CHARLEMAGNE had not forgotten the offence of Geoffroy,
the King of Denmark, in withholding homage, and now
prepared to enforce submission. But at this crisis he was
waited upon by an embassy from Geoffroy, acknowledging his
fault, and craving assistance against an army of invaders
who had attacked his states with a force which he was
unable to repel. The soul of Charlemagne was too great to
be implacable, and he took this opportunity to test that
of Ogier, who had felt acutely the unkindness of his
father, in leaving him, without regard or notice, fifteen
years in captivity. Charles asked Ogier whether, in spite
of his father's neglect, he was disposed to lead an army
to his assistance. He replied, "A son can never be
excused from helping his father by any cause short of
death." Charlemagne placed an army of a thousand
knights under the command of Ogier, and great numbers more
volunteered to march under so distinguished a leader. He
flew to the succor of his father, repelled the invaders,
and drove them in confusion to their vessels. Ogier then
hastened to the capital, but as he drew near the city he
heard all the bells sounding a knell. He soon learned the
cause; it was the obsequies of Geoffroy, the King. Ogier
felt keenly the grief of not having been permitted to
embrace his father once more, and to learn his latest
commands; but he found that his father had declared him
heir to his throne. He hastened to the church where the
body lay; he knelt and bathed the lifeless form with his
tears. At that moment a celestial light beamed all around,
and a voice as of an angel said, "Ogier, leave thy
crown to Guyon, thy brother, and bear no other title than
that of 'The Dane.' Thy destiny is glorious; and other
kingdoms are reserved for thee." Ogier obeyed the
divine behest. He saluted his stepmother respectfully,
and, embracing his brother, told him that he was content
with his lot in being reckoned among the paladins of
Charlemagne, and resigned all claims to the crown of
Denmark.
Ogier returned covered with glory to the court of
Charlemagne, and the Emperor, touched with this proof of
his attachment, loaded him with caresses, and treated him
almost as an equal.
We pass in silence the adventures of Ogier for several
ensuing years, in which the fairy-gifts of his infancy
showed their force in making him successful in all
enterprises, both of love and war. He married the charming
Belicene, and became the father of young Baldwin, a youth
who seemed to inherit in full measure the strength and
courage of his father and the beauty of his mother. When
the lad was old enough to be separated from his mother,
Ogier took him to court and presented him to Charlemagne,
who embraced him, and took him into his service. It seemed
to Duke Namo, and all the elder knights, as if they saw in
him Ogier himself, as he was when a youth; and this
resemblance won for the lad their kind regards. Even
Charlot at first seemed to be fond of him, though after a
while the resemblance to Ogier which he noticed had the
effect to excite his hatred.
Baldwin was attentive to Charlot, and lost no occasion
to be serviceable. The Prince loved to play chess, and
Baldwin, who played well, often made a party with him.
One day Charlot was nettled at losing two pieces in
succession; he thought he could, by taking a piece from
Baldwin, get some amends for his loss; but Baldwin, seeing
him fall into a trap which he had set for him, could not
help a slight laugh, as he said, "Check-mate."
Charlot rose in a fury, seized the rich and heavy
chess-board, and dashed it with all his strength on the
head of Baldwin, who fell, and died where he fell.
Frightened at his own crime, and fearing the vengeance
of the terrible Ogier, Charlot concealed himself in the
interior of the palace. A young companion of Baldwin
hastened and informed Ogier of the event. He ran to the
chamber, and beheld the body of his child bathed in blood,
and it could not be concealed from him that Charlot gave
the blow. Transported with rage, Ogier sought Charlot
through the palace, and Charlot, feeling safe nowhere
else, took refuge in the hall of Charlemagne, where he
seated himself at table with Duke Namo and Salomon, Duke
of Brittany. Ogier, with sword drawn, followed him to the
very table of the Emperor. When a cupbearer attempted to
bar his way, he struck the cup from his hand and dashed
the contents in the Emperor's face. Charles rose in a
passion, seized a knife, and would have plunged it into
his breast, had not Salomon and another baron thrown
themselves between, while Namo, who retained his ancient
influence over Ogier, drew him out of the room. Foreseeing
the consequences of this violence, pitying Ogier, and in
his heart excusing him, Namo hurried him away before the
guards of the palace could arrest him, made him mount his
horse, and leave Paris.
