Volume I Part 10 (1/2)
G.o.d better knows than my pen can report, Wisdom, largesse,[58] estate,[59] and cunning[60] sure: In every point so guided her measure, In word, in deed, in shape, in countenance, That nature could no more her child advance.
The account of his own feelings as she disappears from his charmed gaze,--his lingering at the window of his tower, till Phoebus
Had bid farewell to every leaf and flower,--
then resting his head pensively on the cold stone, and the vision which steals upon his half-waking, half-dreaming fancy, and shadows forth the happy issue of his love,--are all conceived in the most lively manner.
It is judged from internal evidence, that this poem must have been finished after his marriage, since he intimates that he is blessed in the possession of her he loved, and that the fair vision of his solitary dungeon is realised.
When the King of Scots was released, he wooed and won openly, and as a monarch, the woman he had adored in secret. The marriage was solemnized in 1423, and he carried Lady Jane to Scotland where she was crowned soon after his bride and queen.
How well she merited, and how deeply she repaid the love of her devoted and all-accomplished husband, is told in history. When James was surprised and murdered by some of his factious barons, his queen threw herself between him and the daggers of the a.s.sa.s.sins, received many of the wounds aimed at his heart, nor could they complete their purpose till they had dragged her by force from his arms. She deserved to be a poet's queen and love! These are the souls, the deeds which inspire poetry,--or rather which are themselves poetry, its principle and its essence. It was on this occasion that Catherine Douglas, one of the queen's attendants, thrust her arm into the stanchion of the door to serve the purpose of a bolt, and held it there till the savage a.s.sailants forced their way by shattering the frail defence. What times were those!--alas! the love of women, and the barbarity of men!
FOOTNOTES:
[45] Edward III. and the Black Prince.
[46] She was popularly distinguished as the ”_good_ Queen Anne,” and as dear to her husband as to her people. Richard, who with many and fatal faults, really possessed sensibility and strong domestic affections with which Shakspeare has so finely pourtrayed him, was pa.s.sionately devoted to his amiable wife. She died young, at the Palace of Sheen; and when Richard afterwards visited the scene of his loss, he solemnly cursed it in his anguish, and commanded it to be razed to the ground, which was done. One of our kings afterwards rebuilt it. I think Henry the VIIth.
[47] Court of Love, v. 369-412.
[48] Court of Love, v. 36-42.
[49] _i. e._ the tapestry, like my dream, was a representation, not a reality.
[50] Chaucer's Dreame, v. 2185. ”Here also is showed Chaucer's match with a certain gentlewoman, who was so well liked and loved of the Lady Blanche and her Lord (as Chaucer himself also was), that gladly they concluded a marriage between them.”--_Arguments to Chaucer's Works.
Edit._ 1597.
[51] To me there is nothing dear or hateful, every thing is indifferent.
[52] _Mazed_,--distracted.
[53] G.o.dwin's Life of Chaucer, v. iii. p. 5.
[54] In right of his mother, Elizabeth Plantagenet, eldest sister of Edward IV.
[55] These were Henry of Lancaster, afterwards Henry IV. Philippa, Queen of Portugal, and Elizabeth, d.u.c.h.ess of Exeter.
[56] Catherine, d.u.c.h.ess of Lancaster, had three sons: the second was the famous Cardinal Beaufort; the eldest (created Earl of Somerset,) was grandfather to Henry the Seventh, and consequently ancestor to the whole race of Tudor: thus from the sister of Chaucer's wife are descended all the English sovereigns, from the fifteenth century; and likewise the present family of Somerset, Dukes of Beaufort.
[57] ”The King's Quhair,” (i.e. _cahier_ or book.)
[58] Liberality.
[59] Dignity.
[60] Knowledge and discretion.