Page:History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic Vol. I.djvu/251

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
107
107

MARRIAGE OF FERDINAND AND ISABELLA. 107 the frontier, from Almazan to Guadalajara, was de- chapter fended by a line of fortified castles in the hands of the family of Mendoza. ^^ The greatest circum- spection therefore was necessary. The party jour- neyed chiefly in the night ; Ferdinand assumed the disguise of a servant, and, when they halted on the road, took care of the mules, and served his com- panions at table. In this guise, with no other dis- aster except that of leaving at an inn the purse which contained the funds for the expedition, they arrived, late on the second night, at a little place called the Burgo, or Borough, of Osma, which the count of Treviilo, one of the partisans of Isabella, had occupied with a considerable body of men-at- arms. On knocking at the gate, cold and faint with travelling, during which the prince had al- lowed himself to take no repose, they were saluted by a large stone discharged by a sentinel from the battlements, which, glancing near Ferdinand's head, had wellnigh brought his romantic enterprise to a tragical conclusion ; when his voice was recognised by his friends within, and, the trumpets proclaiming his arrival, he was received with great joy and fes- tivity by the count and his followers. The remain- der of his journey, which he commenced before dawn, was performed under the convoy of a numer- ous and well-armed escort ; and on the 9th of Oc- tober he reached Duenas in the kingdom of Leon, where the Castilian nobles and cavaliers of his par- 59 Mem. de la Acad, de Hist., torn. vi. p. 78, Ilust. 2.