Charlemagne called together his peers, and made them
take an oath to do all in their power to arrest Ogier, and
bring him to condign punishment. Ogier on his part sent
messages to the Emperor, offering to give himself up on
condition that Charlot should be punished for his
atrocious crime. The Emperor would listen to no
conditions, and went in pursuit of Ogier at the head of a
large body of soldiers. Ogier, on the other hand, was
warmly supported by many knights, who pledged themselves
in his defence. The contest raged long, with no decisive
results. Ogier more than once had the Emperor in his
power, but declined to avail himself of his advantage, and
released him without conditions. He even implored pardon
for himself, but demanded at the same time the punishment
of Charlot. But Charlemagne was too blindly fond of his
unworthy son to subject him to punishment for the sake of
conciliating one who had been so deeply injured.
At length, distressed at the blood which his friends
had lost in his cause, Ogier dismissed his little army,
and, slipping away from those who wished to attend him,
took his course to rejoin the Duke Guyon, his brother. On
his way, having reached the forest of Ardennes, weary with
long travel, the freshness of a retired valley tempted him
to lie down to take some repose. He unsaddled Beiffror,
relieved himself of his helmet, lay down on the turf,
rested his head on his shield, and slept.
It so happened that Turpin, who occasionally recalled
to mind that he was Archbishop of Rheims, was at that time
in the vicinity, making a pastoral visit to the churches
under his jurisdiction. But his dignity of peer of France,
and his martial spirit, which caused him to be reckoned
among the "preux chevaliers" of his time,
forbade him to travel without as large a retinue of
knights as he had of clergymen. One of these was thirsty,
and knowing the fountain on the borders of which Ogier was
reposing, he rode to it, and was struck by the sight of a
knight stretched on the ground. He hastened back, and let
the Archbishop know, who approached the fountain, and
recognized Ogier.
The first impulse of the good and generous Turpin was
to save his friend, for whom he felt the warmest
attachment; but his archdeacons and knights, who also
recognized Ogier, reminded the Archbishop of the oath
which the Emperor had exacted of them all. Turpin could
not be false to his oath; but it was not without a groan
that he permitted his followers to bind the sleeping
knight. The Archbishop's attendants secured the horse and
arms of Ogier, and conducted their prisoner to the Emperor
at Soissons.
The Emperor had become so much embittered by Ogier's
obstinate resistance, added to his original fault, that he
was disposed to order him to instant death. But Turpin,
seconded by the good Dukes Namo and Salomon, prayed so
hard for him, that Charlemagne consented to remit a
violent death, but sentenced him to close imprisonment,
under the charge of the Archbishop, strictly limiting his
food to one quarter of a loaf of bread per day, with one
piece of meat, and a quarter of a cup of wine. In this way
he hoped quickly to put an end to his life without
bringing on himself the hostility of the King of Denmark,
and other powerful friends of Ogier. He exacted a new oath
of Turpin to obey his orders strictly.
The good Archbishop loved Ogier too well not to cast
about for some means of saving his life, which he foresaw
he would soon lose if subjected to such scanty fare, for
Ogier was seven feet tall, and had an appetite in
proportion. Turpin remembered, moreover, that Ogier was a
true son of the Church, always zealous to propagate the
faith and subdue unbelievers; so he felt justified in
practising on this occasion what in later times has been
entitled "mental reservation," without swerving
from the letter of the oath which he had taken. This is
the method he hit upon.
Every morning he had his prisoner supplied with a
quarter of a loaf of bread, made of two bushels of flour;
to this he added a quarter of a sheep or a fat calf, and
he had a cup made which held forty pints of wine, and
allowed Ogier a quarter of it daily.
Ogier's imprisonment lasted long. Charlemagne was
astonished to hear, from time to time, that he still held
out; and when he inquired more particularly of Turpin, the
good Archbishop, relying on his own understanding of the
words, did not hesitate to affirm positively that he
allowed his prisoner no more than the permitted ration.
