<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XXII. — THE LORD OF BRAMBER. </h2>
<p>Edith stood by while the Norman soldiers piled the stones over the grave.
No tear had fallen from her eyes from the time that she had reached the
field of battle. Her face was as pale as marble, and looked almost as
rigid. When the last stone was placed on the top of the cairn she turned
to Wulf and Beorn:</p>
<p>"Farewell, Wulf! farewell, Beorn! I am glad you were here. I am glad that
beside me stood two of his most trusted thanes, and two of the monks from
the abbey he founded, and whose welfare was so dear to him. I go to Lewes,
and when the doors of the convent close on me I shall be dead to the
world. Would that I were lying beneath that cairn by the side of my dear
lord. I cannot weep for him now, the springs of my heart seem frozen, but
I have time for that. Farewell, thanes! I shall remember you in my
prayers." So saying she turned away, and walked back to the litter.</p>
<p>"Poor lady!" Beorn exclaimed as he watched the litter, escorted by the two
monks, carried along the road.</p>
<p>"Poor lady indeed!" Wulf repeated; "and yet there are thousands in England
and Normandy who were widowed yesterday, and maybe she is better off than
many. She lost Harold the day she resigned him to another, and it was
harder perhaps to be parted from him in that fashion than to know that he
is dead now. She can think of him as his true widow, for assuredly the
queen who never cared aught for him is a widow but in name. Before, Edith
was tortured by the desire to see him and to comfort him, and yet his
marriage stood as a gulf between them, a gulf that she would never have
passed. Now she can think of him as her very own, as the man who had loved
her even as she had loved him. It is a grief, a terrible grief, but one
without bitterness. But see, Lord de Burg is coming this way, and as there
is a litter behind him I suppose all is ready for our departure."</p>
<p>"I am ready, young thanes," De Burg said as he came up. "We ride at once
for Pevensey, whither an order was sent some hours ago for a ship to be in
readiness to sail for Normandy."</p>
<p>Three horses were led up and mounted. They rode away, followed by an armed
party and the litter on which Osgod was laid.</p>
<p>"You have done your last duty to your king," the Norman said. "It is a fit
grave for a hero, and assuredly Harold was one. Maybe that it is not his
last resting-place. The duke at present doubtless felt constrained at
first to refuse him Christian burial, for had he granted Gytha's request,
it would have been an acknowledgment that the charges brought against him
were unfounded, and the excommunication of no avail; but I doubt not that
in time he will allow his body to be taken to his abbey at Waltham. Now,"
he said less gravely, in order to turn their thoughts from the sad scenes
they had witnessed, "what think you of the future, will the Northern earls
head a national movement against us?"</p>
<p>"They are foul traitors!" Beorn exclaimed passionately; "and I would that
Wulf and I could meet them in fair lists and fight them."</p>
<p>"They will do nothing," Wulf said more quietly. "They will hasten to make
the best terms they can for themselves, and will ask to be permitted to
hold their earldoms as his vassals. But they will not long enjoy their
treachery; they are ever intriguers, and as soon as they see their
opportunity will conspire against William as they conspired against
Harold. Thank heaven they will receive scantier mercy at his hands than
they received at the king's. As for the South and East, who is to lead
them? There is no one left to whom they can look for guidance; doubtless
in some places they will resist, but such resistance can only bring ruin
upon those who attempt it. Maybe some will take to the forests or the
great eastern marshes, and may perhaps hold out for months, or even years.
