his service almost all the fiery spirits of the age whose
tempers were congenial; and Louis saw too clearly what might be
attempted and executed by such a train of resolute adventurers,
following a leader of a character as ungovernable as their own.
There was yet another circumstance which increased the animosity of
Louis towards his overgrown vassal; he owed him favours which he
never meant to repay, and was under the frequent necessity of
temporizing with him, and even of enduring bursts of petulant
insolence, injurious to the regal dignity, without being able to treat him
otherwise than as his "fair cousin of Burgundy."
It was about the year 1468, when their feuds were at the highest, though
a dubious and hollow truce, as frequently happened, existed for the
time betwixt them, that the present narrative opens. The person first
introduced on the stage will be found indeed to be of a rank and
condition, the illustration of whose character scarcely called for a
dissertation on the relative position of two great princes; but the
passions of the great, their quarrels, and their reconciliations involve
the fortunes of all who approach them; and it will be found, on
proceeding farther in our story, that this preliminary chapter is
necessary for comprehending the history of the individual whose
adventures we are about to relate.
CHAPTER II
: THE WANDERER
Why then the world's mine oyster, which I with sword will open.
ANCIENT PISTOL
It was upon a delicious summer morning, before the sun had assumed
its scorching power, and while the dews yet cooled and perfumed the
air, that a youth, coming from the northeastward approached the ford of
a small river, or rather a large brook, tributary to the Cher, near to the
royal Castle of Plessis les Tours, whose dark and multiplied
battlements rose in the background over the extensive forest with which
they were surrounded. These woodlands comprised a noble chase, or
royal park, fenced by an enclosure, termed, in the Latin of the middle
ages, Plexitium, which gives the name of Plessis to so many villages in
France. The castle and village of which we particularly speak, was
called Plessis les Tours, to distinguish it from others, and was built
about two miles to the southward of the fair town of that name, the
capital of ancient Touraine, whose rich plain has been termed the
Garden of France.
On the bank of the above mentioned brook, opposite to that which the
traveller was approaching, two men, who appeared in deep
conversation, seemed, from time to time, to watch his motions; for, as
their station was much more elevated, they could remark him at
considerable distance.
The age of the young traveller might be about nineteen, or betwixt that
and twenty; and his face and person, which were very prepossessing,
did not, however, belong to the country in which he was now a
sojourner. His short gray cloak and hose were rather of Flemish than of
French fashion, while the smart blue bonnet, with a single sprig of
holly and an eagle's feather, was already recognized as the Scottish
head gear. His dress was very neat, and arranged with the precision of a
youth conscious of possessing a fine person. He had at his back a
satchel, which seemed to contain a few necessaries, a hawking gauntlet
on his left hand, though he carried no bird, and in his right a stout
hunter's pole. Over his left shoulder hung an embroidered scarf which
sustained a small pouch of scarlet velvet, such as was then used by
fowlers of distinction to carry their hawks' food, and other matters
belonging to that much admired sport. This was crossed by another
shoulder belt, to which was hung a hunting knife, or couteau de chasse.
Instead of the boots of the period, he wore buskins of half dressed
deer's skin.
Although his form had not yet attained its full strength, he was tall and
active, and the lightness of the step with which he advanced, showed
that his pedestrian mode of travelling was pleasure rather than pain to
him. His complexion was fair, in spite of a general shade of darker hue,
with which the foreign sun, or perhaps constant exposure to the
atmosphere in his own country, had, in some degree, embrowned it.
His features, without being quite regular, were frank, open, and
pleasing. A half smile, which seemed to arise from a happy exuberance
of animal spirits, showed now and then that his teeth were well set, and
as pure as ivory; whilst his bright blue eye, with a corresponding gaiety,
had an appropriate glance for every object which it encountered,
expressing good humour, lightness of heart, and determined resolution.
He received and returned the salutation of the few travellers who
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