Billeder på siden
PDF
ePub

in the castle of the city under the keeping of the Constable CHAP. de Clare.

The violent arrest and imprisonment of an Archbishop made a great noise all over England, and John, thinking this a favourable occasion for extending his own power, openly took the part of his captive brother. Although he had hitherto regarded Geoffrey as an enemy, he now pretended to feel for him the most tender affection, and with menaces he insisted on the Chancellor setting the Archbishop at liberty. Longchamp, on account of the sacred character of his prisoner, did not venture to resist. John then wrote to all the Bishops and Barons to assemble at Reading; while the Chancellor, by other letters, forbade them to accept the invitation of a prince whose object it was to disinherit his Sovereign. The assembly, however, was held: John and Geoffrey met, wept, and embraced, and the latter on his knees besought his fellow-peers to avenge the insult which had been offered in his person to the immunities of the Church and the right of sanctuary.

John, becoming bolder and bolder, repaired to London, there convoked the great council of the Barons and Bishops, and accused the Chancellor before them of having grossly abused the authority with which the King had intrusted him. The accused had injured and offended so many of those who were to decide his case, that the accuser was sure of a favourable hearing.

V.

Combinanobles

tion of the

Long

The Chancellor was cited to appear before the Barons by a certain day. He refused, and assembling a military force, marched from Windsor, where he kept his Court, upon against London, to anticipate the re-assembling of the body who champ. presumed to act as his judges. But John's men-at-arms came upon him at the gates of the city, attacked and dispersed his followers, and compelled him in great haste to throw himself into the Tower of London, where he shut himself up, while the Barons and Bishops assembled in Parliament and deliberated on his fate.

The majority of them had resolved to strike a great blow, and to depose by their authority the man who, holding the royal commission, could not regularly be deprived of office

Saxon in

habitants

of London called in to

assist.

[blocks in formation]

without the express order of the Sovereign. In this daring enterprise, they being themselves Normans, were desirous of having the assistance of the Saxon inhabitants of London, constituting the great mass of the population. In the morning of the day appointed for their meeting, they caused the great alarm bell to be rung, and as the citizens issued forth from their houses, persons stationed for the purpose directed them to repair to St. Paul's Cathedral. The merchants and trades-people going thither to see what was the matter, were surprised to find assembled the grandees of the country, the descendants of those who had conquered at Hastings, with whom hitherto they had had no other relation than that of lord and villain. Contrary to custom, the Barons and Prelates gave a gracious reception to the citizens, and a temporary equality was established among all present. The English guessed as well as they could the meaning of the speeches addressed to them in French, and there was read and explained to them a pretended letter of the King, intimating that if the Chancellor should be guilty of malversation in his office, he might be deposed. A vote was then taken of the whole assembly, without distinction of race, and the Norman heralds proclaimed "that it pleased John, the King's brother, and all the Bishops, Earls and Barons of the kingdom and the citizens of London, that the Chancellor should be deposed."

It was at first thought that he would have stood a siege in the Tower, but he was without courage at the approach of real danger, and he immediately offered to capitulate. He was freely allowed to depart on condition of delivering up the keys of all the King's castles. He was made to swear that he would not leave England till he had done so, and two of his brothers were detained as hostages for his good faith.

He withdrew to Canterbury, under pretence of fulfilling his oath; but when he had remained there a few days, he formed the resolution to fly, liking better to expose his brothers to death than to deliver up the castles, by the possession of which he hoped to recover what he had lost. left the city on foot and in disguise, having over his own clothes

He

V.

a gown with great sleeves and a petticoat,-his face being CHAP. covered by a thick veil,--carrying under his arm a pack of linen, and in his hand an ell measure.* In this attire, which was that of an English female pedlar of the time, the Chancellor made for the sea-shore, and was obliged to wait for the ship in which he was to embark. He seated himself quietly on a stone with his pack on his knees, and some fishermen's wives, who were passing by, accosted him, asking him the price of his wares; but, not knowing a single word of English, the Chancellor made no reply, and shook his head,—to the great surprise of those who wished to become his customers. They walked on; but other women coming up, and examining the quality of the linen, made the same demand as the first. The pretended female pedlar still preserved silence, and the women repeated their questions. At length, at his wit's end, the Chancellor raised a loud laugh, hoping so to escape from his embarrassment. At this laugh without a jest, they believed they saw before them a female out of her mind, and raising her veil to ascertain who she was, discovered the face of a man, of a swarthy complexion, lately shaved. Their cries of surprise attracted the workmen of Is seized the port, who, glad to find an object of sport, seized hold of by the mob. the person in masquerade, drawing him by his garments ‡, causing him to tumble on the ground, and making merry with his vain efforts to escape from them and to make them comprehend who he was. After dragging him a long way over stones and through mud, the sailors and fishermen concluded by shutting him up in a cave.§ Here he remained till he contrived to communicate his misadventure to the agents of the government. He was then forced to deliver up the keys of all the royal castles, according to his engagement, and was permitted freely to leave England.

