The wing of the palace in which the earl’s apartments were situated was appropriated to himself and household, flanked to the left by an abutting pile containing state-chambers, never used by the austere and thrifty Louis, save on great occasions of pomp or revel; and, as we have before observed, looking on a garden, which was generally solitary and deserted. From this garden, while Anne yet strove for words to answer her father, and the countess yet watched her embarrassment, suddenly came the soft strain of a Provencal lute; while a low voice, rich, and modulated at once by a deep feeling and an exquisite art that would have given effect to even simpler words, breathed—
THE LAY OF THE HEIR OF LANCASTER
“His birthright but a father’s name,
A grandsire’s hero-sword,
He dwelt within the stranger’s land,
The friendless, homeless lord!”
“Yet one dear hope, too dear to tell,
Consoled the exiled man;
The angels have their home in heaven
And gentle thoughts in Anne.”
At that name the voice of the singer trembled, and paused a moment; the earl, who at first had scarcely listened to what he deemed but the ill-seasoned gallantry of one of the royal minstrels, started in proud surprise, and Anne herself, tightening her clasp round her father’s neck, burst into passionate sobs. The eye of the countess met that of her lord; but she put her finger to her lips in sign to him to listen. The song was resumed—
“Recall the single sunny time,
In childhood’s April weather,
When he and thou, the boy and girl,
Roved hand in band together.”
“When round thy young companion knelt
The princes of the isle;
And priest and people prayed their God,
On England’s heir to smile.”
The earl uttered a half-stifled exclamation, but the minstrel heard not the interruption, and continued,—
“Methinks the sun hath never smiled
Upon the exiled man,
Like that bright morning when the boy
Told all his soul to Anne.”
“No; while his birthright but a name,
A grandsire’s hero—sword,
He would not woo the lofty maid
To love the banished lord.”
“But when, with clarion, fife, and drum,
He claims and wins his own;
When o’er the deluge drifts his ark,
To rest upon a throne.”
“Then, wilt thou deign to hear the hope
That blessed the exiled man,
When pining for his father’s crown
To deck the brows of Anne?”
The song ceased, and there was silence within the chamber, broken but by Anne’s low yet passionate weeping. The earl gently strove to disengage her arms from his neck; but she, mistaking his intention, sank on her knees, and covering her face with her hands, exclaimed,—
“Pardon! pardon! pardon him, if not me!”
“What have I to pardon? What hast thou concealed from me? Can I think that thou hast met, in secret, one who—”
“In secret! Never, never, Father! This is the third time only that I have heard his voice since we have been at Amboise, save when—save when—”