5803 lines
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5803 lines
265 KiB
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Project Gutenberg's Etext of Child Christopher by William Morris
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Child Christopher, by William Morris
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March, 1995 [Etext #234]
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The Project Gutenberg Etext of Child Christopher by Morris
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Child Christopher and Goldilind the Fair
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by William Morris
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1895
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CHAPTER I.
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OF THE KING OF OAKENREALM, AND HIS WIFE AND HIS CHILD.
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Of old there was a land which was so much a woodland, that a
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minstrel thereof said it that a squirrel might go from end
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to end, and all about, from tree to tree, and never touch
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the earth: therefore was that land called Oakenrealm.
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The lord and king thereof was a stark man, and so great a
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warrior that in his youth he took no delight in aught else
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save battle and tourneys. But when he was hard on forty
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years old, he came across a daughter of a certain lord, whom
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he had vanquished, and his eyes bewrayed him into longing,
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so that he gave back to the said lord the havings he had
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conquered of him that he might lay the maiden in his kingly
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bed. So he brought her home with him to Oakenrealm and
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wedded her.
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Tells the tale that he rued not his bargain, but loved her
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so dearly that for a year round he wore no armour, save when
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she bade him play in the tilt-yard for her desport and
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pride.
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So wore the days till she went with child and was near her
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time, and then it betid that three kings who marched on
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Oakenrealm banded them together against him, and his lords
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and thanes cried out on him to lead them to battle, and it
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behoved him to do as they would.
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So he sent out the tokens and bade an hosting at his chief
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city, and when all was ready he said farewell to his wife
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and her babe unborn, and went his ways to battle once more:
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but fierce was his heart against the foemen, that they had
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dragged him away from his love and his joy.
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Even amidst of his land he joined battle with the host of
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the ravagers, and the tale of them is short to tell, for
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they were as the wheat before the hook. But as he followed
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up the chase, a mere thrall of the fleers turned on him and
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cast his spear, and it reached him whereas his hawberk was
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broken, and stood deep in, so that he fell to earth
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unmighty: and when his lords and chieftains drew about him,
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and cunning men strove to heal him, it was of no avail, and
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he knew that his soul was departing. Then he sent for a
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priest, and for the Marshal of the host, who was a great
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lord, and the son of his father's brother, and in few words
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bade him look to the babe whom his wife bore about, and if
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it were a man, to cherish him and do him to learn all that a
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king ought to know; and if it were a maiden, that he should
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look to her wedding well and worthily: and he let swear him
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on his sword, on the edges and the hilts, that he would do
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even so, and be true unto his child if child there were:
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and he bade him have rule, if so be the lords would, and all
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the people, till the child were of age to be king: and the
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Marshal swore, and all the lords who stood around bare
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witness to his swearing. Thereafter the priest houselled
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the King, and he received his Creator, and a little while
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after his soul departed.
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But the Marshal followed up the fleeing foe, and two battles
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more he fought before he beat them flat to earth; and then
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they craved for peace, and he went back to the city in
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mickle honour.
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But in the King's city of Oakenham he found but little joy;
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for both the King was bemoaned, whereas he had been no hard
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man to his folk; and also, when the tidings and the King's
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corpse came back to Oakenrealm, his Lady and Queen took sick
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for sorrow and fear, and fell into labour of her child, and
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in childing of a man-bairn she died, but the lad lived, and
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was like to do well.
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So there was one funeral for the slain King and for her whom
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his slaying had slain: and when that was done, the little
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king was borne to the font, and at his christening he gat to
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name Christopher.
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Thereafter the Marshal summoned all them that were due
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thereto to come and give homage to the new king, and even so
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did they, though he were but a babe, yea, and who had but
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just now been a king lying in his mother's womb. But when
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the homage was done, then the Marshal called together the
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wise men, and told them how the King that was had given him
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in charge his son as then unborn, and the ruling of the
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realm till the said son were come to man's estate: but he
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bade them seek one worthier if they had heart to gainsay the
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word of their dying lord. Then all they said that he was
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worthy and mighty and the choice of their dear lord, and
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that they would have none but he.
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So then was the great folk-mote called, and the same matter
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was laid before all the people, and none said aught against
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it, whereas no man was ready to name another to that charge
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and rule, even had it been his own self.
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Now then by law was the Marshal, who hight Rolf, lord and
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earl of the land of Oakenrealm. He ruled well and strongly,
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and was a fell warrior: he was well befriended by many of
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the great; and the rest of them feared him and his friends:
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as for the commonalty, they saw that he held the realm in
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peace; and for the rest, they knew little and saw less of
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him, and they paid to his bailiffs and sheriffs as little as
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they could, and more than they would. But whereas that left
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them somewhat to grind their teeth on, and they were not
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harried, they were not so ill content. So the Marshal
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throve, and lacked nothing of a king's place save the bare
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name.
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CHAPTER II.
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OF THE KING'S SON.
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As for the King's son, to whom the folk had of late done
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homage as king, he was at first seen about a corner of the
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High House with his nurses; and then in a while it was said,
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and the tale noted, but not much, that he must needs go for
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his health's sake, and because he was puny, to some stead
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amongst the fields, and folk heard say that he was gone to
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the strong house of a knight somewhat stricken in years, who
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was called Lord Richard the Lean. The said house was some
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|
twelve miles from Oakenham, not far from the northern edge
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|
of the wild-wood. But in a while, scarce more than a year,
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Lord Richard brake up house at the said castle, and went
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southward through the forest. Of this departure was little
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said, for he was not a man amongst the foremost. As for the
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King's little son, if any remembered that he was in the
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hands of the said Lord Richard, none said aught about it;
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for if any thought of the little babe at all, they said to
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themselves, Never will he come to be king.
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Now as for Lord Richard the Lean, he went far through the
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wood, and until he was come to another house of his, that
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stood in a clearing somewhat near to where Oakenrealm
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marched on another country, which hight Meadham; though the
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said wild-wood ended not where Oakenrealm ended, but
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stretched a good way into Meadham; and betwixt one and the
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other much rough country there was.
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It is to be said that amongst those who went to this
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stronghold of the woods was the little King Christopher, no
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longer puny, but a stout babe enough: so he was borne
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amongst the serving men and thralls to the castle of the
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Outer March; and he was in no wise treated as a great man's
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son; but there was more than one woman who was kind to him,
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and as he waxed in strength and beauty month by month, both
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carle and quean fell to noting him, and, for as little as he
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was, he began to be well-beloved.
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As to the stead where he was nourished, though it were far
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away amongst the woods, it was no such lonely or savage
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place: besides the castle and the houses of it, there was a
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merry thorpe in the clearing, the houses whereof were set
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down by the side of a clear and pleasant little stream.
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Moreover the goodmen and swains of the said township were no
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ill folk, but bold of heart, free of speech, and goodly of
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favour; and the women of them fair, kind, and trusty.
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Whiles came folk journeying in to Oakenrealm or out to
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Meadham, and of these some were minstrels, who had with them
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tidings of what was astir whereas folk were thicker in the
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world, and some chapmen, who chaffered with the
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thorpe-dwellers, and took of them the woodland spoil for
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such outland goods as those woodmen needed.
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So wore the years, and in Oakenham King Christopher was well
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nigh forgotten, and in the wild-wood had never been known
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clearly for King's son. At first, by command of Rolf the
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Marshal, a messenger came every year from Lord Richard with
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a letter that told of how the lad Christopher did. But when
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five years were worn, the Marshal bade send him tidings
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thereof every three years; and by then it was come to the
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twelfth year, and still the tidings were that the lad throve
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ever, and meanwhile the Marshal sat fast in his seat with
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none to gainsay, the word went to Lord Richard that he
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should send no more, for that he, the Marshal, had heard
|
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enough of the boy; and if he throve it were well, and if
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not, it was no worse. So wore the days and the years.
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CHAPTER III.
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OF THE KING OF MEADHAM AND HIS DAUGHTER.
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Tells the tale that in the country which lay south of
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Oakenrealm, and was called Meadham, there was in these days
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a king whose wife was dead, but had left him a fair
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daughter, who was born some four years after King
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Christopher. A good man was this King Roland, mild,
|
|
bounteous, and no regarder of persons in his justice; and
|
|
well-beloved he was of his folk: yet could not their love
|
|
keep him alive; for, whenas his daughter was of the age of
|
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twelve years, he sickened unto death; and so, when he knew
|
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that his end drew near, he sent for the wisest of his wise
|
|
men, and they came unto him sorrowing in the High House of
|
|
his chiefest city, which hight Meadhamstead. So he bade
|
|
them sit down nigh unto his bed, and took up the word and
|
|
spake:
|
|
|
|
"Masters, and my good lords, ye may see clearly that a
|
|
sundering is at hand, and that I must needs make a long
|
|
journey, whence I shall come back never; now I would, and am
|
|
verily of duty bound thereto, that I leave behind me some
|
|
good order in the land. Furthermore, I would that my
|
|
daughter, when she is of age thereto, should be Queen in
|
|
Meadham, and rule the land; neither will it be many years
|
|
before she shall be of ripe age for ruling, if ever she may
|
|
be; and I deem not that there shall be any lack in her,
|
|
whereas her mother could all courtesy, and was as wise as a
|
|
woman may be. But how say ye, my masters?"
|
|
|
|
So they all with one consent said Yea, and they would ask
|
|
for no better king than their lady his daughter. Then said
|
|
the King:
|
|
|
|
"Hearken carefully, for my time is short: Yet is she young
|
|
and a maiden, though she be wise. Now therefore do I need
|
|
some man well looked to of the folk, who shall rule the land
|
|
in her name till she be of eighteen winters, and who shall
|
|
be her good friend and counsellor into all wisdom
|
|
thereafter. Which of you, my masters, is meet for this
|
|
matter?"
|
|
|
|
Then they all looked one on the other, and spake not. And
|
|
the King said: "Speak, some one of you, without fear; this
|
|
is no time for tarrying."
|
|
|
|
Thereon spake an elder, the oldest of them, and said:
|
|
"Lord, this is the very truth, that none of us here present
|
|
are meet for this office: whereas, among other matters, we
|
|
be all unmeet for battle; some of us have never been
|
|
warriors, and other some are past the age for leading an
|
|
host. To say the sooth, King, there is but one man in
|
|
Meadham who may do what thou wilt, and not fail; both for
|
|
his wisdom, and his might afield, and the account which is
|
|
had of him amongst the people; and that man is Earl
|
|
Geoffrey, of the Southern Marches."
|
|
|
|
"Ye say sooth," quoth the King; "but is he down in the
|
|
South, or nigher to hand?"
|
|
|
|
Said the elder: "He is as now in Meadhamstead, and may be
|
|
in this chamber in scant half an hour." So the King bade
|
|
send for him, and there was silence in the chamber till he
|
|
came in, clad in a scarlet kirtle and a white cloak, and
|
|
with his sword by his side. He was a tall man, bigly made;
|
|
somewhat pale of face, black and curly of hair; blue-eyed,
|
|
thin-lipped, and hook-nosed as an eagle; a man warrior-like,
|
|
and somewhat fierce of aspect. He knelt down by the King's
|
|
bedside, and asked him in a sorrowful voice what he would,
|
|
and the King said: "I ask a great matter of thee, and all
|
|
these my wise men, and I myself, withal, deem that thou
|
|
canst do it, and thou alone--nay, hearken: I am departing,
|
|
and I would have thee hold my place, and do unto my people
|
|
even what I would do if I myself were living; and to my
|
|
daughter as nigh to that as may be. I say all this thou
|
|
mayst do, if thou wilt be as trusty and leal to me after I
|
|
am dead, as thou hast seemed to all men's eyes to have been
|
|
while I was living. What sayest thou?"
|
|
|
|
The Earl had hidden his face in the coverlet of the bed
|
|
while the King was speaking; but now he lifted up his face,
|
|
weeping, and said: "Kinsman and friend and King; this is
|
|
nought hard to do; but if it were, yet would I do it."
|
|
|
|
"It is well," said the King: "my heart fails me and my
|
|
voice; so give heed, and set thine ear close to my mouth:
|
|
hearken, belike my daughter Goldilind shall be one of the
|
|
fairest of women; I bid thee wed her to the fairest of men
|
|
and the strongest, and to none other."
|
|
|
|
Thereat his voice failed him indeed, and he lay still; but
|
|
he died not, till presently the priest came to him, and, as
|
|
he might, houselled him: then he departed.
|
|
|
|
As for Earl Geoffrey, when the King was buried, and the
|
|
homages done to the maiden Goldilind, he did no worse than
|
|
those wise men deemed of him, but bestirred him, and looked
|
|
full sagely into all the matters of the kingdom, and did so
|
|
well therein that all men praised his rule perforce, whether
|
|
they loved him or not; and sooth to say he was not much
|
|
beloved.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV.
|
|
|
|
OF THE MAIDEN GOLDILIND.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMIDST of all his other business Earl Geoffrey bethought him
|
|
in a while of the dead King's daughter, and he gave her in
|
|
charge to a gentlewoman, somewhat stricken in years, a widow
|
|
of high lineage, but not over wealthy. She dwelt in her own
|
|
house in a fair valley some twenty miles from Meadhamstead:
|
|
thereabode Goldilind till a year and a half was worn, and
|
|
had due observance, but little love, and not much kindness
|
|
from the said gentlewoman, who hight Dame Elinor Leashowe.
|
|
Howbeit, time and again came knights and ladies and lords to
|
|
see the little lady, and kissed her hand and did obeisance
|
|
to her; yet more came to her in the first three months of
|
|
her sojourn at Leashowe than the second, and more in the
|
|
second than the third.
|
|
|
|
At last, on a day when the said year and a half was fully
|
|
worn, thither came Earl Geoffrey with a company of knights
|
|
and men-at-arms, and he did obeisance, as due was, to his
|
|
master's daughter, and then spake awhile privily with Dame
|
|
Elinor; and thereafter they went into the hall, he, and she,
|
|
and Goldilind, and there before all men he spake aloud and
|
|
said:
|
|
|
|
"My Lady Goldilind, meseemeth ye dwell here all too
|
|
straitly; for neither is this house of Leashowe great enough
|
|
for thy state, and the entertainment of the knights and
|
|
lords who shall have will to seek to thee hither; nor is the
|
|
wealth of thy liege dame and governante as great as it
|
|
should be, and as thou, meseemeth, wouldst have it.
|
|
Wherefore I have been considering thy desires herein, and if
|
|
thou deem it meet to give a gift to Dame Elinor, and live
|
|
queenlier thyself than now thou dost, then mayst thou give
|
|
unto her the Castle of Greenharbour, and the six manors
|
|
appertaining thereto, and withal the rights of wild-wood and
|
|
fen and fell that lie thereabout. Also, if thou wilt, thou
|
|
mayst honour the said castle with abiding there awhile at
|
|
thy pleasure; and I shall see to it that thou have due meney
|
|
to go with thee thither. How sayest thou, my lady?"
|
|
|
|
Amongst that company there were two or three who looked at
|
|
each other and half smiled; and two or three looked on the
|
|
maiden, who was goodly as of her years, as if with
|
|
compassion; but the more part kept countenance in full
|
|
courtly wise.
|
|
|
|
Then spake Goldilind in a quavering voice (for she was
|
|
afraid and wise), and she said: "Cousin and Earl, we will
|
|
that all this be done; and it likes me well to eke the
|
|
wealth of this lady and my good friend Dame Elinor."
|
|
|
|
Quoth Earl Geoffrey: "Kneel before thy lady, Dame, and put
|
|
thine hands between hers and thank her for the gift." So
|
|
Dame Elinor knelt down, and did homage and obeisance for her
|
|
new land; and Goldilind raised her up and kissed her, and
|
|
bade her sit down beside her, and spake to her kindly; and
|
|
all men praised the maiden for her gentle and courteous
|
|
ways; and Dame Elinor smiled upon her and them, what she
|
|
could.
|
|
|
|
She was small of body and sleek; but her cheeks somewhat
|
|
flagging; brown eyes she had, long, half opened; thin lips,
|
|
and chin somewhat falling away from her mouth; hard on fifty
|
|
winters had she seen; yet there have been those who were
|
|
older and goodlier both.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V.
|
|
|
|
GOLDILIND COMES TO GREENHARBOUR.
|
|
|
|
|
|
But a little while tarried the Earl Geoffrey at Leashowe,
|
|
but departed next morning and came to Meadhamstead. A month
|
|
thereafter came folk from him to Leashowe, to wit, the new
|
|
meney for the new abode of Goldilind; amongst whom was a
|
|
goodly band of men-at-arms, led by an old lord pinched and
|
|
peevish of face, who kneeled to Goldilind as the new
|
|
burgreve of Greenharbour; and a chaplain, a black canon,
|
|
young, broad-cheeked and fresh-looking, but hard-faced and
|
|
unlovely; three new damsels withal were come for the young
|
|
Queen, not young maids, but stalworth women, well-grown, and
|
|
two of them hard-featured; the third, tall, black-haired,
|
|
and a goodly-fashioned body.
|
|
|
|
Now when these were come, who were all under the rule of
|
|
Dame Elinor, there was no gainsaying the departure to the
|
|
new home; and in two days' time they went their ways from
|
|
Leashowe. But though Goldilind was young, she was wise, and
|
|
her heart misgave her, when she was amidst this new meney,
|
|
that she was not riding toward glory and honour, and a world
|
|
of worship and friends beloved. Howbeit, whatso might lie
|
|
before her, she put a good face upon it, and did to those
|
|
about her queenly and with all courtesy.
|
|
|
|
Five days they rode from Leashowe north away, by thorpe and
|
|
town and mead and river, till the land became little
|
|
peopled, and the sixth day they rode the wild-wood ways,
|
|
where was no folk, save now and again the little cot of some
|
|
forester or collier; but the seventh day, about noon, they
|
|
came into a clearing of the wood, a rugged little plain of
|
|
lea-land, mingled with marish, with a little deal of
|
|
acre-land in barley and rye, round about a score of poor
|
|
frame-houses set down scattermeal about the lea. But on a
|
|
long ridge, at the northern end of the said plain, was a
|
|
grey castle, strong, and with big and high towers, yet not
|
|
so much greater than was Leashowe, deemed Goldilind, as for
|
|
a dwelling-house.
|
|
|
|
Howbeit, they entered the said castle, and within, as
|
|
without, it was somewhat grim, though nought was lacking of
|
|
plenishing due for folk knightly. Long it were to tell of
|
|
its walls and baileys and chambers; but let this suffice,
|
|
that on the north side, toward the thick forest, was a
|
|
garden of green-sward and flowers and potherbs; and a
|
|
garth-wall of grey stone, not very high, was the only
|
|
defence thereof toward the wood, but it was overlooked by a
|
|
tall tower of the great wall, which hight the Foresters'
|
|
Tower. In the said outer garth-wall also was a postern,
|
|
whereby there was not seldom coming in and going out.
|
|
|
|
Now when Goldilind had been in her chamber for a few days,
|
|
she found out for certain, what she had before misdoubted,
|
|
that she had been brought from Leashowe and the peopled
|
|
parts near to Meadhamstead unto the uttermost parts of the
|
|
realm to be kept in prison there.
|
|
|
|
Howbeit, it was in a way prison courteous; she was still
|
|
served with observance, and bowed before, and called my lady
|
|
and queen, and so forth: also she might go from chamber to
|
|
hall and chapel, to and fro, yet scarce alone; and into the
|
|
garden she might go, yet not for the more part
|
|
unaccompanied; and even at whiles she went out a-gates, but
|
|
then ever with folk on the right hand and the left.
|
|
Forsooth, whiles and again, within the next two years of her
|
|
abode at Greenharbour, out of gates she went and alone; but
|
|
that was as the prisoner who strives to be free (although
|
|
she had, forsooth, no thought or hope of escape), and as the
|
|
prisoner brought back was she chastised when she came within
|
|
gates again.
|
|
|
|
Everywhere, to be short, within and about the Castle of
|
|
Greenharbour, did Goldilind meet the will and the tyranny of
|
|
the little sleek widow, Dame Elinor, to whom both carle and
|
|
quean in that corner of the world were but as servants and
|
|
slaves to do her will; and the said Elinor, who at first was
|
|
but spiteful in word and look toward her lady, waxed worse
|
|
as time wore and as the blossom of the King's daughter's
|
|
womanhood began to unfold, till at last the she-jailer had
|
|
scarce feasted any day when she had not in some wise grieved
|
|
and tormented her prisoner; and whatever she did, none had
|
|
might to say her nay.
|
|
|
|
But Goldilind took all with a high heart, and her courage
|
|
grew with her years, nor would she bow the head before any
|
|
grief, but took to her whatsoever solace might come to her;
|
|
as the pleasure of the sun and the wind, and the beholding
|
|
of the greenery of the wood, and the fowl and the beasts
|
|
playing, which oft she saw afar, and whiles anear, though
|
|
whiles, forsooth, she saw nought of it all, whereas she was
|
|
shut up betwixt four walls, and that not of her chamber, but
|
|
of some bare and foul prison of the Castle, which, with
|
|
other griefs, must she needs thole under the name and guise
|
|
of penance.
|
|
|
|
However, she waxed so exceeding fair and sweet and lovely,
|
|
that the loveliness of her pierced to the hearts of many of
|
|
her jailers, so that some of them, and specially of the
|
|
squires and men-at-arms, would do her some easement which
|
|
they might do unrebuked, or not sorely rebuked; as bringing
|
|
her flowers in the spring, or whiles a singing-bird or a
|
|
squirrel; and an old man there was of the men-at-arms, who
|
|
would ask leave, and get it at whiles, to come to her in her
|
|
chamber, or the garden? and tell her minstrel tales and the
|
|
like for her joyance. Sooth to say, even the pinched heart
|
|
of the old Burgreve was somewhat touched by her; and he
|
|
alone had any might to stand between her and Dame Elinor; so
|
|
that but for him it had gone much harder with her than it
|
|
did.
|
|
|
|
For the rest, none entered the Castle from the world
|
|
without, nay not so much as a travelling monk, or a friar on
|
|
his wanderings, save and except some messenger of Earl
|
|
Geoffrey who had errand with Dame Elinor or the Burgreve.
|
|
|
|
So wore the days and the seasons, till it was now more than
|
|
four years since she had left Leashowe, and her eighteenth
|
|
summer was beginning.
|
|
|
|
But now the tale leaves telling of Goldilind, and goes back
|
|
to the matters of Oakenrealm, and therein to what has to do
|
|
with King Christopher and Rolf the Marshal.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI.
|
|
|
|
HOW ROLF THE MARSHAL DREAMS A DREAM AND COMES TO THE CASTLE
|
|
OF THE UTTERMOST MARCH.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now this same summer, when King Christopher was of twenty
|
|
years and two, Rolf the Marshal, sleeping one noontide in
|
|
the King's garden at Oakenham, dreamed a dream. For
|
|
himseemed that there came through the garth-gate a woman
|
|
fair and tall, and clad in nought but oaken-leaves, who led
|
|
by the hand an exceeding goodly young man of twenty summers,
|
|
and his visage like to the last battle-dead King of
|
|
Oakenrealm when he was a young man. And the said woman led
|
|
the swain up to the Marshal, who asked in his mind what
|
|
these two were: and the woman answered his thought and
|
|
said: "I am the Woman of the Woods, and the Landwight of
|
|
Oakenrealm; and this lovely lad whose hand I hold is my King
|
|
and thy King and the King of Oakenrealm. Wake, fool--wake!
|
|
and look to it what thou wilt do!"
|
|
|
|
And therewith he woke up crying out, and drew forth his
|
|
sword. But when he was fully awakened, he was ashamed, and
|
|
went into the hall, and sat in his high-seat, and strove to
|
|
think out of his troubled mind; but for all he might do, he
|
|
fell asleep again; and again in the hall he dreamed as he
|
|
had dreamed in the garden: and when he awoke from his dream
|
|
he had no thought in his head but how he might the speediest
|
|
come to the house of Lord Richard the Lean, and look to the
|
|
matter of his lord's son and see him with his eyes, and, if
|
|
it might be, take some measure with the threat which lay in
|
|
the lad's life. Nought he tarried, but set off in an hour's
|
|
time with no more company than four men-at-arms and an old
|
|
squire of his, who was wont to do his bidding without
|
|
question, whether it were good or evil.
|
|
|
|
So they went by frith and fell, by wood and fair ways, till
|
|
in two days' time they were come by undern within sight of
|
|
the Castle of the Outer March, and entered into the street
|
|
of the thorpe aforesaid; and they saw that there were no
|
|
folk therein and at the house-doors save old carles and
|
|
carlines scarce wayworthy, and little children who might not
|
|
go afoot. But from the field anigh the thorpe came the
|
|
sound of shouting and glad voices, and through the lanes of
|
|
the houses they saw on the field many people in gay raiment
|
|
going to and fro, as though there were games and sports
|
|
toward.
|
|
|
|
Thereof Lord Rolf heeded nought, but went his ways straight
|
|
to the Castle, and was brought with all honour into the
|
|
hall, and thither came Lord Richard the Lean, hastening and
|
|
half afeard, and did obeisance to him; and there were but a
|
|
few in the hall, and they stood out of earshot of the two
|
|
lords.
|
|
|
|
The Marshal spoke graciously to Lord Richard, and made him
|
|
sit beside him, and said in a soft voice: "We have come to
|
|
see thee, Lord, and how the folk do in the Uttermost
|
|
Marches. Also we would wot how it goes with a lad whom we
|
|
sent to thee when he was yet a babe, whereas he was some
|
|
byblow of the late King, our lord and master, and we deemed
|
|
thee both rich enough and kind enough to breed him into
|
|
thriving without increasing pride upon him: and, firstly,
|
|
is the lad yet alive?"
