Before him all the hosts of Erebus,  Till he had conquered: and grim Cerberus  Sang madrigals, the Furies rhymed of love,  Old Charon sighed, and sonnets rang above  The gloomy Styx; and even as Tantalus  Was Proserpine discrowned in Tartarus,  And Cupid regnant in the place thereof. 'Thus Love is monarch throughout Hell to-day;  In Heaven we know his power was always great;  And Earth acclaimed Love's mastery straightway  When Sylvia came to gladden Earth's estate:—  Thus Hell and Heaven and Earth his rule obey,  And Sylvia's heart alone is obdurate.

'Well, well,' sighed Sir John, 'it was a goodly rogue that writ it, though the verse runs but lamely! A goodly rogue!

'He might,' Sir John suggested, tentatively, 'have lived cleanly, and forsworn sack; he might have been a gallant gentleman, and begotten grandchildren, and had a quiet nook at the ingleside to rest his old bones: but he is dead long since. He might have writ himself armigero in many a bill, or obligation, or quittance, or what not; he might have left something behind him save unpaid tavern bills; he might have heard cases, harried poachers, and quoted old saws; and slept in his own family chapel through sermons yet unwrit, beneath his presentment, done in stone, and a comforting bit of Latin: but he is dead long since.'

Sir John sat meditating for a while; it had grown quite dark in the room as he muttered to himself. He rose now, rather cumbrously and uncertainly, but with a fine rousing snort of indignation.

'Zooks!' he said, 'I prate like a death's-head. A thing done hath an end, God have mercy on us all! And I will read no more of the rubbish.' 

He cast the packet into the heart of the fire; the yellow papers curled at the edges, rustled a little, and blazed; he watched them burn to the last spark.

'A cup of sack to purge the brain!' cried Sir John, and filled one to the brim. 'And I will go sup with Doll Tearsheet.'

* * * * *

SEPTEMBER 29, 1422

'Anoon her herte hath pitee of his wo, And with that pitee, love com in also; Thus is this quene in pleasaunce and in loye.'

Meanwhile had old Dome Sylvia returned contentedly to the helpmate whom she had accepted under compulsion, and who had made her a fair husband, as husbands go. It is duly recorded, indeed, on their shared tomb, that their forty years of married life were of continuous felicity, and set a pattern to all Norfolk. The more prosaic verbal tradition is that Lady Vernon retained Sir Robert well in hand by pointing out, at judicious intervals, that she had only herself to blame for having married such a selfish person in preference to a hero of the age and an ornament of the loftiest circles.

I find, on consultation of the Allonby records, that Sylvia Vernon died of a quinsy, in 1419, surviving Sir Robert by some three months. She had borne him four sons and four daughters: of these there remained at Winstead in 1422 only Sir Hugh Vernon, the oldest son, knighted by Henry V at Agincourt, where Vernon had fought with distinction; and Adelais Vernon, the youngest daughter, with whom the following has to do. 

CHAPTER IV

The Episode Called 'Sweet Adelais' 

1. Gruntings at Aeaea

It was on a clear September day that the Marquis of Falmouth set out for France. John of Bedford had summoned him posthaste when Henry V was stricken at Senlis with what bid fair to prove a mortal distemper; for the marquis was Bedford's comrade-in-arms, veteran of Shrewsbury, Agincourt and other martial disputations, and the Duke-Regent suspected that, to hold France in case of the King's death, he would presently need all the help he could muster.

'And I, too, look for warm work,' the marquis conceded to Mistress Adelais Vernon, at parting. 'But, God willing, my sweet, we shall be wed at Christmas for all that. The Channel is not very wide. At a pinch I might swim it, I think, to come to you.'

He kissed her and rode away with his men. Adelais stared after them, striving to picture her betrothed rivalling Leander in this fashion, and subsequently laughed. The marquis was a great lord and a brave captain, but long past his first youth; his actions went somewhat too deliberately ever to be roused to the high lunacies of the Sestian amorist. So Adelais laughed, but a moment later, recollecting the man's cold desire of her, his iron fervors, Adelais shuddered.

This was in the court-yard at Winstead. Roger Darke of Yaxham, the girl's cousin, standing beside her, noted the gesture, and snarled.

'Think twice of it, Adelais,' said he.

Whereupon Mistress Vernon flushed like a peony. 'I honor him,' she said, with some irrelevance, 'and he loves me.'

Roger scoffed. 'Love, love! O you piece of ice! You gray-stone saint! What do you know of love?' Master Darke caught both her hands in his. 'Now, by Almighty God, our Saviour and Redeemer, Jesus Christ!' he said, between his teeth, his eyes flaming; 'I, Roger Darke, have offered you undefiled love and you have mocked at it. Ha, Tears of Mary! how I love you! And you mean to marry this man for his title! Do you not believe that I love you, Adelais?' he whimpered.

Gently she disengaged herself. This was of a pattern with Roger's behavior any time during the past two years. 'I suppose you do,' Adelais conceded, with the tiniest possible shrug. 'Perhaps that is why I find you so insufferable.'

Afterward Mistress Vernon turned on her heel and left Master Darke. In his fluent invocation of Mahound and Termagaunt and other overseers of the damned he presently touched upon eloquence.

2. Comes One with Moly

Adelais came into the walled garden of Winstead, aflame now with autumnal scarlet and gold. She seated herself upon a semicircular marble bench, and laughed for no apparent reason, and contentedly waited what Dame Luck might send.

She was a comely maid, past argument or (as her lovers habitually complained) any adequate description.

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