But what can it avail in the end? Had Harold escaped alive there would
have been many a battle as obstinate as that of yesterday to fight before
England was conquered. Had any of the greater thanes escaped men would
have flocked to them, but they are all gone, save the few that were found
well-nigh lifeless this morning. Perhaps it is better as it is; for now
that William is victorious he will soon receive large bodies of
reinforcements, and as resistance would be vain, it were best that no
resistance were made. Duke William has shown himself a wise and just ruler
in Normandy, and will doubtless prove himself the same in England if he be
not angered by revolts and risings. It is hard that Englishmen should be
ruled by a foreigner, but it is no new thing for us. We Saxons conquered
the Britons, and in turn Danish kings have ruled over us; but Saxon and
Dane have become almost one, and the old grudges have died out. Maybe in
time you Normans also may become English."</p>
<p>"You would take the oath of allegiance to William then, Wulf?"</p>
<p>"Not now, my lord, but when England accepts him as her king I should be
willing to hold my lands from him as I have held them before from our
kings, that is, if the lands remain mine."</p>
<p>"They will remain yours," Lord de Burg said confidently. "The duke's
promise was publicly made, and he will certainly adhere to it; even if he
wished it, he could not, after charging Harold with perjury, break his own
promise."</p>
<p>The sun was sinking when they reached Pevensey, for the search for
Harold's body and the building of his cairn had occupied many hours. They
went at once on board one of the ships De Burg had himself furnished for
the expedition, and two days later landed at Rouen. They had brought
horses with them, and the two young thanes at once rode with the baron to
his chateau, leaving Osgod to be brought after them in his litter. Lord de
Burg was received with the greatest joy by his wife, Guy, and Agnes. They
had been in a state of terrible anxiety for the last twenty-four hours,
for a swift ship had been despatched by the duke with the news of the
victory, at daybreak after the battle, and it was known that the fight had
been long and desperately contested, and that a great number of barons and
knights had fallen. As soon as the first outburst of delight was over the
baron called in Wulf and Beorn, who had not followed him into the room,
feeling that he would prefer to greet his family alone. Guy gave an
exclamation of surprise and pleasure as they came forward.</p>
<p>"These are my prisoners," the baron said with a smile, "if I can call
prisoners those who have never surrendered. The duke has intrusted them to
my keeping, and has ordered that you shall hold them in safe custody."</p>
<p>"Lord de Burg does not tell you, lady, that he saved our lives, which but
for him were assuredly lost. We were well-nigh spent, and were surrounded
by a ring of foes when he broke in and stood beside us proclaiming that
the duke himself had given a pledge for our safety."</p>
<p>"I have paid part of the debt we owe," the baron said, "though I saved
them at no cost to myself, while Wulf defended Guy at the risk of his
life."</p>
<p>"How long do you stay with us, my lord?"</p>
<p>"As long as I can, wife. I went, as you know, unwillingly to the war, but
when all the Norman barons followed the duke I could not hold back. But I
trust to have no more of it; so terrible a field no man living has seen,
and in truth until twilight fell it seemed that we should be beaten, with
such obstinacy and endurance did the English fight. We won, but it was a
victory over the dead rather than the living. Of Harold's regular troops
no man turned, no man asked for quarter, they fell where they stood; and
even the irregulars, who had fought with equal bravery, when, as night
fell and all was lost, they fled, inflicted well-nigh as heavy a blow upon
us as had been dealt during the day. I have no animosity against them,
they are valiant men, and were in their right in defending their country,
and I would that I could stay peacefully here until the last blow has been
struck. I am well content with my estates, and need no foot of English
land, no share in English spoil I must fight for my liege lord as long as
fighting goes on, but that over I hope to return here and live in peace.