|
|
|
|
He knitted his brow as he spake, for carefulness of soul;
|
|
but Lord Richard smiled upon him, though as one somewhat
|
|
troubled, and answered: "Lord Marshal, I thank thee for
|
|
visiting this poor house; and I shall tell thee first that
|
|
the lad lives, and hath thriven marvellously, though he be
|
|
somewhat unruly, and will abide no correction now these last
|
|
six years. Sooth to say, there is now no story of his being
|
|
anywise akin to our late Lord King; though true it is that
|
|
the folk in this faraway corner of the land call him King
|
|
Christopher, but only in a manner of jesting. But it is no
|
|
jest wherein they say that they will gainsay him nought, and
|
|
that especially the young women. Yet I will say of him that
|
|
he is wise, and asketh not overmuch; the more is the sorrow
|
|
of many of the maidens. A fell woodsman he is, and
|
|
exceeding stark, and as yet heedeth more of valiance than of
|
|
the love of woman."
|
|
|
|
The Marshal looked no less troubled than before at these
|
|
words; he said: "I would see this young man speedily."
|
|
|
|
"So shall it be, Lord," said Lord Richard. Therewith he
|
|
called to him a squire, and said: "Go thou down into the
|
|
thorpe, and bring hither Christopher, for that a great lord
|
|
is here who would set him to do a deed of woodcraft, such as
|
|
is more than the wont of men."
|
|
|
|
So the squire went his ways, and was gone a little while,
|
|
and meantime drew nigh to the hall a sound of triumphing
|
|
songs and shouts, and right up to the hall doors; then
|
|
entered the squire, and by his side came a tall young man,
|
|
clad but in a white linen shirt and deerskin brogues, his
|
|
head crowned with a garland of flowers: him the squire
|
|
brought up to the lords on the dais, and louted to them, and
|
|
said: "My lords, I bring you Christopher, and he not
|
|
overwilling, for now hath he been but just crowned king of
|
|
the games down yonder; but when the carles and queans there
|
|
said that they would come with him and bear him company to
|
|
the hall doors, then, forsooth, he yea-said the coming. It
|
|
were not unmeet that some shame were done him."
|
|
|
|
"Peace, man!" said Lord Richard, "what hath this to do with
|
|
thee? Seest thou not the Lord Marshal here?" The Lord Rolf
|
|
sat and gazed on the lad, and scowled on him; but
|
|
Christopher saw therein nought but the face of a great lord
|
|
burdened with many cares; so when he had made his obeisance
|
|
he stood up fearlessly and merrily before them.
|
|
|
|
Sooth to say, he was full fair to look on: for all his
|
|
strength, which, as ye shall hear, was mighty, all the
|
|
fashion of his limbs and his body was light and clean done,
|
|
and beauteous; and though his skin, where it showed naked,
|
|
was all tanned with the summer, it was fine and sleek and
|
|
kindly, every deal thereof: bright-eyed and round-cheeked
|
|
he was, with full lips and carven chin, and his hair golden
|
|
brown of hue, and curling crisp about the blossoms of his
|
|
garland.
|
|
|
|
So must we say that he was such an youngling as most might
|
|
have been in the world, had not man's malice been, and the
|
|
mischief of grudging and the marring of grasping.
|
|
|
|
But now spake Lord Rolf: "Sir varlet, they tell me that
|
|
thou art a mighty hunter, and of mickle guile in woodcraft;
|
|
wilt thou then hunt somewhat for me, and bring me home a
|
|
catch seldom seen?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea, Lord King," said Christopher, "I will at least do my
|
|
best, if thou but tell me where to seek the quarry and
|
|
when."
|
|
|
|
"It is well," said the Marshal, "and to-morrow my squire,
|
|
whom thou seest yonder, and who hight Simon, shall tell thee
|
|
where the hunt is up, and thou shalt go with him. But
|
|
hearken! thou shalt not call me king; for to-day there is no
|
|
king in Oakenrealm, and I am but Marshal, and Earl of the
|
|
king that shall be."
|
|
|
|
The lad fell a-musing for a minute, and then he said: "Yea,
|
|
Lord Marshal, I shall do thy will: but meseemeth I have
|
|
heard some tale of one who was but of late king in
|
|
Oakenrealm: is it not so, Lord?"
|
|
|
|
"Stint thy talk, young man," cried the Marshal in a harsh
|
|
voice, "and abide to-morrow; who knoweth who shall be king,
|
|
and whether thou or I shall live to see him."
|
|
|
|
But as he spake the words they seemed to his heart like a
|
|
foretelling of evil, and he turned pale and trembled, and
|
|
said to Christopher: "Come hither, lad; I will give thee a
|
|
gift, and then shalt thou depart till to-morrow." So
|
|
Christopher drew near to him, and the Marshal pulled off a
|
|
ring from his finger and set it on the lad's, and said to
|
|
him: "Now depart in peace;" and Christopher bent the knee to
|
|
him and thanked him for the gracious gift of the ruler of
|
|
Oakenrealm, and then went his ways out of the hall, and the
|
|
folk without gave a glad cry as he came amongst them.
|
|
|
|
But by then he was come to the door, Lord Rolf looked on his
|
|
hand, and saw that, instead of giving the youngling a
|
|
finger-ring which he had bought of a merchant for a price of
|
|
five bezants, as he had meant to do, he had given him a ring
|
|
which the old King had had, whereon was the first letter of
|
|
his name (Christopher to wit), and a device of a crowned
|
|
rose, for this ring was a signet of his. Wherefore was the
|
|
Marshal once more sore troubled, and he arose, and was half
|
|
minded to run down the hall after Christopher; but he
|
|
refrained him, and presently smiled to himself, and then
|
|
fell a-talking to Lord Richard, sweetly and pleasantly.
|
|
|
|
SO wore the day to evening; but, ere he went to bed, the
|
|
Lord Rolf had a privy talk, first with Lord Richard, and
|
|
after with his squire Simon. What followed of that talk ye
|
|
may hear after.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII.
|
|
|
|
HOW CHRISTOPHER WENT A JOURNEY INTO THE WILD-WOOD.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Next morning Christopher, who slept in the little hall of
|
|
the inner court of the Castle, arose betimes, and came to
|
|
the great gate; but, for as early as he was, there he saw
|
|
the squire Simon abiding him, standing between two strong
|
|
horses; to him he gave the sele of the day, and the squire
|
|
greeted him, but in somewhat surly wise. Then he said to
|
|
him: "Well, King Christopher, art thou ready for the road?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea, as thou seest," said the youngling smiling. For,
|
|
indeed, he had breeches now beneath his shirt, and a surcoat
|
|
of green woollen over it; boots of deerskin had he withal,
|
|
and spurs thereon: he was girt with a short sword, and had
|
|
a quiver of arrows at his back, and bare a great bow in his
|
|
hand.
|
|
|
|
"Yea," quoth Simon, "thou deemest thee a gay swain belike;
|
|
but thou lookest likelier for a deerstealer than a rider,
|
|
thou, hung up to thy shooting-gear. Deemest thou we go
|
|
a-hunting of the hind?"
|
|
|
|
Quoth Christopher: "I wot not, squire; but the great lord
|
|
who lieth sleeping yonder, hath told me that thou shouldest
|
|
give me his errand; and of some hunting or feat of
|
|
wood-craft he spake. Moreover, this crooked stick can drive
|
|
a shaft through matters harder than a hind's side."
|
|
|
|
Simon looked confused, and he reddened and stammered
|
|
somewhat as he answered: "Ah, yea: so it was; I mind me;
|
|
I will tell thee anon."
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "Withal, squire, if we are wending into
|
|
the wood, as needs we must, unless we ride round about this
|
|
dale in a ring all day, dost thou deem we shall go at a
|
|
gallop many a mile? Nay, fair sir; the horses shall wend a
|
|
foot's pace oftenest, and we shall go a-foot not unseldom
|
|
through the thickets."
|
|
|
|
Now was Simon come to himself again, and that self was
|
|
surly, so he said: "Ay, ay, little King, thou deemest thee
|
|
exceeding wise in these woods, dost thou not? and forsooth,
|
|
thou mayst be. Yet have I tidings for thee."
|
|
|
|
"Yea, and what be they?" said Christopher.
|
|
|
|
Simon grinned: "Even these," said he, "that Dr. Knowall was
|
|
no man's cousin while he lived, and that he died last week."
|
|
|
|
Therewith he swung himself into his saddle, and Christopher
|
|
laughed merrily at his poor gibe and mounted in like wise.
|
|
|
|
Wherewithal they rode their ways through the thorpe, and at
|
|
the southern end thereof Simon drew rein, and looked on
|
|
Christopher as if he would ask him something, but asked not.
|
|
Then said Christopher: "Whither go we now?"
|
|
|
|
Said Simon: "It is partly for thee to say: hearken, I am
|
|
bidden first to ride the Redwater Wood with thee: knowest
|
|
thou that?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said the lad, "full well: but which way shall we
|
|
ride it? Wilt thou come out of it at Redwater Head, or Herne
|
|
Moss, or the Long Pools?"
|
|
|
|
Said Simon: "We shall make for the Long Pools, if thou
|
|
canst bring me there."
|
|
|
|
Christopher laughed: "Aha!" said he, "then am I some
|
|
faraway cousin of Dr. Knowall when the whole tale is told:
|
|
forsooth I can lead thee thither; but tell me, what shall I
|
|
do of valiant deeds at the Long Pools? for there is no
|
|
fire-drake nor effit, nay, nor no giant, nor guileful dwarf,
|
|
nought save mallard and coot, heron and bittern; yea, and
|
|
ague-shivers to boot."
|
|
|
|
Simon looked sourly on him and said: "Thou are bidden to go
|
|
with me, young man, or gainsay the Marshal. Art thou mighty
|
|
enough thereto? For the rest, fear not but that the deed
|
|
shall come to thee one day."
|
|
|
|
"Nay," said Christopher, "it is all one to me, for I am at
|
|
home in these woods and wastes, I and my shafts. Tell me of
|
|
the deeds when thou wilt." But indeed he longed to know the
|
|
deed, and fretted him because of Simon's surliness and
|
|
closeness. Then he said: "Well, Squire Simon, let us to
|
|
the road; for thou shalt know that to-night we must needs
|
|
house us under the naked heaven; in nowise can we come to
|
|
the Long Pools before to-morrow morning."
|
|
|
|
"Yea, and why not?" said the squire; "I have lain in worse
|
|
places."
|
|
|
|
"Wilt thou tell me thereof?" said Christopher.
|
|
|
|
"Mayhappen," said Simon, "if to-morrow comes and goes for
|
|
both of us twain."
|
|
|
|
So they rode their ways through the wood, and baited at
|
|
midday with what Simon bare in his saddle-bags, and then
|
|
went on till night fell on them; then asked Simon how long
|
|
they were from the Long Pools, and Christopher told him that
|
|
they were yet short of them some fifteen miles, and those
|
|
long ones, because of the marish grounds. So they tethered
|
|
their horses there and ate their supper; and lay down to
|
|
sleep in the house of the woods, by a fire-side which they
|
|
lighted.
|
|
|
|
But in the midnight Christopher, who was exceeding
|
|
fine-eared, had an inkling of someone moving afoot anigh
|
|
him, and he awoke therewith, and sprang up, his drawn
|
|
short-sword in his hand, and found himself face to face with
|
|
Simon, and he also with his sword drawn. Simon sprang
|
|
aback, but held up his sword-point, and Christopher, not yet
|
|
fully awake, cried out: "What wouldst thou? What is it?"
|
|
|
|
Simon answered, stammering and all abashed: "Didst thou not
|
|
hear then? it wakened me."
|
|
|
|
"I heard nought," said Christopher; "what was it?"
|
|
|
|
"Horses going in the wood," said Simon
|
|
|
|
"Ah, yea," said Christopher, "it will have been the wild
|
|
colts and the mares; they harbour about these marsh-land
|
|
parts. Go to sleep again, neighbour, the night is not yet
|
|
half worn; but I will watch a while."
|
|
|
|
Then Simon sheathed his sword, and turned about and stood
|
|
uneasily a little while, and then cast him down as one who
|
|
would sleep hastily; but slept not forsooth, though he
|
|
presently made semblance of it: as for Christopher, he drew
|
|
together the brands of the fire, and sat beside it with his
|
|
blade over his knees, until the first beginning of the
|
|
summer dawn was in the sky; then he began to nod, and
|
|
presently lay aback and slept soundly. Simon slept not, but
|
|
durst not move. So they lay till it was broad day, and the
|
|
sunbeams came thrusting through the boughs of the thicket.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII.
|
|
|
|
CHRISTOPHER COMES TO THE TOFTS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
When they arose in the sunshine, Simon went straightway to
|
|
see to the horses, while Christopher stayed by the fire to
|
|
dight their victuals; he was merry enough, and sang to
|
|
himself the while; but when Simon came back again,
|
|
Christopher looked on him sharply, but for a while Simon
|
|
would not meet his eye, though he asked divers questions of
|
|
him concerning little matters, as though he were fain to
|
|
hear Christopher's voice; at last he raised his eyes, and
|
|
looked on him steadily, and then Christopher said: "Well,
|
|
wayfarer mine, and whither away this morning?"
|
|
|
|
Said Simon: "As thou wottest, to the Long Pools."
|
|
|
|
Said the lad: "Well, thou keepest thy tidings so close,
|
|
that I will ask thee no more till we come to the Long Pools;
|
|
since there, forsooth, thou must needs tell me; unless we
|
|
sunder company there, whereof I were nought grieving."
|
|
|
|
"Mayhappen thou shalt fare a long way to-day," muttered
|
|
Simon.
|
|
|
|
But the lad cried out aloud, while his eye glittered and his
|
|
cheek flushed: "Belike thou hadst well-nigh opened the door
|
|
thereto last night!" And therewith he leapt to his feet and
|
|
drew his short-sword, and with three deft strokes sheared
|
|
asunder an overhanging beech-bough as thick as a man's
|
|
wrist, that it fell crashing down, and caught Simon amongst
|
|
the fall of its leafy twigs, while Christopher stood
|
|
laughing on him, but with a dangerous lofty look in his
|
|
eyes: then he turned away quietly toward the horses and
|
|
mounted his nag, and Simon followed and did the like,
|
|
silently; crestfallen he looked, with brooding fierceness in
|
|
his face.
|
|
|
|
So they rode their ways, and spake but little each to each
|
|
till they came to where the trees of the wood thinned
|
|
speedily, and gave out at last at the foot of a low stony
|
|
slope but little grassed; and when they had ridden up to the
|
|
brow and could see below, Christopher stretched out his
|
|
hand, and said: "Lo thou the Long Pools, fellow wayfarer!
|
|
and lo some of the tramping; horses that woke thee and not
|
|
me last night."
|
|
|
|
Forsooth there lay below them a great stretch of grass,
|
|
which whiles ran into mere quagmire, and whiles was sound
|
|
and better grassed; and the said plain was seamed by three
|
|
long shallow pools, with, as it were, grassy causeways
|
|
between them, grown over here and there with ancient alder
|
|
trees; but the stony slope whereon they had reined up bent
|
|
round the plain mostly to the east, as though it were the
|
|
shore of a great water; and far away to the south the hills
|
|
of the forest rose up blue, and not so low at the most, but
|
|
that they were somewhat higher than the crest of the White
|
|
Horse as ye may see it from the little Berkshire hills above
|
|
the Thames. Down on the firm greensward there was indeed a
|
|
herd of wild horses feeding; mallard and coot swam about the
|
|
waters; the whimbrel laughed from the bent-sides, and three
|
|
herons stood on the side of the causeway seeking a good
|
|
fishing-stead.
|
|
|
|
Simon sat a-horseback looking askance from the marish to
|
|
Christopher, and said nothing a while; then he spake in a
|
|
low croaking voice, and said: "So, little King, we have
|
|
come to the Long Pools; now I will ask thee, hast thou been
|
|
further southward than this marish land?"
|
|
|
|
"That have I," said the lad, "a day's journey further; but
|
|
according to the tales of men it was at the peril of my
|
|
life."
|
|
|
|
Simon seemed as if he had not noted his last word; he said:
|
|
"Well then, since thou knowest the wild and the wood,
|
|
knowest thou amidst of the thickets there, two lumps of bare
|
|
hills, like bowls turned bottom up, that rise above the
|
|
trees, and on each a tower, and betwixt them a long house."
|
|
|
|
"Save us, Allhallows!" quoth Christopher, "but thou wilt
|
|
mean the Tofts! Is it so, sir squire?"
|
|
|
|
"Even so," said Simon.
|
|
|
|
"And thou knowest what dwellest there, and wouldst have me
|
|
lead thee thither?" said the lad.
|
|
|
|
"I am so bidden," said Simon; "if thou wilt not do my
|
|
bidding, seek thou some place to hide thee in from the hand
|
|
of the Earl Marshal."
|
|
|
|
Said the youngling: "Knowest thou not Jack of the Tofts and
|
|
his seven sons, and what he is, and that he dwelleth there?"
|
|
|
|
Said Simon: "I know of him; yea, and himself I know, and
|
|
that he dwelleth there; and I wot that men call him an
|
|
outlaw, and that many rich men shall lack ere he lacks.
|
|
What then?"
|
|
|
|
"This," said Christopher, "that, as all tales tell, he will
|
|
take my life if I ride thither. And," said he, turning to
|
|
Simon, "this is belike what thou wouldest with me?" And
|
|
therewith he drew out his sword, for his bow was unstrung.
|
|
|
|
But Simon sat still and let his sword abide, and said,
|
|
sourly enough: "Thou art a fool to think I am training thee
|
|
to thy death by him; for I have no will to die, and why
|
|
shall he not slay me also? Now again I say unto thee, thou
|
|
hast the choice, either to lead me to the Tofts, where shall
|
|
be the deed for thee to do, or to hide thee in some hole, as
|
|
I said afore, from the vengeance of the Lord of Oakenrealm.
|
|
But as for thy sword, thou mayst put it up, for I will not
|
|
fight with thee, but rather let thee go with a string to thy
|
|
leg, if thou wilt not be wise and do as thy lords ordain for
|
|
thee."
|
|
|
|
Christopher sheathed his sword, and a smile came into his
|
|
face, as if some new thought were stirring in him, and he
|
|
said: "Well, since thou wilt not fight with me, and I but a
|
|
lad, I will e'en do thy will and thine errand to Jack of the
|
|
Tofts. Maybe he is not so black as he is painted, and not
|
|
all tales told of him are true. But some of them I will
|
|
tell thee as we ride along."
|
|
|
|
"And some thereof I know already, O woodland knight," said
|
|
Simon, as they rode down the bent, and Christopher led on
|
|
toward the green causeway betwixt the waters. "Tell me,"
|
|
quoth he, when they had ridden awhile, "is this one of thy
|
|
tales, how Jack of the Tofts went to the Yule feast of a
|
|
great baron in the guise of a minstrel, and, even as they
|
|
bore in the boar's head, smote the said baron on the neck,
|
|
so that his head lay by the head of the swine on the
|
|
Christmas board?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said Christopher, "and how Jack cried out: 'Two
|
|
heads of swine, one good to eat, one good to burn.' But, my
|
|
master, thou shalt know that this manslaying was not for
|
|
nought: whereas the Baron of Greenlake had erewhile slain
|
|
Jack's father in felon wise, where he could strike no stroke
|
|
for life; and two of his brethren also had he slain, and
|
|
made the said Jack an outlaw, and he all sackless. In the
|
|
Uttermost March we deem that he had a case against the
|
|
baron."
|
|
|
|
"Hah!" said Simon. "Is this next tale true, that this Jack
|
|
o' the Tofts slew a good knight before the altar, so that
|
|
the priest's mass-hackle was all wet with his blood, whereas
|
|
the said priest was in the act of putting the holy body into
|
|
the open mouth of the said knight?"
|
|
|
|
Christopher said eagerly: "True was it, by the Rood! and
|
|
well was it done, for that same Sir Raoul was an ugly
|
|
traitor, who had knelt down where he died to wed the Body of
|
|
the Lord to a foul lie in his mouth; whereas the man who
|
|
knelt beside him he had trained to his destruction, and was
|
|
even then doing the first deal of his treason by forswearing
|
|
him there."
|
|
|
|
"And that man who knelt with him there," said Simon, "what
|
|
betid to him?"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "He went out of the church with Jack of
|
|
the Tofts that minute of the stroke; and to the Tofts he
|
|
went with him, and abode with him freely: and a valiant man
|
|
he was...and is."
|
|
|
|
"Hah!" said Simon again. "And then there is this: that the
|
|
seven sons of Jack of the Tofts bore off perforce four fair
|
|
maidens of gentle blood from the castle wherein they dwelt,
|
|
serving a high dame in all honour; and that moreover, they
|
|
hanged the said dame over the battlements of her own castle.
|
|
Is this true, fair sir?"
|
|
|
|
"True is it as the gospel," said Christopher: "yet many say
|
|
that the hanged dame had somewhat less than her deserts; for
|
|
a foul & cruel whore had she been; and had done many to be
|
|
done to death, and stood by while they were pined. And the
|
|
like had she done with those four damsels, had there not
|
|
been the stout sons of Jack of the Tofts; so that the dear
|
|
maidens were somewhat more than willing to be borne away."
|
|
|
|
Simon grinned: "Well, lad," said he, "I see that thou
|
|
knowest Jack of the Tofts even better than I do; so why in
|
|
the devil's name thou art loth to lead me to him, I wot
|
|
not."
|
|
|
|
Christopher reddened, and held his peace awhile; then he
|
|
said: "Well fellow-farer, at least I shall know something
|
|
of him ere next midnight."
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said Simon, "and shall we not come to the Tofts
|
|
before nightfall?"
|
|
|
|
"Let us essay it," said Christopher, "and do our best, it
|
|
yet lacketh three hours of noon." Therewith he spurred on,
|
|
for the greensward was hard under the hooves, and they had
|
|
yet some way to go before they should come amongst the trees
|
|
and thickets.
|
|
|
|
Into the said wood they came, and rode all day diligently,
|
|
but night fell on them before they saw either house or man
|
|
or devil; then said Simon: "Why should we go any further
|
|
before dawn? Will it not be best to come to this perilous
|
|
house by daylight?"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "There be perils in the wood as well as
|
|
in the house. If we lie down here, maybe Jack's folk may
|
|
come upon us sleeping, and some mischance may befall us.
|
|
Withal, hereabout be no wild horses to wake thee and warn
|
|
thee of thy foeman anigh. Let us press on; there is a moon,
|
|
though she be somewhat hidden by clouds, and meseemeth the
|
|
way lieth clear before me; neither are we a great way from
|
|
the Tofts."
|
|
|
|
Then Simon rode close up to Christopher, and took his rein
|
|
and stayed him, and said to him, as one who prayeth: "Young
|
|
man, willest thou my death?"
|
|
|
|
"That is as it may be," said Christopher; "willest thou
|
|
mine?"
|
|
|
|
Simon held his peace awhile, and Christopher might not see
|
|
what was in his face amidst the gathering dusk; but he
|
|
twitched his rein out of the squire's hand, as if he would
|
|
hasten onward; then the squire said: "Nay, I pray thee
|
|
abide and hear a word of me."
|
|
|
|
"Speak then," said Christopher, "but hasten, for I hunger,
|
|
and I would we were in the hall." And therewith he laughed.
|
|
|
|
Said Simon: "Thus it is: if I go back to my lord and bear
|
|
no token of having done his errand to Jack of the Tofts,
|
|
then am I in evil case; and if I come to the Tofts, I wot
|
|
well that Jack is a man fierce of heart, and ready of hand:
|
|
now, therefore, I pray thee give me thy word to be my
|
|
warrant, so far as thou mayst be, with this woodman and his
|
|
sons."
|
|
|
|
At that word Christopher brake out a-laughing loudly, till
|
|
all the dusk wood rang with the merry sound of his fresh
|
|
voice; at last he said: "Well, well, thou art but a craven
|
|
to be a secret murderer: the Lord God would have had an
|
|
easy bargain of Cain, had he been such as thou. Come on,
|
|
and do thine errand to Jack of the Tofts, and I will hold
|
|
thee harmless, so far as I may. Though, sooth to say, I
|
|
guessed what thine errand was, after the horses waked thee
|
|
and put a naked sword in thine hand last night. Marry! I
|
|
had no inkling of it when we left the Castle yesterday
|
|
morning, but deemed thy lord needed me to do him some
|
|
service. Come on then! or rather go thou on before me a
|
|
pace; there, where thou seest the glimmer betwixt the
|
|
beech-trees yonder; if thou goest astray, I am anigh thee
|
|
for a guide. And I say that we shall not go far without
|
|
tidings."
|
|
|
|
Simon went on perforce, as he was bidden, and they rode thus
|
|
a while slowly, Christopher now and then crying, as they
|
|
went: "To the right, squire! To the left! Straight on now!"
|
|
and so on. But suddenly they heard voices, and it was as if
|
|
the wood had all burst out into fire, so bright a light
|
|
shone out. Christopher shouted, and hastened on to pass
|
|
Simon, going quite close to his right side thereby, and as
|
|
he did so, he saw steel flashing in his hand, and turned
|
|
sidling to guard him, but ere he could do aught Simon drave
|
|
a broad dagger into his side, and then turned about and fled
|
|
the way they had come, so far as he knew how.
|
|
|
|
Christopher fell from his horse at once as the stroke came
|
|
home, but straightway therewith were there men with torches
|
|
round about him, a dozen of them; men tall and wild-looking
|
|
in the firelight; and one of them, a slim young man with
|
|
long red hair falling all about his shoulders, knelt down by
|
|
him, while the others held his horse and gat his feet out of
|
|
the stirrups.
|
|
|
|
The red-head laid his hand on his breast, and raised his
|
|
head up till the light of a torch fell on it, and then he
|
|
cried out: "Masters, here hath been a felon; the man hath
|
|
been sticked, and the deed hath to do with us; for lo you,
|
|
this is none other than little Christopher of the Uttermost
|
|
March, who stumbled on the Tofts last Yule, and with whom we
|
|
were so merry together. Here, thou Robert of Maisey, do thy
|
|
leechdom on him if he be yet living; but if he be dead, or
|
|
dieth of his hurt, then do I take the feud on me, to follow
|
|
it to the utmost against the slayer; even I, David the Red,
|
|
though I be the youngest of the sons of Jack of the Tofts.
