H J H T Q F MndH Sweeifimrl I 9 Following a Silken jj Thread She Had Pinned to the Fair Charmer's Skirt, Her IE Majesty Went Through H the Blinding Secret jfl Passages That Hid the Lovers' Retreat, and 'i Plunged a Dagger Into 9 Rosamund's Heart w- ECENT discoveries have caused renew ed interest in what Xm JU r is perhaps the most fascinating story in all English history Ww the story of "King Henry 11 and Fair Rosamund f The secret love of the great earlv English King for one who was called the moFt beautiful woman in England and his in- Igenious but unsuccessful efforts to conc-al his intrigue from a proud, rowerful and also beautiful Queen have excited the Imagination of men for many centuries ever since the twelfth century, when the events of this obscure story occurred It Is established beyond question that King Henry loved Rosamund Clifford, the fair daughter of Walter Lord Clifford, not wisely but too well What is doubtful is that part of the story which asserts that he kept his love in a strangely hidden house and that the Jealous Queen Eleanor pursued her there and put her to death Now there has just been discovered on the Duke of Marl borough's estate, Blenheim Palace, at Woodstock, the buried re mains of an ancient stone house, which is thought to have been that occupied by the King's love 'Rosamund's Bower," es Lhfl poets have called it. 1 The palace, which King Henry occupied when he had hi love affair with Rosamund, was at Woodstock. The estate was a royal manor and was many centuries later given by Queen Anne 'i'j to tlie flrst Duke of Marlborough after his R great victories. King Heniy's palace disappeared cen turies ago,-and of "Rosamund's Bower" j there has never been any definite trnre . An old houso in the village of Woods lock, firlffl not a stone's throw from Blenheim Palace Park, has been pointed to by villager-- ao HaflB occupying the original site of "Rosa- n'ijfflm mund's Bower," but without any good his- ;n?SnE torlcal proof. Another old house, within the grounds of the palace, has been less j'tjGS frequently described as the original but With 'the same lack of good evidence. The newly discovered ruins on the Blen heim estate are regarded by antiquarians ;S2t? as having a better claim to represent j81i "Rosamund's Bower" than either of the ;J other two sites. The ruins are situated in :'3$tfi a tb'ck wood in a remote, somewhat neg lected, part of the estate. The wood was recently cleared away to provide for the in Jfeffn creased cultivation of foodstuffs. rW5 Then came another interesting di6COV- julPHJ ery. It was observed that at a distance of IsVS a hundred yards from the ruins there were a number of very ancient yew trees planted In a peculiar zig-zag line The rof course, had always been a familiar sight, but now it appeared probable that they were a vestige of "the maze." which, according to legend, King Henry built around his sweetheart's house. In response to the renewed Interest in Rosamund Clifford, one of the foremost English artists. F. Cadogan Cowper. has painted a remarkable picture cf "Fair Rosamund and Queen Eleanor' for this year's Royal Academy, it has proved ono of the great successes of the exhibition The artist has chosen the moment v.-hr-n the Queen has surprised the guilty Rosar muud in the dainty retreat which the Kityg has built for her The two women arj wonderfully contrasted On one sido stands the handsome, 6trongfeatured, ma jestlc Queen, with crown on head, pride, determination, anger and outraged wifely dignity In every line At her girdle rh , carries a terrible dagger, and in one hand a cup of poison Rosamund must accept Mfl one or the other as the means of making 1 her exit from the world. She also holds the thread by which she has traced down (he lovers' retreat. 0Q e other clde of the picture Btands ; i Rosamund, the fair." frail, weak, trembling sweetheart of a king You understand instantly that, she cannot continue to exist as the rival of the maJeetlc Queen. BCTI The artist has based bis picture on a Kfll passage in old John Stow's "Chronicle of j England," one of the most familiar source j ' of the fair Rosamund legend. This pas sage reads as follows: j 'Rosamund, tho fayre daughter of 1 Walter Lord Clifford, concubine to Henry 11. (poisoned by Queen Elianor, as some thought), dyed at Woodstocke (A. D. 1177), where King Henry had made for her a house of wonderful working; bo lhal no man or woman might como to her. but he that wuh Instructed by the King, or such as worn right secret with him touching the matter. This house after some wan named Labvrinthus, or Dedalus worke, which was wrought like unto a knot in a garden called a Maze; but it was commonly tald that lastly the Queene KB came to her by a cluo of thredde, or 6ilke. and so dealt with her. that she lived not long pfter; but when she was dead sho Henry II., the Lover oi Kosa mund, Who Became Kinj of England in 1154. From an Ancient, Tvelfth Centurv Manuscript. was buried at GocLtow, In an house of nunner. beside Oxford, with these versos urjon h"r Tonibe 'Ilk jacet in tumba Rosa mundl non Rosa munda. . . ."' Many of the facts of Rosamund Clifford'3 life have been well established. The Eng lish historian, Thomas Carte, gave much attention to the subject. Sho was a daughter of Walter Lord Clifford, whose family bocamn one of the most prominent in England throughout the Middle Ages, a prosperity partly duo to the generosity of King Henry II. Henry 11 was the first of the Plantage uet line of English kings, one of tho groat monarch of the Middle Ages. By bfnh he was a southern Frenchman, related