment,” the question was debated several
                days.
                     All this time York lodged in the Palace of Westminster, where Henry then
                was, but refused to see his royal kinsman or to hold any communication with him
                till the peers had decided on the justice of his claim; he knew no one, he
                said, to whom he owed the title of king.
                     At length the peers arrived at a decision; and the youthful Chancellor,
                by order of the House, pronounced judgment. It was to the effect that Richard
                Plantagenet had made out his claim; but that in consideration of Henry having
                from infancy worn the crown, he should be allowed to continue King for life,
                and that York, who meanwhile was to hold the reins of government, should ascend
                the throne after his royal kinsman’s death. This compromise of a delicate
                dispute seemed to please both parties. On the vigil of the Feast of All Saints,
                York and two of his sons appeared in Parliament, and took an oath to abide by
                the decision; on All Saints Day the heir of John of Gaunt and the heir of
                Lionel of Clarence rode together to St. Paul's in token of friendship; and on
                the Saturday following the Duke was, by sound of trumpet, proclaimed Protector
                of the realm and heir to the crown.
                     The King appeared quite unconcerned at the turn which affairs had taken;
                and York had no apprehensions of a man who was never happy but when giving
                himself up to devotional exercises. The Duke, however, was not indifferent to
                the enmity of Margaret of Anjou; and he felt anxious to secure himself against her
                hostility. He therefore sent a summons to bring her son without delay to
                Westminster, intending in case of disobedience to banish her from among a
                people on whom she had brought so many misfortunes. The Protector, it soon
                appeared, had underestimated the resources, the energy, the terrible enthusiasm
                of the daughter of King René. He sent his messengers, as it were, to hunt a
                wild cat; and he found to his cost that they had roused a fierce tigress.
                     
                 CHAPTER XII.THE QUEEN’S FLIGHT AND RETURN.
                    
