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    Rebecca and Rowena

    Page 6
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    "The day after the bat-" groaned Ivanhoe. "Where is the Lady

      Rowena?"

      The castle has been taken and sacked," the lieutenant said, and pointed

      to what once was Rotherwood, but was now only a heap of smoking ruins.

      Not a tower was left, not a roof, not a floor, not a single human

      being! Everything was flame and ruin, smash and murther!

      Of course Ivanhoe fell back fainting again among the ninety seven

      men-at-arms whom he had slain; and it was not until Wamba had applied a

      second, and uncommonly strong dose of the elixir that he came to life

      again. The good knight was, however, from long practice, so accustomed

      to the severest wounds, that he bore them far more easily than common

      folk, and thus was enabled to reach York upon a litter, which his men

      constructed for him, with tolerable ease.

      Rumor had as usual advanced before him; and he heard at the hotel where

      he stopped, what had been the issue of the affair at Rotherwood. A

      minute or two after his horse was stabbed, and Ivanhoe knocked down,

      the western bartizan was taken by the storming-party which invested it,

      and every soul slain, except Rowena and her boy; who were tied upon

      horses and carried away, under a secure guard, to one of the King's

      castles nobody knew whither: and Ivanhoe was recommended by the

      hotel-keeper (whose house he had used in former times) to reassume his

      wig and spectacles, and not call himself by his own name any more, lest

      some of the King's people should lay hands on him. However, as he had

      killed everybody round, about him, there was but little danger of his

      discovery; and the Knight of the Spectacles, as he was called, went

      about York quite unmolested, and at liberty to attend to his own

      affairs.

      We wish to be brief in narrating this part of the gallant hero's

      existence; for his life was one of feeling rather than affection, and

      the description of mere sentiment is considered by many well-informed

      persons to be tedious. What were his sentiments now, it may be asked,

      under the peculiar position in which he found himself? He had done his

      duty by Rowena, certainly: no man could say otherwise. But as for

      being in love with her any more, after what had occurred, that was a

      different question. Well, come what would, he was determined still to

      continue doing his duty by her; but as she was whisked away the deuce

      knew whither, how could he do anything? So he resigned himself to the

      fact that she was thus whisked away.

      He, of course, sent emissaries about the country to endeavor to find

      out where Rowena was: but these came back without any sort of

      intelligence; and it was remarked, that he still remained in a perfect

      state of resignation. He remained in this condition for a year, or

      more; and it was said that he was becoming more cheerful, and he

      certainly was growing rather fat. The Knight of the Spectacles was

      voted an agreeable man in a grave way; and gave some very elegant,

      though quiet, parties, and was received in the best society of York.

      It was just at assize-time, the lawyers and barristers had arrived, and

      the town was unusually gay; when, one morning, the attorney, whom we

      have mentioned as Sir Wilfrid's man of business, and a most respectable

      man, called upon his gallant client at his lodgings, and said he had a

      communication of importance to make. Having to communicate with a

      client of rank, who was condemned to be hanged for forgery, Sir Roger

      de Backbite, the attorney said, he had been to visit that party in the

      condemned cell; and on the way through the Yard, and through the bars

      of another cell, had seen and recognized an old acquaintance of Sir

      Wilfrid of Ivanhoe and the lawyer held him out, with a particular look,

      a note, written on a piece of whity-brown paper.

      What were Ivanhoe s sensations when he recognized the handwriting of

      Rowena! he tremblingly dashed open the billet, and read as follows:

      MY DEAREST IVAN HOE For I am thine now as erst, and my first love was

      ever ever dear to me. Have I been near thee dying for a whole year,

      and didst thou make no effort to rescue thy Rowena? Have ye given to

      others I mention not their name nor their odious creed the heart that

      ought to be mine? I send thee my forgiveness from my dying pallet of

      straw. - I forgive thee the insults I have received, the cold and

      hunger I have endured, the failing health of my boy, the bitterness of

      my prison, thy infatuation about that Jewess, winch made our married

      life miserable, and which caused thee, I am sure, to go abroad to look

      after her. I forgive thee all my wrongs, and fain would bid thee

      farewell. Mr. Smith hath gained over my gaoler he will tell thee how

      I may see thee. Come and console my last hour by promising that thou

      wilt care for my boy his boy who fell like a hero (when thou wert

      absent) combating by the side of ROWENA."

