登陆注册
4620700000007

第7章

For this charming young girl--said, later, to have been the most beautiful woman of her time in England--though reared to Roman ways and Roman speech, had too well furnished a mind not to think for herself. "She spake," so says the record, "many tongues and was replete with piety." The only child of King Coel, her doting old father had given her the finest education that Rome could offer. She was, even before she grew to womanhood, so we are told, a fine musician, a marvellous worker in tapestry, in hammered brass and pottery, and was altogether as wise and wonderful a young woman as even these later centuries can show.

But, for all this grand education, she loved to hear the legends and stories of her people that in various ways would come to her ears, either as the simple tales of her British nurse, or in the wild songs of the wandering bards, or singers.

As she listened to these she thought less of those crude and barbaric ways of her ancestors that Rome had so vastly bettered than of their national independence and freedom from the galling yoke of Rome, and, as was natural, she cherished the memory of Boadicea, the warrior queen, and made a hero of the fiery young Caractacus.

It is always so, you know. Every bright young imagination is apt to find greater glories in the misty past, or grander possibilities in a still more misty future than in the too practical and prosaic present in which both duty and destiny lie.

And so Helena the princess, Leaning against the soft cushions of her gilded barge, had sighed for the days of the old-time British valor and freedom, and, even as she looked off toward the approaching triareme, she was wondering how she could awake to thoughts of British glory her rather heavy-witted father, Coel the King--an hereditary prince of that ancient Britain in which he was now, alas, but a tributary prince of the all too powerful Rome.

Now, "old King Cole," as Mother Goose tells us--for young Helena's father was none other than the veritable "old King Cole"of our nursery jingle--was a "jolly old soul," and a jolly old soul is very rarely an independent or ambitious one. So long as he could have "his pipe and his bowl" not, of course, his long pipe of tobacco that all the Mother Goose artists insist upon giving him--but the reed pipe upon which his musicians played--so long, in other words, as he could live in ease and comfort, undisturbed in his enjoyment of the good things of life by his Roman over-lords, he cared for no change. Rome took the responsibility and he took things easily. But this very day, while his daughter Helena was floating down the river to meet him on the strand at Wivanloe, he was returning from an unsuccessful boar-hunt in the Essex woods, very much out of sorts--cross because he had not captured the big boar he had hoped to kill, cross because his favorite musicians had been "confiscated" by the Roman governor or propraetor at Londinium (as London was then called), and still more cross because he had that day received dispatches from Rome demanding a special and unexpected tax levy, or tribute, to meet the necessary expenses of the new Emperor Diocletian.

Something else had happened to increase his ill temper. His "jolly old soul," vexed by the numerous crosses of the day, was thrown into still greater perplexity by the arrival, just as he stood fretful and chafing on the shore at Wivanloe, of one who even now was with him on the trireme, bearing him company back to his palace at Camolodunum--Carausius the admiral.

This Carausius, the admiral, was an especially vigorous, valorous, and fiery young fellow of twenty-one. He was cousin to the Princess Helena and a prince of the blood royal of ancient Britain. Educated under the strict military system of Rome, he had risen to distinction in the naval force of the Empire, and was now the commanding officer in the northern fleet that had its central station at Gessoriacum, now Boulogne, on the northern coast of France. He had chased and scattered the German pirates who had so long ravaged the northern seas, had been named by the Emperor admiral of the north, and was the especial pride, as he was the dashing young leader, of the Roman sailors along the English Channel and the German shores.

The light barge of the princess approached the heavier boat of the king, her father. At her signal the oarsmen drew up alongside, and, scarce waiting for either boat to more than slacken speed, the nimble-footed girl sprang lightly to the deck of her father's galley. Then bidding the obedient Cleon take her own barge back to the palace, she hurried at once, and without question, like the petted only child she was, into the high-raised cabin at the stern, where beneath the Roman standards sat her father the king.

Helena entered the apartment at a most exciting moment. For there, facing her portly old father, whose clouded face bespoke his troubled mind, stood her trimly-built young cousin Carausius the admiral, bronzed with his long exposure to the sea-blasts, a handsome young viking, and, in the eyes of the hero-loving Helen, very much of a hero because of his acknowledged daring and his valorous deeds.

Neither man seemed to have noticed the sudden entrance of the girl, so deep were they in talk.

同类推荐
  • 龙舒增广净土文

    龙舒增广净土文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 四分比丘戒本疏

    四分比丘戒本疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金疮跌打接骨药性秘书

    金疮跌打接骨药性秘书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛语法门经

    佛语法门经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 老子解畧

    老子解畧

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 文公

    文公

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 东瀛纪事

    东瀛纪事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 邪妃酷霸狂帅拽

    邪妃酷霸狂帅拽

    <青箫出品,必是精品>对于顾家大小姐,众人谈之色变!三寸不烂之舌伶牙俐齿足足可以把黑的说成白的,死的说成活的!她甚至能够在仵作解剖尸体的时候吃上一碗面条!某某不愿透露名字的公子说:“顾秋水这个人,不是她配不上我,是我配不上她啊!”是谁说的唯女子与小人难养也?明明是唯女子与小人还有顾秋水难养也!什么?你说顾秋水也是个女人?全城的公子哥忍不住举起双手表示这个论题是可以被推翻的。【此故事纯属虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 尼采的人生哲学

    尼采的人生哲学

    本书囊括了尼采思想的精髓,每篇文章都是从我们周围世界的真实事件出发,从而得出哲学观点如何关照现实世界的精妙体现。阅读本书将会彻底颠覆你对哲学的偏见。字里行间,你会感到泉水跃动成洪流奔驰着,时而热情跳跃,时而变幻无穷,既不会感觉到哲学的沉闷无聊,还会发现,只要留心观察,生活中俯拾皆是可供玩味的哲理。
  • 重生之庶女修仙路

    重生之庶女修仙路

    人要倒霉喝凉水都塞牙..不就出车祸了吗!怎么就死了?庆幸的是自己重生了^_^又衰到极点重生到一个刚出生的婴儿身上还是刚死了娘的#无意中发现了修真之路\仙路茫茫意志力要强狠毒嫡母算计我让我嫁老头\姑奶奶我不''发威''当我是病猫……哼哼
  • A New England Girlhood

    A New England Girlhood

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 调实居士证源录

    调实居士证源录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 神祇

    神祇

    天蛮大陆,武道昌盛。少年苏逸携万妖逆袭崛起,临驾一个个万年世家大族之上,迎娶白富美,走上异世巅峰,朝向太古神祇之位!
  • 那天那地

    那天那地

    大道明,三千道出!天地有灵不为道万物生,命运现,因果来天说:“命中无常,因果是债”地说“心比天高,命比纸薄”万物皆以为这规则是天地定之,孰不知这是“命中注定,因果报应”罢了认不认命,还不还债,皆由万物决天地在听,在看,偶尔会管(本文包括各类神话和多种题材,至于内容对错、真假、顺序之类你们辩吧,这些对于我来说很麻烦的)
  • 重生八六俏甜妻

    重生八六俏甜妻

    甜言蜜语版:某人说,他家媳妇在上,媳妇说的一切都是对的,错的也是对的,他媳妇就是最好的!正紧版:重获新生,醒转在八六,自己把自己给卖了,林宁咬牙,自己挖的坑,后果必须自己承担下去啊!