<h2 id="id03356" style="margin-top: 4em">CHAPTER LXXIV.</h2>
<p id="id03357">Arthur's Seat.</p>
<p id="id03358" style="margin-top: 2em">For a day or two the paralyzed terrors of the people, and the tumults
in the citadel, seemed portentous of immediate ruin. A large
detachment from the royal army had entered Scotland by the marine gate
of Berwick; and, headed by De Warenne, was advancing rapidly toward
Edinburgh. Not a soldier belonging to the regent remained on the
carse; and the distant chiefs to whom he sent for aid refused it,
alleging that the discovery of Wallace's patriotism having been a
delusion, had made them suspect all men; and, now locking themselves
within their own castles, each true Scot would there securely view a
struggle in which they could feel no personal interest.</p>
<p id="id03359">Seeing the danger of the realm, and hearing from the Lords Ruthven and
Bothwell that their troops would follow no other leader than Sir
William Wallace, and hopeless of any prompt decision from amongst the
contusion of the council, Badenoch yielded a stern assent to the only
apparent means of saving his sinking country. He turned ashy pale,
while his silence granted to Lord Loch-awe the necessity of imploring
Sir William Wallace to again stretch out his arm in their behalf. With
this embassy the venerable chief had returned exultingly to
Ballochgeich; and the so lately branded Wallace, branded as the
intended betrayer of Scotland, was solicited by his very accusers to
assume the trust of their sole defense!</p>
<p id="id03360">"Such is the triumph of virtue!" whispered Edwin to his friend, as he
vaulted on his horse.</p>
<p id="id03361">A luminous smile from Wallace acknowledged that he felt the tribute
and, looking up to Heaven ere he placed his helmet on his head, he said:</p>
<p id="id03362">"Thence comes my power! and the satisfaction it brings, whether
attended by man's applause or his blame, he cannot take from me. I
now, perhaps for the last time, arm this head for Scotland. May the
God in whom I trust again crown it with victory, and forever after bind
the brows of our rightful sovereign with peace!"</p>
<p id="id03363">While Wallace pursued his march, the regent was quite at a stand,
confounded at the turn which events had taken, and hardly knowing
whether to make another essay to collect forces for the support of
their former leader, or to follow the refractory counsels of his lords,
and await in inactivity the issue of the
expected battle. He knew not bow to act, but a letter from Lady
Strathearn decided him.</p>
<p id="id03364">Though partly triumphant in her charges, yet the accusations of
Bothwell had disconcerted her; and though the restoration of Wallace to
his undisputed authority in the state; seemed to her next to
impossible, still she resolved to take another step, to confirm her
influence over the discontented of her country, and most likely to
insure the vengeance she panted to bring upon her victim's head. To
this end, on the very evening that she retreated in terror from the
council hall, she set forward to the borders; and, easily passing
thence to the English camp (then pitched at Alnwick), was soon admitted
to the castle, where De Warenne lodged. She was too well taught in the
school of vanity not to have remarked the admiration with which that
earl had regarded her while he was a prisoner in Stirling; and, hoping
that he might not be able to withstand the persuasion of her charms,
she opened her mission with no less art than effect. De Warren was
made to believe, that on the strength of a passion Wallace had
conceived for her, and which she treated with disdain, he had repented
of his former refusal of the crown of Scotland; and, misled by a hope
that she would not repeat her rejection of his hand could it present
her a scepter, he was now attempting to compass that dignity by the
most complicated intrigues. She then related how, at her instigation,
the regent had deposed him from his military command, and she ended
with saying, that impelled by loyalty to Edward (whom her better reason
now recognized as the lawful sovereign of her country), she had come to
exhort that monarch to renew his invasion of the kingdom.</p>
<p id="id03365">Intoxicated with her beauty, and enraptured, by a manner which seemed
to tell him that a softer sentiment than usual had made her select him
as the embassador to the king, De Warenne greedily drank in all her
words; and ere he allowed this, to him, romantic conference to break
up, he had thrown himself at her feet, and implored her, by every
impassioned argument, to grant him the privilege of presenting her to
Edward as his intended bride. De Warenne was in the meridian of life;
and being fraught with a power at court beyond most of his peers, she
determined to accept his hand and wield its high influence to the
destruction of Wallace, even should she be compelled in the act to
precipitate her country in his fall. De Warenne drew from her a
half-reluctant consent; and, while he poured forth the transports of a
happy lover, he was not so much enamored of the fine person of Lady
Strathearn as to be altogether insensible to the advantages which his
alliance with her would give to Edward in his Scottish pretensions.
And as it would consequently increase his own importance with that
monarch, he lost no time in communicating the circumstances to him.
Edward suspected something in this sudden attachment of the countess,
which, should it transpire, might cool the ardor of his officer for
uniting so useful an agent to his cause; therefore, having highly
approved De Warenne's conduct in affair, to hasten the nuptials, he
proposed being present at their solemnization that very evening. The
solemn vows which Lady Strathearn then pledged at the altar to be
pronounced by her with no holy awe of the marriage contract; but rather
as those alone by which she swore to complete her revenge on Wallace,
and, by depriving him of life, prevent the climax to her misery, of
seeing him (what she believed he intended to become) the husband of
Helen Mar.</p>
<p id="id03366">The day after she became De Warenne's wife, she accompanied him by sea
to Berwick; and from that place she dispatched messengers to the
regent, and to other nobles, her kinsmen, fraught with promises, which
Edward, in the event of success had solemnly pledged himself to ratify.
