CHAPTER IV.
The fugitive Britons, scarce one-tenth of the number that had first
rushed to the attack,--performed their flight with the same Parthian
rapidity that characterised the assault; and escaping both Welch foe
and Saxon, though the former broke ground to pursue them, they gained
the steeps of Penmaen.
There was no further thought of slumber that night within the walls.
While the wounded were tended, and the dead were cleared from the
soil, Harold, with three of his chiefs, and Mallet de Graville, whose
feats rendered it more than ungracious to refuse his request that he
might assist in the council, conferred upon the means of terminating
the war with the next day. Two of the thegns, their blood hot with
strife and revenge, proposed to scale the mountain with the whole
force the reinforcements had brought them, and put all they found to
the sword.
The third, old and prudent, and inured to Welch warfare, thought
otherwise.
"None of us," said he, "know what is the true strength of the place
which ye propose to storm. Not even one Welchman have we found who
hath ever himself gained the summit, or examined the castle which is
said to exist there." [162]
"Said!" echoed De Graville, who, relieved of his mail, and with his
wounds bandaged, reclined on his furs on the floor. "Said, noble sir!
Cannot our eyes perceive the towers?"
The old thegn shook his head. "At a distance, and through mists,
stones loom large, and crags themselves take strange shapes. It may
be castle, may be rock, may be old roofless temples of heathenesse
that we see. But to repeat (and, as I am slow, I pray not again to be
put out in my speech)--none of us know what, there, exists of defence,
man-made or Nature-built. Not even thy Welch spies, son of Godwin,
have gained to the heights. In the midst lie the scouts of the Welch
King, and those on the top can see the bird fly, the goat climb. Few
of thy spies, indeed, have ever returned with life; their heads have
been left at the foot of the hill, with the scroll in their lips,--
'Dic ad inferos--quid in superis novisti.' Tell to the shades below
what thou hast seen in the heights above."
"And the Walloons know Latin!" muttered the knight; "I respect them!"
The slow thegn frowned, stammered, and renewed:
"One thing at least is clear; that the rock is well nigh
insurmountable to those who know not the passes; that strict watch,
baffling even Welch spies, is kept night and day; that the men on the
summit are desperate and fierce; that our own troops are awed and
terrified by the belief of the Welch, that the spot is haunted and the
towers fiend-founded. One single defeat may lose us two years of
victory. Gryffyth may break from the eyrie, regain what he hath lost,
win back our Welch allies, ever faithless and hollow. Wherefore, I
say, go on as we have begun. Beset all the country round; cut off all
supplies, and let the foe rot by famine--or waste, as he hath done
this night, his strength by vain onslaught and sally."
"Thy counsel is good," said Harold, "but there is yet something to add
to it, which may shorten the strife, and gain the end with less
sacrifice of life. The defeat of tonight will have humbled the
spirits of the Welch; take them yet in the hour of despair and
disaster. I wish, therefore, to send to their outposts a nuncius,
with these terms: 'Life and pardon to all who lay down arms and
surrender.'"
"What, after such havoc and gore?" cried one of the thegns.
"They defend their own soil," replied the Earl simply: "had not we
done the same?"
"But the rebel Gryffyth?" asked the old thegn, "thou canst not accept
him again as crowned sub-king of Edward?"
"No," said the Earl, "I propose to exempt Gryffyth alone from the
pardon, with promise, natheless, of life if he give himself up as
prisoner; and count, without further condition, on the King's mercy."
There was a prolonged silence. None spoke against the Earl's
proposal, though the two younger thegns misliked it much.
At last said the elder, "But hast thou thought who will carry this
message? Fierce and wild are yon blood-dogs; and man must needs
shrive soul and make will, if he will go to their kennel."
"I feel sure that my bode will be safe," answered Harold: for Gryffyth
has all the pride of a king, and, sparing neither man nor child in the
onslaught, will respect what the Roman taught his sires to respect--
envoy from chief to chief--as a head scatheless and sacred."
"Choose whom thou wilt, Harold," said one of the young thegns,
laughing, "but spare thy friends; and whomsoever thou choosest, pay
his widow the weregeld."
"Fair sirs," then said De Graville, "if ye think that I, though a
stranger, could serve you as nuncius, it would be a pleasure to me to
undertake this mission. First, because, being curious as concerns
forts and castles, I would fain see if mine eyes have deceived me in
taking yon towers for a hold of great might. Secondly, because that
same wild-cat of a king must have a court rare to visit. And the only
reflection that withholds my pressing the offer as a personal suit is,
that though I have some words of the Breton jargon at my tongue's
need, I cannot pretend to be a Tully in Welch; howbeit, since it seems
that one, at least, among them knows something of Latin, I doubt not
but what I shall get out my meaning!"
"Nay, as to that, Sire de Graville," said Harold, who seemed well
pleased with the knight's offer, "there shall be no hindrance or let,
as I will make clear to you; and in spite of what you have just heard,
Gryffyth shall harm you not in limb or in life. But, kindly and
courteous Sir, will your wounds permit the journey, not long, but
steep and laborious, and only to be made on foot?"
"On foot!" said the knight, a little staggered, "Pardex! well and
truly, I did not count upon that!"
"Enough," said Harold, turning away in evident disappointment, "think
of it no more."