                 When Margaret of Anjou, from the rising ground at Northampton, saw her knights and
                nobles bite the dust, and descried the banner of Richard Plantagenet borne in
                triumph through the broken ranks of the Lancastrian army, she mounted in haste
                and fled with her son towards the Bishopric of Durham. Changing her mind,
                however, the unfortunate Queen drew her rein, turned aside, and made for North
                Wales.
                     The way was beset with danger. As Margaret was passing through
                Lancashire she was robbed of her jewels; and while, with bitter feelings, pursuing
                her flight through Cheshire, she was attacked by a retainer of Sir William
                Stanley. Having escaped these perils, and been joined by Somerset, the fair Anjouite sought refuge in Harleck Castle, which had been built on the site of an ancient British fortress by the
                first Edward, and which was held-for that mighty monarch’s feeble descendant,
                by a Welsh captain, who rejoiced in the name of Davydd ap Jefan ap Einion.
   The Castle of Harleck stood on a lofty cliff,
                the base of which was then washed by the ocean, though now a marshy tract of
                ground intervenes. From the sea, with such a rock to scale, the stronghold was
                wellnigh impregnable; while on the land side it was defended by massive walls,
                by a large fosse, and by round towers and turrets, which covered every
                approach. Owen Glendower had, during four years, maintained the place against
                the fifth Henry; and the sturdy “Davydd” would not have
                shrunk from defending it against a Yorkist army, even if led by Warwick in
                person.
   At Harleck Margaret passed months, brooding
                over the past, uncertain as to the present, and anxious about the future. At
                times, indeed, she must have forgotten her misfortunes, as, from the
                battlements of the castle, she gazed with the eye of a poetess over the
                intervening mountains to where the peaks of Snowdon seem to mingle with the
                clouds. At length she was startled by intelligence of the settlement made by
                Parliament, and by a summons from York, as Protector, to appear at Westminster
                with her son.
                     Margaret might well crimson with shame and anger. The terms on which the
                dispute between York and Lancaster had been compromised recalled all the injurious
                rumours as to the birth of her son; and her maternal feelings were shocked at
                the exclusion of the boy-prince from the throne he had been born to inherit.
                Submission was, under these circumstances, impossible to such a woman. She was
                not yet thirty, decidedly too young to abandon hope; and she was conscious of
                having already, in seasons of danger, exhibited that energy which is hope in
                action. The idea of yet trampling in the dust the three magnates by whom she
                had been humbled, took possession of her mind; and, unaided save by beauty,
                eloquence, and those accomplishments, which fifteen years earlier had made her
                famous at the courts of Europe, she started for the north with the
                determination of regaining the crown which she had already found so thorny. The
                distressed Queen embarked on the Menai; and her destination was Scotland.
                     One day in the autumn of 1460, James, King of Scots, the second of his
                name, while attempting to wrest Roxburgh Castle from the English, was killed by
                the bursting of a cannon, and succeeded by his son, a boy in his seventh year.
                The obsequies of the deceased monarch were scarcely celebrated, when
                intelligence reached the Scottish Court that Margaret of Anjou had, with her
                son, arrived at Dumfries; that she had met with a reception befitting a royal
                personage; and that she had taken up her residence in the College of Lincluden.
   Mary of Gueldres, the widowed Queen of Scots,
                was about Margaret’s own age. Moreover, Mary was a princess of great beauty, of
                masculine talent, and of the blood royal of France. Surrounded by the iron
                barons of a rude country, her position was not quite so pleasant as a bed of
                roses; and she could hardly help sympathising with the desolate condition of
                her distant kinswoman. Hastening with her son to Dumfries, she held a
                conference that lasted for twelve days.
                     At the conference of Lincluden everything went
                smoothly. Much wine was consumed. A close friendship was formed between the
                Queens. A marriage was projected between the Prince of Wales and a princess of
                Scotland. Margaret’s spirit rose high; her hopes revived; and encouraged by
                promises of aid, she resolved on no less desperate an adventure than marching
                to London and rescuing her husband from the grasp of “the Triumvirate.”
                     The enterprise decided on, no time was lost. An army was mustered in the
                frontier counties with a rapidity, which, it would seem, York and his friends
                had never regarded as possible. The great barons of the north, however, had
                never manifested any tenderness for the White Rose; and they remembered with
                indignation that hitherto their southern peers had carried everything before
                them. Eager to vindicate their importance, and inspired by Margaret with an
                enthusiasm almost equal to her own, the Nevilles of Westmoreland, the Percies of Northumberland, and the Cliffords of Cumberland, summoned their fighting men, and at the same time endeavoured,
                by promises of plunder south of the Trent, to allure the foraying clans to
                their standard.
                 The Borderers boasted that their property was in their swords; and they
                were seldom slow to ride when the prospect of booty was presented to their
                imaginations. They went to church as seldom as the twenty-ninth of February
                comes into the calendar, and never happened to comprehend that there was a
                seventh commandment. When on forays, they took everything that was not too
                heavy; and were sometimes far from satisfied with the exception. Such men
                hailed with delight the prospect of plundering the rich South. From peels and
                castellated houses they came, wearing rusting armour, and mounted on lean
                steeds, but steady of heart, stout of hand, and ready, without thought of fear,
                to charge against knight or noble, no matter how proof his mail or high his
                renown in arms. The Borderers cared nothing for York or Lancaster; and would
                have fought as readily for the White Rose as the Red. But the spoil south of
                the Trent was a noble prize; and they gathered to the Queen’s standard like
                eagles to their prey.
                     Finding herself at the head of eighteen thousand men, Margaret of Anjou
                pressed boldly southward. Even the season was such as would have daunted an
                ordinary woman. When operations commenced, the year 1460 was about to expire;
                the grass had withered; the streams were darkened with the rains of December;
                the leaves had fallen; and the wind whistled through the naked branches of the
                trees. Margaret, far from shrinking, defied all hardships; and the spectacle of
                a Queen, so young and beautiful, enduring fatigue and during danger, excited
                the admiration and increased loyalty of her adherents. With every inclination
                to execute a signal revenge, she appeared before the gates of York; and marched
                from that city towards Sandal Castle.
                     
 
                 
 
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