|
|
For this man I meant should be my fellow in field and fell,
|
|
ganging and galloping, in hall and high-place, in cot and in
|
|
choir, before woman and warrior, and priest and
|
|
proud-prince. Now thou Robert, how does he?"
|
|
|
|
Said the man who had looked to Christopher's wound, and had
|
|
put aside his coat and shirt: "He is sore hurt, but
|
|
meseemeth not deadly. Nay, belike he may live as long as
|
|
thou, or longer, whereas thou wilt ever be shoving thy red
|
|
head and lank body wheresoever knocks are going."
|
|
|
|
David rose with a sigh of one who is lightened of a load,
|
|
and said: "Well Robert, when thou hast bound his wound let
|
|
us have him into the house: Ho lads! there is light enough
|
|
to cut some boughs and make a litter for him. But, ho
|
|
again! has no one gone after the felon to take him?"
|
|
|
|
Robert grinned up from his job with the hurt man: "Nay,
|
|
King David," said he, "it is mostly thy business; mayhappen
|
|
thou wilt lay thy heels on thy neck and after him."
|
|
|
|
The red-head stamped on the ground, and half drew his sax,
|
|
and shoved it back again unto the sheath, and then said
|
|
angrily: "I marvel at thee, Robert, that thou didst not
|
|
send a man or two at once after the felon: how may I leave
|
|
my comrade and sweet board-fellow lying hurt in the
|
|
wild-wood? Art thou growing over old for our woodland ways,
|
|
wherein loitering bringeth louting?"
|
|
|
|
Robert chuckled and said: "I thought thou wouldst take the
|
|
fly in thy mouth, foster-son: if the felon escape Ralph
|
|
Longshanks and Anthony Green, then hath he the devil's luck;
|
|
and they be after him."
|
|
|
|
"That is well," said the young man, "though I would I were
|
|
with them." And therewith he walked up and down
|
|
impatiently, while the others were getting ready the litter
|
|
of boughs.
|
|
|
|
At last it was done, and Christopher laid thereon, and they
|
|
all went on together through the woodland path, the torches
|
|
still flaring about them. Presently they came out into a
|
|
clearing of the wood, and lo, looming great and black before
|
|
them against the sky, where the moon had now broken out of
|
|
the clouds somewhat, the masses of the tofts, and at the top
|
|
of the northernmost of them a light in the upper window of a
|
|
tall square tower. Withal the yellow-litten windows of a
|
|
long house showed on the plain below the tofts; but little
|
|
else of the house might be seen, save that, as they drew
|
|
near, the walls brake out in doubtful light here and there
|
|
as the torches smote them.
|
|
|
|
So came they to a deep porch, where they quenched all the
|
|
torches save one, and entered a great hall through it, David
|
|
and two other tall young men going first, and Robert Maisey
|
|
going beside the bier. The said hall was lighted with
|
|
candles, but not very brightly, save at the upper end; but
|
|
amidmost a flickering heap of logs sent a thin line of blue
|
|
smoke up to the luffer. There were some sixty folk in the
|
|
hall, scattered about the end-long tables, a good few of
|
|
whom were women, well grown and comely enough, so far as
|
|
could be seen under the scanty candle-light. At the
|
|
high-table, withal, were sitting both men and women, and as
|
|
they drew near to the greater light of it, there could be
|
|
seen in the chief seat a man, past middle age, tall,
|
|
wide-shouldered and thin-flanked, with a short peaked beard
|
|
and close-cut grizzled hair; he was high of cheekbones,
|
|
thin-faced, with grey eyes, both big and gentle-looking; he
|
|
was clad in a green coat welted with gold. Beside him sat a
|
|
woman, tall and big-made, but very fair of face, though she
|
|
were little younger, belike, than the man. Out from these
|
|
two sat four men and four women, man by man and woman by
|
|
woman, on either side of the high-seat. Of the said men,
|
|
one was of long red hair as David, and like to him in all
|
|
wise, but older; the others were of like fashion to him in
|
|
the high-seat. Shortly to say it, his sons they were, as
|
|
David and the two young men with him. The four women who
|
|
sat with these men were all fair and young, and one of them,
|
|
she who drank out of the red-head's cup, so fair, and with
|
|
such a pleasant slim grace, that her like were not easy to
|
|
be found.
|
|
|
|
Again, to shorten the tale, there in the hall before
|
|
Christopher, who lay unwotting, were Jack of the Tofts and
|
|
his seven sons, and the four wives of four of the same, whom
|
|
they had won from the Wailful Castle, when they, with their
|
|
father, put an end to the evil woman, and the great
|
|
she-tyrant of the Land betwixt the Wood and the River.
|
|
|
|
Now when David and his were come up to the dais, they stayed
|
|
them, and their father spake from his high-seat and said:
|
|
"What is to do, ye three? and what catch have ye?"
|
|
|
|
Said David: "I would fain hope 'tis the catch of a life
|
|
that or I love; for here is come thy guest of last Yule,
|
|
even little Christopher, who wrestled with thee and threw
|
|
thee after thou hadst thrown all of us, and he lying along
|
|
and hurt, smitten down by a felon hard on our very doors.
|
|
What will ye do with him?"
|
|
|
|
"What," said Jack of the Tofts, "but tend him and heal him
|
|
and cherish him. And when he is well, then we shall see.
|
|
But where is the felon who smote him?"
|
|
|
|
Said David: "He fled away a-horseback ere we came to the
|
|
field of deed, and Anthony Green and Ralph Longshanks are
|
|
gone after him, and belike, will take him."
|
|
|
|
"Mayhappen not," said the master. "Now, forsooth, I have an
|
|
inkling of what this may mean; whereas there can be but one
|
|
man whose business may be the taking of our little guest's
|
|
life. But let all be till he be healed and may tell us his
|
|
tale; and, if he telleth it as I deem he will, then shall we
|
|
seek further tidings. Meanwhile, if ye take the felon, keep
|
|
him heedfully till I may see him; for then may I have a true
|
|
tale out of him, even before Christopher is hale again."
|
|
|
|
So therewith David and Robert, with two or three others,
|
|
brought Christopher to a chamber, and did what leechdoms to
|
|
him they might; but Jack of the Tofts, and his sons and
|
|
their fair wives, and his other folk, made merry in the hall
|
|
of the Tofts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX.
|
|
|
|
SQUIRE SIMON COMES BACK TO OAKENHAM. THE EARL MARSHAL TAKEN
|
|
TO KING IN OAKENREALM.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now as to Squire Simon, whether the devil helped him, or his
|
|
luck, or were it his own cunning and his, horse's stoutness,
|
|
we wot not; but in any case he fell not in with Ralph
|
|
Longshanks and Anthony Green, but rode as far and as fast as
|
|
his horse would go, and then lay down in the wild-wood; and
|
|
on the morrow arose and went his ways, and came in the even
|
|
to the Castle of the Uttermost March, and went on thence the
|
|
morrow after on a fresh horse to Oakenham. There he made no
|
|
delay but went straight to the High House, and had privy
|
|
speech of the Earl Marshal; and him he told how he had
|
|
smitten Christopher, and, as he deemed, slain him. The Earl
|
|
Marshal looked on him grimly and said: "Where is the ring
|
|
then?"
|
|
|
|
"I have it not," said Simon. "How might I light down to
|
|
take it, when the seven sons were hard on us?" And therewith
|
|
he told him all the tale, and how he had risen to slay
|
|
Christopher the even before; and how he had found out after
|
|
that the youngling had become guest and fosterling of the
|
|
folk of the Tofts; and how warily Christopher had ridden, so
|
|
that he, Simon, had had to do his best at the last moment.
|
|
"And now, Lord," quoth he, "I see that it will be my luck to
|
|
have grudging of thee, or even worse it may be; yea, or thou
|
|
wilt be presently telling me that I am a liar and never
|
|
struck the stroke: but I warrant me that by this time Jack
|
|
of the Tofts knoweth better, for I left my knife in the
|
|
youngling's breast, and belike he wotteth of my weapons.
|
|
Well, then, if thou wilt be quit of me, thou hast but to
|
|
forbear upholding me against the Toft folk, and then am I
|
|
gone without any to-do of thee."
|
|
|
|
Earl Rolf spake quietly in answer, though his face was
|
|
somewhat troubled: "Nay, Simon, I doubt thee not, not one
|
|
word; for why shouldest thou lie to me? nor do I deem thou
|
|
wouldest, for thou art trusty and worthy. Yet sore I doubt
|
|
if the child be dead. Well, even so let it be, for I am
|
|
alive; and full surely I am mightier than Jack of the Tofts,
|
|
both to uphold thee against him (wherein I shall not fail),
|
|
and otherwise. But may God make me even as that young man
|
|
if I be not mightier yet in a few days. But now do thou go
|
|
and eat and drink and take thy disport; for thou hast served
|
|
me well; and in a little while I shall make thee knight and
|
|
lord, and do all I can to pleasure thee."
|
|
|
|
So then Simon knelt to the Earl and made obeisance to him,
|
|
and arose and went his ways, light-hearted and merry.
|
|
|
|
But within the month it so befel that some of the lords and
|
|
dukes came to the Earl Marshal, and prayed him to call
|
|
together a great Folk-mote of all Oakenrealm; and he
|
|
answered them graciously, and behight them to do as they
|
|
would; and even so did he.
|
|
|
|
And that Mote was very great, and whenas it was hallowed,
|
|
there arose a great lord, grey and ancient, and bewailed him
|
|
before the folk, that they had no king over Oakenrealm to
|
|
uphold the laws & ward the land; and "Will ye live bare and
|
|
kingless for ever?" said he at last. "Will ye not choose
|
|
you a king, and crown him, before I die, and we others of
|
|
the realm who are old and worn?" Then he sat down, and
|
|
another arose, and in plain terms he bade them take the Earl
|
|
Marshal to king. And then arose one after other, and each
|
|
sang the same song, till the hearts of the people grew warm
|
|
with the big words, and at first many, and then more cried
|
|
out: "A King, a King! The Earl Marshal for King! Earl Rolf
|
|
for King!" So that at last the voices rose into a great
|
|
roar, and sword clashed on shield, and they who were about
|
|
the Earl turned to him and upraised him on a great
|
|
war-shield, and he stood thereon above the folk with a naked
|
|
sword in his hand, and all the folk shouted about him.
|
|
|
|
Thereafter the chiefs and all the mightiest came and did
|
|
homage to him for King of Oakenrealm as he sat on the Hill
|
|
of the Folk-mote: and that night there was once more a King
|
|
of Oakenrealm, and Earl Rolf was no more, but King Rolf
|
|
ruled the people.
|
|
|
|
But now the tale leaves telling of him, and turns again to
|
|
Christopher the woodman, who lay sick of his hurt in the
|
|
House of the Tofts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X.
|
|
|
|
OF CHRISTOPHER AT THE TOFTS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Christopher was six weeks ere he could come and go as he was
|
|
wont; but it was but a few days ere he was well enough to
|
|
tell his tale to Jack of the Tofts and his seven bold sons;
|
|
and they cherished him and made much of him, and so
|
|
especially did David, the youngest son, to his board-fellow
|
|
and troth-brother.
|
|
|
|
On a day when he was well-nigh whole, as he sat under an
|
|
oak-tree nigh the house, in the cool of the evening, Jack of
|
|
the Tofts came to him and sat beside him, and made him tell
|
|
his tale to him once more, and when he was done he said to
|
|
him: "Foster-son, for so I would have thee deem of thyself,
|
|
what is the thing that thou rememberest earliest in thy
|
|
days?"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "A cot without the Castle walls at the
|
|
Uttermost Marches, and a kind woman therein, big,
|
|
sandy-haired, and freckled, and a lad that was white-haired
|
|
and sturdy, somewhat bigger than I. And I mind me standing
|
|
up against the door-post of the cot and seeing men-at-arms
|
|
riding by in white armour, and one of them throwing an apple
|
|
to me, and I raised my arm to throw it back at him, but my
|
|
nurse (for somehow I knew she was not my mother) caught my
|
|
hand and drew me back indoors, and I heard the men laughing
|
|
behind me. And then a little after my nurse took me into
|
|
the Castle court, and there was again the man who had thrown
|
|
me the apple, sitting on a bench therein, clad in a scarlet
|
|
gown furred with brown fur; and she led me up to him, and he
|
|
stooped down and chucked me under the chin and put his hand
|
|
on my head, and looked at my nurse and said: 'Yea, he is a
|
|
big lad, and groweth apace, whereas he is but of six
|
|
winters.' 'Nay, Lord,' said my nurse, 'he is but scantly
|
|
five.' He knit his brows and said: 'Nay, I tell thee he is
|
|
six.' She shook her head, but said nought, and the great
|
|
man scowled on her and said: 'Mistress, wilt thou set thy
|
|
word against mine? Know now that this child is of six years.
|
|
Now then, how old is he?' She said faintly: 'Six years.'
|
|
Said he: 'Look to it that thy head and thy mouth forget it
|
|
not, else shall we make thy back remember it.' Then he put
|
|
his hand on my head again, and said: 'Well, I say thou art
|
|
a big lad for six years;' and therewith he gave me a silver
|
|
penny; and even as he spake, came up a grey-clad squire to
|
|
him and looked on me curiously. Then I went away with my
|
|
nurse, and wondered why she was grown so pale, whereas she
|
|
was mostly red-cheeked and jolly. But when she had brought
|
|
me into the cot again, she kissed me and clipped me, weeping
|
|
sorely the while; wherefore I wept, though I knew not why.
|
|
Sithence, I soon came to know that the man was the lord and
|
|
governor of the Castle, as ye may well wot; but to this hour
|
|
I know not what he meant by threatening my nurse."
|
|
|
|
Said Jack: "And how old art thou now, Christopher mine?"
|
|
|
|
Said the youngling, laughing: "By my lord the Castellan's
|
|
reckoning I am twenty and two years; but if thou wilt trow
|
|
my good and kind nurse, that yet liveth a kind dame, thou
|
|
must take twelve months off the tale."
|
|
|
|
Jack sat silent a little; then he laughed and said: "Well,
|
|
thou art a mickle babe, Christopher, and it may be that one
|
|
day many a man shall know it. But now tell me again; thou
|
|
hadst said to me before that thou hast known neither father
|
|
nor mother, brother nor sisters: is it so, verily?"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "Never a kinsman of blood have I, though
|
|
many well-wishers."
|
|
|
|
Said Jack: "Well, now hast thou father and mother, brethren
|
|
and sisters, though they be of the sort of man-slayers and
|
|
strong-thieves and outlaws; yet they love thee, lad, and
|
|
thou mayst one day find out how far thou mayst trust them."
|
|
|
|
Christopher nodded and smiled at him merrily; then he fell
|
|
silent awhile, and the outlaw sat looking on him; at last he
|
|
said suddenly: "Foster-father, tell me what I am, and of
|
|
what kindred, I pray thee; for, methinks, thou knowest
|
|
thereof; and what wonder, wise man as thou art."
|
|
|
|
"Forsooth, son Christopher, I have a deeming thereof, or
|
|
somewhat more, and when it is waxen greater yet, I will tell
|
|
it thee one day, but not now. But hearken! for I have other
|
|
tidings for thee. Thou art now whole and strong, and in a
|
|
few days thou mayst wend the wild-wood as stoutly as e'er a
|
|
one of us. Now, therefore, how sayest thou, if I bid thee
|
|
fare a two days' journey with David and Gilbert thy
|
|
brethren, and thy sister Joanna, till they bring thee to a
|
|
fair little stead which I call mine own, to dwell there
|
|
awhile? For, meseemeth, lad, that the air of the Tofts here
|
|
may not be overwholesome unto thee."
|
|
|
|
Christopher reddened, and he half rose up, and said: "What
|
|
is this, foster-father? Is it that there shall be battle at
|
|
the Tofts, and that thou wouldst have me away thence? Am I
|
|
then such a weakling?"
|
|
|
|
Said Jack, laughing: "Be still now, thou sticked one. The
|
|
Tofts go down to battle at some whiles; but seldom comet
|
|
battle to the Tofts; and no battle do I look for now. But
|
|
do my bidding, sweet fosterling, and it will be better for
|
|
me and better for thee, and may, perchance, put off battle
|
|
for awhile; which to me as now were not unhandy. If thou
|
|
wilt but abide at Littledale for somewhile, there shall be
|
|
going and coming betwixt us, and thou shalt drink thy Yule
|
|
at the Tofts, and go back afterwards, and ever shalt thou
|
|
have thy sweet fellows with thee; so be wise, since thou
|
|
goest not perforce."
|
|
|
|
"Yea, yea," said Christopher, laughing; "thou puttest force
|
|
on no man, is it not so, foster-father? Wherefore I will go,
|
|
and uncompelled."
|
|
|
|
Therewith came up to them, from out of the wild-wood, David,
|
|
and with him Joanna, who was the wife of Gilbert, and one of
|
|
those fair maidens from the Wailful Castle, though not the
|
|
fairest of them; they had been a-hunting, for ever those
|
|
three would willingly go together, Gilbert, David, and
|
|
Joanna; and now Gilbert had abided behind, to dight the
|
|
quarry for fetching home. Christopher looked on the two
|
|
joyfully, as a man getting whole after sickness smiles on
|
|
goodly things; and Joanna was fair to see in her hunter's
|
|
attire, with brogues tied to her naked feet, and the
|
|
shapeliness of her legs bare to the knee beneath the
|
|
trussing up of her green skirts.
|
|
|
|
They greeted Christopher kindly, and Joanna sat down by him
|
|
to talk, but Jack of the Tofts took his son by the arm, and
|
|
went toward the house with him in earnest speech.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI.
|
|
|
|
HOW CHRISTOPHER CAME TO LITTLEDALE TO ABIDE THERE A WHILE.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In about a week's time from this, those four fellows went
|
|
their ways southward from the Tofts, having with them four
|
|
good nags and four sumpter beasts laden with such things as
|
|
they needed, whereof were weapons enough, though they all,
|
|
save Christopher, bare bows; and he and the others were girt
|
|
with swords, and a leash of good dogs followed them. Two
|
|
milch kine also they drave with them.
|
|
|
|
Merry they were all as they went their ways through the
|
|
woods, but the gladness of Christopher was even past words;
|
|
wherefore, after a little, he spake scarce at all, but sat
|
|
in his saddle hearkening the tales and songs and jests of
|
|
his fellows, who went close beside him, for more often they
|
|
went a-foot than rode. And, forsooth, as the sweet morning
|
|
wore, it seemed to him, so great was his joy, as if all the
|
|
fair show of the greenery, and the boles of the ancient
|
|
oaks, and the squirrels running from bough to bough, and the
|
|
rabbits scuttling from under the bracken, and the hind
|
|
leaping in the wood-lawn, and the sun falling through the
|
|
rustling leaves, and the wind on his face, and the scent of
|
|
the forest, yea, and his fair companions and their
|
|
loveliness & valiancy and kindness, and the words and songs
|
|
that came from their dear mouths, all these seemed to him,
|
|
as it were, one great show done for the behoof and pleasure
|
|
of him, the man come from the peril of death and the
|
|
sick-bed.
|
|
|
|
They lay that night in all glee under the green boughs; and
|
|
arose on the morrow, and went all day, and again slept in
|
|
the greenwood, and the next morning came down into a fair
|
|
valley, which was indeed Littledale, through which ran a
|
|
pleasant little river; and on a grassy knoll, but a short
|
|
way from its bank, was a long framed hall, somewhat narrow,
|
|
and nought high, whitherward they turned them straightway,
|
|
and were presently before the door; then Gilbert drew a key
|
|
from out of his scrip and unlocked the door, and they
|
|
entered, and found within a fair little hall, with shut-beds
|
|
out from it on the further side, and kitchen, and
|
|
store-bowers at the end; all things duly appointed with
|
|
plenishing, and meal and wine; for it was but some three
|
|
months since one of Jack of the Tofts' allies, Sir Launcelot
|
|
a'Green and his wife and two bairns, had left it till their
|
|
affair was made straight; whereas he had dwelt there a whole
|
|
year, for he had been made an outlaw of Meadham, and was a
|
|
dear friend of the said Jack.
|
|
|
|
"Now," said David smiling, "here is now thy high house and
|
|
thy castle, little King Christopher; how doth it like thee?"
|
|
|
|
"Right well," said Christopher; "and, to say sooth, I would
|
|
almost that it were night, or my bones do else, that I might
|
|
lie naked in a bed."
|
|
|
|
"Nay, lad," said Gilbert, "make it night now, and we will do
|
|
all that needs must be done, while thou liest lazy, as all
|
|
kings use to do."
|
|
|
|
"Nay," said Christopher, "I will be more a king than so, for
|
|
I will do neither this nor that; I will not work and I will
|
|
not go to bed, but will look on, till it is time for me to
|
|
take to the crooked stick and the grey-goose wing and seek
|
|
venison."
|
|
|
|
"That is better than well," said David; "for I can see by
|
|
thine eyes, that are dancing with pleasure, that in three or
|
|
four days thou wilt be about the thickets with us."
|
|
|
|
"Meantime," said Joanna, "thou shalt pay for thy meat and
|
|
drink by telling us tales when we come home weary."
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said Christopher laughing, "that ye may go to sleep
|
|
before your time."
|
|
|
|
So they talked, and were joyous and blithe together, and
|
|
between them they made the house trim, and decked it with
|
|
boughs and blossoms; and though Christopher told them no
|
|
tale that night, Joanna and David sang both; and in a night
|
|
or two it was Christopher that was the minstrel. So when
|
|
the morrow came there began their life of the woodland; but,
|
|
save for the changing of the year and the chances of the
|
|
hunt, the time passed on from day to day with little change,
|
|
and it was but seldom that any man came their way. When Yule
|
|
was, they locked the house door behind them and went their
|
|
ways home to the Tofts; and now of all of these wayfarers
|
|
was Christopher by far the hardest and strongest, for his
|
|
side had utterly forgotten Simon's knife. At the Tofts they
|
|
were welcomed with all triumph, and they were about there in
|
|
the best of cheer, till it was wearing toward Candlemas, and
|
|
then they took occasion of a bright and sunny day to go back
|
|
to Littledale once more, and there they abode till spring
|
|
was come and was wearing into summer, and messages had come
|
|
and gone betwixt them and the Tofts, and it was agreed that
|
|
with the first of autumn they should go back to the Tofts
|
|
and see what should betide.
|
|
|
|
But now leave we Christopher and these good fellows of the
|
|
Tofts and turn to Goldilind, who is yet dwelling amid no
|
|
very happy days in the Castle of Greenharbour, on the
|
|
northernmost marches of Meadham.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XII.
|
|
|
|
OF GOLDILIND IN THE MAY MORNING AT GREENHARBOUR.
|
|
|
|
|
|
May was on the land now, and was come into its second week,
|
|
and Goldilind awoke on a morn in the Castle of Greenharbour;
|
|
but little did her eyes behold of the May, even when they
|
|
were fully open; for she was lying, not in her own chamber,
|
|
which was proper, and even somewhat stately, and from whence
|
|
she could look on the sky and greenwood, but in a chamber
|
|
low down amidst the footings of the wall, little lighted,
|
|
unadorned, with nought in it for sport or pleasure; nought,
|
|
forsooth, save the pallet bed on which she lay, a joint
|
|
stool and water ewer. To be short, though it were called
|
|
the Least Guard-chamber, it was a prison, and she was there
|
|
dreeing her penance, as Dame Elinor would call the cruelty
|
|
of her malice, which the chaplain, Dame Elinor's led
|
|
captain, had ordained her for some sin which the twain had
|
|
forged between them.
|
|
|
|
She lay there naked in her smock, with no raiment anigh her,
|
|
and this was the third morning whereon she had awakened to
|
|
the dusky bare walls, and a long while had their emptiness
|
|
made of the hours: but she lay quiet and musing, not
|
|
altogether without cheer now; for indeed she was not wont to
|
|
any longer penance than this she had but now tholed, so she
|
|
looked for release presently: and, moreover, there had
|
|
grown in her mind during those three days a certain purpose;
|
|
to wit, that she would get hold of the governor of the
|
|
castle privily, and two or three others of the squires who
|
|
most regarded her, and bewail her case to them, so that she
|
|
might perchance get some relief. Forsooth, as she called to
|
|
mind this resolve, her heart beat and her cheek flushed, for
|
|
well she knew that there was peril in it, and she forecast
|
|
what might be the worst that would come thereof, while, on
|
|
the other hand, the best that might be seemed to her like a
|
|
glimpse of Paradise.
|
|
|
|
As she lay there and turned the matter over in her mind for
|
|
this many an hundred time, there came a key into the lock,
|
|
and the door opened; and thereby entered a tall woman,
|
|
dark-haired, white-skinned, somewhat young, and not
|
|
ill-favoured: Goldilind still lay there, till the new-comer
|
|
said to her in a hard voice, wherein was both threatening
|
|
and mockery: "Rise up, our Lady! the Dame Elinor saith that
|
|
it is enough, and that thou art to go forth. Nay, hold a
|
|
while; for I say unto thee that it is yet early in the day,
|
|
and that thy chamber is not yet dight for thee, so thou must
|
|
needs bestow thyself elsewhere till it be done."
|
|
|
|
Goldilind rose up, and said smiling: "Yea, Aloyse, but thou
|
|
hast not brought my raiment: and thou seest!"
|
|
|
|
The maid stood looking at her a moment somewhat evilly, and
|
|
then said: "Well, since it is but scant six o'clock, I may
|
|
do that; but I bid thee ask me not overmuch; for meseemeth
|
|
Dame Elinor is not overwell pleased with thee to-day, nor
|
|
our chaplain either."
|
|
|
|
Therewith she turned and went out, locking the door behind
|
|
her, and came back presently bearing on her arm a green gown
|
|
and other raiment: she laid them on the stool before the
|
|
Lady, and said: "Hasten, my Lady, and let me go to my
|
|
place: sooth to say, it may well be double trouble to thee
|
|
to don thy clothes, for thou mayst have to doff them again
|
|
before long."