      The reader may consult his own feelings, and say whether Ivanhoe was

      likely to be pleased or not by this letter: however, he inquired of Mr.

      Smith, the solicitor, what was the plan which that gentleman had

      devised for the introduction to Lady Rowena, and was informed that he

      was to get a barrister's gown and wig, when the gaoler would introduce

      him into the interior of the prison. These decorations, knowing

      several gentlemen of the Northern Circuit, Sir Wilfrid of Ivanhoe

      easily procured, and with feelings of no small trepidation, reached the

      cell, where, for the space of a year, poor Rowena had been immured.

      If any person have a doubt of the correctness, of the historical

      exactness of this narrative, I refer him to the "Biographic

      Universelle" (article Jean sans Terre), which says, "La femme dun baron

      auquel on vint demander son fils, repondit, Le roi pense-t-il que je

      conflerai mon fils a un homme quia egorge son neveu de sa propre main?"

      Jean fit en lever la mere et l'enfant, et la laissa _mourir _de _faim

      dans les cachots."

      I picture to myself, with a painful sympathy, Rowena undergoing this

      disagreeable sentence. Alt her virtues, her resolution, her chaste

      energy and perseverance, shine with redoubled lustre, and, for the

      first time since the commencement of the history, I feel that I am

      partially reconciled to her. The weary year passes she grows weaker

      and more languid, thinner and thinner! At length Ivanhoe, in the

      disguise of a barrister of the Northern Circuit, is introduced to her

      cell, and finds his lady in the last stage of exhaustion, on the straw

      of her dungeon, with her little boy in her arms. She has preserved his

      life at the expense of her own, giving him the whole of the pittance

      which her gaolers allowed her, and perishing herself of inanition.

      There is a scene! I feel as if I had made it up, as it were, with this

      lady, and that we part in peace, in consequence of in providing her

      with so sublime a death-bed. Fancy Ivanhoe's entrance their

      recognition the faint blush upon her worn features the pathetic way in

      which she gives little Cedric in charge to him, and his promises of

      protection.

      "Wilfrid, my early loved
    ," slowly gasped she, removing her gray hair

      from her furrowed temples, and gazing on her boy fondly, as he nestled

      on Ivanhoe's knee "promise me, by St.

      Waltheof of Templestowe promise me one boon!"

      "I do," said Ivanhoe, clasping the boy, and thinking it was to that

      little innocent the promise was intended to apply.

      "By St. Waltheof?"

      "By St. Waltheof!"

      "Promise me, then," gasped Rowena, staring wildly at him, that you

      never will marry a Jewess?"

      "By St. Waltheof," cried Ivanhoe, "this is too much, Rowena!" But he

      felt his hand grasped for a moment, the nerves then relaxed, the pale

      lips ceased to quiver she was no more!

      CHAPTER VI.

      IVAN HOE THE WIDOWER.

      HAVING placed young Cedric at school at the Hall of Dotheboyes, in

      Yorkshire, and arranged his family affairs, Sir Wilfrid of Ivanhoe

      quitted a country which had no longer any charms for him, and in which

      his stay was rendered the less agreeable by the notion that King John

      would hang him, if ever he could lay hands on the faithful follower of

      King Richard and Prince Arthur.

      But there was always in those days a home and occupation for a brave

      and pious knight. A saddle on a gallant war-horse, a pitched field

      against the Moors, a lance wherewith to spit a turbaned infidel, or a

      road to Paradise carved out by his scimitar, these were the height of

      the ambition of good and religious warriors; and so renowned a champion

      as Sir Wilfrid of Ivanhoe was sure to be well received wherever blows

      were stricken for the cause of Christendom. Even among the dark

      Templars, he who had twice overcome the most famous lance of their

      Order was a respected though not a welcome guest: but among the

      opposition company of the Knights of St. John, he was admired and

      courted beyond measure; and always affectioning that Order, which

      offered him, indeed, its first rank and comanderies, he did much good

      service; fighting in their ranks for the glory of heaven and St.

