MarmionRalph de Wilton, being charged with treason, claimed to prove
his innocence by the ordeal of battle, and, being overthrown by Lord
Marmion, was supposed to be dead, but was picked up by a beadsman, who
nursed him carefully; and, being restored to health, he went on a
pilgrimage to foreign lands. Now, Lord Marmion was betrothed to
Constance de Beverley; and De Wilton to Lady Clare, daughter of the
Earl of Gloucester. When De Wilton was supposed to be dead, Lord
Marmion proved faithless to Constance, and proposed to Clare, having an
eye especially to her rich inheritance. Clare rejected his suit, and
took refuge in the convent of St. Hilda, in Whitby; Constance, on the
other hand, took the veil in the convent of St. Cuthbert, in Holy Isle.
In time, Constance eloped from the convent, but, being overtaken, was
buried alive in the walls of a deep cell. In the meantime Lord Marmion
was sent by Henry VIII. with a message to James IV. of Scotland, and
stopped at the hall of Hugh de Heron for a night. Sir Hugh, at his
request, appointed him a guide to conduct him to the king, and the
guide wore the dress of a palmer. On his return, Lord Marmion hears
that Lady Clare is in Holy Isle, and commands the abbess of Hilda to
release her, that she may be placed under the charge of her kinsman,
Fitz Clare, of Tantallon Hall. Here she meets De Wilton, the
palmer-guide of Lord Marmion. Lord Marmion being killed at the battle
of Flodden Field, De Wilton married Lady Clare. (
Source: Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, E. Cobham Brewer, 1894 More on Marmion from Infoplease:
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