书城公版Kenilworth
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第112章 CHAPTER XXI(4)

Begone,I tell thee;must I entreat thee to mine own dishonour?No,my lord,said Varney;but if you are serious in entrusting me with the task of urging this most necessary measure,you must give me a letter to my lady,as my credentials,and trust to me for backing the advice it contains with all the force in my power.And such is my opinion of my lady's love for your lordship,and of her willingness to do that which is at once to contribute to your pleasure and your safety,that I am sure she will condescend to bear for a few brief days the name of so humble a man as myself,especially since it is not inferior in antiquity to that of her own paternal house.Leicester seized on writing materials,and twice or thrice commenced a letter to the Countess,which he afterwards tore into fragments.At length he finished a few distracted lines,in which he conjured her,for reasons nearly concerning his life and honour,to consent to bear the name of Varney for a few days,during the revels at Kenilworth.He added that Varney would communicate all the reasons which rendered this deception indispensable;and having signed and sealed these credentials,he flung them over the table to Varney with a motion that he should depart,which his adviser was not slow to comprehend and to obey.

Leicester remained like one stupefied,till he heard the trampling of the horses,as Varney,who took no time even to change his dress,threw himself into the saddle,and,followed by a single servant,set off for Berkshire.At the sound the Earl started from his seat,and ran to the window,with the momentary purpose of recalling the unworthy commission with which he had entrusted one of whom he used to say he knew no virtuous property save affection to his patron.But Varney was already beyond call;and the bright,starry firmament,which the age considered as the Book of Fate,lying spread before Leicester when he opened the casement,diverted him from his better and more manly purpose.

There they roll,on their silent but potential course,said the Earl,looking around him,without a voice which speaks to our ear,but not without influences which affect,at every change,the indwellers of this vile,earthly planet.This,if astrologers fable not,is the very crisis of my fate!The hour approaches of which I was taught to beware--the hour,too,which I was encouraged to hope for.A King was the word--but how?--the crown matrimonial.All hopes of that are gone--let them go.The rich Netherlands have demanded me for their leader,and,would Elizabeth consent,would yield to me THEIR crown.And have I not such a claim even in this kingdom?That of York,descending from George of Clarence to the House of Huntingdon,which,this lady failing,may have a fair chance--Huntingdon is of my house.--But I will plunge no deeper in these high mysteries.Let me hold my course in silence for a while,and in obscurity,like a subterranean river;the time shall come that I will burst forth in my strength,and bear all opposition before me.While Leicester was thus stupefying the remonstrances of his own conscience,by appealing to political necessity for his apology,or losing himself amidst the wild dreams of ambition,his agent left town and tower behind him on his hasty journey to Berkshire.

HE also nourished high hope.He had brought Lord Leicester to the point which he had desired,of committing to him the most intimate recesses of his breast,and of using him as the channel of his most confidential intercourse with his lady.Henceforward it would,he foresaw,be difficult for his patron either to dispense with his services,or refuse his requests,however unreasonable.And if this disdainful dame,as he termed the Countess,should comply with the request of her husband,Varney,her pretended husband,must needs become so situated with respect to her,that there was no knowing where his audacity might be bounded perhaps not till circumstances enabled him to obtain a triumph,which he thought of with a mixture of fiendish feelings,in which revenge for her previous scorn was foremost and predominant.Again he contemplated the possibility of her being totally intractable,and refusing obstinately to play the part assigned to her in the drama at Kenilworth.

Alasco must then do his part,he said.Sickness must serve her Majesty as an excuse for not receiving the homage of Mrs.

Varney--ay,and a sore and wasting sickness it may prove,should Elizabeth continue to cast so favourable an eye on my Lord of Leicester.I will not forego the chance of being favourite of a monarch for want of determined measures,should these be necessary.Forward,good horse,forward--ambition and haughty hope of power,pleasure,and revenge strike their stings as deep through my bosom as I plunge the rowels in thy flanks.On,good horse,on--the devil urges us both forward!