Kenilworth - Page 66/408

He found her in a white cymar of silk lined with furs, her little

feet unstockinged and hastily thrust into slippers; her unbraided hair

escaping from under her midnight coif, with little array but her own

loveliness, rather augmented than diminished by the grief which she felt

at the approaching moment of separation.

"Now, God be with thee, my dearest and loveliest!" said the Earl, scarce

tearing himself from her embrace, yet again returning to fold her again

and again in his arms, and again bidding farewell, and again returning

to kiss and bid adieu once more. "The sun is on the verge of the blue

horizon--I dare not stay. Ere this I should have been ten miles from

hence."

Such were the words with which at length he strove to cut short their

parting interview. "You will not grant my request, then?" said the

Countess. "Ah, false knight! did ever lady, with bare foot in slipper,

seek boon of a brave knight, yet return with denial?"

"Anything, Amy, anything thou canst ask I will grant," answered the

Earl--"always excepting," he said, "that which might ruin us both."

"Nay," said the Countess, "I urge not my wish to be acknowledged in the

character which would make me the envy of England--as the wife, that

is, of my brave and noble lord, the first as the most fondly beloved of

English nobles. Let me but share the secret with my dear father! Let me

but end his misery on my unworthy account--they say he is ill, the good

old kind-hearted man!"

"They say?" asked the Earl hastily; "who says? Did not Varney convey to

Sir Hugh all we dare at present tell him concerning your happiness and

welfare? and has he not told you that the good old knight was following,

with good heart and health, his favourite and wonted exercise. Who has

dared put other thoughts into your head?"

"Oh, no one, my lord, no one," said the Countess, something alarmed at

the tone, in which the question was put; "but yet, my lord, I would fain

be assured by mine own eyesight that my father is well."

"Be contented, Amy; thou canst not now have communication with thy

father or his house. Were it not a deep course of policy to commit no

secret unnecessarily to the custody of more than must needs be, it were

sufficient reason for secrecy that yonder Cornish man, yonder Trevanion,

or Tressilian, or whatever his name is, haunts the old knight's house,

and must necessarily know whatever is communicated there."