      Waltheof, and slaying many thousands of the heathen in Prussia, Poland,

      and those savage Northern countries. The only fault that the great and

      gallant, though severe and ascetic Folko of Heydenbraten, the chief of

      the Order of St. John, found with the melancholy warrior, whose lance

      did such good service to the cause, was, that he did not persecute the

      Jews as so religious a knight should. He let off sundry captives of

      that persuasion whom he had taken with his sword and his spear, saved

      others from torture, and actually ransomed the two last grinders of a

      venerable rabbi (that Roger de Cartright, an English knight of the

      Order, was about to extort from the elderly Israelite,) with a hundred

      crowns and a gimmal ring, which were all the property he possessed.

      Whenever he so ransomed or benefited one of this religion, he would

      moreover give them a little token or a message (were the good knight

      out of money), saying, "Take this token, and remember this deed was

      done by Wilfrid the Disinherited, for the services whilome rendered to

      him by Rebecca, the daughter of Isaac of York!" So among themselves,

      and in their meetings and synagogues, and in their restless travels

      from land to land, when they of Jewry cursed and reviled all

      Christians, as such abominable heathens will, they nevertheless

      excepted the name of the Desdichado, or the doubly-disinherited as he

      now was, the Desdichado-Doblado.

      The account of all the battles, storms, and scala does in which Sir

      Wilfrid took part, would only weary the reader; for the dropping off

      one heathen's head with an axe must be very like the decapitation of

      any other unbeliever. Suffice it to say, that wherever this kind of

      work was to be done, and Sir Wilfrid was in the way, he was the man to

      perform it. It would astonish you were you to see the account that

      Wamba kept of his master's achievements, and of the Bulgarians,

      Bohemians, Croatians, slain or maimed by his hand. And as, in those

      days, a reputation for valor had an immense effect upon the soft hearts

      of women, and even the ugliest man, were he a stout warrior, was looked

      upon with favor by Beauty: so Ivanhoe, who was by no means ill-favored,

      though now becoming rather elderly, made conquests over female breasts

      as well as over Saracens, and had more than one direct offer of

      marriage made to him by princesses, countesses, and noble ladies

      possessing both charms and money, which they were anxious to place at

      the disposal of a champion so renowned. It is related that the Duchess

      Regent of Kartoffelberg offered him her hand, and the ducal crown of

      Kartoffelberg, which he had rescued from the unbelieving Prussians; but

      Ivanhoe evaded the Duchess's offer, by riding away from her capital

      secretly at midnight and hiding himself in a convent of Knights

      Hospitallers on the borders of Poland. And it is a fact that the

      Princess Rosalia Seraphina of Pumpernickel, the most lovely woman of

      her time, became so frantically attached to him, that she followed him

      on a campaign, and was discovered with his baggage disguised as

      horse-boy. But no princess, no beauty, no female blandishments had any

      charms for Ivanhoe: no hermit practised a more austere celibacy. The

      severity of his morals contrasted so remarkably with the lax and

      dissolute manner of the young lords and nobles in the courts which he

      frequented, that these young springgalds would sometimes sneer and call

      him Monk and Milksop; but his courage in the day of battle was so

      terrible and admirable, that I promise you the youthful libertines did

      not sneer then; and the most reckless of them often turned pale when

      they couched their lances to follow Ivanhoe. Holy Waltheof! it was an

      awful sight to see him with his pale calm face, his shield upon his

      breast, his heavy lance before him, charging a squadron of heathen

      Bohemians, or a regiment of Cossacks! Wherever he saw the enemy,

      Ivanhoe assaulted him: and when and people remonstrated with him, and

      said if he attacked such and such a post, breach, castle, or army, he

      would be slain, "And suppose I be?" he answered, giving them to

      understand that he would as lief the Battle of Life were over

      altogether.

      While he was thus making war against the Northern infidels news was

      carried all over Christendom of a catastrophe which had befallen the

      good cause in the South of Europe, where the Spanish Christians had met

      with such a defeat and massacre at the hands of the Moors as had never

      been known in the proudest day of Saladin.