"Nay, by your leave, what I have once said I stand to," returned the
knight; "albeit, you may as well cleave in two one of those
respectable centaurs of which we have read in our youth, as part
Norman and horse. I will forthwith go to my chamber, and apparel
myself becomingly--not forgetting, in case of the worst, to wear my
mail under my robe. Vouchsafe me but an armourer, just to rivet up
the rings through which scratched so felinely the paw of that well-
appelled Griffin."
"I accept your offer frankly," said Harold, "and all shall be prepared
for you, as soon as you yourself will re-seek me here."
The knight rose, and though somewhat stiff and smarting with his
wounds, left the room lightly, summoned his armourer and squire, and
having dressed with all the care and pomp habitual to a Norman, his
gold chain round his neck, and his vest stiff with broidery, he re-
entered the apartment of Harold. The Earl received him alone, and
came up to him with a cordial face. "I thank thee more, brave Norman,
than I ventured to say before my thegns, for I tell thee frankly, that
my intent and aim are to save the life of this brave king; and thou
canst well understand that every Saxon amongst us must have his blood
warmed by contest, and his eyes blind with national hate. You alone,
as a stranger, see the valiant warrior and hunted prince, and as such
you can feel for him the noble pity of manly foes."
"That is true," said De Graville, a little surprised, "though we
Normans are at least as fierce as you Saxons, when we have once tasted
blood; and I own nothing would please me better than to dress that
catamaran in mail, put a spear in its claws, and a horse under its
legs, and thus fight out my disgrace at being so clawed and mauled by
its griffes. And though I respect a brave knight in distress, I can
scarce extend my compassion to a thing that fights against all rule,
martial and kingly."
The Earl smiled gravely. "It is the mode in which his ancestors
rushed on the spears of Caesar. Pardon him."
"I pardon him, at your gracious request," quoth the knight, with a
grand air, and waving his hands; "say on."
"You will proceed with a Welch monk--whom, though not of the faction
of Gryffyth, all Welchmen respect--to the mouth of a frightful pass,
skirting the river; the monk will bear aloft the holy rood in signal
of peace. Arrived at that pass, you will doubtless be stopped. The
monk here will be spokesman; and ask safe-conduct to Gryffyth to
deliver my message; he will also bear certain tokens, which will no
doubt win the way for you."
"Arrived before Gryffyth, the monk will accost him; mark and heed well
his gestures, since thou wilt know not the Welch tongue he employs.
And when he raises the rood, thou,--in the mean while, having artfully
approached close to Gryffyth,--wilt whisper in Saxon, which he well
understands, and pressing the ring I now give thee into his hand,
'Obey, by this pledge; thou knowest Harold is true, and thy head is
sold by thine own people.' If he asks more thou knowest nought."
"So far, this is as should be from chief to chief," said the Norman,
touched, "and thus had Fitzosborne done to his foe. I thank thee for
this mission, and the more that thou hast not asked me to note the
strength of the bulwark, and number the men that may keep it."
Again Harold smiled. "Praise me not for this, noble Norman--we plain
Saxons have not your refinements. If ye are led to the summit, which
I think ye will not be, the monk at least will have eyes to see, and
tongue to relate. But to thee I confide this much;--I know already,
that Gryffyth's strongholds are not his walls and his towers, but the
superstition of our men, and the despair of his own. I could win
those heights, as I have won heights as cloudcapt, but with fearful
loss of my own troops, and the massacre of every foe. Both I would
spare, if I may."
"Yet thou hast not shown such value for life, in the solitudes I
passed," said the knight bluntly.
Harold turned pale, but said firmly, "Sire de Graville, a stern thing
is duty, and resistless is its voice. These Welchmen, unless curbed
to their mountains, eat into the strength of England, as the tide
gnaws into a shore. Merciless were they in their ravages on our
borders, and ghastly and torturing their fell revenge. But it is one
thing to grapple with a foe fierce and strong, and another to smite
when his power is gone, fang and talon. And when I see before me the
faded king of a great race, and the last band of doomed heroes, too
few and too feeble to make head against my arms,--when the land is
already my own, and the sword is that of the deathsman, not of the
warrior,--verily, Sir Norman, duty releases its iron tool, and man
becomes man again."
"I go," said the Norman, inclining his head low as to his own great
Duke, and turning to the door; yet there he paused, and looking at the
ring which he had placed on his finger, he said, "But one word more,
if not indiscreet--your answer may help argument, if argument be
needed. What tale lies hid in this token?"
Harold coloured and paused a moment, then answered:
"Simply this. Gryffyth's wife, the lady Aldyth, a Saxon by birth,
fell into my hands. We were storming Rhadlan, at the farther end of
the isle; she was there. We war not against women; I feared the
license of my own soldiers, and I sent the lady to Gryffyth. Aldyth
gave me this ring on parting; and I bade her tell Gryffyth that
whenever, at the hour of his last peril and sorest need, I sent that
ring back to him, he might hold it the pledge of his life."
"Is this lady, think you, in the stronghold with her lord?"
"I am not sure, but I fear yes," answered Harold.
"Yet one word: And if Gryffyth refuse, despite all warning?"
Harold's eyes drooped.
"If so, he dies; but not by the Saxon sword. God and our lady speed
you!"