登陆注册
19898100000069

第69章 CARDINAL WOLSEY(5)

"Tremble, then, Anne Boleyn!" cried Catherine, "tremble! and when you are adjudged to die the death of an adulteress, bethink you of the prediction of the queen you have injured.I may not live to witness your fate, but we shall meet before the throne of an eternal Judge.""Oh, Henry, this is too much!" gasped Anne, and she sank fainting into his arms.

"Begone!" cried the king furiously."You have killed her!""It were well for us both if I had done so," replied Catherine."But she will recover to work my misery and her own.To your hands I commit her punishment.May God bless you, Henry!"With this she replaced her mask, and quitted the chapel.

Henry, meanwhile, anxious to avoid the comments of his attendants, exerted himself to restore Anne Boleyn to sensibility, and his efforts were speedily successful.

"Is it then reality?" gasped Anne, as she gazed around."I hoped it was a hideous dream.Oh, Henry, this has been frightful! But you will not kill me, as she predicted? Swear to me you will not!""Why should you be alarmed?" rejoined the king."If you are faithful, you have nothing to fear.""But you said suspicion, Henry--you said suspicion!" cried Anne.

"You must put the greater guard upon your conduct," rejoined the king moodily."I begin to think there is some truth in Catherine's insinuations.""Oh no, I swear to you there is not," said Anne--"I have trifled with the gallants of Francis's court, and have listened, perhaps too complacently, to the love-vows of Percy and Wyat, but when your majesty deigned to cast eyes upon me, all others vanished as the stars of night before the rising of the god of day.Henry, I love you deeply, devotedly--but Catherine's terrible imprecations make me feel more keenly than I have ever done before the extent of the wrong I am about to inflict upon her--and I fear that retributive punishment will follow it.""You will do her no wrong," replied Henry."I am satisfied of the justice of the divorce, and of its necessity; and if my purposed union with you were out of the question, I should demand it.Be the fault on my head.""Your words restore me in some measure, my liege," said Anne."I love you too well not to risk body and soul for you.I am yours for ever--ah!"she exclaimed, with a fearful look.

"What ails you, sweetheart?" exclaimed the king.

"I thought I saw a face at the window," she replied--"a black and hideous face like that of a fiend.""It was mere fancy," replied the king."Your mind is disturbed by what has occurred.You had better join your attendants, and retire to your own apartments.""Oh, Henry!" cried Anne--" do not judge me unheard - do not believe what any false tongue may utter against me.I love only you and can love only you.I would not wrong you, even in thought, for worlds.""I believe you, sweetheart," replied the king tenderly.

So saying, he led her down the aisle to her attendants.They then proceeded together to the royal lodgings, where Anne retired to her own apartments, and Henry withdrew to his private chamber.

II.How Herne the Hunter appeared to Henry on the Terrace.

Henry again sat down to his despatches, and employed himself upon them to a late hour.At length, feeling heated and oppressed, he arose, and opened a window.As he did so, he was almost blinded by a vivid flash of forked lightning.Ever ready to court danger, and convinced, from the intense gloom without, that a fearful storm was coming on, Henry resolved to go forth to witness it.With this view he quitted the closet, and passed through a small door opening on the northern terrace.The castle clock tolled the hour of midnight as he issued forth, and the darkness was so profound that he could scarcely see a foot before him.But he went on.

"Who goes there?" cried a voice, as he advanced, and a partisan was placed at his breast.

"The king! " replied Henry, in tones that would have left no doubt of the truth of the assertion, even if a gleam of lightning had not at the moment revealed his figure and countenance to the sentinel.

"I did not look for your majesty at such a time," replied the man, lowering his pike."Has your majesty no apprehension of the storm? Ihave watched it gathering in the valley, and it will be a dreadful one.If Imight make bold to counsel you, I would advise you to seek instant shelter in the castle.""I have no fear, good fellow," laughed the king." Get thee in yon porch, and leave the terrace to me.I will warn thee when I leave it."As he spoke a tremendous peal of thunder broke overhead, and seemed to shake the strong pile to its foundations.Again the lightning rent the black canopy of heaven in various places, and shot down in forked flashes of the most dazzling brightness.A rack of clouds, heavily charged with electric fluid, hung right over the castle, and poured down all their fires upon it.

Henry paced slowly to and fro, utterly indifferent to the peril he ran--now watching the lightning as it shivered some oak in the home park, or lighted up the wide expanse of country around him--now listening to the roar of heaven's artillery; and he had just quitted the western extremity of the terrace, when the most terrific crash he had yet heard burst over him.The next instant a dozen forked flashes shot from the sky, while fiery coruscations blazed athwart it; and at the same moment a bolt struck the Wykeham Tower, beside which he had been recently standing.Startled by the appalling sound, he turned and beheld upon the battlemented parapet on his left a tall ghostly figure, whose antlered helm told him it was Herne the Hunter.Dilated against the flaming sky, the proportions of the demon seemed gigantic.His right hand was stretched forth towards the king, and in his left he held a rusty chain.Henry grasped the handle of his sword, and partly drew it, keeping his gaze fixed upon the figure.