We forgot to say that, when Ogier was led prisoner to
Soissons, the Abbot of Saint Faron, observing the fine
horse Beiffror, and not having at the time any other favor
to ask of Charlemagne, begged the Emperor to give him the
horse, and had him taken to his abbey. He was impatient to
try his new acquisition, and, when he had arrived in his
litter at the foot of the mountain where the horse had
been brought to meet him, mounted him and rode onward. The
horse, accustomed to bear the enormous weight of Ogier in
his armor, when he perceived nothing on his back but the
light weight of the Abbot, whose long robes fluttered
against his sides, ran away, making prodigious leaps over
the steep acclivities of the mountain, till he reached the
convent of Jouaire, where, in sight of the Abbess and her
nuns, he threw the Abbot, already half dead with fright,
to the ground. The Abbot, bruised and mortified, revenged
himself on poor Beiffror, whom he condemned, in his wrath,
to be given to the workmen to drag stones for a chapel
that was building near the abbey. Thus, ill-fed,
hard-worked, and often beaten, the noble horse Beiffror
passed the time while his master's imprisonment lasted.
That imprisonment would have been as long as his life
if it had not been for some important events which forced
the Emperor to set Ogier at liberty.
The Emperor learned at the same time, that Carahue,
King of Mauritania, was assembling an army to come and
demand the liberation of Ogier; that Guyon, King of
Denmark, was prepared to second the enterprise with all
his forces; and, worse than all, that the Saracens, under
Bruhier, Sultan of Arabia, had landed in Gascony, taken
Bordeaux, and were marching with all speed for Paris.
Charlemagne now felt how necessary the aid of Ogier was
to him. But, in spite of the representations of Turpin,
Namo, and Salomon, he could not bring himself to consent
to surrender Charlot to such punishment as Ogier should
see fit to impose. Besides, he believed that Ogier was
without strength and vigor, weakened by imprisonment and
long abstinence.
At this crisis he received a message from Bruhier,
proposing to put the issue upon the result of a combat
between himself and the Emperor or his champion;
promising, if defeated, to withdraw his army. Charlemagne
would willingly have accepted the challenge; but his
counsellors all opposed it. The herald was therefore told
that the Emperor would take time to consider his
proposition, and give his answer the next day.
It was during this interval that the three Dukes
succeeded in prevailing upon Charlemagne to pardon Ogier,
and to send for him to combat the puissant enemy who now
defied him; but it was no easy task to persuade Ogier. The
idea of his long imprisonment and the recollection of his
son, bleeding and dying in his arms by the blow of the
ferocious Charlot, made him long resist the urgency of his
friends. Though glory called him to encounter Bruhier, and
the safety of Christendom demanded the destruction of this
proud enemy of the faith, Ogier only yielded at last on
condition that Charlot should be delivered into his hands
to be dealt with as he should see fit.
The terms were hard, but the danger was pressing, and
Charlemagne, with a returning sense of justice, and a
strong confidence in the generous though passionate soul
of Ogier, at last consented to them.
Ogier was led into the presence of Charlemagne by the
three peers. The Emperor, faithful to his word, had caused
Charlot to be brought into the hall where the high barons
were assembled, his hands tied, and his head uncovered.
When the Emperor saw Ogier approach, he took Charlot by
the arm, led him towards Ogier, and said these words:
"I surrender the criminal; do with him as you think
fit." Ogier, without replying, seized Charlot by the
hair, forced him on his knees, and lifted with the other
hand his irresistible sword. Charlemagne, who expected to
see the head of his son rolling at his feet, shut his eyes
and uttered a cry of horror.
Ogier had done enough. The next moment he raised
Charlot, cut his bonds, kissed him on the mouth, and
hastened to throw himself at the feet of the Emperor.
Nothing can exceed the surprise and joy of Charlemagne
at seeing his son unharmed and Ogier kneeling at his feet.
He folded him in his arms, bathed him with tears, and
exclaimed to his barons, "I feel at this moment that
Ogier is greater than I." As for Charlot, his base
soul felt nothing but the joy of having escaped death; he
remained such as he had been, and it was not till some
years afterwards he received the punishment he deserved,
from the hands of Huon of Bordeaux, as we have seen in a
former chapter.