|
|
|
|
Goldilind answered nought, but reddened and paled again as
|
|
she clad her under the waiting-maid's eyes. Then they went
|
|
out together, and up a short stone stair, till they were
|
|
level with the greensward without. Then the maid turned to
|
|
Goldilind and said: "And now thou art clad and out, my Lady,
|
|
I wot not where thou art to go to, since to thy chamber thou
|
|
must not go. Nay, hold and hearken! here we be at the door
|
|
which opens on to the Foresters' Garth under the Foresters'
|
|
Tower, thither shalt thou abide till I come to fetch thee.
|
|
How now, my Lady! what else wouldst thou?"
|
|
|
|
Goldilind looked on her with a smile, yet with eagereyes,
|
|
and said: "O good Aloyse, wouldst thou but give me a piece
|
|
of bread? for I hunger; thou wottest my queenly board hath
|
|
not been overloaded these last days."
|
|
|
|
"Ha!" said Aloyse; "if thou ask me overmuch I fear thou
|
|
mayst pay for it, my Lady; but this last asking thou shalt
|
|
have, and then none other till all thy penance thou hast
|
|
dreed. Abide!"
|
|
|
|
Therewith she went up the stairs, and Goldilind, who now was
|
|
but weak with her prison and the sudden light, and the hope
|
|
and fear of her purpose of bewailing her story, sat her down
|
|
on the stair there, almost, as it were, 'twixt home and
|
|
hell, till her heart came back to her and the tears began to
|
|
flow from her eyes. Forthright came back Aloyse, bearing a
|
|
white loaf and a little pitcher of milk on a silver
|
|
serving-dish; she laid them down, unlocked the door into the
|
|
garden, and thrust Goldilind through by the shoulders; then
|
|
she turned and took up her serving-dish with the bread and
|
|
milk, and handed it to Goldilind through the door, and said:
|
|
"Now is my Lady served. It were indeed well that my Lady
|
|
should strengthen herself this hour for the hour next to
|
|
come."
|
|
|
|
Therewith she turned about, and shut and locked the door;
|
|
and the King's daughter fell to eagerly on her bread, and
|
|
thought of little till she had eaten and drunk, save that
|
|
she felt the sweet scent of the gilliflowers and eglantine
|
|
as it were a part of her meal.
|
|
|
|
Then she went slowly down the garden, treading the
|
|
greensward beside the flowers; and she looked on the hold,
|
|
and the low sun gilded the walls thereof and glittered in a
|
|
window here and there, and though there was on her a
|
|
foreboding of the hours of that day, she did what she might
|
|
to make the best of the fragrant May morning and the song of
|
|
birds and rustle of leaves, though, indeed, at whiles the
|
|
tears would gush out of her eyes when she thought how young
|
|
she was and how feeble, and the pity of herself became sweet
|
|
unto her.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIII.
|
|
|
|
OF GOLDILIND IN THE GARTH.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now, as she went in that garden with her face turned toward
|
|
the postern which led into the open space of the greenwood,
|
|
which was but two bow-shots from the thicket, she heard the
|
|
clatter of horse-hoofs on the loose stones of the path, and
|
|
how they stopped at the said postern; and presently there
|
|
was a key in the lock, the door opened, and a man came in
|
|
walking stiffly, like a rider who has ridden far and fast.
|
|
He was clad in jack and sallet, and had a sword by his side,
|
|
and on his sleeve was done in green and gold a mountain
|
|
aflame; so that Goldilind knew him at once for a man of Earl
|
|
Geoffrey's; and, indeed, she had seen the man before, coming
|
|
and going on errands that she knew nought of, and on which
|
|
nothing followed that was of import to her. Therefore, as
|
|
she watched him cross the garden and go straight up to the
|
|
door of the Foresters' Tower, and take out another key and
|
|
enter, she heeded him but little, nor did his coming
|
|
increase her trouble a whit.
|
|
|
|
She walked on toward the postern, and now she saw that the
|
|
errand-bearer had left it open behind him, and when she came
|
|
close up to it, she saw his horse tied to a ring in the
|
|
wall, a strong and good bay nag. The sight of him, and the
|
|
glimpse of the free and open land, stirred in her the misery
|
|
of her days and the yearning for the loveliness of the world
|
|
without, converse of friends, hope of the sufficiency of
|
|
desire, and the sweetness of love returned. And so strong a
|
|
wave of anguish swept over her, that she bowed her down upon
|
|
the grass and wept bitterly. Yet but a little while it
|
|
lasted; she rose up presently and looked warily all round
|
|
her, and up to the Castle, and saw none stirring; she drew
|
|
up the skirts of her green gown into her girdle, till the
|
|
hem but just hid her knees; then she stepped lightly through
|
|
the half-open door with flushed cheeks and glittering eyes,
|
|
while her heart rose within her; then she lifted her hand,
|
|
unhitched the reins from the iron ring, and quietly led the
|
|
horse close under the garth-wall, and stole gently up the
|
|
slope which, as all roads from the Castle, went straightway
|
|
toward the thicket, but this was the straightest. So she
|
|
went, till she came to the corner of the garth-wall, and a
|
|
little further; and the Castle on that side was blind, save
|
|
for the swale on the battlement, whereon in that deep peace
|
|
was little going; and, moreover, it was not even yet six
|
|
o'clock.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIV.
|
|
|
|
GOLDILIND GOES FREE.
|
|
|
|
|
|
There then she stayed the horse, and, flushed and panting,
|
|
got lightly into the saddle and bestrode it, and, leaning
|
|
over on the beast's neck, smote his flanks with her heels;
|
|
the horse was fresh, though his master had been weary,
|
|
whereas the said messenger had gotten him from a forester
|
|
some six miles away in the wood that morning, so the nag
|
|
answered to her call for speed, and she went a great gallop
|
|
into the wood, and was hidden in a twinkling from any eyes
|
|
that might be looking out of the Castle.
|
|
|
|
Without checking the nag she sped along, half mad with joy
|
|
at the freedom of this happy morn. Nigh aimless she was,
|
|
but had an inkling that it were well with her if she could
|
|
hold northward ever; for the old man aforesaid had told her
|
|
of Oakenrealm, and how it lay northward of them; so that way
|
|
she drifted as the thicket would suffer her. When she had
|
|
gone as much of a gallop as she might for some half hour,
|
|
she drew rein to breathe her nag, and hearkened; she turned
|
|
in the saddle, but heard nought to affright her, so she went
|
|
on again, but some what more soberly; and thuswise she rode
|
|
for some two hours, and the day waxed hot, and she was come
|
|
to a clear pool amidst of a little clearing, covered with
|
|
fine greensward right down to the water's edge.
|
|
|
|
There she made stay, and got off her horse, and stood awhile
|
|
by him as he cropped the sweet grass; and the birds sang at
|
|
the edge of the thicket, and the rabbits crept and gambolled
|
|
on the other side of the water; and from the pool's edge the
|
|
moorhens cried. She stood half leaning against the side of
|
|
the horse till she became somewhat drowsy; yea, and even
|
|
dreamed a little, and that little but ill, it seemed, as she
|
|
gave a troubled cry and shrank together and turned pale.
|
|
Then she rubbed her eyes and smiled, and turned to the pool,
|
|
where now a little ripple was running over the face of it,
|
|
and a thought came upon her, and she set her hand to the
|
|
clasp of her gown and undid it, and drew the gown off her
|
|
shoulders, and so did off all her raiment, and stood naked a
|
|
little on the warm sunny grass, and then bestirred her and
|
|
went lightly into the pool, and bathed and sported there,
|
|
and then came on to the grass again, and went to and fro to
|
|
dry her in the air and sun. Then she did on her raiment
|
|
again, and laid her down under a thorn-bush by the
|
|
pool-side, and there, would she, would she not, went to
|
|
sleep soundly and dreamed not. And when she awoke she
|
|
deemed her sleep had been long, but it was not so, but
|
|
scarce a score of minutes. Anyhow, she sprang up now and
|
|
went to her horse, and drew the girths tight (which she had
|
|
loosed erewhile,) and so bestrode the good horse, and shook
|
|
the reins, and rode away much comforted and enheartened.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XV.
|
|
|
|
OF GOLDILIND IN THE WILD-WOOD.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Goldilind rode on, hastening yet to put as many miles as she
|
|
might betwixt her and Greenharbour. Within a three hours
|
|
from her bathing she fell a-hungering sore, and knew not
|
|
what to do to eat, till she found a pouch made fast to the
|
|
saddle-bow, and therein a little white loaf, that and no
|
|
more, which she took and ate the half of with great joy,
|
|
sitting down by a brook-side, whence she had her drink.
|
|
|
|
Then again she mounted, and rode on till dusk overtook her
|
|
just as she came to a little river running from the north
|
|
from pool to shallow, and shallow to pool. And whereas she
|
|
was now exceeding weary, and the good horse also much spent,
|
|
and that the grass was very sweet and soft down to the
|
|
water's edge, and that there was a thick thorn-bush to cover
|
|
her, she made up her mind that this place should be her
|
|
bed-chamber. So she took saddle and bridle off the horse,
|
|
as he must needs bite the grass, and then when she had eaten
|
|
the other half of her bread, she laid her down on the green
|
|
grass, with her head on the saddle, and when she had lain
|
|
listening to the horse cropping the grass close anigh her
|
|
for a minute or two, she fell fast asleep, and lay there
|
|
long and had no dreams.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVI.
|
|
|
|
WHAT GOLDILIND FOUND IN THE WOOD.
|
|
|
|
|
|
When she awoke it was broad day and bright sun, and she rose
|
|
up to her feet and looked about, and saw the horse standing
|
|
close by, and sharing the shade with her, whisking his tail
|
|
about lazily. Then she turned, and saw the stream rippling
|
|
out from the pool over the clean gravel, and here and there
|
|
a fish darting through the ripple, or making clean rings on
|
|
the pool as he quietly took a fly; the sky was blue and
|
|
clear, there was scarce a breath of air, and the morning was
|
|
already hot; no worse than yesterday sang the birds in the
|
|
bushes; but as she looked across the river, where, forsooth,
|
|
the alders grew thick about the pool's edge, a cock
|
|
blackbird, and then another, flew out from the close boughs,
|
|
where they had been singing to their mates, with the sharp
|
|
cry that they use when they are frighted. Withal she saw
|
|
the bush move, though, as aforesaid, the morning was without
|
|
wind. She had just stooped to do off her foot-gear (for she
|
|
was minded to bathe again), but now she stopped with one
|
|
shoe in her hand, and looked on the bushes keenly with
|
|
beating heart, and again she thought she saw the boughs
|
|
shaken, and stood, not daring to move a while; but they
|
|
moved no more now when she had looked steadily at them a
|
|
space, and again a blackbird began singing loud just where
|
|
they had been shaken. So she gathered heart again, and
|
|
presently turned her hand once more to stripping her raiment
|
|
off her, for she would not be baulked of her bath; but when
|
|
the stripping was done, she loitered not naked on the bank
|
|
as she had done the day before, but walked swiftly into the
|
|
shallow, and thence down into the pool, till nothing but her
|
|
head and the whiteness of her shoulders showed over the dark
|
|
water. Even then she turned her head about twice to look
|
|
into the over-side bushes, but when she saw nothing stir
|
|
there she began to play in the water, but not for long, but
|
|
came splashing through the shallow and hurried on her
|
|
raiment.
|
|
|
|
When she was clad again she went up to the horse, and patted
|
|
and caressed him, and did bridle and saddle on him, and was
|
|
going to climb upon him, when, of a sudden, she thought she
|
|
would lead him across, lest there should be a hole near the
|
|
other bank and he might stumble into it unwarily; so she
|
|
bared her feet once more and trussed up her gown skirts, and
|
|
so took the ford, leading the beast; the water was nowhere
|
|
up to mid-leg of her, and she stepped ashore on to short
|
|
and fine grass, which spread like a meadow before her, with
|
|
a big thorn or two scattered about it, and a little grassy
|
|
hill beset with tall elms toward the top, coming down into
|
|
the flat of the meadow and drawing round it nearly up to the
|
|
river on the north side.
|
|
|
|
But now she stood staring in wonder and some deal of fear;
|
|
for there were three milch kine feeding on the meadow, and,
|
|
moreover, under a thorn, scarce a hundred yards from where
|
|
she stood, was a tall man standing gazing on her. So
|
|
stricken was she that she might neither cry out nor turn
|
|
aside; neither did she think to pull her gown out of her
|
|
girdle to cover the nakedness of her legs.
|
|
|
|
When they had thus stood a little while the man began to
|
|
move toward her very slowly, nor did she dare to flee any
|
|
the more. But when he was within half a dozen paces her
|
|
face flushed red, and she did pull her gown out of its
|
|
trusses and let it flow down. But he spake to her in a
|
|
pleasant voice, and said: "May I speak to thee, maiden?"
|
|
|
|
Fear was yet in her soul, so that she might not speak for a
|
|
little, and then she said: "O, I beseech thee, bring me not
|
|
back to Greenharbour!" And she paled sorely as she spake the
|
|
word.
|
|
|
|
But he said: "I wot not of Greenharbour, how to find the
|
|
way thereto, though we have heard of it. But comfort
|
|
thyself, I pray thee, there is nought to fear in me."
|
|
|
|
The sound of his voice was full pleasant to her, and when
|
|
she hearkened him, how kind and frank it was, then she knew
|
|
how much of terror was blent with her joy in her newly-won
|
|
freedom and the delight of the kind and happy words. Yet
|
|
still she spoke not, and was both shamefast and still not
|
|
altogether unafraid. Yet, sooth to say, though his attire
|
|
was but simple, he was nought wild or fierce to look on.
|
|
From time to time she looked on him, and then dropped her
|
|
eyes again. In those glances she saw that he was grey-
|
|
eyed, and smooth-cheeked, and round-chinned, and his hair
|
|
curly and golden; and she must needs think that she had
|
|
never seen any face half so fair. He was clad but in a
|
|
green coat that came not down to his knees, and brogues were
|
|
tied to his feet, and no more raiment he had; and for hat he
|
|
had made him a garland of white may blossom, and well it sat
|
|
there: and again she looked on him, and thought him no
|
|
worse than the running angel that goes before the throne of
|
|
God in the picture of the choir of Meadhamstead; and she
|
|
looked on him and marvelled.
|
|
|
|
Now she hung her head before him and wished he would speak,
|
|
and even so did he, and said: "Maiden, when I first saw
|
|
thee from amidst of the bush by the river yonder, I deemed
|
|
thou wert a wood-wight, or some one of the she-Gods of the
|
|
Gentiles come back hither. For this is a lonely place, and
|
|
some might deem that the Devil hath might here more than in
|
|
other places; and when I saw thee, that thou wouldst do off
|
|
thy raiment to bathe thee, though soothly I longed to lie
|
|
hidden there, I feared thee, lest thou shouldst be angry
|
|
with me if I were to see thee unclad; so I came away; yet I
|
|
went not far, for I was above all things yearning to see
|
|
thee; and sooth it is, that hadst thou not crossed the
|
|
water, I should presently have crossed it myself to seek
|
|
thee, wert thou Goddess, or wood-wife, or whatever might
|
|
have come of it. But now thou art come to us, and I have
|
|
heard thy voice beseeching me not to bring thee to
|
|
Greenharbour, I see that thou art a woman of the kindred of
|
|
Adam. And yet so it is, that even now I fear thee somewhat.
|
|
Yet I will pray thee not to be wroth if I ask thee whether I
|
|
may do aught for thy need."
|
|
|
|
Now she began somewhat to smile, and she looked him full in
|
|
the face, and said: "Forsooth, my need is simple, for I am
|
|
hungry."
|
|
|
|
He smote himself on the breast, and said: "See now, what a
|
|
great fool I am, not to have known it without telling,
|
|
instead of making long-winded talk about myself. Come
|
|
quickly, dear maiden, and leave thine horse to crop the
|
|
grass."
|
|
|
|
So he hurried on to the thorn-bush aforesaid, and she went
|
|
foot to foot with him, but he touched her not; and
|
|
straightway she sat her down on the root of the thorn, and
|
|
smiled frankly on him, and said:
|
|
|
|
"Nay, sir, and now thou hast made me go all this way I am
|
|
out of breath and weary, so I pray thee of the victual at
|
|
once."
|
|
|
|
But he had been busy with his scrip which he had left cast
|
|
down there, and therewithal reached out to her a mighty
|
|
hunch of bread and a piece of white cheese, and said:
|
|
|
|
"Now shall I fetch thee milk." Wherewith he took up a bowl
|
|
of aspen tree that had lain by the scrip, and ran off to one
|
|
of the kine and milked the bowl full, and came back with it
|
|
heedfully, and set it down beside her and said: "This was
|
|
the nighest thing to hand, but when thou hast eaten and
|
|
rested then shall we go to our house, if thou wilt be so
|
|
kind to me; for there have we better meat and wine to boot."
|
|
|
|
She looked up at him smiling, but her pleasure of the meat
|
|
and the kindness was so exceeding, that she might not
|
|
refrain from tears also, but she spake not.
|
|
|
|
As for him, he knelt beside her, looking on her wistfully;
|
|
and at last he said: "I shall tell thee, that I am glad
|
|
that thou wert hungry and that I have seen thee eating, else
|
|
might I have deemed thee somewhat other than a woman of
|
|
mankind even yet."
|
|
|
|
She said: "Yea, and why wouldst thou not believe my word
|
|
thereto?"
|
|
|
|
He said, reddening: "I almost fear to tell thee, lest thou
|
|
think me overbold and be angry with me."
|
|
|
|
"Nay," she said, "tell me, for I would know."
|
|
|
|
Said he: "The words are not easy in my rude mouth; but this
|
|
is what I mean: that though I be young I have seen fair
|
|
women not a few, but beside any of them thou art a
|
|
wonder;....and loth I were if thou wert not really of
|
|
mankind, if it were but for the glory of the world."
|
|
|
|
She hung her head and answered nought a while, and he also
|
|
seemed ashamed: but presently she spake: "Thou hast been
|
|
kind to us, wouldst thou tell us thy name? and then, if it
|
|
like thee, what thou art?"
|
|
|
|
"Lady," he said, "my name is easy to tell, I hight
|
|
Christopher; and whiles folk in merry mockery call me
|
|
Christopher King; meseems because I am of the least account
|
|
of all carles. As for what else I am, a woodman I am, an
|
|
outlaw, and the friend of them: yet I tell thee I have
|
|
never by my will done any harm to any child of man; and
|
|
those friends of mine, who are outlaws also, are kind and
|
|
loving with me, both man and woman, though needs must they
|
|
dwell aloof from kings' courts and barons' halls."
|
|
|
|
She looked at him wondering, and as if she did not
|
|
altogether understand him; and she said: "Where dost thou
|
|
dwell?"
|
|
|
|
He said: "To-day I dwell hard by; though where I shall
|
|
dwell to-morrow, who knows? And with me are dwelling three
|
|
of my kind fellows; and the dearest is a young man of mine
|
|
own age, who is my fellow in all matters, for us to live and
|
|
die each for the other. Couldst thou have seen him, thou
|
|
wouldst love him I deem."
|
|
|
|
"What name hath he?" said Goldilind.
|
|
|
|
"He hight David," said Christopher.
|
|
|
|
But therewith he fell silent and knit his brow, as though he
|
|
were thinking of some knotty point: but in a while his face
|
|
cleared, and he said: "If I durst, I would ask thee thy
|
|
name, and what thou art?"
|
|
|
|
"As to my name," said she, "I will not tell it thee as now.
|
|
As to what I am, I am a poor prisoner; and much have I been
|
|
grieved and tormented, so that my body hath been but a thing
|
|
whereby I might suffer anguish. Something else am I, but I
|
|
may not tell thee what as yet."
|
|
|
|
He looked on her long, and then arose and went his way along
|
|
the very track of their footsteps, and he took the horse and
|
|
brought him back to the thorn, and stood by the lady and
|
|
reddened, and said: "I must tell thee what I have been
|
|
doing these last minutes."
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said she, looking at him wonderingly, "hast thou not
|
|
been fetching my horse to me?"
|
|
|
|
"So it is," said he; "but something else also. Ask me, or I
|
|
cannot tell thee."
|
|
|
|
She laughed, and said: "What else, fair sir?"
|
|
|
|
Said he: "Ask me what, or I cannot tell thee."
|
|
|
|
"Well, what, then?" said she.
|
|
|
|
He answered, stammering and blushing: "I have been looking
|
|
at thy foot prints, whereby thou camest up from the water,
|
|
to see what new and fairer blossoms have come up in the
|
|
meadow where thy feet were set e'en now."
|
|
|
|
She answered him nothing, and he held his peace. But in a
|
|
while she said: "If thou wouldst have us come to thine
|
|
house, thou shalt lead us thither now." And therewith she
|
|
took her foot-gear from out of her girdle, as if she would
|
|
do it on, and he turned his face away, but sighed therewith.
|
|
Then she reddened and put them back again, and rose up
|
|
lightly, and said: "I will go afoot; and wilt thou lead the
|
|
horse for me?"
|
|
|
|
So did he, and led her by all the softest and most flowery
|
|
ways, turning about the end of a spur of the little hill
|
|
that came close to the water, and going close to the lip of
|
|
the river. And when they had thus turned about the hill
|
|
there was a somewhat wider vale before them, grassy and
|
|
fair, and on a knoll, not far from the water, a long
|
|
frame-house thatched with reed.
|
|
|
|
Then said Christopher: "Lady, this is now Littledale, and
|
|
yonder the house thereof."
|
|
|
|
She said quietly: "Lovely is the dale, and fair the house
|
|
by seeming, and I would that they may be happy that dwell
|
|
therein!"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "Wilt thou not speak that blessing within
|
|
the house as without?"
|
|
|
|
"Fain were I thereof," she said. And therewith they came
|
|
into the garth, wherein the apple trees were blossoming, and
|
|
Goldilind spread abroad her hands and lifted up her head for
|
|
joy of the sight and the scent, and they stayed awhile
|
|
before they went on to the door, which was half open, for
|
|
they feared none in that place, and looked for none whom
|
|
they might not deal with if he came as a foe.
|
|
|
|
Christopher would have taken a hand of her to lead her in,
|
|
but both hands were in her gown to lift up the hem as she
|
|
passed over the threshold; so he durst not.
|
|
|
|
Fair and bright now was the hall within, with its long and
|
|
low windows goodly glazed, a green halling on the walls of
|
|
Adam and Eve and the garden, and the good God walking
|
|
therein; the sun shone bright through the southern windows,
|
|
and about the porch it was hot, but further toward the dais
|
|
cool and pleasant.
|
|
|
|
So Goldilind sat down in the coolest of the place at the
|
|
standing table; but Christopher bestirred himself, and
|
|
brought wine and white bread, and venison and honey, and
|
|
said: "I pray thee to dine, maiden, for it is now hard on
|
|
noon; and as for my fair fellows, I look not for them before
|
|
sunset for they were going far into the wood."
|
|
|
|
She smiled on him, and ate and drank a little deal, and he
|
|
with her. Sooth to say, her heart was full, and though she
|
|
had forgotten her fear, she was troubled, because, for as
|
|
glad as she was, she could not be as glad as her gladness
|
|
would have her, for the sake of some lack, she knew not
|
|
what.
|
|
|
|
Now spake Christopher: "I would tell thee something
|
|
strange, to wit, though it is little more than three hours
|
|
since I first saw thee beside the river, yet I seem to know
|
|
thee as if thou wert a part of my life."
|
|
|
|
She looked on him shyly, and he went on: "This also is
|
|
strange, and, withal, it likes me not, that when I speak of
|
|
my fair fellows here, David, and Gilbert, and Joanna, they
|
|
are half forgotten to my heart, though their names are on my
|
|
tongue; and this house, doth it like thee, fair guest?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea, much," she said; "it seems joyous to me: and I shall
|
|
tell thee that I have mostly dwelt in unmerry houses, though
|
|
they were of greater cost than this."