At any rate I can tarry quietly here for a week. Certainly no force can be
raised in time to oppose the duke's advance on London, and my sword
therefore may well rest in its scabbard. I suppose, thanes, you will not
object to give me your parole to attempt no escape?"</p>
<p>"Willingly, my lord," Beorn said. "If, contrary to our opinion, England
should rise and fight one more battle for freedom, we will give you due
notice that we shall if possible escape and cross the sea to join our
countrymen."</p>
<p>"That is fair enough," De Burg said with a smile, "and the moment you give
me notice I will clap you into so firm a cage that I warrant you will not
escape from it; but I trust the necessity will not arise. Now, Guy, take
your friends to their chambers and see to their comfort. I will not tell
the story of the battle until you return, for doubtless you are burning to
hear it, and in truth it will be famous in all times, both as one of the
sturdiest fights ever heard of, and because such great issues depended on
its results."</p>
<p>When Guy returned with his friends and a meal had been eaten, De Burg told
the story of the battle of Senlac.</p>
<p>"Such is the story as far as I know it," he added in conclusion, "but in
truth beyond the beginning and the end, and the fact that we twice fell
back and at one time were flying in headlong rout to our ships, I know
nothing. All day I was striving to break through a living wall, and
striving in vain. I can see now the close line of shields, the helmet
covered faces above them, and the terrible axes rising and falling,
cleaving through helmet and hauberk as if they had been pasteboard. It may
well-nigh be said that we have no wounded, for each man struck fell in his
track as if smitten by lightning. Can you add more, thanes?"</p>
<p>Beorn shook his head.</p>
<p>"It is like a dream," Wulf said. "We never moved through the long day. At
times there was a short lull, and then each man was fighting as best he
could. I know that my arms grew tired and that my axe seemed to grow
heavier, that horse and foot swept up to us, and there was occasionally
breathing time; that the royal brothers' voices rose ever cheeringly and
encouragingly until Gurth and Leofwin fell, and after that Harold's alone
was heard, though I think it came to my ears as from a distance, so great
was the tumult, so great our exertions. When Harold died I knew that all
was lost, but even that did not seem to affect me. I had become a sort of
machine, and fought almost mechanically, with a dim consciousness that the
end was close at hand. It was only at the last, when Beorn and I stood
back to back, that I seemed myself again, and was animated with new
strength that came, I suppose, from despair."</p>
<p>"It was an awful day," De Burg said. "I have fought in many battles under
the duke's banner, but the sternest of them were but paltry skirmishes in
comparison to this. Half of the nobles of Normandy lie dead, half the army
that filled the mighty fleet that sailed from St. Valery have fallen.
William is King of England, but whether that will in the end repay
Normandy for the loss she has suffered seems to me very doubtful. And now
let us to bed. I sleep not well on shipboard, and in truth I had such
dreams of death and slaughter that I ever awoke bathed with sweat, and in
such fear that I dared not go to sleep again."</p>
<p>At the end of a week the baron sailed again for England. To the two young
Englishmen the following weeks passed pleasantly. Ships came frequently
from England with news of what was doing there. William had tarried for
some time at his camp at Hastings, expecting to receive the submission of
all England. But not an Englishman came to bow before him. The Northern
earls had hurried to London as soon as they heard of the defeat at Senlac
and the death of the king and his brothers, and a Witan was instantly
summoned to choose his successor to the throne.</p>
<p>Edwin and Morcar thought that the choice of the nation would surely fall
upon one or other of them, as in rank and position they were now the first
men in the realm. They exerted themselves to the utmost to bring this
about, but no true-hearted Englishman could forgive either their
acceptance of Harold Hardrada as their king, or the long and treacherous
delay that had left Southern England to stand alone on the day of battle.
The choice of the Witan fell on the young Edgar, the grandson of Edmund
Ironside, the last male survivor of the royal blood. Edgar, however, was
never crowned, as that ceremony could only take place at one of the
festivals of the church, and it was therefore postponed until Christmas.
London was eager for resistance. Alfred had fought battle after battle
against the Danes, and though without their natural leaders, the people
throughout Southern England looked forward to a long and determined
struggle. With the army of the North as a rallying centre a force more
numerous than that which Harold had led might soon be gathered. But these
hopes were dashed to the ground by the treacherous Northern earls. Had one
of them been chosen to sit on the vacant throne they would doubtless have
done their best to maintain that throne, but they had been passed over,
and oblivious of the fact that it was to the South they owed the rescue of
their earldoms from the sway of the King of Norway and Tostig, they
sullenly marched away with their army and left the South to its fate.</p>
<p>While the cause of England was thus being betrayed and ruined, William was
advancing eastward along the coast ravaging and destroying. Romney was
levelled to the ground and its inhabitants slain. Dover opened its gates.
It is probable that most of the male population had joined Harold, and had
fallen at Senlac; and that the terrible fate of Romney had struck such
terror into the hearts of the inhabitants, who knew there was no army that
could advance to their assistance, that they surrendered at the
Conqueror's approach. To them William behaved with lenity and kindness.