"You thought you had got rid of me, Harry of England," cried Herne, "but were you to lay the weight of this vast fabric upon me, I would break from under it--ho! ho!""What wouldst thou, infernal spirit?" cried Henry.

同类推荐
  • 海南杂着

    海南杂着

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 东山经

    东山经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 少林真传伤科秘方

    少林真传伤科秘方

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大方等陀罗尼经

    大方等陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • A Mountain Woman

    A Mountain Woman

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 兰州历史文化.1

    兰州历史文化.1

    兰州是甘肃省的政治、经济、文化中心。位于青藏、内蒙古、黄土三大高原交汇地带,居南北之中,扼东西要塞,黄河横穿境内,地势沿河起伏。悠久的历史、绚丽的文化,形成了集民族文化、黄河文化、丝路文化于一身的兰州历史文化。这种文化结构,不仅奠定了兰州人民纯厚朴实的文化基质,而且影响着一代代兰州人的物质和精神生活。
  • 无尽魔焰

    无尽魔焰

    少年石头,机缘偶得神秘狼珠,修绝世神通,集魔、佛、道三家功法于一身,自此逆天改命,成就永恒传说。
  • 问情逍遥

    问情逍遥

    修仙路的漫漫遥不可及,人们一路追求的超脱物外,掌万物法则,长生不死,结果发现永远无法超脱这天地法则,离开这六道轮回,离开这人们本有的七情六欲。那么,修道到底为了什么?是孤独长生,还是逍遥一生?这里将带大家走进一个不同寻常的修仙路,一个帝国丞相的公子年幼逢巨变,走上了修仙路,有兄弟,有红颜,有几段悲喜的聚散离合,有至死不渝的爱情,有真诚的友情,有天才的争锋,有一波三折的修仙路,只为了求一生逍遥。
  • 人族帝师

    人族帝师

    穿越成了顾家三少爷,觉醒天赋,寻找天才,做人族无上帝师!
  • 英雄联盟之猴王

    英雄联盟之猴王

    一个可怜的人在世间游荡,他只是想找到回家的路
  • 穿越:帝都之恋

    穿越:帝都之恋

    一代北国大将,宁为玉碎,不为瓦全。玉佩破碎碎的瞬间,他的灵魂却穿越到了二十一世纪,是灵魂的附身,还是命运的玩笑?这些他都不想知道,他只知道,自己心中深埋着的信奉。缘分,有时就是这么简单,无心的一次帮助,却遇上了彼此一见钟情的她,不敢说出口的爱,能否覆盖他内心深处的信奉。他不知道,来到二十一世纪的,并不止他一个,就连那些曾经的朋友跟敌人,也纷纷现身。随着内心的信奉被唤醒,他的双手再次沾满了鲜血,包括他所爱之人。玉玺重现,是灵魂的再次穿越,还是命运的再次玩笑?面对曾经的敌人,他再次举起手中的剑,浴血奋战。这次,他不再是为了保家卫国,而是为了数千年后,那个在二十一世纪等他的女孩……
  • 补酒大全

    补酒大全

    盖人体五脏六腑之气,为肺所主,来自中焦脾胃水谷之精气,由上焦宣发,输布全身,所以气虚多责之于肺、脾二脏。故补气药酒是为肺、脾气虚病症而设,适用于久病体虚,劳累,年老体弱等因素引起的脏腑组织机能减退所表现的症候。常见的主要表现为神疲乏力、声低(少气)、懒言、头晕、目眩、面色淡白,自汗怕风,大便滑泄,活动时诸症加剧,舌淡苔白,脉虚或虚大无力……
  • 冷酷女神遇上霸道男神

    冷酷女神遇上霸道男神

    等冷酷女神遇上霸道男神,4对四,很公平吧。
  • 我在你的世界等着你之明瞾篇

    我在你的世界等着你之明瞾篇

    她是一个北京土生土长的南城丫头,在一次车祸中意外的和自己的闺蜜上官尒琪一起神奇的穿越,遇到了这一生让自己无法忘记的人,他是位至高无上的君主,却对她呵护备至,宠爱有加,前世今生他始终把她捧在手心,时空斗转星移,机缘巧合下,她回到前世,找回那曾经刻骨铭心的爱,只为在今生的相遇
  • 第二人

    第二人

    一个惶惶度日的宅男,一个潇洒游走世界的王,哪一个才是自己,冰冷的城市灯光下,照射出两个影子!有人因战争渴望和平,自然亦有人因和平而渴望战争!挥动战争之剑,斩开这片和平地混沌天地,开创一片战乱的天堂。到那时,人所渴望的必将是和平。但在所谓当权者心中,所谓和平,是无异于地狱的!