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "To me it hath been merry and happy
|
|
enough; but now it seems to me as if it had all been made
|
|
for thee and this meeting."
|
|
|
|
"Is it therefore no longer merry to thee because of that?"
|
|
she said, smiling, yet flushing much red therewith. Now it
|
|
was his turn not to answer her, and she cast down her eyes
|
|
before him, and there was silence between them.
|
|
|
|
Then she looked at him steadily, and said: "It is indeed
|
|
grievous that thou shouldest forget thine old friends for
|
|
me, and that it should have come into thy mind that this
|
|
fair and merry house was not made for thy fair fellows and
|
|
thy delight with them, but for me, the chance-comer. For,
|
|
hearken, whereas thou saidst e'en now, that I was become a
|
|
part of thy life, how can that be? For if I become the poor
|
|
captive again, how canst thou get to me, thou who art
|
|
thyself a castaway, as thou hast told me? Yea, but even so,
|
|
I shall be too low for thee to come down to me. And if I
|
|
become what I should be, then I must tell thee that I shall
|
|
be too high for thee to climb up to me; so that in one way
|
|
or other we shall be sundered, who have but met for an hour
|
|
or two."
|
|
|
|
He hung his head a while as they stood there face to face,
|
|
for both of them had arisen from the board; but presently he
|
|
looked up to her with glittering eyes, and said: "Yea, for
|
|
an hour or two; why then do we tarry and linger, and say
|
|
what we have no will to say, and refrain from what our
|
|
hearts bid us?"
|
|
|
|
Therewith he caught hold of her right wrist, and laid his
|
|
hand on her left shoulder, and this first time that he had
|
|
touched her, it was as if a fire ran through all his body
|
|
and changed it into the essence of her: neither was there
|
|
any naysay in her eyes, nor any defence against him in the
|
|
yielding body of her. But even in that nick of time he drew
|
|
back a little, and turned his head, as a man listening,
|
|
toward the door, and said: "Hist! hist! Dost thou hear,
|
|
maiden?" She turned deadly pale: "O what is it? What is it?
|
|
Yea, I hear; it is horses drawing nigh, and the sound of
|
|
hounds baying. But may it not be thy fellows coming back?"
|
|
|
|
"Nay, nay," he said; "they rode not in armour. Hark to it!
|
|
and these hounds are deep-voiced sleuth-dogs! But come now,
|
|
there may yet be time."
|
|
|
|
He turned, and caught up axe and shield from off the wall,
|
|
and drew her toward a window that looked to the north, and
|
|
peered out of it warily; but turned back straightway, and
|
|
said: "Nay, it is too late that way, they are all round
|
|
about the house. Maiden, get thou up into the solar by this
|
|
stair, and thou wilt find hiding-place behind the traverse
|
|
of the bed; and if they go away, and my fellows come in due
|
|
time, then art thou safe. But if not, surely they shall do
|
|
thee no hurt; for I think, indeed, that thou art some great
|
|
one."
|
|
|
|
And he fell to striding down the hall toward the door; but
|
|
she ran after him, and caught his arm, and said: "Nay, nay,
|
|
I will not hide, to be dragged out of my refuge like a
|
|
thief: thou sayest well that I am of the great; I will stand
|
|
by thee and command and forbid as a Queen. O go not to the
|
|
door! Stay by me, stay!"
|
|
|
|
"Nay, nay," he said, "there is nought for it but the deed of
|
|
arms. Look! seest thou not steel by the porch?"
|
|
|
|
And therewith he broke from her and ran to the door, and was
|
|
met upon the very threshold by all-armed men, upon whom he
|
|
fell without more ado, crying out: "For the Tofts! For the
|
|
Tofts! The woodman to the rescue!" And he hewed right and
|
|
left on whatsoever was before him, so that what fell not,
|
|
gave back, and for a moment of time he cleared the porch;
|
|
but in that nick of time his axe brake on the basnet of a
|
|
huge man-at-arms, and they all thrust them on him together
|
|
and drave him back into the hall, and came bundling after
|
|
him in a heap. But he drave his shield at one, and then
|
|
with his right hand smote another on the bare face, so that
|
|
he rolled over and stirred no more till the day of doom.
|
|
Then was there a weapon before him, might he have stooped to
|
|
pick it up; but he might not; so he caught hold of a sturdy
|
|
but somewhat short man by the collar and the lap of his
|
|
leather surcoat, and drew aback, and with a mighty heave
|
|
cast him on the rout of them, who for their parts had drawn
|
|
back a little also, as if he had been a huge stone, and down
|
|
went two before that artillery; and they set up a great roar
|
|
of wonder and fear. But he followed them, and this time got
|
|
an axe in his hand, so mazed they were by his onset, and he
|
|
hewed at them again and drave them aback to the threshold of
|
|
the door: but could get them no further, and they began to
|
|
handle long spears to thrust at him.
|
|
|
|
But then came forward a knight, no mickle man, but clad in
|
|
very goodly armour, with a lion beaten in gold on his green
|
|
surcoat; this man smote up the spears, and made the men go
|
|
back a little, while he stood on the threshold; so
|
|
Christopher saw that he would parley with him, and forbore
|
|
him, and the knight spake: "Thou youngling, art thou mad?
|
|
What doest thou falling on my folk?"
|
|
|
|
"And what do ye," said Christopher fiercely, "besetting the
|
|
houses of folk with weapons? Now wilt thou take my life.
|
|
But I shall yet slay one or two before I die. Get thee
|
|
back, lord, or thou shalt be the first."
|
|
|
|
But the knight, who had no weapon in his hand, said: "We
|
|
come but to seek our own, and that is our Lady of Meadham,
|
|
who dwelleth at Greenharbour by her own will. And if thou
|
|
wilt stand aside thou mayst go free to the devil for us."
|
|
|
|
Now would Christopher have shouted and fallen on, and gone
|
|
to his death there and then; but even therewith a voice,
|
|
clear and sweet, spake at the back of him, and said: "Thou
|
|
kind host, do thou stand aside and let us speak that which
|
|
is needful." And therewith stepped forth Goldilind and
|
|
stood beside Christopher, and said: "Sir Burgreve, we rode
|
|
forth to drink the air yesterday, and went astray amidst the
|
|
wild-wood, and were belated, so that we must needs lie down
|
|
under the bare heaven; but this morning we happened on this
|
|
kind forester, who gave us to eat, and took us to his house
|
|
and gave us meat and drink; for which it were seemlier to
|
|
reward him than threaten him. Now it is our pleasure that
|
|
ye lead us back to Greenharbour; but as for this youth, that
|
|
ye do him no hurt, but let him go free, according to thy
|
|
word spoken e'en now, Sir Burgreve."
|
|
|
|
She spake slowly and heavily, as one who hath a lesson to
|
|
say, and it was to be seen of her that all grief was in her
|
|
heart, though her words were queenly. Some of them that
|
|
heard laughed; but the Burgreve spake, and said: "Lady, we
|
|
will do thy will in part, for we will lead thee to
|
|
Greenharbour in all honour; but as to this young man, if he
|
|
will not be slain here and now, needs must he with us. For
|
|
he hath slain two of our men outright, and hath hurt many,
|
|
and, methinks, the devil of the woods is in his body. So do
|
|
thou bid him be quiet, if thou wouldst not see his blood
|
|
flow."
|
|
|
|
She turned a pale unhappy face on Christopher, and said:
|
|
"My friend, we bid thee withstand them no more, but let them
|
|
do with thee as they will."
|
|
|
|
Christopher stood aside therewith, and sat down on a bench
|
|
and laughed, and said in a high voice: "Stout men-at-arms,
|
|
forsooth, to take a maid's kirtle to their shield."
|
|
|
|
But therewith the armed men poured into the hall, and a half
|
|
dozen of the stoutest came up unto Christopher where he sat,
|
|
and bound his hands with their girdles, and he withstood
|
|
them no whit, but sat laughing in their faces, and made as
|
|
if it were all a Yule-tide game. But inwardly his heart
|
|
burned with anger, and with love of that sweet Lady.
|
|
|
|
Then they made him stand up, and led him without the house,
|
|
and set him on a horse, and linked his feet together under
|
|
the belly thereof. And when that was done he saw them lead
|
|
out the Lady, and they set her in a horse litter, and then
|
|
the whole troop rode off together, with two men riding on
|
|
either side of the said litter. In this wise they left
|
|
Littledale.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVII.
|
|
|
|
GOLDILIND COMES BACK TO GREENHARBOUR.
|
|
|
|
|
|
They rode speedily, and had with them men who knew the
|
|
woodland ways, so that the journey was nought so long thence
|
|
as Goldilind had made it thither; and they stayed not for
|
|
nightfall, since the moon was bright, so that they came
|
|
before the Castle-gate before midnight. Now Goldilind
|
|
looked to be cast into prison, whatever might befall her
|
|
upon the morrow; but so it went not, for she was led
|
|
straight to her own chamber, and one of her women, but not
|
|
Aloyse, waited on her, and when she tried to have some
|
|
tidings of her, the woman spake to her no more than if she
|
|
were dumb. So all unhappily she laid her down in her bed,
|
|
foreboding the worst, which she deemed might well be death
|
|
at the hand of her jailers. As for Christopher, she saw the
|
|
last of him as they entered the Castle-gate, and knew not
|
|
what they had done with him. So she lay in dismal thoughts,
|
|
but at last fell asleep for mere weariness.
|
|
|
|
When she awoke it was broad day, and there was someone going
|
|
about in the chamber; she turned, and saw that it was
|
|
Aloyse. She felt sick at heart, and durst not move or ask
|
|
of tidings; but presently Aloyse turned, and came to the
|
|
bed, and made an obeisance, but spake not. Goldilind raised
|
|
her head, and said wearily: "What is to be done, Aloyse,
|
|
wilt thou tell me? For my heart fails me, and meseems,
|
|
unless they have some mercy, I shall die to-day."
|
|
|
|
"Nay," said the chambermaid, "keep thine heart up; for here
|
|
is one at hand who would see thee, when it is thy pleasure
|
|
to be seen."
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said Goldilind, "Dame Elinor to wit." And she
|
|
moaned, and fear and heart-sickness lay so heavy on her
|
|
that she went nigh to swooning
|
|
|
|
But Aloyse lifted up her head, and brought her wine and made
|
|
her drink, and when Goldilind was come to herself again the
|
|
maid said: "I say, keep up thine heart, for it is not Dame
|
|
Elinor and the rods that would see thee, but a mighty man;
|
|
nay, the most mighty, to wit, Earl Geoffrey, who is King of
|
|
Meadham in all but the name."
|
|
|
|
Goldilind did in sooth take heart at this tidings, and she
|
|
said: "I wonder what he may have to do here; all this while
|
|
he hath not been to Greenharbour, or, mayhappen, it might
|
|
have been better for me."
|
|
|
|
"I wot not," said Aloyse, "but even so it is. I shall tell
|
|
thee, the messenger, whose horse thou didst steal, brought
|
|
no other word in his mouth save this, that my Lord Earl was
|
|
coming; and come he did; but that was toward sunset, long
|
|
after they had laid the blood-hounds on thy slot, and I had
|
|
been whipped for letting thee find the way out a-gates. Now,
|
|
our Lady, when thou hast seen the Earl, and hast become our
|
|
Lady and Mistress indeed, wilt thou bethink thee of the morn
|
|
before yesterday on my behalf?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said Goldilind, "if ever it shall befall."
|
|
|
|
"Befall it shall," said Aloyse; "I dreamed of thee three
|
|
nights ago, and thou sitting on thy throne commanding and
|
|
forbidding the great men. But at worst no harm hath
|
|
happened save to my shoulders and sides, by thy stealing
|
|
thyself, since thou hast come back in the nick of time, and
|
|
of thine own will, as men say. But tell me now of thine
|
|
holiday, and if it were pleasant to thee?"
|
|
|
|
Goldilind fell a-weeping at the word, bethinking her of
|
|
yesterday morning, and Aloyse stood looking on her, but
|
|
saying nought. At last spake Goldilind softly: "Tell me,
|
|
Aloyse, didst thou hear any speaking of that young man who
|
|
was brought in hither last night? Have they slain him?"
|
|
|
|
Said Aloyse: "Soothly, my Lady, I deem they have done him
|
|
no hurt, though I wot not for sure. There hath been none
|
|
headed or hanged in the base-court to-day. I heard talk
|
|
amongst the men-at-arms of one whom they took; they said he
|
|
was a wonder of sheer strength, and how that he cast their
|
|
men about as though he were playing at ball. Sooth to say,
|
|
they seemed to bear him no grudge therefor. But now I would
|
|
counsel thee to arise; and I am bidden to tire and array
|
|
thee at the best. And now I would say a word in thine ear,
|
|
to wit, that Dame Elinor feareth thee somewhat this morn."
|
|
|
|
So Goldilind arose, and was arrayed like a very queen, and
|
|
was served of what she would by Aloyse and the other women,
|
|
and sat in her chamber awaiting the coming of the mighty
|
|
Lord of Meadham.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVIII.
|
|
|
|
EARL GEOFFREY SPEAKS WITH GOLDILIND.
|
|
|
|
|
|
But a little while had she sat there, before footsteps a
|
|
many came to the door, which was thrown open, and straight
|
|
it was as if the sun had shone on a flower-bed, for there
|
|
was come Earl Geoffrey and his lords all arrayed most
|
|
gloriously. Then came the Earl up the chamber to Goldilind,
|
|
and bent the knee before her, and said: "Lady and Queen, is
|
|
it thy pleasure that thy servant should kiss thine hand?"
|
|
|
|
She made him little cheer, but reached out to him her lily
|
|
hand in its gold sleeve, and said: "Thou must do thy will."
|
|
|
|
So he kissed the hand reverently, and said: "And these my
|
|
lords, may they enter and do obeisance and kiss hands, my
|
|
Lady?"
|
|
|
|
Said Goldilind: "I will not strive to gainsay their will,
|
|
or thine, my Lord."
|
|
|
|
So they entered and knelt before her, and kissed her hand;
|
|
and, to say sooth, most of them had been fain to kiss both
|
|
hands of her, yea, and her cheeks and her lips; though but
|
|
little cheer she made them, but looked sternly on them.
|
|
|
|
Then the Earl spake to her, and told her of her realm, and
|
|
how folk thrived, and of the deep peace that was upon the
|
|
land, and of the merry days of Meadham, and the praise of
|
|
the people. And she answered him nothing, but as he spake
|
|
her bosom began to heave, and the tears came into her eyes
|
|
and rolled down her cheeks. Then man looked on man, and the
|
|
Earl said: "My masters, I deem that my Lady hath will to
|
|
speak to me privily, as to one who is her chiefest friend
|
|
and well-willer. Is it so, my Lady?"
|
|
|
|
She might not speak for the tears that welled out from her
|
|
heart; but she bowed her head and strove to smile on him.
|
|
|
|
But the Earl waved his hand, and those lords, and the women
|
|
also, voided the chamber, and left those two alone, the Earl
|
|
standing before her. But ere he could speak, she arose from
|
|
her throne and fell on her knees before him, and joined
|
|
hands palm to palm, and cried in a broken voice: "Mercy!
|
|
Mercy! Have pity on my young life, great Lord!"
|
|
|
|
But he lifted her up, and set her on her throne again, and
|
|
said: "Nay, my Lady, this is unmeet; but if thou wouldst
|
|
talk and tell with me I am ready to hearken."
|
|
|
|
She strove with her passion a while, and then she said:
|
|
"Great Lord, I pray thee to hearken, and to have patience
|
|
with a woman's weak heart. Prithee, sit down here beside
|
|
me.
|
|
|
|
"It were unfitting," he said; "I shall take a lowlier seat."
|
|
Then he drew a stool to him, and sat down before her, and
|
|
said: "What aileth thee? What wouldest thou?"
|
|
|
|
Then she said: "Lord Earl, I am in prison; I would be
|
|
free."
|
|
|
|
Quoth he: "Yea, and is this a prison, then?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea," she said, "since I may not so much as go out from it
|
|
and come back again unthreatened; yet have I been, and that
|
|
unseldom, in a worser prison than this: do thou go look on
|
|
the Least Guard-chamber, and see if it be a meet dwelling
|
|
for thy master's daughter."
|
|
|
|
He spake nought awhile; then he said: "And, yet if it
|
|
grieveth thee, it marreth thee nought; for when I look on
|
|
thee mine eyes behold the beauty of the world, and the body
|
|
wherein is no lack."
|
|
|
|
She reddened and said: "If it be so, it is God's work, and
|
|
I praise him therefor. But how long will it last? For grief
|
|
slayeth beauty."
|
|
|
|
He looked on her long, and said: "To thy friends I betook
|
|
thee, and I looked that they should cherish thee; where then
|
|
is the wrong that I have done thee?"
|
|
|
|
She said: "Maybe no wrong wittingly; since now, belike,
|
|
thou art come to tell me that all this weary sojourn is at
|
|
an end, and that thou wilt take me to Meadhamstead, and set
|
|
me on the throne there, and show my father's daughter to all
|
|
the people."
|
|
|
|
He held his peace, and his face grew dark before her while
|
|
she watched it. At last he spake in a harsh voice: "Lady,"
|
|
he said, "it may not be; here in Greenharbour must thou
|
|
abide, or in some other castle apart from the folk."
|
|
|
|
"Yea," she said, "now I see it is true, that which I
|
|
foreboded when first I came hither: thou wouldst slay me,
|
|
that thou mayest sit safely in the seat of thy master's
|
|
daughter; thou durst not send me a man with a sword to
|
|
thrust me through, therefore thou hast cast me into prison
|
|
amongst cruel jailers, who have been bidden by thee to take
|
|
my life slowly and with torments. Hitherto I have withstood
|
|
their malice and thine; but now am I overcome, and since I
|
|
know that I must die, I have now no fear, and this is why I
|
|
am bold to tell thee this that I have spoken, though I wot
|
|
now I shall be presently slain. And now I tell thee I repent
|
|
it, that I have asked grace of a graceless face."
|
|
|
|
Although she spake strong words, it was with a mild and
|
|
steady voice. But the Earl was sore troubled, and he rose
|
|
up and walked to and fro of the chamber, half drawing his
|
|
sword and thrusting it back into the scabbard from time to
|
|
time. At last he came back to her, and sat down before her
|
|
and spake:
|
|
|
|
"Maiden, thou art somewhat in error. True it is that I
|
|
would sit firm in my seat and rule the land of Meadham, as
|
|
belike none other could. True it is also that I would have
|
|
thee, the rightful heir, dwell apart from the turmoil for a
|
|
while at least; for I would not have thy white hands thrust
|
|
me untimely from my place, or thy fair face held up as a
|
|
banner by my foemen. Yet nowise have I willed thy death or
|
|
thine anguish; and if all be true as thou sayest it, and
|
|
thou art so lovely that I know not how to doubt it, tell me
|
|
then what these have done with thee."
|
|
|
|
She said: "Sir, those friends to whom thou hast delivered
|
|
me are my foes, whether they were thy friends or not. Wilt
|
|
thou compel me to tell thee all my shame? They have treated
|
|
me as a thrall who had whiles to play a queen's part in a
|
|
show. To wit, thy chaplain whom thou hast given me has
|
|
looked on me with lustful eyes, and has bidden me buy of him
|
|
ease and surcease of pain with my very body, and hath
|
|
threatened me more evil else, and kept his behest."
|
|
|
|
Then leapt up the Earl and cried out: "Hah! did he so? Then
|
|
I tell thee his monk's hood shall not be stout enough to
|
|
save his neck. Now, my child, thou speakest; tell me more,
|
|
since my hair is whitening."
|
|
|
|
She said: "The sleek, smooth-spoken woman to whom thou
|
|
gavest me, didst thou bid her to torment me with stripes,
|
|
and the dungeon, and the dark, and solitude, and hunger?"
|
|
|
|
"Nay, by Allhallows!" he said, "nor thought of it; trust me
|
|
she shall pay therefor if so she hath done."
|
|
|
|
She said: "I crave no vengeance, but mercy I crave, and
|
|
thou mayst give it me."
|
|
|
|
Then were they both silent, till he said: "Now I, for my
|
|
part, will pray thee bear what thou must bear, which shall
|
|
be nought save this, that thy queenship lie quiet for a
|
|
while; nought else of evil shall betide thee henceforth; but
|
|
as much of pleasure and joy as may go with it. But tell me,
|
|
there is a story of thy snatching a holiday these two days,
|
|
and of a young man whom thou didst happen on. Tell me now,
|
|
not as a maiden to her father or warder, but as a great lady
|
|
might tell a great lord, what betid betwixt you two: for
|
|
thou art not one on whom a young and doughty man may look
|
|
unmoved. By Allhallows! but thou art a firebrand, my Lady!"
|
|
And he laughed therewith.
|
|
|
|
Goldilind flushed red exceeding; but she answered steadily:
|
|
"Lord Earl, this is the very sooth, that I might not fail to
|
|
see it, how he thought me worth looking on, but he treated
|
|
me with all honour, as a brother might a sister."
|
|
|
|
"Tell me," said the Earl, "what like was this man?"
|
|
|
|
Said she: "He was young, but strong beyond measure; and
|
|
full doughty: true it is that I saw him with mine eyes take
|
|
and heave up one of our men in his hands and cast him away
|
|
as a man would a clod of earth."
|
|
|
|
The Earl knit his brow: "Yea," said he, "and that story I
|
|
have heard from the men-at-arms also. But what was the man
|
|
like of aspect?"
|
|
|
|
She reddened: "He was of a most goodly body," she said,
|
|
"fair-eyed, and of a face well carven; his speech kind and
|
|
gentle." And yet more she reddened.
|
|
|
|
Said the Earl: "Didst thou hear what he was, this man?"
|
|
|
|
She said: "I deem from his own words that he was but a
|
|
simple forester."
|
|
|
|
"Yea," quoth the Earl, "a simple forester? Nay, but a
|
|
woodman, an outlaw, a waylayer; so say our men, that he fell
|
|
on them with the cry: A-Tofts! A-Tofts! Hast thou never
|
|
heard of Jack of the Tofts?"
|
|
|
|
"Nay, never," said she.
|
|
|
|
Said the Earl: "He is the king of these good fellows; and a
|
|
perilous host they be. Now I fear me, if he be proven to be
|
|
one of these, there will be a gallows reared for him to-
|
|
morrow, for as fair and as doughty as he may be."
|
|
|
|
She turned all pale, and her lips quivered: then she rose
|
|
up, and fell on her knees before the Earl, and cried out:
|
|
"O sir, a grace, a grace, I pray thee! Pardon this poor man
|
|
who was so kind to me!"
|
|
|
|
The Earl raised her up and smiled, and said: "Nay, my Lady
|
|
Queen, wouldst thou kneel to me? It is unmeet. And as for
|
|
this woodman, it is for thee to pardon him, and not for me;
|
|
and since, by good luck, he is not hanged yet, thy word hath
|
|
saved his neck." She sat down in her chair again, but still
|
|
looked white and scared. But the Earl spake again, and
|
|
kindly:
|
|
|
|
"Now to all these matters I shall give heed, my Lady;
|
|
wherefore I will ask leave of thee, and be gone; and
|
|
to-morrow I will see thee again, and lay some rede before
|
|
thee. Meantime, be of good cheer, for thou shalt be made as
|
|
much of as may be, and live in mickle joy if thou wilt. And
|
|
if any so much as give thee a hard word, it shall be the
|
|
worse for them."
|
|
|
|
Therewith he arose, and made obeisance to her, and departed.
|
|
And she abode quiet, and looking straight before her, till
|
|
the door shut, and then she put her hands to her face and
|
|
fell a-weeping, and scarce knew what ailed her betwixt hope,
|
|
and rest of body, and love, though that she called not by
|
|
its right name.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIX.
|
|
|
|
EARL GEOFFREY SPEAKETH WITH CHRISTOPHER.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now it is to be said that the Earl had had much tidings told
|
|
him of Christopher, and had no intent to put him to death,
|
|
but rather meant to take him into the company of his guard,
|
|
to serve him in all honour; and that which he said as to
|
|
hanging him was but to try Goldilind; but having heard and
|
|
seen of her such as we have told, he now thought it good to
|
|
have a privy talk with this young man. So he bade a squire
|
|
lead him to where Christopher was held in ward, and went
|
|
much pondering.
|
|
|
|
So the squire brought him to the self-same Littlest
|
|
Guardroom (in sooth a prison) where Goldilind had lain that
|
|
other morn; and he gave the squire leave, and entered and
|
|
shut the door behind him, so that he and Christopher were
|
|
alone together. The young man was lying on his back on the
|
|
pallet, with his hands behind his head, and his knees drawn
|
|
up, murmuring some fag-end of an old song; but when he heard
|
|
the door shut to he sat up, and, turning to the new-comer,
|
|
said: "Art thou tidings? If so, then tell me quickly which
|
|
it is to be, the gallows or freedom?"
|
|
|
|
"Friend," said the Earl sternly, "dost thou know who I am?"
|
|
|
|
"Nay," said Christopher; "by thine attire thou shouldst be
|
|
some great man; but that is of little matter to me, since
|
|
thou wilt neither bid slay me, or let me go, for a heedless
|
|
word.
|
|
|
|
Quoth the Earl: "I am the master of the land of Meadham, so
|
|
there is no need to tell thee that I have thy life or death
|
|
in my hand. Now thou wilt not deny that thou art of the
|
|
company of Jack o' the Tofts?"
|
|
|
|
"It is sooth," said Christopher.
|
|
|
|
"Well," said the Earl, "thou art bold then to have come
|
|
hither, for thou sayest it that thou art a wolf's-head and
|
|
forfeit of thy life. Now, again, thou didst take the Lady
|
|
of Meadham home to thy house yesterday, and wert with her
|
|
alone a great while. Now according to thy dealings with her
|
|
thou dost merit either the most evil of deaths, or else it
|
|
may be a reward: hah! what sayest thou?"
|
|
|
|
Christopher leapt up, and said in a loud voice: "Lord King,
|
|
whatsoever I may be, I am not each man's dastard; when I saw
|
|
that pearl of all women, I loved her indeed, as who should
|
|
not, but it was even as I had loved the Mother of God had
|
|
she come down from the altar picture at the Church of
|
|
Middleham of the Wood. And whoso saith otherwise, I give
|
|
him the lie back in his teeth, and will meet him face to
|
|
face if I may; and then, meseems, it will go hard with him."
|
|
|
|
Spake the Earl, laughing: "I will be no champion against
|
|
thee, for I hold my skin and my bones of too much price
|
|
thereto. And, moreover, though meseemeth the Blessed Virgin
|
|
would have a hot lover in thee were she to come down to
|
|
earth anigh thy dwelling, yet trow I thy tale, that thou
|
|
hast dealt with my Lady in honour. Therefore, lad, what
|
|
sayest thou, wilt thou be a man of mine, and bear arms for
|
|
me, and do my will?"
|
|
|
|
Spake Christopher: "Lord, this is better than hanging."
|
|
|
|
"Why, so it is, lad," said the Earl, laughing again, "and
|
|
some would say better by a good deal. But hearken! if thou
|
|
take it, thou must abide here in Greenharbour--a long while,
|
|
maybe; yea, even so long as my Lady dwelleth here."
|
|
|
|
Christopher flushed and said: "Lord, thou art kind and
|
|
gracious, and I will take thy bidding."
|
|
|
|
The Earl said: "Well, so it shall be then; and presently
|
|
thou shalt go out of this guard-room a free man. But abide
|
|
a while."
|
|
|
|
Therewith he drew a stool to him and sat down, and spake not
|
|
for a long while; and Christopher abode his pleasure; at
|
|
last spake the Earl: "One day, mayhappen, we may make a
|
|
wedding for thee, and that no ill one."
|
|
|
|
Christopher laughed: "Lord," said he, "what lady will wed
|
|
me, a no man's son?"
|
|
|
|
Said the Earl: "Not if the Lord of Meadham be thy friend?
|
|
Well then, how if the Lady and Queen of Meadham make thee
|
|
the wedding?"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "I were liefer to make mine own wedding,
|
|
whenso I need a woman in my bed: I will compel no woman,
|
|
nor ask others to compel her."
|
|
|
|
The Earl rose up, and fell to pacing the prison to and fro;
|
|
and at last he stood over against Christopher, and said:
|
|
"Hearken, forester: I will foretell thy fortune; it is that
|
|
thou shalt become great by wedding."
|
|
|
|
Christopher held his peace; and the Earl spake again: "Now
|
|
is the shortest word best. We deem thee both goodly and
|
|
doughty, and would wed thee to a great lady, even that one
|
|
to whom thou hast shown kindness in the wilderness."
