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    Chapter 22

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    I give this heavy weight from off my head,
    And this unwieldy sceptre from my hand;
    With mine own tears I wash away my balm,
    With mine own hand I give away my crown,
    With mine own tongue deny my sacred state,
    With mine own breath release all duteous oaths.
    RICHARD II.

    Lord Ruthven had the look and bearing which became a soldier and a
    statesman, and the martial cast of his form and features procured him
    the popular epithet of Greysteil, by which he was distinguished by his
    intimates, after the hero of a metrical romance then generally known.
    His dress, which was a buff-coat embroidered, had a half-military
    character, but exhibited nothing of the sordid negligence which
    distinguished that of Lindesay. But the son of an ill-fated sire, and
    the father of a yet more unfortunate family, bore in his look that
    cast of inauspicious melancholy, by which the physiognomists of that
    time pretended to distinguish those who were predestined to a violent
    and unhappy death.

    The terror which the presence of this nobleman impressed on the
    Queen's mind, arose from the active share he had borne in the
    slaughter of David Rizzio; his father having presided at the
    perpetration of that abominable crime, although so weak from long and
    wasting illness, that he could not endure the weight of his armour,
    having arisen from a sick-bed to commit a murder in the presence of
    his Sovereign. On that occasion his son also had attended and taken an
    active part. It was little to be wondered at, that the Queen,
    considering her condition when such a deed of horror was acted in her
    presence, should retain an instinctive terror for the principal actors
    in the murder. She returned, however, with grace the salutation of
    Lord Ruthven, and extended her hand to George Douglas, who kneeled,
    and kissed it with respect; the first mark of a subject's homage which
    Roland Graeme had seen any of them render to the captive Sovereign.
    She returned his greeting in silence, and there was a brief pause,
    during which the steward of the castle, a man of a sad brow and a
    severe eye, placed, under George Douglas's directions, a table and
    writing materials; and the page, obedient to his mistress's dumb

    signal, advanced a large chair to the side on which the Queen stood,
    the table thus forming a sort of bar which divided the Queen and her
    personal followers from her unwelcome visitors. The steward then
    withdrew after a low reverence. When he had closed the door behind
    him, the Queen broke silence--"With your favour, my lords, I will
    sit--my walks are not indeed extensive enough at present to fatigue me
    greatly, yet I find repose something more necessary than usual."

    She sat down accordingly, and, shading her cheek with
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