His severity at Romney and his lenity at Dover had their effect. There
being no central authority, no army in the field, each town and district
was left to shift for itself; and assuredly none of them unaided could
hope to offer prolonged resistance to the Normans. As, after eight days'
stay at Dover, William advanced towards Canterbury, he was met by a
deputation of the citizens offering their submission, and soon from all
parts of Kent similar messages came in.</p>
<p>Kent had done its full share in the national defence on the hill near
Hastings, and was not to be blamed if, when all England remained supine
and inactive, its villagers refused to throw away their lives uselessly.
The duke was detained by sickness for a month near Canterbury, and there
received the submission of Kent and Sussex, and also that of the great
ecclesiastical city of Winchester; but the spirit of resistance in London
still burned brightly, and William was indisposed to risk the loss that
would be incurred by an assault upon its walls. He, therefore, moved round
in a wide circle, wasting the land, plundering and destroying, till the
citizens, convinced that resistance could only bring destruction upon
themselves and their city, and in spite of the efforts of their wounded
sheriff, sent an embassy to the duke at Berkhampstead to submit and do
homage to him.</p>
<p>Not London alone was represented by this embassy. The young king, elected
but uncrowned, was with it; two archbishops, two bishops, and many of the
chief men in England accompanied it, and although they were not the
spokesmen of any Witan, they might be said fairly to represent London and
Southern England.</p>
<p>Deserted by the North, without a leader, and seeing their land exposed to
wholesale ravages, the South and West Saxons were scarcely to be blamed
for preferring submission to destruction. They doubtless thought that
William, the wise ruler of Normandy, would make a far better king than the
boy they had chosen, who was himself almost as much a foreigner as
William, save that there was a strain of English royal blood in his veins.
So had England accepted Canute the Dane as her king, and he had ruled as
an English monarch wisely and well.</p>
<p>The embassy offered William the crown. The Norman prelates and priests,
who held so many of the dignities in the English Church, had worked hard
to incline men's minds to this end. Silent while England stood united
under its king to oppose the invader, their tongues were loosed as soon as
the strength of England was broken and its king dead, and they pointed out
that God had clearly designated William as their king by giving him
victory and by destroying alike Harold and his brothers.</p>
<p>William went through the farce of hesitating to accept the offer of the
crown, and held a consultation with his officers as to the answer he
should give. They of course replied that he should accept the offer.
William, therefore, marched with his army to London, where on
Christmas-day the same prelate who had anointed Harold King of England
crowned William as his successor.</p>
<p>A few days later Beorn and Wulf with Osgod, who had now completely
recovered from his wounds, set sail for England. There was no longer any
reason why they should not take their oaths to serve William. He was the
crowned king of England, the accepted of the people, as Harold had been,
and when all Southern England had submitted it was not for them, who had
received special favours at William's hand, to hold back. With them went
Lady de Burg, Guy, and Agnes, with many other Norman ladies on their way
to rejoin their lords in London. Baron de Burg, on the day after their
arrival at Westminster, led the two young thanes to the private apartment
of the king. He received them graciously.</p>
<p>"There are none of your nation," he said, "whose homage I more gladly
accept. You fought valiantly before under my banner, and will, I am sure,
be ready to do so again should occasion arise. I am thankful to my Lord de
Burg that he interposed in my name and saved your lives. I have not
forgotten the other part of my promise, and have this morning ordered my
justiciar to add to your estates forfeited lands adjoining."</p>
<p>Beorn and Wulf had previously talked the matter over. Their own
inclinations would have led them to refuse the offer, but as it was
certain that all the land forfeited to the crown by the death of its
holders in battle would be apportioned among William's Norman followers,
they thought that it would be wholly for the benefit both of the families
of the late thanes and for their tenants and people that they should
accept any estate William might bestow on them. They, therefore, thanked
the duke in suitable terms, and at once took the oaths for the lands he
might be pleased to bestow on them. A week later they received the formal
deeds, which in both cases more than doubled the estates they before
possessed.</p>
<p>The same evening Lord de Burg said to Wulf, who had tarried in London,
while Beorn had at once set out for Fareham: "I think the time has come,
