Dickens, Charles – A Child’s History of England

rioters; the other, Sir Simon Burley, an honourable knight, who had

been the dear friend of the Black Prince, and the governor and

guardian of the King. For this gentleman’s life the good Queen

even begged of Gloucester on her knees; but Gloucester (with or

without reason) feared and hated him, and replied, that if she

valued her husband’s crown, she had better beg no more. All this

was done under what was called by some the wonderful – and by

others, with better reason, the merciless – Parliament.

But Gloucester’s power was not to last for ever. He held it for

only a year longer; in which year the famous battle of Otterbourne,

sung in the old ballad of Chevy Chase, was fought. When the year

was out, the King, turning suddenly to Gloucester, in the midst of

a great council said, ‘Uncle, how old am I?’ ‘Your highness,’

returned the Duke, ‘is in your twenty-second year.’ ‘Am I so

much?’ said the King; ‘then I will manage my own affairs! I am

much obliged to you, my good lords, for your past services, but I

need them no more.’ He followed this up, by appointing a new

Chancellor and a new Treasurer, and announced to the people that he

had resumed the Government. He held it for eight years without

opposition. Through all that time, he kept his determination to

revenge himself some day upon his uncle Gloucester, in his own

breast.

At last the good Queen died, and then the King, desiring to take a

second wife, proposed to his council that he should marry Isabella,

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Dickens, Charles – A Child’s History of England

of France, the daughter of Charles the Sixth: who, the French

courtiers said (as the English courtiers had said of Richard), was

a marvel of beauty and wit, and quite a phenomenon – of seven years

old. The council were divided about this marriage, but it took

place. It secured peace between England and France for a quarter

of a century; but it was strongly opposed to the prejudices of the

English people. The Duke of Gloucester, who was anxious to take

the occasion of making himself popular, declaimed against it

loudly, and this at length decided the King to execute the

vengeance he had been nursing so long.

He went with a gay company to the Duke of Gloucester’s house,

Pleshey Castle, in Essex, where the Duke, suspecting nothing, came

out into the court-yard to receive his royal visitor. While the

King conversed in a friendly manner with the Duchess, the Duke was

quietly seized, hurried away, shipped for Calais, and lodged in the

castle there. His friends, the Earls of Arundel and Warwick, were

taken in the same treacherous manner, and confined to their

castles. A few days after, at Nottingham, they were impeached of

high treason. The Earl of Arundel was condemned and beheaded, and

the Earl of Warwick was banished. Then, a writ was sent by a

messenger to the Governor of Calais, requiring him to send the Duke

of Gloucester over to be tried. In three days he returned an

answer that he could not do that, because the Duke of Gloucester

had died in prison. The Duke was declared a traitor, his property

was confiscated to the King, a real or pretended confession he had

made in prison to one of the Justices of the Common Pleas was

produced against him, and there was an end of the matter. How the

unfortunate duke died, very few cared to know. Whether he really

died naturally; whether he killed himself; whether, by the King’s

order, he was strangled, or smothered between two beds (as a

serving-man of the Governor’s named Hall, did afterwards declare),

cannot be discovered. There is not much doubt that he was killed,

somehow or other, by his nephew’s orders. Among the most active

nobles in these proceedings were the King’s cousin, Henry

Bolingbroke, whom the King had made Duke of Hereford to smooth down

the old family quarrels, and some others: who had in the familyplotting

times done just such acts themselves as they now condemned

in the duke. They seem to have been a corrupt set of men; but such

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