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "It is the wont of great lords to mock
|
|
poor folk, therefore I must not show anger against thee."
|
|
|
|
"I mock thee not," said the Earl; "I mean nought, but as my
|
|
words say."
|
|
|
|
"Nay then," said Christopher, "thou biddest me an evil deed,
|
|
great Lord. What I said was that I would compel no woman;
|
|
and shall I compel her who is the wonder of the world and my
|
|
very own Lady?"
|
|
|
|
"Hold thy peace, sir fool," said the Earl; "let me tell thee
|
|
that she is as like to compel thee as thou her. And as to
|
|
her being thy Lady, she shall be thy Lady and wife indeed;
|
|
but not here, for above all things will she get her away
|
|
from Greenharbour, and thou shalt be her champion, to lead
|
|
her about the world like a knight errant."
|
|
|
|
Now was Christopher so troubled that he knew not what
|
|
countenance to make, and scarce might he get a word out of
|
|
his mouth a long while. At last he said: "Lord, I see that
|
|
I must needs do thy will if this be no trap which thou hast
|
|
set for me. But overwonderful it is, that a great lady
|
|
should be wedded to a gangrel churl."
|
|
|
|
The Earl laughed: "Many a ferly fares to the fair-eyed,"
|
|
quoth he; "and also I will tell thee in thine ear that this
|
|
Lady may not be so great as her name is great. Did she
|
|
praise her life-days to thee?"
|
|
|
|
"Nay," said Christopher; "I mind me well, she called herself
|
|
the poor captive."
|
|
|
|
"She said but sooth," quoth the Earl; "and her going away
|
|
from Greenharbour is instead of her captivity; and I tell
|
|
thee it is by that only I may make her joyous. And now one
|
|
word: thou that criest out For the Tofts in battle art not
|
|
altogether unfriended, meseemeth."
|
|
|
|
Christopher looked up proudly and fiercely: he said:
|
|
"Forsooth, Lord, my friends are good, though thou callest
|
|
them wolf-heads and gallows-meat."
|
|
|
|
"Champion," said the Earl, laughing, "that may well be
|
|
sooth; and there are a many ups and downs in the world.
|
|
Bethink thee that the time may come when thou and thy
|
|
friends may wend to my help, and may win the names of knight
|
|
and baron and earl: such hap hath been aforetime. And now I
|
|
crave of thee, when thou comest back to the Tofts, to bid
|
|
Jack fall upon other lands than Meadham when he rideth,
|
|
because of the gift and wedding that I give thee now. So,
|
|
lad, I deem that thou hast chosen thy part; but let not the
|
|
tale thereof go out of thy mouth, or thou wilt gab away thy
|
|
wedding. Lo, thou, I leave this door open behind me; and
|
|
presently shall the smith come here to do away thine irons;
|
|
and I shall send a squire to thee to lead thee to a fair
|
|
chamber, and to bring thee goodly raiment, and do thou play
|
|
amongst thy fellows as one of the best of them; and show
|
|
them, if thou wilt, some such feats in peace as yesterday
|
|
thou showedst them in battle. And to-morrow there will be
|
|
new tidings." And therewith he departed.
|
|
|
|
No worse than his word he was, and anon came the smith and
|
|
the squire; and he was brought to a chamber, and raiment of
|
|
fine linen and silk and embroidery was brought to him: and
|
|
when he was new clad he looked like a king's son, whereas
|
|
aforetime he looked like a God of the Gentiles of old. All
|
|
men praised his beauty and his courtesy, and after dinner
|
|
was, and they had rested, they bade him play with them and
|
|
show them his prowess, and he was nought loth thereto, and
|
|
did what he might in running and leaping, and casting of the
|
|
bar, and shooting in the bow. And in all these things he
|
|
was so far before everyone, that they marvelled at him, and
|
|
said it was well indeed that he had not been slain
|
|
yesterday. As to wrestling, therein he might do but little;
|
|
for all forbore him after the first man had stood before
|
|
him, a squire, well learned in war, and long and tough, and
|
|
deemed a very stark man; him Christopher threw over his
|
|
shoulder as though he had been a child of twelve years. So
|
|
wore the day at Greenharbour in merrier wise for all good
|
|
folk than for many a day had been the wont there.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XX.
|
|
|
|
OF THE WEDDING OF CHRISTOPHER AND GOLDILIND.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Early on the morrow came the Earl unto Goldilind, and she
|
|
received him gladly, as one who had fashioned life anew for
|
|
her. And when he had sat down by her, he spake and said:
|
|
"Lady, thou cravedst of me yesterday two things; the first
|
|
was freedom from the captivity of Greenharbour; and the
|
|
second, life and liberty for the varlet that cherished thee
|
|
in the wild-wood the other day. Now thy first asking
|
|
grieved me, for that thou hast been tyrannously done by; and
|
|
thy second I wondered at; but since I have seen the young
|
|
man, I wonder the less; for he is both so goodly, and so
|
|
mighty of body, and of speech bold and free, yet gentle and
|
|
of all courtesy, that he is meet to be knight or earl, yea,
|
|
or very king. Now, therefore, in both these matters I will
|
|
well to do thy pleasure, and in one way it may be; and thou
|
|
mayst then go forth from Greenharbour as free as a bird, and
|
|
thy varlet's life may be given unto him, and mickle honour
|
|
therewith. Art thou, then, willing to do after my rede and
|
|
my commandment, so that both these good things may betide
|
|
thee?"
|
|
|
|
"Right willing am I," she said, "to be free and happy and to
|
|
save the life of a fair youth and kind."
|
|
|
|
"Then," said he, "there is one thing for thee to do: that
|
|
this day thou wed this fair and kind youth, and let him lead
|
|
thee forth from Greenharbour; and, belike, he will bring
|
|
thee to no ill stead; for his friends are mightier than
|
|
mayhappen thou deemest."
|
|
|
|
She turned as red as blood at his word; she knit her brows,
|
|
and her eyes flashed as she answered: "Is it seemly for a
|
|
King's daughter to wed a nameless churl? And now I know
|
|
thee, Lord Earl, what thou wouldst do; thou wouldst be King
|
|
of Meadham and put thy master's daughter to the road." And
|
|
she was exceeding wroth.
|
|
|
|
But he said, smiling somewhat: "Was it then seemly for the
|
|
King's daughter to kneel for this man's life, and go near to
|
|
swooning for joy when it was granted to her?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea," she said, "for I love him with all my body and soul;
|
|
and I would have had him love me par amours, and then should
|
|
I have been his mistress and he my servant; but now shall he
|
|
be my master and I his servant." And still was she very
|
|
wroth.
|
|
|
|
Quoth the Earl: "As to the matter of my being King of
|
|
Meadham, that will I be, whatever befall, or die in the
|
|
place else. So if thou wilt not do my rede, then must the
|
|
varlet whom thou lovest die, and at Greenharbour must thou
|
|
abide with Dame Elinor. There is no help for it."
|
|
|
|
She shrieked out at that word of his, and well nigh swooned,
|
|
lying back in her chair: but presently fell a-weeping
|
|
sorely. But the Earl said: "Hearken, my Lady, I am not
|
|
without warrant to do this. Tell me, hast thou ever seen
|
|
any fairer or doughtier than this youngling?"
|
|
|
|
"Never," said she.
|
|
|
|
"So say we all," he said. "Now I shall tell thee (and I can
|
|
bring witness to it) that in his last hour the King, thy
|
|
father, when he gave thee into my keeping, spake also this:
|
|
that I should wed thee to none save the fairest and
|
|
doughtiest man that might be found: even so would I do now.
|
|
What then sayest thou?"
|
|
|
|
She answered not, but still wept somewhat; then said the
|
|
Earl: "Lady, give me leave, and I shall send thy women to
|
|
thee, and sit in the great hall for an hour, and if within
|
|
that while thou send a woman of thine to say one word, Yes,
|
|
unto me, then is all well. But if not, then do I depart from
|
|
Greenharbour straightway, and take the youngling with me to
|
|
hang him up on the first tree. Be wise, I pray thee."
|
|
|
|
And therewith he went his ways. But Goldilind, being left
|
|
alone a little, rose up and paced the chamber to and fro,
|
|
and her tears and sobbing ceased; and a great and strange
|
|
joy grew up in her heart, mingled with the pain of longing,
|
|
so that she might rest in nowise. Even therewith the door
|
|
opened, and her women entered, Aloyse first, and she called
|
|
to her at once, and bade her to find Earl Geoffrey in the
|
|
great hall, and say to him: Yes. So Aloyse went her ways,
|
|
and Goldilind bade her other women to array her in the best
|
|
and goodliest wise that they might. And the day was yet
|
|
somewhat young. Now it must besaid of Earl Geoffrey that, in
|
|
spite of his hard word, he had it not in his heart either to
|
|
slay Christopher or to leave Goldilind at Greenharbour to
|
|
the mercy of Dame Elinor.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXI.
|
|
|
|
OF THE WEDDING OF THOSE TWAIN.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now were folk gathered in the hall, and the Earl Geoffrey
|
|
was standing on the dais by the high-seat, and beside him a
|
|
worthy clerk, the Abbot of Meadhamstead, a monk of St.
|
|
Benedict, and next to him the Burgreve of Greenharbour, and
|
|
then a score of knights all in brave raiment, and squires
|
|
withal, and sergeants; but down in the hall were the men-
|
|
at-arms and serving-men, and a half hundred of folk of the
|
|
countryside, queans as well as carles, who had been gathered
|
|
for the show and bidden in. No other women were there in
|
|
the hall till Goldilind and her serving-women entered. She
|
|
went straight up the hall, and took her place in the
|
|
high-seat; and for all that her eyes seemed steady, she had
|
|
noted Christopher standing by the shot-window just below the
|
|
dais.
|
|
|
|
Now when she was set down, and there was silence in the
|
|
hall, Earl Geoffrey came forth and said: "Lords and
|
|
knights, and ye good people, the Lady Goldilind, daughter of
|
|
the Lord King Roland that last was, is now of age to wed;
|
|
and be it known unto you, that the King, her father, bade
|
|
me, in the last words by him spoken, to wed her to none but
|
|
the loveliest and strongest that might be, as witness I can
|
|
bring hereto. Now such a man have I sought hereto in
|
|
Meadhamstead and the much-peopled land of Meadham, and none
|
|
have I come on, however worthy he were of deeds, or
|
|
well-born of lineage, but that I doubted me if he were so
|
|
fair or so doughty as might be found; but here in this half-
|
|
desert corner of the land have I gotten a man than whom none
|
|
is doughtier, as some of you have found to your cost. And
|
|
tell me all you, where have ye seen any as fair as this
|
|
man?" And therewith he made a sign with his hand, and forth
|
|
strode Christopher up on to the dais; and he was so clad,
|
|
that his kirtle was of white samite, girt with a girdle of
|
|
goldsmith's work, whereby hung a good sword of like fashion,
|
|
and over his shoulders was a mantle of red cloth-of-gold,
|
|
furred with ermine, and lined with green sendall; and on his
|
|
golden curled locks sat a chaplet of pearls.
|
|
|
|
Then to the lords and all the people he seemed so fair and
|
|
fearless and kind that they gave a great shout of welcome;
|
|
and Goldilind came forth from her chair, as fair as a June
|
|
lily, and came to Christopher and reached out her hand to
|
|
him, but he refrained him a moment, so that all they could
|
|
see how sweet and lovely a hand it was, and then he took it,
|
|
and drew her to him, and kissed her mouth before them all;
|
|
and still he held her hand, till the Abbot of Meadhamstead
|
|
aforetold came and stood by them and blessed them.
|
|
|
|
Then spake the Earl again: "Lo ye, here hath been due
|
|
betrothal of these twain, and ye may see how meet they be
|
|
for each other in goodliness and kindness. Now there
|
|
lacketh nought but they should be wedded straightway; and
|
|
all is arrayed in the chapel; wherefore if this holy man
|
|
will come with us and do on his mass-hackle, our joy shall
|
|
be fulfilled; save that thereafter shall feast and merriment
|
|
await all you in this hall, and we shall be there to welcome
|
|
all comers in this house of Greenharbour, whereas this our
|
|
gracious Lady has long abided so happily."
|
|
|
|
Man looked on man here and there, and smiled a little as he
|
|
spake, but none said aught, for there were none save the
|
|
Earl's servants there, and a sort of poor wretches.
|
|
|
|
So therewithal they went their ways to the chapel where was
|
|
the wedding done as grandly as might be, considering they
|
|
were in no grander place than Greenharbour. And when all was
|
|
done, and folk began to flow away from the chapel, and
|
|
Goldilind sat shamefaced but strangely happy in a great
|
|
stall of the choir, the Earl called Christopher unto him,
|
|
and said: "My lad, I deem that some great fortune shall
|
|
betide thee since already thou hast begun so luckily. But I
|
|
beseech thee mar not thy fortune by coming back with thy
|
|
fair wife to the land of Meadham; or else it may be thou
|
|
shalt cast thy life away, and that will bring her sorrow, as
|
|
I can see well."
|
|
|
|
He spake this grimly, though he smiled as he spake. But he
|
|
went on more gently: "I will not send you twain away
|
|
empty-handed; when ye go out a-gates into the wide world, ye
|
|
shall find two fair horses for your riding, well bedight,
|
|
and one with a woman's saddle; and, moreover, a sumpter
|
|
beast, not very lightly burdened, for on one side of him he
|
|
beareth achest wherein is, first of all, the raiment of my
|
|
Lady, and beneath it some deal of silver and gold and gems;
|
|
but on the other side is victual and drink for the way for
|
|
you, and raiment for thee, youngling. How sayest thou, is
|
|
it well?"
|
|
|
|
"It is well, Lord," said Christopher; "yet would I have with
|
|
me the raiment wherewith I came hither, and my bow and my
|
|
sax."
|
|
|
|
"Yea and wherefore, carle?" said Earl Geoffrey.
|
|
|
|
Said the youngling: "We be going to ride the wild-wood, and
|
|
it might be better for safety's sake that I be so clad as
|
|
certain folk look to see men ride there."
|
|
|
|
But he reddened as he spake; and the Earl said: "By
|
|
Allhallows! but it is not ill thought of; and, belike, the
|
|
same-like kind of attire might be better to hide the
|
|
queenship of the Lady from the wood-folk than that which now
|
|
she weareth?"
|
|
|
|
"True is that, Lord," quoth Christopher.
|
|
|
|
"Yet," said the Earl, "l will have you go forth from the
|
|
Castle clad in your lordly weed, lest folk of mine say that
|
|
I have stripped my Lady and cast her forth: don ye your
|
|
poor raiment when in the wood ye be."
|
|
|
|
Therewith he called to a squire, and bade him seek out that
|
|
poor raiment of the new-wedded youngling, and bow withal
|
|
and shafts good store, and do all on the sumpter; and,
|
|
furthermore, he bade him tell one of my Lady's women to set
|
|
on the sumpter some of Goldilind's old and used raiment. So
|
|
the squire did the Earl's will, and both got Christopher's
|
|
gear and also found Aloyse and gave her the Earl's word.
|
|
|
|
She smiled thereat, and went straightway and fetched the
|
|
very same raiment, green gown and all, which she had brought
|
|
to Goldilind in prison that other day, and in which
|
|
Goldilind had fled from Greenharbour. And when she had done
|
|
them in the chest above all the other gear, she stood yet
|
|
beside the horses amidst of the varlets and squires who were
|
|
gathered there to see the new-wedded folk depart.
|
|
|
|
Presently then came forth through the gate those two, hand
|
|
in hand, and Earl Geoffrey with them. And he set Goldilind
|
|
on her horse himself, and knelt before her to say farewell,
|
|
and therewith was Christopher on his horse, and him the Earl
|
|
saluted debonairly.
|
|
|
|
But just as they were about shaking their reins to depart,
|
|
Aloyse fell down on her knees before the Earl, who said:
|
|
"What is toward, woman?"
|
|
|
|
"A grace, my Lord, a grace," said she.
|
|
|
|
"Stand up on thy feet," said the Earl, "and ye, my masters,
|
|
draw out of earshot."
|
|
|
|
Even so did they; and the Earl bade her speak, and she said:
|
|
"Lord, my Lady is going away from Greenharbour, and anon
|
|
thou wilt be going, and I shall be left with the sleek
|
|
she-devil yonder that thou hast set over us, and here there
|
|
will be hell for me without escape, now that my Lady is
|
|
gone. Wherefore I pray thee take me with thee to
|
|
Meadhamstead, even if it be to prison; for here I shall die
|
|
the worst of deaths."
|
|
|
|
Earl Geoffrey smiled on her sourly, and said: "If it be as
|
|
I understand, that thou hast lifted thine hand against my
|
|
Lady, wert thou wending with me, thou shouldst go just so
|
|
far as the first tree. Thou mayst deem thyself lucky if I
|
|
leave thee behind here. Nor needest thou trouble thee
|
|
concerning Dame Elinor; little more shalt thou hear of her
|
|
henceforward."
|
|
|
|
But Goldilind spake and said: "My Lord Earl, I would ask
|
|
grace for this one; for what she did to me she did
|
|
compelled, and not of her free will, and I forgive it her.
|
|
And moreover, this last time she suffered in her body for
|
|
the helping of me; so if thou mightest do her asking I were
|
|
the better pleased."
|
|
|
|
"It shall be as thou wilt, my Lady," said the Earl, "and I
|
|
will have her with me and keep her quiet in Meadhamstead;
|
|
but, by Allhallows! had it not been for thy word we would
|
|
have had her whipped into the wild-wood, and hanged up on to
|
|
a tree thereafter."
|
|
|
|
Then Aloyse knelt before Goldilind and kissed her feet, and
|
|
wept, and drew back pale and trembling. But Goldilind shook
|
|
her rein once for all now, and her apple-grey horse went
|
|
forth with her; Christopher came after, leading the sumpter
|
|
beast, and forth they went, and passed over the open green
|
|
about the Castle, and came on to the woodland way whereby
|
|
Goldilind had fled that other time.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXII.
|
|
|
|
OF THE WOODLAND BRIDE-CHAMBER.
|
|
|
|
|
|
They rode in silence a good way, and it was some three hours
|
|
after noon, and the day as fair and bright as might be.
|
|
Christopher held his peace for sweet shame that he was alone
|
|
with a most fair maid, and she his own, and without defence
|
|
against him. But she amidst of her silence turned, now red,
|
|
and now somewhat pale, and now and again she looked somewhat
|
|
askance on him, and he deemed her looks were no kinder than
|
|
they should be.
|
|
|
|
At last she spake, yet not looking on him, and said: "So,
|
|
Forester, now is done what I must needs do: thy life is
|
|
saved, and I am quit of Greenharbour, and its prison, and
|
|
its torments: whither away then?"
|
|
|
|
Quoth he, all dismayed, for her voice was the voice of
|
|
anger: "I wot not whither, save to the house thou hast
|
|
blessed already with thy dear body."
|
|
|
|
At that word she turned quite pale, and trembled, and spake
|
|
not for a while, and smote her horse and hastened on the
|
|
way, and he after her; but when he was come up with her
|
|
again, then she said, still not looking at him: "A house of
|
|
woodmen and wolf-heads. Is that a meet dwelling-place for
|
|
me? Didst thou hear men at Greenharbour say that I am a
|
|
Queen?"
|
|
|
|
"Hear them I did," quoth he; "but meseemeth nought like a
|
|
Queen had they done with thee."
|
|
|
|
She said: "And dost thou mock me with that? thou?" And she
|
|
burst out weeping. He answered not, for sore grief smote
|
|
him, remembering her hand in his but a little while ago.
|
|
And again she hurried on, and he followed her.
|
|
|
|
When he came up with her she said: "And thou, didst thou
|
|
woo me as a Queen?"
|
|
|
|
"Lady," he said, "I wooed thee not at all; I was given to
|
|
thee, would I, would I not: great joy was that to me."
|
|
|
|
Then said she: "Thou sayest sooth, thou hast not wooed me,
|
|
but taken me." She laughed therewith, as one in bitterness.
|
|
But presently she turned to him, and he wondered, for in her
|
|
face was longing and kindness nought like to her words. But
|
|
he durst not speak to her lest he should anger her, and she
|
|
turned her face from him again: and she said: "Wert thou
|
|
given to me? meseems I was given to thee, would I, would I
|
|
not; the Queen to the Churl, the Wood-man, the Wolf-head."
|
|
And again she rode on, and he followed, sick at heart and
|
|
wondering sorely.
|
|
|
|
When they were riding together again, they spake not to each
|
|
other, though she stole glances at him to see how he fared;
|
|
but he rode on with knit brows and a stern countenance. So
|
|
in a while she began to speak to him again, but as if there
|
|
were nought but courtesy between them, and neither love nor
|
|
hatred. She fell to asking him of woodland matters,
|
|
concerning bird and beast and things creeping; and at first
|
|
he would scarce answer her at all, and then were his answers
|
|
short; but at last, despite of all, he began to forget both
|
|
grief and anger, so much the sweetness of her speech wound
|
|
about his heart; and, withal, she fell to asking him of his
|
|
fellows and their life in the woods, and of Jack of the
|
|
Tofts and the like; and now he answered her questions fully,
|
|
and whiles she laughed at his words, and he laughed also;
|
|
and all pleasure had there been of this converse, if he had
|
|
not beheld her from time to time and longed for the fairness
|
|
of her body, and feared her wrath at his longing.
|
|
|
|
So wore the day, and the sun was getting low, and they were
|
|
come to another woodland pool which was fed by a
|
|
clear-running little brook, and up from it went a low bank
|
|
of greensward exceeding sweet, and beyond that oak trees
|
|
wide-branched and great, and still fair greensward beneath
|
|
them and hazel-thicket beyond them. There, then, Goldilind
|
|
reined up, and looked about her, but Christopher looked on
|
|
her and nought else. But she said: "Let to-morrow bring
|
|
counsel; but now am I weary to-night, and if we are not to
|
|
ride night-long, we shall belike find no better place to
|
|
rest in. Wilt thou keep watch while I sleep?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea," he said, bowing his head to her soberly; and
|
|
therewith he got off his horse, and would have helped her
|
|
down from hers, but she slipped lightly down and stood
|
|
before him face to face, and they were very nigh to each
|
|
other, she standing close to her horse. Her face was pale to
|
|
his deeming and there was a piteous look in her eyes, so
|
|
that he yearned towards her in his bowels, and reached his
|
|
hand toward her; but she shrank aback, leaning against her
|
|
horse, and said in a trembling voice, looking full at him,
|
|
and growing yet paler: "Forester, dost thou think it seemly
|
|
that thou shouldst ride with us, thou such as thou hast told
|
|
thyself to be, in this lordly raiment, which they gave thee
|
|
yonder as part of the price for thy leading us away into the
|
|
wild-wood?"
|
|
|
|
"Lady," said he, "whether it be seemly or not, I see that it
|
|
is thy will that I should go clad as a woodland churl; abide
|
|
a little, and thy will shall be done."
|
|
|
|
Therewith he did off the burden from the sumpter horse, and
|
|
set the chests on the earth; then he took her horse gently,
|
|
and led him with the other two in under the oak trees, and
|
|
there he tethered them so that they could bite the grass;
|
|
and came back thereafter, and took his old raiment out of
|
|
the chest, and said: "What thou wilt have me do, I will do
|
|
now; and this all the more as to-morrow I should have done
|
|
it unbidden, and should have prayed thee to do on garments
|
|
less glorious than now thou bearest; so that we may look the
|
|
less strange in the woodland if we chance to fall in with
|
|
any man.
|
|
|
|
Nought she answered as he turned toward the hazel copse; she
|
|
had been following him with her eyes while he was about that
|
|
business, and when his back was turned, she stood a moment
|
|
till her bosom fell a-heaving, and she wept; then she turned
|
|
her about to the chest wherein was her raiment, and went
|
|
hastily and did off her glorious array, and did on the green
|
|
gown wherewith she had fled, and left her feet bare withal.
|
|
Then she looked up and saw Christopher, how he was coming
|
|
from out the hazel-thicket new clad in his old raiment, and
|
|
she cried out aloud, and ran toward him. But he doubted
|
|
that some evil had betid, and that she was chased; so he
|
|
drew out his sword; but she ran up to him and cried out:
|
|
"Put up thy sword, here is none save me."
|
|
|
|
But he stood still, gazing on her in wonderment, and now she
|
|
was drawn near to him she stood still before him, panting.
|
|
Then he said: "Nay, Lady, for this night there was no need
|
|
of thy disguising thee, to-morrow it had been soon enough."
|
|
|
|
She said: "I were fain if thou wouldst take my hand, and
|
|
lead me back to our resting-place."
|
|
|
|
Even so he did, and as their palms met he felt how her hand
|
|
loved him, and a flood of sweetness swept over his heart,
|
|
and made an end of all its soreness. But he led her quietly
|
|
back again to their place. Then she turned to him and said:
|
|
"Now art thou the woodland god again, and the courtier no
|
|
more; so now will I worship thee." And she knelt down
|
|
before him, and embraced his knees and kissed them; but he
|
|
drew her up to him, and cast his arms about her, and kissed
|
|
her face many times, and said: "Now art thou the poor
|
|
captive again."
|
|
|
|
She said: "Now hast thou forgiven me; but I will tell thee
|
|
that my wilfulness and folly was not all utterly feigned;
|
|
though when I was about it I longed for thee to break it
|
|
down with the fierceness of a man, and bid me look to it how
|
|
helpless I was, and thou how strong and my only defence.