Wulf, when I can speak of a subject that has been in my thoughts for a
long time, and which, although you have not spoken, has, as my wife and I
have both seen, been dear to you. Normandy and England are now one, and we
are vassals of the same king. As long as there was a probability that
Englishmen and Normans might again be ranged in battle against each other,
it was not expedient that aught should be done in the matter, but, now
this obstacle is removed, I can offer you the alliance on which I am sure
your heart is set, and give you the hand of my daughter in marriage."</p>
<p>"It is the greatest wish of my life," Wulf replied gratefully. "I should
have asked you for her hand before had it not been for the position of
public affairs. I love her dearly, though I have until now abstained from
speaking; and yet I would not wed her unless her heart went freely with
her hand."</p>
<p>"I think not that she will be disobedient to my wishes," De Burg said
smiling. "She has proved deaf to all her Norman suitors, and although
among them were some whom few maidens would have said no to, her mother
and I had no wish to force her inclinations, especially as we both
shrewdly suspected where her heart had been bestowed. This alliance, too,
has long been the dearest wish of Guy. On the bed of sickness where he lay
so long, and from which it seemed at one time that he would never rise, he
often spoke to me of it. He was fondly attached to his sister, and again
and again said that he wished of all things that you should some day
become her husband, as he was sure her happiness would be safe with you,
and that you would worthily fill his place to us, and would, when the time
came, rule nobly over the lands of De Burg."</p>
<p>"God forbid that that should ever be the case," Wulf said earnestly. "I
trust that Guy will live long, and that he will marry and leave
descendants to follow him."</p>
<p>The baron shook his head sadly. "Guy is better," he said, "but he is still
weak and fragile, and the leeches tell me that a rough winter or an
illness that would be nought to others might carry him off. I have small
hopes that he will ever marry. I am sure that no such thought is in his
mind. He is as eager now as he was four years ago that you should be a son
to us, and a husband to Agnes. He has also earnestly expressed the wish,
in which I also join, that you should take our name. You English have no
family names, but that will come with other Norman customs, and marrying a
De Burg it would seem natural that you should yourself become Wulf de
Burg."</p>
<p>"I should feel it a high honour. There is no more noble name in Normandy,
and I trust I may prove worthy of bearing it."</p>
<p>"That I have no fear of, Wulf, else I should not have offered you the hand
of my daughter. I will bring my wife and Guy in. I have offered you the
hand of Agnes, but it is right that you should ask her mother's consent,
although beforehand assured of it."</p>
<p>He left the room, and soon returned with Lady de Burg and Guy.</p>
<p>"My lord has told me," she said, before Wulf could speak, "that you would
ask my consent to your marriage with Agnes. I give it you unasked, freely
and gladly. I have but one regret—that the seas will divide us."</p>
<p>"Not so," the baron said; "William's court will be held in London, and for
years he will reside here far more than in Normandy, and will expect his
nobles to be frequently with him. I certainly shall not come alone, and
you will therefore have as many opportunities of seeing Agnes as if she
were married to a Norman whose estates did not lie near our own."</p>
<p>"I thank you most deeply, Lady de Burg, for the confidence which you show
in intrusting your daughter's happiness to me. I swear that with all my
might and power I will strive to make her happy, and will spare her to
visit you in Normandy whensoever you may wish it."</p>
<p>Guy came forward now and grasped Wulf's hand.</p>
<p>"How I have longed for this time, my brother," he said. "How I have hoped
that I might at least live long enough to know that the dearest wish of my
heart would be gratified. I can go hence now right willingly when God
calls me, knowing that my father and mother have another son to fill my
place, and that the happiness of my sister is secured."</p>
<p>"And now, wife, will you fetch Agnes from her chamber," the baron said.</p>
<p>In two or three minutes the baroness returned, leading Agnes, to whom she
had told the reason of her summons. The baron stepped forward and took her
hand.</p>
<p>"My daughter," he said, "the Thane of Steyning has asked for your hand in
marriage, and your mother and I have given our free and full consent, but
he would fain know from your own lips that you will come to him
willingly."</p>
<p>"I have loved you, Agnes, since while still but a boy I first saw you, and
my love has grown ever since. The happiness of my life depends upon your
answer, but unless your heart goes with your hand I would rather remain
unmarried to my dying day."</p>
<p>The girl had stood with downcast eyes and with flushed face until now.
