Winter was far advanced when Montfort Court was again
brightened by the presence of its lady. A polite
letter from Mr. Carr Vipont had reached her before
leaving Windsor, suggesting how much it would be for
the advantage of the Vipont interest if she would
consent to visit for a month or two the seat in Ireland,
which had been too long neglected, and at which my
lord would join her on his departure from his Highland
moors. So to Ireland went Lady Montfort.
My lord did not join her there; but Mr. Carr Vipont
deemed it desirable for the Vipont interest that the
wedded pair should reunite at Montfort Court, where
all the Vipont family were invited to witness their
felicity or mitigate their ennui.
But before proceeding another stage in this history,
it becomes a just tribute of respect to the great
House of Vipont to pause and place its past records
and present grandeur in fuller display before the
reverential reader. The House of Vipont!—what
am I about? The House of Vipont requires a chapter
to itself.
CHAPTER VII.
The House of Vipont,—“Majora
canamus.”
The House of Vipont! Looking back through ages,
it seems as if the House of Vipont were one continuous
living idiosyncrasy, having in its progressive development
a connected unity of thought and action, so that through
all the changes of its outward form it had been moved
and guided by the same single spirit,—“Le
roi est mort; vive le roi!”—A
Vipont dies; live the Vipont! Despite its high-sounding
Norman name, the House of Vipont was no House at all
for some generations after the Conquest. The
first Vipont who emerged from the obscurity of time
was a rude soldier of Gascon origin, in the reign
of Henry II.,—one of the thousand fighting-men
who sailed from Milford Haven with the stout Earl of
Pembroke, on that strange expedition which ended in
the conquest of Ireland. This gallant man obtained
large grants of land in that fertile island; some
Mac or some O’----- vanished, and the House of
Vipont rose.
During the reign of Richard I., the House of Vipont,
though recalled to England (leaving its Irish acquisitions
in charge of a fierce cadet, who served as middleman),
excused itself from the Crusade, and, by marriage
with a rich goldsmith’s daughter, was enabled
to lend moneys to those who indulged in that exciting
but costly pilgrimage. In the reign of John,
the House of Vipont foreclosed its mortgages on lands
thus pledged, and became possessed of a very fair
property in England, as well as its fiefs in the sister
isle.
Copyrights
What Will He Do with It — Volume 05 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.