"Tunicâ fœmineâ viridi... cappam habens ejusdem coloris . . . manicatam... peplum in capite.. pannum lineum in manu sinistrâ. . . virgam venditoris in dextrâ."- Hoveden.

[ocr errors]

↑ "Viderunt faciem hominis nigram et noviter rasam."- Hoveden.

"Et facta est statim multitudo virorum ac mulierum extrahentium de capite peplum et trahentium eum prostratum in terram per manicas et capucium."— Ibid.

§ "Pluribusque modis turpiter tractavit per totam villam et . . . cellario tenebroso. inclusit.". Ibid.

in quodam

CHAP.

V.

France.

Visits
Cœur de
Lion in

On arriving in France, he immediately wrote to the King that Prince John, having got possession of his fortresses, was Arrives in about to usurp the throne, and pressing him immediately to return from the Holy Land. He seems to have convinced Richard that he himself had acted as a good and loyal subject, and that his struggle with the Barons was only in the support of the royal authority. To his honour it is recorded that, hearing of Richard's captivity in Germany, he repaired captivity. thither, and obtained permission to visit, in prison, that generous master, whom the universe seemed to have abandoned. Richard received him as a personal friend persecuted in his service, and employed him in defending him from the unfounded charges brought against him as a pretext for his detention, and in conducting the negotiations for his liberation.

Planta

Geoffrey As soon as Longchamp had been subdued and exiled by genet again John and the Barons, the office of Chancellor was restored Chancellor. to Geoffrey Plantagenet, now fully installed in his arch

A. D. 1199. Subsequent fate of Geoffrey Plantagenet.

bishopric, and he held it till Richard's return to England, when he was finally deprived of it. He experienced clemency to which he was not much entitled, considering his perfidy and breach of oath, and he seems to have employed himself in the discharge of his ecclesiastical duties during the remainder of this reign.

It will be convenient that I should here relate what further is known of him as Ex-chancellor. After the death of Richard he was no longer suffered to live in tranquillity. John seized all his goods and the profits of his archbishopric, and Geoffrey raised a strong party against him. A truce was established between them; but this was of short duration. John requiring for his wars, without the consent of the great council of the nation, the tenth shilling of what every body was worth, this tax was resisted as illegal

Thus the Chancellor is supposed to have serenaded the King:

"O Richard, O mon Roy,

L'univers t'abandonne,

Mais pour moy je garde ma foy

Toujours fidèle a ta personne."

[ocr errors]

CHAP.

V.

by Geoffrey, who pronounced sentence of excommunication on all within his diocese who should pay it. John vowed a bitter revenge, and was proceeding to such extremities against him that he went into voluntary exile, and died at a distance His exile, from his native land before the memorable æra when the and death, Barons at Runnymede obtained security against unlawful taxation, and the tyranny of John was effectually restrained.

But we must now return back to Longchamp. No sooner Longwas Richard again in possession of the royal authority, than, champ again disregarding all the charges which were brought against his Chancellor. vicegerent of abuse of authority, he re-instated him in the office of Chancellor, and restored to him all his authority.

ment at

Notting

In 1194 a parliament was called at Nottingham. When Parliait was opened, Hubert, Archbishop of Canterbury, sat on the King's right hand, and Geoffrey Archbishop of York, on ham. his left. But Longchamp, the Chancellor, was present, and although only ranking according to the precedence of his sce, he guided all their deliberations. The session was about the usual length, viz. four days. On the first day sentence was passed on several rebellious Barons and sheriffs, who were deprived of their castles and jurisdictions. On the second day the King pronounced judgment against his brother John, who was absent, for having, contrary to his oath of fealty, usurped his castles, and entered into a conspiracy with the King of France against him-when he was ordered to appear by a certain day under pain of banishment. On the third day a supply of two shillings on every ploughland was voted to the King; and the last day was spent in hearing and redressing grievances, and resolving that to nullify the King's submission to the Emperor when in captivity, he should be crowned again. This ceremony was actually performed at Winchester.

forges letter from

But Longchamp, the Chancellor, had soon to extricate the LongKing from a new perplexity. A calumny was propagated, champ and generally believed, that while in the East he had murdered the Marquis of Montserrat.* This charge was invented by Philip, King of France, Richard's great rival, with whom he

VOL. I.

See the tale of the Talisman by Sir Walter Scott.

I

"The Old

Man of the
Mountain "

« ForrigeFortsæt »