When Wulf ceased speaking she looked up into his face:</p>
<p>"I love you, Wulf; I have always loved you. It is for your sake that I
have said no to the suitors of my own race who have sought my hand. I will
be a true wife and loving to you."</p>
<p>"Then take her, Wulf," the baron said, placing her hand in his. "You are
now her betrothed husband and our adopted son."</p>
<p>Wulf stooped and kissed the girl's lips, and the betrothal was completed.
After some talk it was arranged that Wulf should at once journey down to
Steyning, assume possession of his new estates, set the house in order,
and prepare for their coming. Guy was to accompany him, and as soon as all
was in readiness Wulf would come up to London and return with Lord and
Lady de Burg and Agnes, who would pay a short visit and all would then
cross to Normandy, for the marriage was to take place at their chateau
there.</p>
<p>"I was sure how it would be," Osgod said when Wulf told him the news that
night. "I should have been blind indeed if I had not seen it long ago. I
love not the Normans, but I make exception in the case of Lord de Burg and
his family. And truly it will in all respects be a good thing for your
tenants. Although the duke, or I suppose I ought to say the king, promises
greatly at present, there is no saying what he may do later on; and he has
all these locusts to provide for. 'Tis well indeed, then, that there
should be a Norman lady as well as an English thane at Steyning."</p>
<p>Wulf's return home gave rise to demonstrations of the greatest joy among
his tenants. They had heard nothing of him since the battle, and had
deemed him to have fallen with the rest of the defenders of the standard,
and had been living in fear of the arrival of some Norman baron to be
their lord. Wulf was greatly pleased to find that, although not one of his
housecarls had returned from Hastings, the greater portion of his
irregular levies had escaped at nightfall with the party who had inflicted
so heavy a blow upon their pursuers. For the next few days Wulf was
thoroughly occupied. The tenants of his new estates received him almost as
joyfully as his own had done, for, like them, they had expected the advent
of a Norman master. In one of the two estates that had fallen to him the
thane he had succeeded had left no heirs; while the other thane had left a
widow and a young family. Wulf arranged that these should remain in their
home, receiving for their maintenance half the rents of the estate.</p>
<p>Guy was greatly pleased with the fair country in which his sister's lot
was to be cast, but he owned frankly that the house seemed unworthy now of
the large estate, and was indeed but a poor place in comparison with the
noble chateau in which she had been brought up.</p>
<p>"That shall be remedied, Guy, as soon as matters settle down. I have laid
by none of my revenues, for the keeping up of a hundred housecarls has
taxed them to the utmost, but now that my income is more than doubled, and
this expense has altogether ceased, I shall have funds with which I can
soon begin to build. When I was young, Steyning seemed to me a fine house,
but after your Norman castles it is indeed but a poor place."</p>
<p>When, a fortnight later, the De Burgs arrived with Wulf, while Agnes
expressed herself delighted with the quaintness of the old Saxon home, her
father and mother were decidedly of Guy's opinion.</p>
<p>"The house is a good house in its way," the Baron said, "but there will be
great changes in the land. Much of it will be transferred to Norman hands,
and ere long castles and chateaux like ours at home will rise everywhere,
and as an English noble with broad lands it is but fit that your residence
should vie with others. But this shall be my care, and shall be my
daughter's special dowry. I foresee that it will be long ere matters
wholly settle down. Moreover, though William's hand is strong that of his
successor may be weak, and in time there will be the same troubles here
among the barons that there were in Normandy before William put them down
with a strong hand. Therefore, I should say we will build a castle rather
than a chateau, for such I am sure will be the style of all the Norman
buildings here, until England settles down to peace and quiet. I would not
disturb this house, Wulf; it is doubtless dear to you, and will, moreover,
serve as a dowager-house or as an abode for a younger son. We will fix on
a new site altogether, and there we will rear a castle worthy of the
