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AUTHOR OF THE HISTORY OF CHARLEMAGNE,' LIFE OF EDWARD THE

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General Library System

University of Wisconsin - Madison
A

728 State

Madison, WI 53706-1494

U.S.A

LONDON:

BLATCH AND LAMPERT PRINTERS, GROVE PLACE, BROMPTON.

F4527
J27

#5403636

HISTORY OF THE LIFE

OF

RICHARD COEUR-DE-LION.

WHEN Prince Richard, afterwards King of Eng-
land, first entered upon the busy scene of life, by
flying from the court of his father, and taking part
with two of his brothers in their rebellion, he had
not yet completed his sixteenth year; but was even
then robust, powerful, and active in body, and
haughty, bold, and decided in character. The
fierceness, as well as the strength and courage of
the lion, showed itself at a very early age; though
he pursued with all the eagerness of his nature
those softer arts which were calculated to mitigate
his harsher qualities. In regard to his early edu-
cation, we have but few minute particulars.
was undoubtedly such as was then usually given

VOL. II.

B

It

to the sons of nobles and princes; but, in all probability, his father Henry, who was well versed in polite literature himself, took pains to afford his sons as complete a knowledge of letters as was to be obtained in those days. We know, indeed, that Richard, though inferior to his father in learning, was superior, in that respect, to most of the princes of his time; his fondness for music and skill in poetry, are attested by contemporaries; and those two arts formed the relaxation of his idle hours, and his consolation in sorrow and captivity.

In all the sports and exercises of chivalry, Richard was preeminent; and to obtain the degree of proficiency which he had acquired, not only great dexterity and activity of body was necessary, but long and early training. The cultivation of those corporeal powers which were required to obtain great military renown in those days, was indeed a natural consequence of the feudal system; and the chivalrous education which every baron bestowed upon his son in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, forms so curious and characteristic a point in the history of that age, that I must dwell upon it here, in order to show, in some degree, the discipline which Richard had already gone through before he quitted the court of his father.

Till the young noble had entered the seventh year of his age, he was, in almost all cases, left to the care and government of women. The nurse, the mother, and her attendants taught, during that

period, all that the infant mind was capable of receiving, gave the first notions of religion, and first bade the young heart aspire to honour and renown. At seven years of age, from those tender hands which had smoothed the pillow of his infancy, the boy was taken and consigned to the rougher charge of men, who immediately began to prepare him for the life of danger, toil, and strife that he was to undergo. His first station was usually as page; and I cannot discover that there was any difference in the treatment and occupations of the sons of the highest noblemen while in this capacity, and that of the youths of inferior rank, who were admitted to aid in the task. In king's courts, indeed, the former were sometimes styled "children of honour;" but still the page served his master at table, gave him the wine-cup, held the basin in which he washed before dinner, and rendered to him a thousand other offices of the same kind. The services of the page, however, were amply repaid by the instruction he received, not only in military exercises, but in demeanour, in conduct, and in religion. We find from Joinville, who was himself educated by St. Louis, that the great and good king to whom he attached himself through life, took infinite pleasure in exercising the minds of the young men at his court, in making them discuss various questions thrown out at random, in aiding their judgment, and directing their views aright. Indeed, nothing can give us a better or a more pleasing view of the

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