The son of Henry III. returned from the Holy Land to be one of
our noblest, best, and wisest kings. Edward I.—called
Longshanks in a kind of joke, because he was the tallest man in the
Court—was very grand-looking and handsome; and could leap,
run, ride, and fight in his heavy armor better than anyone else. He
was brave, just, and affectionate; and his sweet wife, Eleanor of
Castille, was warmly loved by him and all the nation. He built as
many churches and was as charitable as his father, but he was much
more careful to make only good men bishops, and he allowed no
wasting or idling. He faithfully obeyed Magna Carta, and made
everyone else obey the law—indeed many good laws and customs
have begun from this time. Order was the great thing he cared for,
and under him the English grew prosperous and happy, when nobody
was allowed to rob them.
The Welsh were, however, terrible robbers. You remember that
they are the remains of the old Britons, who used to have all
Britain. They had never left off thinking that they had a right to
it, and coming down out of their mountains to burn the houses and
steal the cattle of the Saxons, as they still called the English.
Edward tried to make friends with their princes—Llewellyn and
David—and to make them keep their people in order. He gave
David lands in England, and let Llewellyn marry his cousin, Eleanor
de Montfort. But they broke their promises shamefully, and did such
savage things to the English on their borders that he was forced to
put a stop to it, and went to war. David was made prisoner, and put
to death as a traitor; and Llewellyn was met by some soldiers near
the bridge of Builth and killed, without their knowing who he was.
Edward had, in the meantime, conquered most of the country; and he
told the Welsh chiefs that, if they would come and meet him at
Caernarvon Castle, he would give them a prince who had been born in
their country—had never spoken a word of any language but
theirs. They all came, and the king came down to them with his own
little baby son in his arms, who had lately been born in Caernarvon
Castle, and, of course, had never spoken any language at all. The
Welsh were obliged to accept him; and he had a Welsh nurse, that
the first words he spoke might be Welsh. They thought he would have
been altogether theirs, as he then had an elder brother; but in a
year or two the oldest boy died; and, ever since that time, the
eldest son of the King of England has always been Prince of
Wales.
There was a plan for the little Prince Edward of Caernarvon
being married to a little girl, who was grand-daughter to the King
of Scotland, and would be Queen of Scotland herself—and this
would have led to the whole island being under one king—but,
unfortunately, the little maiden died. It was so hard to decide who
ought to reign, out of all her cousins, that they asked king Edward
to choose among them— since everyone knew that a great piece
of Scotland belonged to him as over-lord, just as his own dukedom
of Aquitaine belonged to the King of France over him; and the Kings
of Scotland always used to pay homage to those of England for
it.
Edward chose John Balliol, the one who had the best right; but
he made him understand that, as overlord, he meant to see that as
good order was kept in Scotland as in England. Now, the English
kings had never meddled with Scottish affairs before, and the Scots
were furious at finding that he did so. They said it was insulting
them and their king; and poor Balliol did not know what to do among
them, but let them defy Edward in his name. This brought Edward and
his army to Scotland. The strong places were taken and filled with
English soldiers, and Balliol was made prisoner, adjudged to have
rebelled against his lord and forfeited his kingdom, and was sent
away to France.
Edward thought it would be much better for the whole country to
join Scotland to England, and rule it himself. And so, no doubt, it
would have been; but many Scots were not willing,—and in
spite of all the care he could take, the soldiers who guarded his
castles often behaved shamefully to the people round them. One
gentleman, named William Wallace, whose home had been broken up by
some soldiers, fled to the woods and hills, and drew so many Scots
round him that he had quite an army. There was a great fight at the
Bridge of Stirling; the English governors were beaten, and Wallace
led his men over the border into Northumberland, where they
plundered and burnt wherever they went, in revenge for what had
been done in Scotland.
Edward gathered his forces and came to Scotland. The army that
Wallace had drawn together could not stand before him, but was
defeated at Falkirk, and Wallace had to take to the woods. Edward
promised pardon to all who would submit—and almost all did;
but Wallace still lurked in the hills, till one of his own
countrymen betrayed him to the English, when he was sent to London,
and put to death.
All seemed quieted, and English garrisons—that is,
guarding soldiers —were in all the Scottish towns and
castles, when, suddenly, Robert Bruce, one of the half English,
half Scottish nobles between whom Edward had judged, ran away from
the English court, with his horse's shoes put on backwards. The
next thing that was heard of him was, that he had quarreled with
one of his cousins in the church at Dumfries, and stabbed him to
the heart, and then had gone to Scone and had been crowned King of
Scotland.
Edward was bitterly angry now. He sent on an army to deal
unsparingly with the rising, and set out to follow with his son,
now grown to man's estate. Crueller things than he had ever allowed
before were done to the places where Robert Bruce had been
acknowledged as king, and his friends were hung as traitors
wherever they were found; but Bruce himself could not be caught. He
was living a wild life among the lakes and hills; and Edward, who
was an old man now, had been taken so ill at Carlisle, that he
could not come on to keep his own strict rule among his men. All
the winter he lay sick there; and in the spring he heard that
Bruce, whom he thought quite crushed, had suddenly burst upon the
English, defeated them, and was gathering strength every day.
Edward put on his armor and set out for Scotland; but at
Burgh-on-the-Sands his illness came on again, and he died there at
seventy years old.
He was buried in Westminster Abbey, under a great block of
stone, and the inscription on it only says, "Edward I.,
1308—The Hammer of the Scots—Keep Treaties." His good
wife, Queen Eleanor, had died many years before him, and was also
buried at Westminster. All the way from Grantham, in
Lincolnshire—where she died—to London, Edward set up a
beautiful stone cross wherever her body rested for the night—
fifteen of them—but only three are left now.
|