Authors: My Lord John
Copyright © 1973 by Georgette Heyer
Cover and internal design © 2009 by Sourcebooks, Inc.
Cover photos © Bridgeman Art Library
Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.
The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
Published by Sourcebooks Landmark, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.
P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410
(630) 961-3900
Fax: (630) 961-2168
www.sourcebooks.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Heyer, Georgette.
My Lord John / Georgette Heyer.
p. cm.
“’A vous entière’ motto of John, Duke of Bedford.”
1. Bedford, John Plantagenet, Duke of, 1389-1435—Fiction. 2. Great Britain—History—House of Lancaster, 1399-1461—Fiction. 3. Nobility—Great Britain—Fiction. I. Title.
PR6015.E795M9 2008
823’.912—dc22
2009001207
Printed and bound in the United States of America.
VP 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
The fame of my wife, Georgette Heyer, rests largely upon her historical novels, particularly those of the Regency period. But this was not her own favourite: she preferred what she called ‘armour’, the Middle Ages. She was especially attracted to that period of English history when the House of Lancaster was at its peak, from about 1393 to 1435.
Some years ago she planned a work, a trilogy, to illustrate this period, taking John, Duke of Bedford, the younger and most trusted brother of Henry V, as its central character, for his lifespan covered the whole period, and because he was a great man though not today a well-known character. With his death the decay of the Lancastrian line set in.
Her research was enormous and meticulous. She was a perfectionist. She studied every aspect of the period – history, wars, social conditions, manners and customs, costume, armour, heraldry, falconry, and the chase. She drew genealogies of all the noble families of England (with their own armorial bearings painted on each) for she believed that the clues to events were to be found in their relationships. She had indexed files for every day of the year for the forty years she was covering with all noteworthy events duly entered on their dates. She learnt to read medieval English almost as easily as modern and amassed a large vocabulary. One summer we toured the Scottish–English borderlands, learning the country and visiting seventy-five castles and twenty-three abbeys (or their ruins). Her notes fill volumes.
For the work, as she planned it, she needed a period of about five years of single-minded concentration. But this was not granted to her. The penal burden of British taxation, coupled with the clamour of her readers for a new book, made her break off to write another Regency story. After such a break it was hard to recapture the spirit of her main work and it required a good deal of labour to refresh her knowledge. After this had happened a second time, she laid her manuscript aside, foreseeing that at least two more such interruptions would inevitably recur before she could complete the work. So a great historical novel was never finished.
She had, however, completed nearly a third of the whole work, which is now reproduced in this book. The period covered is from 1393 to 1413, almost identical with the period of Shakespeare’s
Richard II
and the two parts of
Henry IV
. The first three parts here were finalised by her. The fourth, unfinished, is from her rough draft: this has necessitated some editing.
The historian, A. J. Froude, in his famous purple passage declared that it was not possible for us to grasp the medieval mind. This is probably true. But it may be that, in this work, Georgette Heyer has come closer to bridging the gap than anyone else has done.