to the previous English kings through his mother His life was an amazing series of triumphs and tragedies At nineteen he went to England, made war on his undo, King Stephen, and after making peace was accepted as heir to the English throne. During this period he met and loved Rosa mund Clifford, In 1164, when he was twenty-one, he In' herlted the Dngllsb throne, but before go ing to England he seized the opportunity to marry a great princess known as Eleanor gt Aquitaine. Sho had been mar ried to King Louis VII of France Ho had divorced her on the pretext of consanguin ity, but really because he was rilsplo d by her gallantries and her violent temper. To the ambitious Henry these defects seemed of little importance, for what hp desired most was the possession of the preat territories in Franc to which Eleanor wa3 heiress it was through her inheritance that England beiatno involved In war with France for nearly one hundred yeara, including the Joan of Arc period. Eleauor was a typical product of south ern France in the age of troubadours, tour natnents and courts of love. It was the sole aim in life of a good knight to muk love in the most romantic manner Imagina ble and of a lady to have as many adoring knights as possible Eleanor had served as "Queen of Beaut)" at many tourna ments and was credited by the old chroni clers with having many affairs with knights and troubadours. Sim was hand Rome, hot tempered and of masculine vigor of body King Henry' married Eleanor and took her to England, where he began to con solldate his power. In the midst of his cares be found time to ppend with Rosa- ...vw, 1; k 3ueen Eleanor, vith Dagger and Poison Cup, Surpris ng Fai Rosamund in Her Secret "Bower" by Means f a Clue of Thread. A Remarkably Skilful Historical Paintinrj by F. Cadogan Cowper, A. R. A. mund Clifford Thera is some reason to believe that either before or immediately after bin marriage to Queen Eleanor the King went through a secret marriage with Rosamund. In the isolated life of thoso da3 it would not have been difficult to conceal h n t-ther marriago from a young Clrl like Rosamund. To make sure of secrecy the King con structed an extraordinary retreat for her at his domain of Woodstock, where b lived an idyllic if sinful existence, temporarily free from court cares. An old historian namd lirompton', wno goes into considerable detail on tho sub Ject, says that this retreat was Iirst ap proaehed by a maze, an arrangement of winding paths amid thick trees. Any one who did not possess the clue to the maze could never find h!s way to Rosamund V. retreat, but would constantly find himself foming back to where be started. It is popularly supposed that this maze was similar to the one at Hampton rourt Palace, near London. Various types of mazes have, in fact, been constructed on English estates for centuries. It seems probable that the one thiit concealed Rosa mund's house must have been much larger than that of Hampton Court. When the Kins had made his way through tho maze he came to a trap door hidden among the trees. He raised this and then entered a long, winding subter P.c3amund Ciiffcrd, Weeping at the Discovery of Her Guilty Secret. From an Ancient English Painting. The Famous Maze at Hampton Court Palace, Near London, Which Is Popularly Supposed to Have Been Copied from the One That Concealed Fair Rosamund's Retreat. ranean passage, or labyrinth. Finally when he had gone through this, ho came up In a delightful little garden where stood "Rosamund's Bower," concealed id tho remotest part of the forest During the two years following hi mar rin?e to Queen Kieanor the King wa de Voted to Rosamund. They had two sons, both of whom became great men in the land. It was not likely that such a woman C) lf)?0 TntrnaMonM Keaturo Servtr. inr fit?' l as Queen Eleanor would long have failed to notice her husband's absorption in a secondary household. The jealous Queen discovered that tho ' ri t l?y near the royal palace of Wood Stock 1 1. -r suspicions Tell upon Rosamund Clifford and she thought of an ingenious stratagem to trace her movements. She attached a ball of silk floss to Rosumund's Bkirt and this unwound aa she retreated iirrM nrltaln Rlutitu Rfscnrfd Wgk&& 9 through, the maze to her secret trysting pj u-e. 'hen the King had gone away the tierce, proud Quen followed the Mlken thread and surprised poor Rosamund in her dainty retreat. Tho statement that tho I u a carried with her n dagger and a cup of poison is entirely in agreement with what is known of her martial and vigorous character. Poor Rosamund, caught helpless and alone, hesitated, what to do and, while) sho trembled in terror, the fierce Queen Struck her to tho heart with her dagger, as some writers assert, although others my -die took tho poison. 'Certain historians say that the story of the maze and Queen Eleanors dramatln actions Is a fanciful embroidery. They a-sr-rt Mint after Klug Henry's relations With Rosamund Clifford had been known for two years tho Queen's violent remon strances and the great scandal caused thereby led to the seclusion of the royal sweetheart In a nunnery at Godstow, where -he died many years after. The historians who reject tho romantic story have never been ablo to prove that the King did not conceal his sweetheart In a maze., The story, which has been re peated by many chroniclers from the C trllest time, has many elements of prob iMIity, and the discovery of the ancient -ulns at Woodstock appears to confirm its accuracy in part. I I Jueen Eleanor, Who Put Rosa mund to Death. From Her Tomb at Fontevrault Abbey, France.