Her embassador arrived at Stirling the day succeeding that in which
Wallace and his troops had marched from Ballochgeich. The letters
brought were eagerly opened by Badenoch and his chieftains, and they
found their contents to this effect. She announced to them her
marriage with the lord warden, who was returned into Scotland with
every power for the final subjugation of the country; and therefore she
besought the regent and his council, not to raise a hostile arm against
him if they would not merely escape the indignation of a great king,
but insure his favor. She cast out hints to Badenoch, as if Edward
meant to reward his acquiescence with the crown of Scotland; and with
similar baits, proportioned to the views of all her other kinsmen, she
smoothed their anger against that monarch's former insults persuading
them to at least remain inactive during the last struggle of their
country.</p>
<p id="id03367">Meanwhile Wallace, taking his course along the banks of the Forth, when
the night drew near, encamped his little army at the base of the
craigs, east of Edinburgh Castle. His march having been long and
rapid, the men were much fatigued, and hardly were laid upon their
heather beds before they fell asleep.
Wallace had learned from his scouts that the main body of the Southrons
had approached within a few miles of Dalkeith. Thither he hoped to go
next morning, and there, he trusted, strike the conclusive blow for
Scotland, by the destruction of a division which he understood
comprised the flower of the English army. With these expectations he
gladly saw his troops lying in that repose which would rebrace their
strength for the combat, and, as the hours of night stole on while his
possessed mind waked for all around, he was pleased to see his
ever-watchful Edwin sink down in a profound sleep.</p>
<p id="id03368">It was Wallace's custom, once at least in the night, to go himself the
rounds of his posts, to see that all was safe. The air was serene and
he walked out on this duty. He passed from line to line, from station
to station, and all was in order. One post alone remained to be
visited, and that was a point of observation on the craigs near
Arthur's Seat. As he proceeded along a lonely defile between the rocks
which overhang the ascent of the mountain, he was startled by the
indistinct sight of a figure amongst the rolling vapors of the night,
seated on a towering cliff directly in the way he was to go. The broad
light of the moon, breaking from behind the clouds, shone full upon the
spot, and discovered a majestic form in gray robes, leaning on a harp;
while his face, mournfully gazing upward, was rendered venerable by a
long white beard that mingled with the floating mist. Wallace paused,
and stopping some distance from this extraordinary apparition, looked
on it in silence. The strings of the harp seemed softly touched, but
it was only the sighing of a transitory breeze passing over them. The
vibration ceased, but, in the next moment the hand of the master indeed
struck the chords, and with so full and melancholy a sound that Wallace
for a few minutes was riveted to the ground; then moving forward with a
breathless caution, not to disturb the nocturnal bard, he gently
approached. He was, however, descried! The venerable figure clasped
his hands, and in a voice of mournful solemnity exclaimed:</p>
<p id="id03369">"Art thou come, doomed of Heaven, to hear thy sad coronach?" Wallace
started at this salutation. The bard, with the same emotion,
continued; "No choral hymns hallow thy bleeding corpse—wolves howl thy
requiem—eagles scream over thy desolate grave! Fly, chieftain, fly!"</p>
<p id="id03370">"What, venerable father of the harp," cried Wallace, interrupting the
awful pause, "thus addresses one whom he must mistake for some other
warrior?"</p>
<p id="id03371">"Can the spirit of inspiration mistake its object?" demanded the bard.
"Can he whose eyes have been opened be blind to Sir William Wallace—to
the blood which clogs his mounting footsteps?"</p>
<p id="id03372">"And what or who am I to understand art thou?" replied Wallace. "Who
is the saint whose holy charity would anticipate the obsequies of a man
who yet may be destined to a long pilgrimage?"</p>
<p id="id03373">"Who I am," resumed the bard, "will be sthown to thee when thou hast
passed yon starry firmament. But the galaxy streams with blood; the
bugle of death is alone heard; and thy lacerated breast heaves in vain
against the hoofs of opposing squadrons. They charge—Scotland falls!
Look not on me, champion of thy country! Sold by thine
enemies—betrayed by thy friends! It was not the seer of St. Anton who
gave thee these wounds—that heart's blood was not drawn by me: a
woman's hand in mail, ten thousand armed warriors strike the mortal
steel—he sinks, he falls! Red is the blood of Eske! Thy vital stream
hath dyed it. Fly, bravest of the brave, and live! Stay, and perish!"
With a shriek of horror, and throwing his aged arms extended toward
the heavens, while his gray beard mingled in the rising blast, the seer
rushed from sight. Wallace saw the misty rocks alone, and was left in
awful solitude.</p>
<p id="id03374">For a few minutes he stood in profound silence. His very soul seemed
deprived of power to answer so terrible a denunciation, with even a
questioning thought. He had heard the destruction of Scotland
declared, and himself sentenced to perish if he did not escape the
general ruin by flying from her side! This terrible decree of fate, so
disastrously corroborated by the extremity of Bruce, and the divisions
in the kingdom, had been sounded in his ear, had been pronounced by one
of those sages of his country, on whom the spirit of prophecy, it was
believed, yet descended, with all the horrors of a woe-denouncing
prophet. Could he then doubt its truth? He did not doubt; he believed
the midnight voice he had heard. But recovering from the first shock
of such a doom, and remembering that it still left the choice to
himself, between dishonored life or glorious death, he resolved to show
his respect to the oracle by manifesting a persevering obedience to the
eternal voice which gave those agents utterance: and while he bowed to
the warning, he vowed to be the last who should fall from the side of
his devoted country. "If devoted," cried he, "then our fates shall be
the same. My fall from thee shall be into my grave. Scotland may have
struck the breast the breast that shielded her, yet, Father of Mercies,
forgive her blindness, and grant me still permission a little longer to
oppose my heart between her and this fearful doom!"</p>
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