G. R. Rougier
The Characters
Richard II, King of England 1377–1399 (Cousin Richard)
. Son of Edward, the Black Prince (d. 1376), eldest son of King Edward III, and Joan, the Fair Maid of Kent
Anne of Bohemia
, his first wife
Isabelle of France,
his second wife
Lancaster
John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, Duke of Aquitaine (Bel sire, M. d’Espagne, M. de Guyenne)
, the King’s uncle, third son of King Edward III
Constanza of Castile (Spanish Grandmother)
, his second wife
Katherine Swynford
, his mistress, later his third wife
Henry of Bolingbroke, Earl of Derby, later Duke of Hereford, later King Henry IV
, his eldest son
Mary Bohun
, Henry of Bolingbroke’s first wife
Henry (Harry)
, their eldest son
Thomas
, their second son
John
, their third son
Humfrey
, their fourth son
Blanche
, their eldest daughter
Philippa
, their youngest daughter
Joanna of Brittany
, Henry of Bolingbroke’s second wife
York
Edmund of Langley, Duke of York
, the King’s uncle, fourth son of King Edward III
Edward, Earl of Rutland, later Duke of Aumâle, later Duke of York
, his eldest son
Richard of Coningsburgh
, his younger son
Constance
, his daughter, wife of Thomas Despenser
Gloucester
Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester
, the King’s uncle, fifth son of King Edward III
Eleanor Bohun
, his wife
Humfrey
, his son
Mortimer
Roger Mortimer, Earl of March
, grandson of Lionel, Duke of Clarence, second son of King Edward III
Edmund, later Earl of March
, his eldest son
Roger
, his younger son
Sir Edmund
, his brother, later married Owen Glendower’s daughter in Wales
Beaufort
John Beaufort, later Earl of Somerset, later Marquis of Dorset
, eldest son of John of Gaunt and Katherine Swynford
Margaret Holland
, his wife
Henry, later Bishop of Lincoln, later Bishop of Winchester
, his brother
Thomas
, his brother
Joan
, his sister, later married Ralph Neville, Earl of Westmoreland
Holland
John Holland, Earl of Huntingdon, later Duke of Exeter
, son of the King’s mother, Joan of Kent, by her third marriage
Bess
, his wife, daughter of John of Gaunt
Thomas, Earl of Kent, later Duke of Surrey
, his nephew
Margaret
, Thomas’s sister, later married John Beaufort
Edmund
, Thomas’s son
Arundel
Richard Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel
Thomas Fitzalan
,
later Earl of Arundel
, his son
Thomas (Archbishop Arundel), Archbishop of York, later Archbishop of Canterbury
, his brother
Joan, Dowager Countess of Hereford
, his sister, Mary and Eleanor Bohun’s mother, Henry of Bolingbroke’s mother-in-law
Warwick
Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick
Richard, later Earl of Warwick
, his son
Neville
Ralph Neville of Raby, later Earl of Westmoreland
Joan Beaufort
, his second wife
Sir John Neville
, his eldest son by his first marriage
Thomas, Lord Furnivall
, his brother
Percy
Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland (the Fox)
Henry (Hotspur)
, his son
Thomas, Earl of Worcester
, his brother
Mowbray
Thomas Mowbray, Earl of Nottingham, later Duke of Norfolk
Thomas, later Earl of Nottingham
, his eldest son
John
, his younger son
The Countess of Norfolk
, a remote cousin of Henry of Bolingbroke, grandmother of Thomas Mowbray
Sir Hugh Waterton
, governor of Henry of Bolingbroke’s children
Sir Robert Waterton
, his cousin, constable of Pontefract Castle
Thomas Swynford
, Katherine Swynford’s son by her first marriage
Sir Robert Umfraville
, a friend of Ralph Neville
Gilbert
, his nephew
John Talbot
, a friend of Harry’s
John Oldcastle, later Lord Cobham
, a friend of Harry’s
Henry Scrope of Masham
, a friend of Harry’s
Richard (Archbishop Scrope), Archbishop of York
, his uncle
Reginald Grey of Ruthin
, a friend of Henry of Bolingbroke
Master Chaucer
, a scrivener
Messire de Froissart
, a canon of Chimay
In France
Charles VI, King of France
Isabeau
, his wife
Louis, Duke of Orleans
, his brother
Charles, later Duke of Orleans
, Louis of Orleans’ son
Philip, Duke of Burgundy
, the King’s uncle
John (the Fearless), later Duke of Burgundy
, Philip of Burgundy’s son
John of Montfort, Duke of Brittany
Joanna
, his third wife
In Scotland
Robert III, King of Scotland
James, later James I of Scotland
, his son
Robert, Duke of Albany
, his brother,
later Regent after Robert’s death in 1406
In Wales
Owen Glendower (Prince of Wales)
, leader of the Welsh forces
Part I
Richard the Redeless
(1393–1399)
Ther is no hye estate so sadde and stable,Remember wele, lat it not be forgete,
But he to falle in perile is ful able.
Hoccleve: Regement of Princes