From a window in the palace the sad
melancholy King watched them. Behind him stood
his brother, Don Pedro of Aragon, whom he hated, and
his confessor, the Grand Inquisitor of Granada, sat
by his side. Sadder even than usual was the
King, for as he looked at the Infanta bowing with
childish gravity to the assembling counters, or laughing
behind her fan at the grim Duchess of Albuquerque
who always accompanied her, he thought of the young
Queen, her mother, who but a short time before so
it seemed to him had come from the gay
country of France, and had withered away in the sombre
splendour of the Spanish court, dying just six months
after the birth of her child, and before she had seen
the almonds blossom twice in the orchard, or plucked
the second year’s fruit from the old gnarled
fig-tree that stood in the centre of the now grass-grown
courtyard. So great had been his love for her
that he had not suffered even the grave to hide her
from him. She had been embalmed by a Moorish
physician, who in return for this service had been
granted his life, which for heresy and suspicion of
magical practices had been already forfeited, men said,
to the Holy Office, and her body was still lying on
its tapestried bier in the black marble chapel of
the Palace, just as the monks had borne her in on
that windy March day nearly twelve years before.
Once every month the King, wrapped in a dark cloak
and with a muffled lantern in his hand, went in and
knelt by her side calling out, ‘Mi reina!
Mi reina!’ and sometimes breaking through
the formal etiquette that in Spain governs every separate
action of life, and sets limits even to the sorrow
of a King, he would clutch at the pale jewelled hands
in a wild agony of grief, and try to wake by his mad
kisses the cold painted face.
To-day he seemed to see her again,
as he had seen her first at the Castle of Fontainebleau,
when he was but fifteen years of age, and she still
younger. They had been formally betrothed on
that occasion by the Papal Nuncio in the presence
of the French King and all the Court, and he had returned
to the Escurial bearing with him a little ringlet of
yellow hair, and the memory of two childish lips bending
down to kiss his hand as he stepped into his carriage.
Later on had followed the marriage, hastily performed
at Burgos, a small town on the frontier between the
two countries, and the grand public entry into Madrid
with the customary celebration of high mass at the
Church of La Atocha, and a more than usually
solemn auto-da-fe, in which nearly three hundred
heretics, amongst whom were many Englishmen, had been
delivered over to the secular arm to be burned.
Certainly he had loved her madly,
and to the ruin, many thought, of his country, then
at war with England for the possession of the empire
of the New World. He had hardly ever permitted
her to be out of his sight; for her, he had forgotten,
or seemed to have forgotten, all grave affairs of
State; and, with that terrible blindness that passion
brings upon its servants, he had failed to notice
that the elaborate ceremonies by which he sought to
please her did but aggravate the strange malady from
which she suffered. When she died he was, for
a time, like one bereft of reason. Indeed, there
is no doubt but that he would have formally abdicated
and retired to the great Trappist monastery at Granada,
of which he was already titular Prior, had he not
been afraid to leave the little Infanta at the mercy
of his brother, whose cruelty, even in Spain, was
notorious, and who was suspected by many of having
caused the Queen’s death by means of a pair
of poisoned gloves that he had presented to her on
the occasion of her visiting his castle in Aragon.
Even after the expiration of the three years of public
mourning that he had ordained throughout his whole
dominions by royal edict, he would never suffer his
ministers to speak about any new alliance, and when
the Emperor himself sent to him, and offered him the
hand of the lovely Archduchess of Bohemia, his niece,
in marriage, he bade the ambassadors tell their master
that the King of Spain was already wedded to Sorrow,
and that though she was but a barren bride he loved
her better than Beauty; an answer that cost his crown
the rich provinces of the Netherlands, which soon
after, at the Emperor’s instigation, revolted
against him under the leadership of some fanatics
of the Reformed Church. The Birthday
of the Infranta.