Part 25 (2/2)
The blood fled from the cheek of Wallace. ”Not as you do, Murray; I can no more love a woman as you love her. Such scenes as these,” cried he, turning to the mangled bodies which the men were now carrying away to the precipice of the Clyde, ”have divorced woman's love from my heart. I am all my country's, or I am nothing.”
”Nothing!” reiterated Murray, laying his hand upon that of Wallace, as it rested upon the hilt of the sword on which he leaned. ”Is the friend of mankind, the champion of Scotland, the beloved of a thousand valuable hearts, nothing? Nay, art thou not the agent of Heaven, to be the scourge of a tyrant? Art thou not the deliverer of thy country?”
Wallace turned his bright eye upon Murray with an expression of mingled feelings. ”May I be all this, my friend, and Wallace must yet be happy! But speak not to me of love and woman; tell me not of those endearing qualities I have prized too tenderly, and which are now buried to me forever beneath the ashes of Ellerslie.”
”Not under the ashes of Ellerslie,” cried Murray, ”sleep the remains of your lovely wife.” Wallace's penetrating eye turned quick upon him.
Murray continued: ”My cousin's pitying soul stretched itself toward them; by her directions they were brought from your oratory in the rock, and deposited, with all holy rites, in the cemetery at Bothwell.”
The glow that now animated the before chilled heart of Wallace, overspread his face. His eyes spoke volumes of grat.i.tude, his lips moved, but his feelings were too big for utterance, and, fervently pressing the hand of Murray, to conceal emotions ready to shake his manhood, he turned away, and walked toward the cliff.
When all the slain were lowered to their last beds, a young priest, who came in the company of Scrymgeour, gave the funeral benediction both to the departed in the waves, and those whom the sh.o.r.e had received. The rites over, Murray again drew near to Wallace and delivered his aunt's message. ”I shall obey her commands,” returned he; ”but first we must visit our wounded prisoners in the tower.”
Above three hundred of them had been discovered amongst the dead.
Murray gladly obeyed the impulse of his leader's arm; and, followed by the chieftains returned from the late solemn duty, they entered the tower. Ireland welcomed Wallace with the intelligence that he hoped he had succored friends instead of foes, for that most of the prisoners were poor Welsh peasants, whom Edward had torn from their mountains to serve in his legions; and a few Irish, who in the heat of blood, and eagerness for adventure, had enlisted in his ranks. ”I have shown to them,” continued Ireland, ”what fools they are to injure themselves in us. I told the Welsh they were clinching their own chains by a.s.sisting to extend the dominion of their conqueror; and I have convinced the Irish they were forging fetters for themselves by lending their help to enslave their brother nation, the free-born Scots. They only require your presence, my lord, to forswear their former leaders, and to enlist under Scottish banners.”
”Thou art an able orator, my good Stephen,” returned Wallace; ”and whatever promises thou hast made to honest men in the name of Scotland, we are ready to ratify them. Is it not so?” added he, turning to Kirkpatrick and Scrymgeour.
”All as you will,” replied they in one voice. ”Yes,” added Kirkpatrick; ”you were the first to rise for Scotland, and who but you has a right to command for her?”
Ireland threw open the door which led into the hall, and there, on the ground, on pallets of straw, lay most of the wounded Southrons. Some of their dimmed eyes had discerned their preserver, when he discovered them expiring on the rock; and on sight of him now, they uttered such a piercing cry of grat.i.tude, that, surprised, he stood for a moment. In that moment, five or six of the poor wounded wretches crawled to his feet. ”Our friend! our preserver!” burst from their lips, as they kissed the edge of his plaid.
”Not to me, not to me!” exclaimed Wallace. ”I am a soldier like yourselves. I have only acted a soldier's part; but I am a soldier of freedom, you of a tyrant, who seeks to enslave the world. This makes the difference between us; this lays you at my feet, when I would more willingly receive you into my arms as brothers in one generous cause.”
”We are yours,” was the answering exclamation of those who knelt, and of those who raised their feebler voices from their beds of straw. A few only remained silent. With many kind expressions of acceptance, Wallace disengaged himself from those who clung around him, and then moved toward the sick, who seemed too ill to speak. While repeating the same consolatory language to them, he particularly observed an old man who was lying between two young ones, and still kept a profound silence. His rough features were marked with many a scar, but there was a meek resignation in her face that powerfully struck Wallace.
When the chief drew near, the veteran raised himself on his arm, and bowed his head with a respectful air. Wallace stopped. ”You are an Englishman?”
”I am, sir, and have no services to offer you. These two young men on each side of me are my sons. There brother I lost last night in the conflict. To-day, by your mercy, not only my life is preserved, but my two remaining children also. Yet I am an Englishman, and I cannot be grateful at the expense of my allegiance.”
”Nor would I require it of you,” returned Wallace; ”these brave Welsh and Irish were brought hither by the invader who subjugates their countries; they owe him no duty. But you are a free subject of England; he that is a tyrant over others can only be a king to you; he must be the guardian of your laws, the defender of your liberties, or his scepter falls. Having sworn to follow a sovereign so plighted, I am not severe enough to condemn you, because, misled by that phantom which he calls glory, you have suffered him to betray you into unjust conquests.”
”Once I have been so misled,” returned the old man; ”but I never will again. Fifty years I have fought under the British standard, in Normandy and in Palestine; and now in my old age, with four sons, I followed the armies of my sovereign into Scotland. My eldest I lost on the plains of Dunbar. My second fell last night; and my two youngest are now by my side. You have saved them and me. What can I do? Not, as your n.o.ble self says, forswear my country; but this I swear, and in the oath do you, my sons, join (as he spoke they laid their crossed hands upon his, in token of a.s.sent), never to lift an arm against Sir William Wallace or the cause of injured Scotland!”
”To this we also subjoin!” cried several other men, who comprised the whole of the English prisoners.
”n.o.ble people!” cried Wallace, ”why have you not a king worthy of you?”
”And yet,” observed Kirkpatrick, in a surly tone, ”Heselrigge was one of these people!”
Wallace turned upon him with a look of so tremendous a meaning, that, awed by an expression too mighty for him to comprehend, he fell back a few paces, muttering curses, but on whom could not be heard.
”That man would arouse the tiger in our lion-hearted chief!” whispered Scrymgeour to Murray.
”Ay,” returned Lord Andrew; ”but the royal spirit keeps the beast in awe--see how coweringly that bold spirit now bows before it!”
Wallace marked the impression his glance had made, but where he had struck, being unqilling to pierce also, he dispelled the thunder from his countenance, and once more looking on Sir Roger with a frank serenity. ”Come,” said he, ”my good knight; you must not be more tenacious for William Wallace than he is for himself! While he possesses such a zealous friend as Kirkpatrick of Torthorald, he need not now fear the arms of a thousand Heselrigges.”
”No, nor of Edwards either,” cried Kirkpatrick, once more looking boldly up, and shaking his broad claymore: ”My thistle has a point to sting all to death who would pa.s.s between this arm and my leader's breast.”
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