      Thursday, the 9th of Shaban, in the 605th year of the Hejira, is known

      all over the West as the _amun-al-ark, the year of the battle of

      Alarcos, gained over the Christians by the Moslems of Andaluz, on which

      fatal day Christendom suffered a defeat so signal, that it was feared

      the Spanish peninsula would be entirely wrested away from the dominion

      of the Cross. On that day the Franks lost 150,000 men and 30,000

      prisoners. A man-slave sold among the unbelievers for a dirhem; a

      donkey for the same; a sword, half a dirhem;
    a horse, five dirhems.

      Hundreds of thousands of these various sorts of booty were in the

      possession of the triumphant followers of Yakoob-al-Mansoor. Curses on

      his head! But he was a brave warrior, and the Christians before him

      seemed to forget that they were the descendants of the brave Cid, the

      _Kanbitoor, as the Moorish hounds (in their jargon) denominated the

      famous Canpeador.

      A general move for the rescue of the faithful in Spain crusade against

      the infidels triumphing there, was preached throughout Europe by all

      the most eloquent clergy; and thousands and thousands of valorous

      knights and nobles, accompanied by well-meaning varlets and vassals of

      the lower sort, trooped from all sides to the rescue. The Straits of

      Gibel-al-Tariff, at which spot the Moor, passing from Barbary, first

      planted his accursed foot on the Christian soil, were crowded with the

      galleys of the Templars and the Knights of St. John, who flung succors

      into the menaced kingdoms of the peninsula; the inland sea swarmed with

      their ships hasting from their forts and islands, from Rhodes and

      Byzantium, from Jaffa and Ascalon. The Pyrenean peaks beheld the

      pennons and glittered with the armor of the knights marching out of

      France into Spain; and, finally in a ship that set sail direct from

      Bohemia, where Sir Wilfrid happened to be quartered at the time when

      the news of the defeat of Alarcos came and alarmed all good Christians,

      Ivanhoe landed at Barcelona, and proceeded to slaughter the Moors

      forthwith.

      He brought letters of introduction from his friend Folko of

      Heydenbraten, the Grand Master of the Knights of Saint John, to the

      venerable Baldomero de Garbanzos, Grand Master of the renowned order of

      Saint Jago. The chief of Saint Jago's knights paid the greatest

      respect to a warrior whose fame was already so widely known in

      Christendom; and Ivanhoe had the pleasure of being appointed to all the

      posts of danger and forlorn hopes that could be devised in his honor.

      He would be called up twice or thrice in a night to fight the Moors: he

      led ambushes, scaled breaches, was blown up by mines; was wounded many

      hundred times (recovering, thanks to the elixir, of which Wamba always

      carried a supply); he was the terror of the Saracens, and the

      admiration and wonder of the Christians.

      To describe his deeds, would, I say, be tedious; one day's battle was

      like that of another. I am not writing in ten volumes like Monsieur

      Alexandre Dumas, or even in three like other great authors. We have no

      room for the recounting of Sir Wilfrid's deeds of valor. Whenever he

      took a Moorish town, it was remarked, that he went anxiously into the

      Jewish quarters and inquired amongst the Hebrews, who were in great

      numbers in Spain, for Rebecca, the daughter of Isaac. Many Jews,

      according to his wont, he ransomed, and created so much scandal by this

      proceedings and by the manifest favor which he showed to the people of

      that nation, that the Master of Saint Jago remonstrated with him, and

      it is probable he would have been cast into the Inquisition and

      roasted, but that his prodigious valor and success against the Moors

      counterbalanced his heretical partiality for the children of Jacob.

      It chanced that the good knight was present at the siege of Xixona in

      Andalusia, entering the breach first, according to his wont, and

      slaving, with his own hand, the Moorish lieutenant of the town, and

      several hundred more of its unbelieving defenders. He had very nearly

      done for the Alfaqui, or governor a veteran warrior with a crooked

      scimitar and a beard as white as snow but a couple of hundred of the

      Alfaqui's bodyguard flung themselves between Ivanhoe and their chief,

      and the old fellow escaped with his life, leaving a handful of his

      beard in the grasp of the English knight. The strictly military

      business being done, and such of the garrison as did not escape put, as

      by right, to the sword, the good knight, Sir Wilfrid of Ivanhoe, took

     


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