Kings-at-Arms
KINGS-AT-ARMS
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
I WILL MAINTAIN DEFENDER OF THE FAITH GOD AND THE KING THE QUEST OF GLORY THE GOVERNOR OF ENGLAND PRINCE AND HERETIC THE CARNIVAL OF FLORENCE “WILLIAM, BY THE GRACE OF GOD”— THE THIRD ESTATE GOD’S PLAYTHINGS SHADOWS OF YESTERDAY
E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY
BY MARJORIE BOWEN
NEW YORK E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY 681 Fifth Avenue Published 1919 E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY All Rights Reserved Printed in the United States of America
“Presque toutes ses actions, jusqu’à celles de sa vie privée et amie, out été bien loin au delà du vraisemble. C’est peut-être le seul de tous les hommes, et jusqu’ici le seul de tous les rois, qui ait réçu sans faiblesse; il a port toutes les vertus à au ecès où elles sont aussi dangereuses que les vices opposés.”—Voltaire.
“A name at which the world grew pale.”—S. Johnson.
A LADY, haughty and fierce in her natural character, but schooled to at least the outward show of a cold patience by long years of training in submission to the wills of men, sat in a little private dining-room of her palace at Stockholm and frowned with an air of discontent and pride at her companion, a gentleman, elderly but much younger than herself, who stood by the fireplace and looked on the ground; he also had an air by no means well satisfied, but though he was only a minister and she was a Queen he had never been as much in the background as she, nor so forced to subdue an imperious spirit, for she was a woman, and women had never counted for much in Sweden.
They did not like each other, Count Piper, the late King’s minister, and Eleanora Edwiga, the late King’s mother; she knew that she owed to him her forced retirement from the brief-prized power that she had held as Regent, and he thought her very presence in the palace was vexatious and that her place was in retirement with her prayer-book and her embroidery, but for the moment they were in the same position and might be useful to each other, therefore, tacitly ignoring mutual dislike, they became allies.