最新网址:www.llskw.org
Ah. Here we are. Now Fabyan, writing for Henry VII, says that the boy was captured and brought before Edward IV, was struck in the face by Edward with his gauntlet and immediately slain by the King's servants. Nice? But Polydore Virgil goes one better. He says that the murder was done in person by George, Duke of Clarence, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, and William, Lord Hastings. Hall adds Dorset to the murderers. But that didn't satisfy Holinshed: Holinshed reports that it was Richard Duke of Gloucester who struck the first blow. How do you like that? Best quality Tony pandy, isn't it.'
'Pure Tonypandy. A dramatic story with not a word of truth in it. If you can bear to listen to a few sentences of the sainted More, I'll give you another sample of how history is made.'
'The sainted More makes me sick at the stomach but I'll listen.'
Grant looked for the paragraph he wanted, and read:
Some wise men also ween that his drift [that is, Richard's drift] covertly conveyed, lacked not in helping forth his brother Clarence to his death; which he resisted openly, howbeit somewhat, as men deemed, more faintly than he that were heartily minded to his weal. And they who deem thus think that he, long time in King Edward's life, forethought to be King in case that the King his brother (whose life he looked that evil diet should shorten) should happen to decease (as indeed he did) while his children were young. And they deem that for this intent he was glad of his brother Clarence's death, whose life must needs have hindered him so intending whether the same Clarence had kept true to his nephew the young King or enterprised to be King himself. But of all this point there is no certainty; and whose divineth upon conjectures may as well shoot too far as too short.
'The mean, burbling, insinuating old bastard,' said Carradine sweetly.
'Were you clever enough to pick out the one positive statement in all that speculation?'
'Oh, yes.'
'You spotted it? That was smart of you. I had to read it three times before I got the one unqualified fact.'
'That Richard protested openly against his brother George being put to death.'
'Yes.'
'Of course, with all that "men say" stuff,' Carradine observed, 'the impression that is left is just the opposite. I told you, I wouldn't have the sainted More as a present.'
'I think we ought to remember that it is John Morton's account and not the sainted More's.'
'The sainted More sounds better. Besides, he liked the thing well enough to be copying it out.'
Grant, the one-time soldier, lay thinking of the expert handling of that very sticky situation at Northampton.
'It was neat of him to mop up Rivers' two thousand without any open clash.'
'I expect they preferred the King's brother to the Queen's brother, if they were faced with it.'
'Yes. And of course a fighting man has a better chance with troops than a man who writes books.'
'Did Rivers write books?'
'He wrote the first book printed in England. Very cultured, he was.'
'Huh. It doesn't seem to have taught him not to try conclusions with a man who was a brigadier at eighteen and a general before he was twenty-five. That's one thing that has surprised me, you know.'
'Richard's qualities as a soldier?'
'No, his youth. I'd always thought of him as a middle-aged grouch. He was only thirty-two when he was killed at Bosworth.'
'Tell me: when Richard took over the boy's guardian ship, at Stony Stratford, did he make a clean sweep of the Ludlow crowd?
请记住本书首发域名:www.llskw.org。来奇网电子书手机版阅读网址:m.llskw.org