estate. By the way, I have spoken to the king of your betrothal to my
daughter, and he is highly pleased. He says that it is his earnest wish
that his Norman nobles shall marry English heiresses, both because they
will thus come into possession of lands without disturbing the owners, and
because such mixture of blood will the more speedily weld the two peoples
into one; and that, similarly, he is glad to see a Norman maiden united to
an English noble of whom he has so high an opinion."</p>
<p>Fond as Wulf was of his old home he saw that it would be best to abandon
it for a new residence more suited to the times and more in accordance
with his own increased possessions and the home from which he was taking
his wife. After riding round the estates Lord de Burg and he fixed upon a
knoll of rising ground near the village of Bramber, and not far from the
religious house where Wulf had spent so many evenings, and whose prior had
been one of the first to welcome his return.</p>
<p>"I will charter a ship at Rouen," Lord de Burg said, "and send over a
master craftsman, skilful in designing and building castles, and a large
number of quarrymen, masons, and carpenters. Labour here is scarce, and
the men are unskilled at this kind of work. Rough labour can doubtless be
obtained, and your tenants can transport the stones from the quarry and
dig the fosse. I will send over a goodly number of men. It will cost no
more to employ three hundred for six months than fifty for three years."</p>
<p>A week later Wulf sailed for Rouen with the De Burgs. Beorn accompanied
him, as well as Osgod, to be present at the wedding, which took place at
Rouen Cathedral. A month later Wulf returned with his wife to Steyning.
Already an army of men were at work at Bramber. The tenants all gave their
assistance readily, and far beyond the amount their feudal tenure
required, for they saw the advantage it would be to them to have a strong
castle in their midst to which they could retire in case of danger.
Labourers had been engaged in large numbers from the country round by the
master craftsmen. The outlines of the castle had been traced, and the
ground dug for its foundations, while already the broad deep fosse which
was to surround it had been dug to a depth of several feet. The stones had
to be brought from a considerable distance, but as at this time of year
there was little work for the carts, those belonging not only to the
tenants of the estate, but to the cultivators for miles round were engaged
in the service.</p>
<p>In six months a stately pile had risen in the midst of the tranquil glade.
When it was ready for occupation Lord and Lady de Burg and their son came
over, and great festivities were held when Wulf de Burg (now Lord of
Bramber) moved into the castle.</p>
<p>Soon after the birth of their first son Wulf and his wife received a hasty
summons to cross the sea, and arrived in time to stand by the death-bed of
Guy. Wulf had been greatly moved by the storm of war that had swept over
the North of England, and the terrible vengeance taken by William there.
He had no pity for the traitor earls, but he grieved for the men who, but
for their treachery, would have fought at Hastings. He regretted deeply
the isolated risings in various parts of the country, whose only effect
was to bring ruin upon whole districts and to increase the sternness and
rigour of William's rule.</p>
<p>Wulf's after-life was divided between England and Normandy, as he became a
baron of the latter country at the death of Lord de Burg. He fought no
more in England, but more than once followed William's banner in his
struggles with his rebellious sons and turbulent nobles. He lived to see
the animosities between Englishmen and Normans beginning to die out, and
to find our kings relying upon sturdy English men-at-arms and bow-men in
their struggles with French kings and with the Norman barons who held so
large a portion of English soil. Osgod became the seneschal of the castle,
and held it for his lord during his absences in Normandy. Wulf took an
interest in the fortunes of Ulf, who in the course of time succeeded to
the business of Ulred, and became one of the most skilled and famous
armourers in London. Beorn married the former heiress of one of the
estates William had granted him, and his firm friendship with the Lord of
Bramber remained unbroken to the end of their lives.</p>
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