|
|
Not utterly feigned it was: for I will say it, that I was
|
|
grieved to the heart when I bethought me of Meadhamstead and
|
|
the seat of my fathers. What sayest thou then? Shalt thou be
|
|
ever a woodman in these thickets, and a follower of Jack of
|
|
the Tofts? If so thou wilt, it is well."
|
|
|
|
He took her by the shoulders and bent her backwards to kiss
|
|
her, and held her up above the earth in his arms, waving her
|
|
this way and that, till she felt how little and light she
|
|
was in his grasp, though she was no puny woman; then he set
|
|
her on her feet again, and laughed in her face, and said:
|
|
"Sweetling, let to-morrow bring counsel. But now let it all
|
|
be: thou hast said it, thou art weary; so now will I dight
|
|
thee a bed of our mantles, and thou shalt lie thee down, and
|
|
I shall watch thee as thou badest me."
|
|
|
|
Therewith he went about, and plucked armfuls of the young
|
|
bracken, and made a bed wide and soft, and spread the
|
|
mantles thereover.
|
|
|
|
But she stood awhile looking on him; then she said: "Dost
|
|
thou think to punish me for my wilful folly, and to shame me
|
|
by making me speak to thee?"
|
|
|
|
"Nay," he said, "it is not so."
|
|
|
|
She said: "I am not shamed in that I say to thee: if thou
|
|
watch this night, I will watch by thee; and if I lie down to
|
|
rest this night, thou shalt lie by me. For my foemen have
|
|
given me to thee, and now shalt thou give thyself to me."
|
|
|
|
So he drew near to her shyly, like unto one who hath been
|
|
forgiven. And there was their bridal bed, and nought but
|
|
the oak boughs betwixt them and the bare heavens.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIII.
|
|
|
|
THEY FALL IN WITH FRIENDS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now awoke Goldilind when the morning was young and fresh,
|
|
and she drew the mantle up over her shoulders; and as she
|
|
did so, but half awake, she deemed she heard other sounds
|
|
than the singing of the black-birds and throstles about the
|
|
edge of the thicket, and she turned her eyes toward the oak
|
|
trees and the hazel-thicket, and saw at once three of
|
|
mankind coming on foot over the greensward toward her. She
|
|
was afraid, so that she durst not put out a hand to awaken
|
|
Christopher, but sat gazing on those three as they came
|
|
toward her; she saw that two were tall men, clad much as
|
|
Christopher; but presently she saw that there was a woman
|
|
with them, and she took heart somewhat thereat; and she
|
|
noted that one of the men was short-haired and dark-haired,
|
|
and the other had long red hair falling about his shoulders;
|
|
and as she put out her hand and laid it on Christopher's
|
|
shoulder, the red-haired one looked toward her a moment
|
|
under the sharp of his hand (for the sun was on their side),
|
|
and then set off running, giving out a great whoop
|
|
therewithal. Even therewith leapt up Christopher, still
|
|
half awake, and the red-haired man ran right up to him, and
|
|
caught him by the shoulders, and kissed him on both cheeks;
|
|
so that Goldilind saw that these were the fellows whereof
|
|
Christopher had told, and she stood there shame-fast and
|
|
smiling.
|
|
|
|
Presently came up the others, to wit, Gilbert and Joanna,
|
|
and they also kissed and embraced Christopher, and all they
|
|
were as full of joy as might be. Then came Joanna to
|
|
Goldilind, and said: "I wot not who this may be, brother,
|
|
yet meseems she will be someone who is dear to thee,
|
|
wherefore is she my sister." And therewith she kissed
|
|
Goldilind; and she was kind, and sweet of flesh, and goodly
|
|
of body, and Goldilind rejoiced in her.
|
|
|
|
Joanna made much of her, and said to her: "Here is to do,
|
|
whereas two men have broken into a lady's chamber; come,
|
|
sister, let us to the thicket, and I will be thy tiring-
|
|
maid, and while these others tell their tales we shall tell
|
|
ours." And she took her hand and they went into the hazels;
|
|
but the two new-come men seemed to find it hard to keep
|
|
their eyes off Goldilind, till the hazels had hidden her.
|
|
|
|
Then turned David to Christopher, and said: "Thy pardon,
|
|
little King, that we have waked thee so early; but we wotted
|
|
not that thou hadst been amongst the wood-women; and, sooth
|
|
to say, my lad, we had little ease till we found thee, after
|
|
we came home and saw all those hoof-marks yonder."
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said Gilbert, "if we had lost thee we had been finely
|
|
holpen up, for we could neither have gone back to the Tofts
|
|
nor into the kingdom: for I think my father would have
|
|
hanged us if we had come back with a 'By the way,
|
|
Christopher is slain.' But tell us, lad, what hath befallen
|
|
thee with yonder sweetling?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea, tell us," said David, "and sit down here betwixt us,
|
|
with thy back to the hazel-thicket, or we shall get no tale
|
|
out of thee--tush, man, Joanna will bring her back, and that
|
|
right soon, I hope."
|
|
|
|
Christopher laughed, and sat down between them, and told all
|
|
how it had gone with him, and of Goldilind, who she was.
|
|
The others hearkened heedfully, and Gilbert said: "With all
|
|
thou hast told us, brother, it is clear we shall find it
|
|
hard to dwell in Littledale; so soon as thy loveling hath
|
|
rested her at our house, we must go our ways to the Tofts,
|
|
and take counsel of our father."
|
|
|
|
Christopher yea-said this, and therewithal was come Joanna
|
|
leading Goldilind duly arrayed (yet still in her green gown,
|
|
for she would none other), fresh, blushing, and all lovely;
|
|
and David and Christopher did obeisance before her as to a
|
|
great lady; but she hailed them as brothers, merrily and
|
|
kindly, and bade them kiss her; and they kissed her cheek,
|
|
but shyly, and especially David.
|
|
|
|
Thereafter they broke their fast under the oak trees, and
|
|
spent a merry hour, and then departed, the two women riding
|
|
the horses, the others afoot; so came they to the house of
|
|
Littledale, some while before sunset, and were merry and
|
|
glad there. Young they were, troubles were behind them, and
|
|
many a joy before them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIV.
|
|
|
|
THEY TAKE COUNSEL AT LITTLEDALE.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten days they abode in the house of Littledale in all good
|
|
cheer, and Joanna led Goldilind here and there about the
|
|
woods, and made much of her, so that the heart within her
|
|
was full of joy, for the freedom of the wild-woods and all
|
|
the life thereof was well-nigh new to her; whereas on the
|
|
day of her flight from Greenharbour, and on two other such
|
|
times, deadly fear, as is aforesaid, was mingled with her
|
|
joyance, and would have drowned it utterly, but for the
|
|
wilfulness which hardened her heart against the punishment
|
|
to come. But now she was indeed free, and it seemed to her,
|
|
as to Christopher when he was but new healed of his hurt, as
|
|
if all this bright beauty of tree and flower, and beast and
|
|
bird, was but made for her alone, and she wondered that her
|
|
fellow could be so calm and sedate amidst of all this
|
|
pleasure. And now, forsooth, was her queenhood forgotten,
|
|
and better and better to her seemed Christopher's valiant
|
|
love; and the meeting in the hall of the eventide was so
|
|
sweet to her, that she might do little but stand trembling
|
|
whiles Christopher came up to her, and Joanna's trim feet
|
|
were speeding her over the floor to meet her man, that she
|
|
might be a sharer in his deeds of the day.
|
|
|
|
Many tales withal Joanna told the Queen of the deeds of her
|
|
husband and his kindred, and of the freeing of her and the
|
|
other three from their captivity at Wailing Knowe, and of
|
|
the evil days they wore there before the coming of their
|
|
lads, which must have been worser by far, thought Goldilind,
|
|
than the days of Greenharbour; so with all these tales, and
|
|
the happy days in the house of the wild-woods, Goldilind now
|
|
began to deem of this new life as if there had been none
|
|
other fated for her, so much a part was she now become of
|
|
the days of those woodmen and wolf-heads.
|
|
|
|
But when the last of those ten days was wearing to an end
|
|
and those five were sitting happy in the hall (albeit David
|
|
sat somewhat pensive, now staring at Goldilind's beauty, now
|
|
rising from his seat to pace the floor restlessly), Gilbert
|
|
spake and said: "Brethren, and thou, Queen Goldilind, it
|
|
may be that the time is drawing near for other deeds than
|
|
letting fly a few shafts at the dun deer, and eating our
|
|
meat, and singing old songs as we lie at our ladies' feet;
|
|
for though we be at peace here in the wild-wood, forgetting
|
|
all things save those that are worthy to be remembered, yet
|
|
in the cities and the courts of kings guile is not
|
|
forgotten, and pride is alive, and tyranny, and the sword is
|
|
whetted for innocent lives, and the feud is eked by the
|
|
destruction of those who be sackless of its upheaving.
|
|
Wherefore it behoveth to defend us by the ready hand and the
|
|
bold heart and the wise head. So, I say, let us loiter here
|
|
no longer, but go our ways to-morrow to the Tofts, and take
|
|
the rede of our elders. How say ye, brethren?"
|
|
|
|
Quoth Christopher: "Time was, brother, when what thou
|
|
sayest would have been as a riddle to me, and I would have
|
|
said: Here are we merry, though we be few; and if ye lack
|
|
more company, let me ride to the Tofts and come back with a
|
|
half score of lads and lasses, and thus let us eke our
|
|
mirth; and maybe they will tell us whitherward to ride. But
|
|
now there is a change, since I have gained a gift over-great
|
|
for me, and I know that they shall be some of the great ones
|
|
who would be eager to take it from me; and who knows what
|
|
guile may be about the weaving even now, as on the day when
|
|
thou first sawest this hall, beloved."
|
|
|
|
Goldilind spake and sighed withal: "Whither my lord will
|
|
lead me, thither will I go; but here is it fair and sweet
|
|
and peaceful; neither do I look for it that men will come
|
|
hither to seek the Queen of Meadham."
|
|
|
|
David said: "Bethink thee, though, my Lady, that he who
|
|
wedded thee to the woodman may yet rue, and come hither to
|
|
undo his deed, by slaying the said woodman, and showing the
|
|
Queen unto the folk."
|
|
|
|
Goldilind turned pale; but Joanna spake: "Nay, brother
|
|
David, why wilt thou prick her heart with this fear? For my
|
|
part, I think that, chance-hap apart, we might dwell here
|
|
for years in all safety, and happily enough, maybe. Yet
|
|
also I say that we of the Tofts may well be eager to show
|
|
this jewel to our kindred, and especially to our father and
|
|
mother of the Tofts; so to-morrow we will set about the
|
|
business of carrying her thither, will she, nill she." And
|
|
therewith she threw her arms about Goldilind, and clipped
|
|
her and kissed her; and Goldilind reddened for pleasure and
|
|
for joy that she was so sore prized by them all.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXV.
|
|
|
|
NOW THEY ALL COME TO THE TOFTS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Next morning, while the day was yet young, they rode
|
|
together, all of them, the nighest way to the Tofts, for
|
|
they knew the wood right well. Again they slept one night
|
|
under the bare heavens, and, rising betimes on the morrow,
|
|
came out under the Tofts some four hours after high noon, on
|
|
as fair and calm a day of early summer as ever was seen.
|
|
|
|
They rode up straight to the door of the great hall, and
|
|
found but few folk about, and those mostly women and
|
|
children; Jack was ridden abroad, they said, but they looked
|
|
to see him back to supper, him and his sons, for he was no
|
|
great way gone.
|
|
|
|
Meantime, when they got off their horses, the women and
|
|
children thronged round about them; and the children
|
|
especially about Christopher, whom they loved much. The
|
|
maidens, also, would not have him pass into the hall
|
|
unkissed, though presently, after their faces had felt his
|
|
lips, they fell a-staring and wondering at Goldilind, and
|
|
when Christopher took her by the hand and gave her welcome
|
|
to the House of the Tofts, and they saw that she was his,
|
|
they grew to be somewhat afraid, or it might be shy, both of
|
|
her and of him.
|
|
|
|
Anyhow, folk came up to them in the hall, and made much of
|
|
them, and took them unto chambers and washed their feet, and
|
|
crowned them with flowers, and brought them into the hall
|
|
again, and up on to the dais, and gave them to eat and
|
|
drink. Thither came to them also the Lady Margaret, Jack's
|
|
wedded wife, and made them the most cheer that she might;
|
|
and unto her did Christopher tell his story as unto his very
|
|
mother; and what there was in the house, both of carle and
|
|
of quean, gathered round about to hearken, and Christopher
|
|
nothing loth. And Goldilind's heart warmed toward that
|
|
folk, and in sooth they were a goodly people to look on, and
|
|
frank and happy, and of good will, and could well of
|
|
courtesy, though it were not of the courts.
|
|
|
|
Wore the bright day, and it drew toward sunset, and now the
|
|
carles came straight into the hall by twos and threes, till
|
|
there were a many within its walls. But to each one of
|
|
these knots as they entered, someone, carle or quean, spake
|
|
a word or two, and straightway the new-comers went up to the
|
|
dais and greeted Christopher pleasantly, and made obeisance
|
|
to Goldilind.
|
|
|
|
At last was the hall, so quiet erst, grown busy as a
|
|
beehive, and amidst the throng thereof came in the
|
|
serving-folk, women and men, and set the endlong boards up
|
|
(for the high-table was a standing one of oak, right thick
|
|
and strong); and then they fell to bringing in the service,
|
|
all but what the fire was dealing with in the kitchen. And
|
|
whiles this was a-doing, the sun was sinking fast, and it
|
|
was dusk in the hall by then it was done, though without the
|
|
sky was fair and golden, and about the edges of the thicket
|
|
were the nightingales singing loud and sweet, but within was
|
|
the turmoil of many voices, whereof few heeded if their
|
|
words were loud or soft.
|
|
|
|
Amidst all this, from close to the hall, rang out the sound
|
|
of many horns winding a woodland tune. None was afeard or
|
|
astonied, because all knew it for the horns of Jack of the
|
|
Tofts; but they stilled their chattering talk somewhat, and
|
|
abided his coming; and even therewith came the sound of many
|
|
feet and the clash of weapons, and men poured in, and there
|
|
was the gleam of steel, as folk fell back to the right and
|
|
left, and gave room to the new-comers. Then a loud, clear,
|
|
and cheery voice cried out from amidst of them: "Light in
|
|
the hall, men and maids! Candles, candles! Let see who is
|
|
here before us!"
|
|
|
|
Straightway then was there running hither and thither and
|
|
light sprang up over all the hall, and there could folk see
|
|
Jack of the Tofts, and a score and a half of his best, every
|
|
man of them armed with shield and helm and byrny, with green
|
|
coats over their armour, and wreaths of young oak about
|
|
their basnets; there they stood amidst of the hall, and
|
|
every man with his naked sword in his fist. Jack stood
|
|
before his folk clad in like wise with them, save that his
|
|
head was bare but for an oak wreath. Men looked on a while
|
|
and said nought, while Jack looked proudly and keenly over
|
|
the hall, and at last his eye caught Christopher's, but he
|
|
made the youngling no semblance of greeting. Christopher's
|
|
heart fell, and he misdoubted if something were not wrong;
|
|
but he spake softly to one who stood by him, and said: "Is
|
|
aught amiss, Will Ashcroft? this is not the wont here."
|
|
|
|
Said the other: "Not in thy time; but for the last seven
|
|
days it hath been the wont, and then off weapons and to
|
|
supper peaceably.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVI.
|
|
|
|
OF THE KING OF OAKENREALM.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Even therewith, and while the last word had but come to
|
|
Christopher's ears, rang out the voice of Jack of the Tofts
|
|
again, louder and clearer than before: and he said: "Men
|
|
in this hall, I bear you tidings! The King of Oakenrealm is
|
|
amongst us to-night."
|
|
|
|
Then, forsooth, was the noise and the turmoil, and cries and
|
|
shouts and clatter, and fists raised in air and weapons
|
|
caught down from the wall, and the glitter of spear-points
|
|
and gleam of fallow blades. For the name of Rolf, King of
|
|
Oakenrealm, was to those woodmen as the name of the Great
|
|
Devil of Hell, so much was he their unfriend and their
|
|
dastard. But Jack raised up his hand, and cried: "Silence
|
|
ye! Blow up, horns, The Hunt's Up!"
|
|
|
|
Blared out the horns then, strong and fierce, under the
|
|
hall-roof, and when they were done, there was more silence
|
|
in the hall than in the summer night without; only the voice
|
|
of the swords could not be utterly still, but yet tinkled
|
|
and rang as hard came against hard here and there in the
|
|
hush.
|
|
|
|
Again spake Jack: "Let no man speak! Let no man move from
|
|
his place! I SEE THE KING! Ye shall see him!"
|
|
|
|
Therewith he strode up the hall and on to the dais, and came
|
|
up to where stood Christopher holding Goldilind's hand, and
|
|
she all pale and trembling; but Jack took him by the
|
|
shoulder, and turned him about toward a seat which stood
|
|
before the board, so that all men in the hall could see it;
|
|
then he set him down in it, and took his sword from his
|
|
girdle, and knelt down before the young man, and took his
|
|
right hand, and said in a loud voice: "I, Jack of the
|
|
Tofts, a free man and a sackless, wrongfully beguilted, am
|
|
the man of King Christopher of Oakenrealm, to live and die
|
|
for him as need may be. Lo, Lord, my father's blade! Wilt
|
|
thou be good to me and gird me therewith, as thy father girt
|
|
him?"
|
|
|
|
Now when Christopher heard him, at first he deemed that all
|
|
this was some sport or play done for his pastime and the
|
|
pleasure of the hall-folk in all kindness and honour. But
|
|
when he looked in the eyes of him, and saw him fierce and
|
|
eager and true, he knew well it was no jest; and as the
|
|
shouts of men went up from the hall and beat against the
|
|
roof, himseemed that he remembered, as in a dream, folk
|
|
talking a-nigh him when he was too little to understand, of
|
|
a king and his son, and a mighty man turned thief and
|
|
betrayer. Then his brow cleared, and his eyes shone bright,
|
|
and he leaned forward to Jack and girt him with the sword,
|
|
and kissed his mouth, and said: "Thou art indeed my man and
|
|
my thane and my earl, and I gird thee with thy sword as my
|
|
father girded thy father."
|
|
|
|
Then stood up Jack o' the Tofts and said: "Men in this
|
|
hall, happy is the hour, and happy are ye! This man is the
|
|
King of Oakenrealm, and he yonder is but a thief of kings, a
|
|
dastard!"
|
|
|
|
And again great was the shouting, for carle and quean, young
|
|
and old, they loved Christopher well: and Jack of the Tofts
|
|
was not only their war-duke and alderman, but their wise man
|
|
also, and none had any thought of gainsaying him. But he
|
|
spake again and said: "Is there here any old man, or not so
|
|
old, who hath of past days seen our King that was, King
|
|
Christopher to wit, who fell in battle on our behalf? If so
|
|
there be, let him come up hither."
|
|
|
|
Then arose a greybeard from a bench nigh the high-table, and
|
|
came up on to the dais; a very tall man had he been, but was
|
|
now somewhat bowed by age. He now knelt before Christopher,
|
|
and took his hand, and said: "I, William of Whittenham, a
|
|
free man, a knight, sackless of the guilt which is laid on
|
|
me, would be thy man, O my lord King, to serve thee in all
|
|
wise; if so be that I may live to strike one stroke for my
|
|
master's son, whom now I see, the very living image of the
|
|
King whom I served in my youth."
|
|
|
|
Then Christopher bent down to him and kissed him, and said:
|
|
"Thou art indeed my man and my thane & my baron; and who
|
|
knows but that thou mayst have many a stroke to strike for
|
|
me in the days that are nigh at hand."
|
|
|
|
And again the people shouted: and then there came another
|
|
and another, and ten more squires and knights and men of
|
|
estate, who were now indeed woodmen and wolf-heads, but who,
|
|
the worst of them, were sackless of aught save slaying an
|
|
unfriend, or a friend's unfriend, in fair fight; and all
|
|
these kneeled before him, and put their hands in his, and
|
|
gave themselves unto him.
|
|
|
|
When this was done, there came thrusting through the throng
|
|
of the hall a tall woman, old, yet comely as for her age;
|
|
she went right up on to the dais, and came to where sat
|
|
Christopher, and without more ado cast her arms about him
|
|
and kissed him, and then she held him by the shoulders and
|
|
cried out: "O, have I found thee at last, my loveling, and
|
|
my dear, and my nurse-chick? and thou grown so lovely and
|
|
yet so big that I may never more hold thee aloft in mine
|
|
arms, as once I was wont; though high enough belike thou
|
|
shalt be lifted; and I say praise be to God and to his
|
|
Hallows that thou art grown so beauteous and mighty a man!"
|
|
|
|
Therewith she turned about toward the hall-throng and said:
|
|
"Thou, duke of these woodmen, and all ye in this hall, I
|
|
have been brought hither by one of you; and though I have
|
|
well-nigh died of joy because of the suddenness of this
|
|
meeting, yet I thank him therefor. For who is this goodly
|
|
and gracious young man save the King's son of Oakenrealm,
|
|
Christopher that was; and that to my certain knowledge; for
|
|
he is my fosterling and my milk-child, and I took him from
|
|
the hands of the midwife in the High House of Oakenham a
|
|
twenty-one years ago; and they took him from Oakenham, and
|
|
me with him to the house of Lord Richard the Lean, at
|
|
Longholms, and there we dwelt; but in a little while they
|
|
took him away from Longholms to I wot not whither, but would
|
|
not suffer me to go along with him, and ever sithence have I
|
|
been wandering about and hoping to see this lovely child
|
|
again, and now I see him, what he is, and again I thank God
|
|
and Allhallows therefor."
|
|
|
|
Once more then was there stir and glad tumult in the hall.
|
|
But Goldilind stood wondering, and fear entered into her
|
|
soul; for she saw before her a time of turmoil and unpeace,
|
|
and there seemed too much between her and the sweetness of
|
|
her love. Withal it must be said, that for as little as she
|
|
knew of courts and war-hosts, she yet seemed to see lands
|
|
without that hall, and hosts marching, and mighty walls
|
|
glittering with spears, and the banners of a great King
|
|
displayed; and Jack of the Tofts and his champions and good
|
|
fellows seemed but a frail defence against all that, when
|
|
once the hidden should be shown, and the scantiness of the
|
|
woodland should cry on the abundance of the kingdom to bow
|
|
down.
|
|
|
|
Now she came round the board and stood beside Christopher,
|
|
and he turned to her, and stood up and took her hand, in
|
|
such wise that she felt the caress of it; and joy filled her
|
|
soul, as if she had been alone with him in the wild-wood.
|
|
|
|
But he spake and said: "All ye my friends: I see and wot
|
|
well that ye would have me sit in my father's seat and be
|
|
the King of Oakenrealm, and that ye will give me help and
|
|
furtherance therein to the utmost; nor will I cast back the
|
|
gift upon you; and I will say this, that when I am King
|
|
indeed, it is my meaning and my will now, that then I shall
|
|
be no less one of you good fellows and kind friends than ye
|
|
have known me hitherto; and even so I deem that ye think of
|
|
me. But, good friends, it is not to be hidden that the road
|
|
ye would have me wend with you is like to be rough; and it
|
|
may well be that we shall not come to be kings or kings'
|
|
friends but men hunted, and often, maybe, men taken and
|
|
slain. Therefore, till one thing or the other come, the
|
|
kingship, or the taking, I will try to be no less joyous
|
|
than now I am, and so meseemeth shall ye; and if ye be of
|
|
this mind, then shall the coming days be no worse than the
|
|
days which have been; and God wot they have been happy
|
|
enough. Now again, ye see this most fair lady, whose hand I
|
|
hold; she is my beloved and my wife; and therewithal she is
|
|
the true Queen of Meadham, and a traitor sits in her place
|
|
even as a traitor sits in mine. But I must tell you that
|
|
when she took me for her beloved, she knew not, nor did I,
|
|
that I was a King's son, but she took me as a woodman and an
|
|
outcast, and as a wood-man and outcast I wooed her, trusting
|
|
in the might that was in my body, and the love that was in
|
|
my heart; and now before all you, my friends, I thank her
|
|
and worship her that my body and my love was enough for her;
|
|
as, God wot, the kingship of the whole earth should not be
|
|
overmuch for her, if it lay open to her to take. But, sweet
|
|
friends, here am I talking of myself as a King wedded unto a
|
|
Queen, whereas meseemeth the chiefest gift our twin kingship
|
|
hath brought you to-night is the gift of two most mighty
|
|
unfriends for you; to wit, her foeman and mine. See ye to
|
|
it, then, if the wild-wood yonder is not a meeter dwelling
|
|
for us than this your goodly hall; and fear not to put us to
|
|
the door as a pair of make-bates and a peril to this goodly
|
|
company. Lo you, the sky without has not yet lost all
|
|
memory of the sun, and in a little while it will be
|
|
yellowing again to the dawn. Nought evil shall be the
|
|
wild-wood for our summer dwelling; and what! ere the winter
|
|
come, we may have won us another house where erst my fathers
|
|
feasted. And thereto, my friends, do I bid you all."
|
|
|
|
But when they heard his friendly words, and saw the beauty
|
|
of the fair woman whose hand he held, his face grew so
|
|
well-beloved to them, that they cried out with so great a
|
|
voice of cheer, wordless for their very joy, that the
|
|
timbers of the hall quavered because of it, and it went out
|
|
into the wild-wood as though it had been the feastful
|
|
roaring of the ancient gods of the forest.
|
|
|
|
But when the tumult sank a little, then cried out Jack of
|
|
the Tofts: "Bring now the mickle shield, and let us look
|
|
upon our King."
|
|
|
|
So men went and fetched in a huge ancient shield, plated
|
|
with berry-brown iron, inlaid with gold, and the four
|
|
biggest men in the hall took it on their shoulders and knelt
|
|
down anigh the dais, before Christopher, and Jack said
|
|
aloud: "King! King! Stand up here! for this war-board of
|
|
old days is the castle and the burg alone due to thee, and
|
|
these four fellows here are the due mountains to upbear it."
|
|
|
|
Then lightly strode Child Christopher on to the shield, and
|
|
when he stood firm thereon, they rose heedfully underneath
|
|
him till they were standing upright on their feet, and the
|
|
King stood on the shield as if he were grown there, and
|
|
waved his naked sword to the four orts.
|
|
|
|
Then cried out an old woman in a shrill voice: "Lo, how the
|
|
hills rise up into tall mountains; even so shall arise Child
|
|
Christopher to the kingship."
|
|
|
|
Thereat all the folk laughed for joy and cried out: "Child
|
|
Christopher! Child Christopher, our King!" And for that
|
|
word, when he came to the crown indeed, and ruled wide
|
|
lands, was he called Child Christopher; and that name clave
|
|
to him after he was dead, and but a name in the tale of his
|
|
kindred.
|
|
|
|
Now the King spake and said: "Friends, now is it time to
|
|
get to the board, and the feast which hath been stayed this
|
|
while; and I pray you let it be as merry as if there were no
|
|
striving and unpeace betwixt us and the winning of peace.
|
|
But to-morrow we will hallow-in the Mote, and my earl and my
|
|
barons and good men shall give counsel, and then shall it be
|
|
that the hand shall do what the heart biddeth."
|
|
|
|
Therewith he leapt down from the shield, and went about the
|
|
hall talking to this one and that, till the board was full
|
|
dight; then he took his place in the high-seat, beside Jack
|
|
of the Tofts; and David and Gilbert and his other
|
|
foster-brethren sat on either side of him, and their wives
|
|
with them; and men fell to feasting in great glee.
|
|
|
|
But one thing there is yet to tell of this feast. When men
|
|
had drunk a cup or two, and drunk memories to good men dead,
|
|
and healths to good men living, amidst this arose a
|
|
grey-head carle from the lower end of the hall, and said:
|
|
"Child Christopher, thy grace, that I may crave a boon of
|
|
thee on this day of leal service.'
|
|
|
|
"Ask then," said Christopher, with a pleasant face.
|
|
|
|
"King," quoth the carle, "here are we all gathered together,
|
|
and we have before us the most beautifullest woman of the
|
|
world, who sitteth by thy side; now to-night we be all dear
|
|
friends, and there is no lack between us; yet who can say
|
|
how often we may meet and things be so? I do not say that
|
|
there shall enmity and dissension arise between us, though
|
|
that may betide; but it is not unlike that another time
|
|
thou, King, and thy mate, may be prouder than now ye be,
|
|
since now ye are new to it. And if that distance grow
|
|
between us, it will avail nought to ask my boon then."
|
|
|
|
"Well, well, ask it now, friend," said the King, laughing;
|
|
"I were fain of ending the day with a gift."
|
|
|
|
"This it is then, King," said the carle: "since we are here
|
|
set down before the loveliest woman in the world, grant us
|
|
this, that all we men-folk may for this once kiss the face
|
|
of her, if she will have it so."
|
|
|
|
Huge laughter and cheers arose at his word; but King
|
|
Christopher arose and said: "Friend, thy boon is granted
|
|
with a good will; or how sayest thou, Goldilind my beloved?
|
|
|
|
For all answer she stood up blushing like a rose, and held
|
|
out her two hands to the men in the hall. And straightway
|
|
the old carle rose up and went in haste to the high-table,
|
|
before another man might stir, and took Goldilind by the
|
|
chin, and kissed her well-favouredly, and again men laughed
|
|
joyously. Then came before her Jack of the Tofts and all
|
|
his sons, one after other, and kissed her face, save only
|
|
David, who knelt humbly before her, and took her right hand
|
|
and kissed it, while the tears were in his eyes. Then came
|
|
many of the men in the hall, and some were bold, but many
|
|
were shy, and when they came before her durst kiss neither
|
|
hand nor face of her, but their hearts were full of her when
|
|
they went to their places again; and all the assembly was
|
|
praising her.
|
|
|
|
So wore the time of that first night of the kingship of
|
|
Child Christopher.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVII.
|
|
|
|
OF THE HUSTING OF THE TOFTS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
When morning was, there were horns sounding from the tower
|
|
on the toft, and all men hastening in their war-gear to the
|
|
topmost of the other toft, the bare one, whereon was no
|
|
building; for thereon was ever the mote-stead of these
|
|
woodmen. But men came not only from the stead and houses of
|
|
the Tofts, but also from the woodland cots and dwellings
|
|
anigh, of which were no few. And they that came there first
|
|
found King Christopher sitting on the mound amid the
|
|
mote-stead, and Jack of the Tofts and his seven sons sitting
|
|
by him, and all they well-weaponed and with green coats over
|
|
their hauberks; and they that came last found three hundreds
|
|
of good men and true gathered there, albeit this was but the
|
|
Husting of the Tofts.
|
|
|
|
So when there were no more to come, then was the Mote
|
|
hallowed, and the talk began; but short and sharp was their
|
|
rede, for well did all men wot who had been in the hall the
|
|
night before that there was now no time to lose. For though
|
|
nigh all the men that had been in the hall were well known
|
|
to each other, yet might there perchance have been some spy
|
|
unknown, who had edged him in as a guest to one of the good
|
|
men. Withal, as the saw saith: The word flieth, the wight
|
|
dieth. And it were well if they might gather a little host
|
|
ere their foeman might gather a mickle.
|
|
|
|
First therefore arose Jack of the Tofts, and began shortly
|
|
to put forth the sooth, that there was come the son of King
|
|
Christopher the Old, and that now he was seeking to his
|
|
kingdom, not for lust of power and gain, but that he might
|
|
be the friend of good men and true, and uphold them and be
|
|
by them upholden. And saith he: "Look ye on the face of
|
|
this man, and tell me where ye shall find a friend
|
|
friendlier than he, and more single-hearted?" And therewith
|
|
he laid his hand on Christopher's head, and the young man
|
|
rose up, blushing like a maid, and thereafter a long time
|
|
could no lord be heard for the tumult of gladness and the
|
|
clashing of weapons.
|
|
|
|
But when it was a little hushed, then spake Jack again:
|
|
"Now need no man say more to man on this matter, for ye call
|
|
this curly-headed lad the King of Oakenrealm, even as some
|
|
of ye did last night."
|
|
|
|
Mighty was the shout of yea-say that arose at that word; and
|
|
when it was stilled, a grey-head stood up and said: "King
|
|
Christopher, and thou, our leader, whom we shall henceforth
|
|
call Earl, it is now meet that we shear up the war-arrow,
|
|
and send it forth to whithersoever we deem our friends
|
|
dwell, and that this be done at once here in this Mote, and
|
|
that the hosting be after three nights' frist in the plain
|
|
of Hazeldale, which all ye know is twelve miles nigher to
|
|
Oakenrealm than this."
|
|
|
|
All men yea-said this, no one gainsaid it; and straightway
|
|
was fire kindled and the bull slain, for the said elder had
|
|
brought him thither; and the arrow was sheared and scorched
|
|
and reddened, and the runners were fetched, and the word
|
|
given them, and they were sped on their errand.
|
|
|
|
Up rose then another, a young man, and spake: "Many stout
|
|
fellows be here, and some wise and well-ruled, and many also
|
|
hot-head and wilful: Child Christopher is King now, and we
|
|
all know him that when he cometh into the fray he is like to
|
|
strike three strokes for two that any other winneth; but as
|
|
to his lore of captainship, if he hath any, he was born with
|
|
it, as is like enough, seeing who was his father; therefore
|
|
we need a captain well-proven, to bid us how to turn hither
|
|
and thither, and where to gather thickest, and where to
|
|
spread thinnest; and when to fall on fiercely and when to
|
|
give way, and let the thicket cover us; for wise in war
|
|
shall our foemen be. Now therefore if anyone needeth a
|
|
better captain than our kin-father and war-father Jack of
|
|
the Tofts, he must needs go fetch him from otherwhere! How
|
|
sayest thou, Christopher lad?"
|
|
|
|
Great cheer there was at the word, and laughter no little
|
|
therewith. But Christopher stood up, and took Jack by the
|
|
hand, and said: "Now say I, that if none else follow this
|
|
man into battle, yet will I; and if none else obey him to go
|
|
backward or forward to the right hand or to the left as he
|
|
biddeth, yet will I. Thou, Wilfrid Wellhead, look to it
|
|
that thou dost no less. But ye folk, what will ye herein?"
|
|
|
|
So they all yea-said Jack of the Tofts for captain; and
|
|
forsooth they might do no less, for he was wary and wise,
|
|
and had done many deeds, and seen no little of warfare.
|
|
|
|
Then again arose a man of some forty winters, strong built
|
|
and not ungoodly, but not merry of countenance, and he
|
|
spake: "King and war-leader, I have a word to say: We be
|
|
wending to battle, we carles, with spear in fist and sword
|
|
by side; and if we die in the fray, of the day's work is it;
|
|
but what do we with our kinswomen, as mothers and daughters
|
|
and wives and she-friends, and the little ones they have
|
|
borne us? For, see ye! this warfare we are faring, maybe it
|
|
shall not last long, and yet maybe it shall; and then may
|
|
the foeman go about us and fall on this stead if we leave
|
|
them behind here with none to guard them; and if, on the
|
|
other hand, we leave them men enough for their warding, then
|
|
we minish our host overmuch. What do we then?"
|
|
|
|
Then spake Jack of the Tofts: "This is well thought of by
|
|
Haward of Whiteacre, and we must look to it. And, by my
|
|
rede, we shall have our women and little ones with us; and
|
|
why not? For we shall then but be moving Toftstead as we
|
|
move; and ever to some of us hath it been as a camp rather
|
|
than an house. Moreover, ye know it, that our women be no
|
|
useless and soft queans, who durst not lie under the oak
|
|
boughs for a night or two, or wade a water over their
|
|
ankles, but valiant they be, and kind, and helpful; and many
|
|
of them are there who can draw a bow with the best, and, it
|
|
may be, push a spear if need were. How say ye, lads?"
|
|
|
|
Now this also they yea-said gladly; forsooth they had scarce
|
|
been fain of leaving the women behind, at least the younger
|
|
ones, even had they been safe at the Tofts; for there is no
|
|
time when a man would gladlier have a fair woman in his arms
|
|
than when battle and life-peril are toward.
|
|
|
|
Thereafter the Mote sundered, when the Captain had bidden
|
|
his men this and that matter that each should look to; and
|
|
said that he, for his part, with King Christopher and a
|
|
chosen band, would set off for Hazeldale on the morrow morn,
|
|
whereas some deal of the gathering would of a certainty be
|
|
come thither by then; and that there was enough left of that
|
|
day to see to matters at the Tofts.
|
|
|
|
So all men went about their business, which was, for the
|
|
most part, seeing to the victualling of the host.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVIII.
|
|
|
|
OF THE HOSTING IN HAZELDALE.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the morrow early was Jack of the Tofts dight for
|
|
departure, with Christopher and David and Gilbert and five
|
|
score of his best men. But when they went out of the porch
|
|
into the sweet morning, lo! there was Goldilind before them,
|
|
clad in her green gown, and as fresh and dear as the early
|
|
day itself. And Jack looked on her and said: "And thou, my
|
|
Lady and Queen, thou art dight as thou wouldst wend with
|
|
us?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea," she said, "and why not?"
|
|
|
|
"What sayest thou, King Christopher?" said the Captain.
|
|
|
|
"Nay," said King Christopher, reddening, "it is for thee to
|
|
yea-say or nay-say; though true it is that I have bidden her
|
|
farewell for two days' space." And the two stood looking on
|
|
one another.
|
|
|
|
But Jack laughed and said: "Well, then, so be it; but let
|
|
us get to the way, or else when the sweethearts of these
|
|
lads know that we have a woman with us we shall have them
|
|
all at our backs." Thereat all laughed who were within
|
|
earshot, and were merry.
|
|
|
|
So they wended the woodland ways, some afoot, some
|
|
a-horseback, of whom was Jack of the Tofts, but Christopher
|
|
and David went afoot. And Goldilind rode a fair white horse
|
|
which the Captain had gotten her.
|
|
|
|
As they went, and King Christopher ever by Goldilind's right
|
|
hand, and were merry and joyous, they two were alone in the
|
|
woodland way; so Christopher took her hand and kissed it,
|
|
and said: "Sweetling, why didst thou tell me nought of thy
|
|
will to come along with us? Never had I balked thee."
|
|
|
|
She looked at him, blushing as a rose, and said: "Dear
|
|
friend, I will tell thee; I knew that thou wouldst make our
|
|
parting piteous-sweet this morning; and of that I would not
|
|
be balked. See, then, how rich I am, since I have both
|
|
parted from thee and have thee." And therewith she louted
|
|
down from her saddle, and they kissed together sweetly, and
|
|
so thereafter wore the way.
|
|
|
|
So came they to the plain of Hazeldale, which was a wide
|
|
valley with a middling river winding about it, the wild-wood
|
|
at its back toward the Tofts, and in front down-land nought
|
|
wooded, save here and there a tree nigh a homestead or cot;
|
|
for that way the land was builded for a space. Forsooth it
|
|
was not easy for the folk thereabout to live quietly, but if
|
|
they were friends in some wise to Jack of the Tofts.
|
|
|
|
So when the company of the Tofts came out into the dale
|
|
about three hours after noon, it was no wonder to them to
|
|
see men riding and going to and fro, and folk pitching tents
|
|
and raising booths nigh to the cover of the wood; and when
|
|
the coming of the Toft-folk was seen, and the winding of
|
|
their horns heard, there was many a glad cry raised in
|
|
answer, and many an horn blown, and all men there came
|
|
running together toward where now was stayed Jack of the
|
|
Tofts and Christopher and their men.
|
|
|
|
Then Goldilind bade Christopher help her light down; so he
|
|
took her in his arms, and was not over hasty in setting her
|
|
down again. But when she stood by him, she looked over the
|
|
sunny field darkened by the folk hastening over the
|
|
greensward, and her eyes glittered and her cheek flushed,
|
|
and she said: "Lord King, be these some others of thy men?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea, sweetling," said he, "to live and die with me."
|
|
|
|
She looked on him, and said softly: "Maybe it were an ill
|
|
wish to wish that I were thou; yet if it might be for one
|
|
hour!"
|
|
|
|
Said he: "Shall it not be for more than one hour? Shall it
|
|
not be for evermore, since we twain are become one?"
|
|
|
|
"Nay," she said, "this is but a word; I am but thine
|
|
handmaid: and now I can scarce refrain my body from falling
|
|
before thy feet."
|
|
|
|
He laughed in her face for joy, and said: "Abide a while,
|
|
until these men have looked on thee, and then shalt thou see
|
|
how thou wilt be a flame of war in their hearts that none
|
|
shall withstand."
|
|
|
|
Now were the dale-dwellers all come together in their
|
|
weapons, and they were glad of their King and his loveling;
|
|
and stout men were they all, albeit some were old, and some
|
|
scarce of man's age. So they were ranked and told over, and
|
|
the tale of them was over six score who had obeyed the
|
|
war-arrow, and more and more, they said, would come in every
|
|
hour. But now the Captains of them bade the Toft-folk eat
|
|
with them; and they yea-said the bidding merrily, and word
|
|
was given, and sacks and baskets brought forth, and barrels
|
|
to boot, and all men sat down on the greensward, and high
|
|
was the feast and much the merriment on the edge of
|
|
Hazeldale.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIX.
|
|
|
|
TIDINGS COME TO HAZELDALE.
|
|
|
|
|
|
But they had not done their meat, and had scarce begun upon
|
|
their drink, ere they saw three men come riding on the spur
|
|
over the crown of the bent before them; these made no stay
|
|
for aught, but rode straight through the ford of the river,
|
|
as men who knew well where it was, and came on hastily
|
|
toward the feasters by the wood-edge. Then would some have
|
|
run to meet them, but Jack of the Tofts bade them abide till
|
|
he had heard the tidings; whereas they needed not to run to
|
|
their weapons, for, all of them, they were fully dight for
|
|
war, save, it might be, the doing on of their sallets or
|
|
basnets. But Jack and Christopher alone went forward to
|
|
meet those men; and the foremost of them cried out at once:
|
|
"I know thee, Jack of the Tofts! I know thee! Up and arm! up
|
|
and arm! for the foemen are upon thee; and so choose thee
|
|
whether thou wilt fight or flee."
|
|
|
|
Quoth Jack, laughing: "I know thee also, Wat of Whiteend;
|
|
and when thou hast told me how many and who be the foemen,
|
|
we will look either to fighting or fleeing."
|
|
|
|
Said Wat: "Thou knowest the blazon of the banner which we
|
|
saw, three red wolves running on a silver field?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea, forsooth," said Jack; "'tis the Baron of Brimside that
|
|
beareth that shield ever; and the now Baron, hight the Lord
|
|
Gandolf, how many was he?"
|
|
|
|
Said Wat: "Ten hundreds or more. But what say fellows?"
|
|
|
|
Quoth the other twain: "More, more they were."
|
|
|
|
Said Jack of the Tofts: "And when shall he be here, deem
|
|
ye?"
|
|
|
|
"In less than an hour," said Wat, "he will be on thee with
|
|
great and small; but his riders, some of them, in lesser
|
|
space."
|
|
|
|
Then turned Jack about and cried out for David, and when he
|
|
came, he said: "Put thy long legs over a good horse, and
|
|
ride straight back to the Tofts and gather whatever may bear
|
|
spear and draw bow, and hither with them, lad, by the
|
|
nighest road; tarry not, speak no word, be gone!"
|
|
|
|
So David turned, and was presently riding swiftly back
|
|
through the woodland paths. But Jack spake to the bearers of
|
|
tidings: "Good fellows, go ye yonder and bid them give you
|
|
a morsel and a cup; and tell all the tidings, and this,
|
|
withal, that we have nought to flee from a good fightstead
|
|
for Gandolf of Brimside." Therewith he turned to
|
|
Christopher and said: "Thy pardon, King, but these matters
|
|
must be seen to straightway. Now do thou help me array our
|
|
folk, for there is heart enough in them as in thee and me;
|
|
and mayhappen we may make an end to this matter now and
|
|
here. Moreover, the Baron of Brimside is a stout carle, so
|
|
fight we must, meseemeth."
|
|
|
|
Then he called to them one of the captains of the Tofts and
|
|
they three spake together heedfully a little, and thereafter
|
|
they fell to work arraying the folk; and King Christopher
|
|
did his part therein deftly and swiftly, for quick of wit he
|
|
was, and that the more whenso anything was to be done.
|
|
|
|
As to the array, the main of the folk that were spearmen and
|
|
billmen but moved forward somewhat from where they had dined
|
|
to the hanging of the bent, so that their foemen would have
|
|
the hill against them or ever they came on point and edge.
|
|
But the bowmen, of whom were now some two hundreds, for many
|
|
men had come in after the first tally, were spread abroad on
|
|
the left hand of the spearmen toward the river, where the
|
|
ground was somewhat broken, and bushed with thorn-bushes.
|
|
And a bight of the water drew nearer to the Tofters, amidst
|
|
of which was a flat eyot, edged with willows and covered
|
|
with firm and sound greensward, and was some thirty yards
|
|
endlong and twenty overthwart. So there they abode the
|
|
coming of the foe, and it was now hard on five o'clock.
|
|
|
|
But Christopher went up to Goldilind where she stood amidst
|
|
of the spearmen, hand turning over hand, and her feet
|
|
wandering to and fro almost without her will; and when he
|
|
came to her, she had much ado to refrain her from falling on
|
|
his bosom and weeping there. But he cried to her gaily:
|
|
"Now, my Lady and Queen, thou shalt see a fair play toward
|
|
even sooner than we looked for; and thine eyes shall follow
|
|
me, if the battle be thronged, by this token, that amongst
|
|
all these good men and true I only wear a forgilded basnet
|
|
with a crown about it."
|
|
|
|
"O!" she said, "if it were but over, and thou alive and
|
|
free! I would pay for that, I deem, if I might, by a sojourn
|
|
in Greenharbour again."
|
|
|
|
"What!" he said, "that I might have to thrust myself into
|
|
the peril of snatching thee forth again?" And he laughed
|
|
merrily. "Nay," said he, "this play must needs begin before
|
|
it endeth; and by Saint Nicholas, I deem that to-day it
|
|
beginneth well."
|
|
|
|
But she put her hands before her face, and her shoulders
|
|
were shaken with sobs. "Alas! sweetling," said he, "that my
|
|
joy should be thy sorrow! But, I pray thee, take not these
|
|
stout-hearts for runaways. And Oh! look, look!"
|
|
|
|
She looked up, wondering and timorous, but all about her the
|
|
men sprang up and shouted, and tossed up bill and sword, and
|
|
the echo of their cries came back from the bowmen on the
|
|
left, and Christopher's sword came rattling out of the
|
|
scabbard and went gleaming up aloft. Then words came into
|
|
the cry of the folk, and Goldilind heard it, that they cried
|
|
"Child Christopher! King Christopher!" Then over her head
|
|
came a sound of flapping and rending as the evening wind
|
|
beat about the face of the wood; and she heard folk cry
|
|
about her: "The banner, the banner! Ho for the Wood-wife of
|
|
Oakenrealm!"
|
|
|
|
Then her eyes cleared for what was aloof before her, and she
|
|
saw a dark mass come spreading down over the bent on the
|
|
other side of the river, and glittering points and broad
|
|
gleams of white light amidst of it, and noise came from it;
|
|
and she knew that here were come the foemen. But she
|
|
thought to herself that they looked not so many after all;
|
|
and she looked at the great and deft bodies of their folk,
|
|
and their big-headed spears and wide-bladed glaves and
|
|
bills, and strove with her heart and refrained her fear, and
|
|
thrust back the image which had arisen before her of
|
|
Greenharbour come back again, and she lonely and naked in
|
|
the Least Guard-chamber: and she stood firm, and waved her
|
|
hand to greet the folk.
|
|
|
|
And lo! there was Christopher kneeling before her and
|
|
kissing her hand, and great shouts arising about her of "The
|
|
Lady of Oakenrealm! The Lady of Meadham! For the Lady! For
|
|
the Lady!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXX.
|
|
|
|
OF THE FIELD THAT WAS SET IN THE HOLM OF HAZELDALE.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now thither cometh Jack o' the Tofts, and spake to
|
|
Christopher: "See thou, lad--Lord King, I should say; this
|
|
looketh not like very present battle, for they be stayed
|
|
half way down the bent; and lo thou, some half score are
|
|
coming forth from the throng with a white shield raised
|
|
aloft. Do we in likewise, for they would talk with us."
|
|
|
|
"Shall we trust them, father?" said Christopher.
|
|
|
|
"Trust them we may, son," said Jack; "Gandolf is a violent
|
|
man, and a lifter of other men's goods, but I deem not so
|
|
evil of him as that he would bewray troth."
|
|
|
|
So then they let do a white cloth over a shield and hoist it
|
|
on a long spear, and straightway they gat to horse, Jack of
|
|
the Tofts, and Christopher, and Haward of Whiteacre, and
|
|
Gilbert, and a half score all told; and they rode straight
|
|
down to the ford, which was just below the tail of the eyot
|
|
aforesaid, and as they went, they saw the going of the
|
|
others, who were by now hard on the waterside; and said
|
|
Jack: "See now, King Christopher, he who rides first in a
|
|
surcoat of his arms is even the Baron, the black
|
|
bullet-headed one; and the next to him, the red-head, is his
|
|
squire and man, Oliver Marson, a stout man, but fierce and
|
|
grim-hearted. Lo thou, they are taking the water, but they
|
|
are making for the eyot and not our shore: son mine, this
|
|
will mean a hazeled field in the long run; but now they will
|
|
look for us to come to them therein. Yea, now they are
|
|
aland and have pitched their white shield. And hearken,
|
|
that is their horn; blow we an answer: ho, noise! set thy
|
|
lips to the brass."
|
|
|
|
So then, when one horn had done its song, the other took it
|
|
up, and all men of both hosts knew well that the horns blew
|
|
but for truce and parley.
|
|
|
|
Now come the Toft-folk to the ford, and take the water,
|
|
which was very shallow on their side, and when they come up
|
|
on to the eyot, they find the Baron and his folk off their
|
|
horses, and lying on the green grass, so they also lighted
|
|
down and stood and hailed the new comers. Then uprose the
|
|
Lord Gandolf, and greeted the Toft-folk, and said: "Jack of
|
|
the Tofts, thou ridest many-manned to-day."
|
|
|
|
"Yea, Lord," said Jack, "and thou also. What is thine
|
|
errand?"
|
|
|
|
"Nay," said the Baron, "what is thine? As for mine host
|
|
here, there came a bird to Brimside and did me to wit that I
|
|
should be like to need a throng if I came thy way; and sooth
|
|
was that. Come now, tell us what is toward, thou rank
|
|
reiver, though I have an inkling thereof; for if this were a
|
|
mere lifting, thou wouldst not sit still here amidst thy
|
|
friends of Hazeldale."
|
|
|
|
"Lord," said Jack o' the Tofts, "thou shalt hear mine
|
|
errand, and then give heed to what thou wilt do. Look to
|
|
the bent under the wood, and tell me, dost thou see the
|
|
blazon of the banner under which be my men?"
|
|
|
|
"That can I not," said the Lord Gandolf; "but I have seen
|
|
the banner of Oakenrealm, which beareth the wood-woman with
|
|
loins garlanded with oak-leaves, look much like to it at
|
|
such a distance."
|
|
|
|
Said Jack: "It is not ill guessed. Yonder banner is the
|
|
King's banner, and beareth on it the woman of Oakenrealm ."
|
|
|
|
The Lord bent his brows on him, and said: "Forsooth, rank
|
|
reiver, I wotted not that thou hadst King Rolf for thy
|
|
guest."
|
|
|
|
Quoth Jack of the Tofts: "Forsooth, Lord, no such guest as
|
|
the Earl Marshal Rolf would I have alive in my poor house."
|
|
|
|
"Well, Jack," said the big Lord, grinning, "arede me the
|
|
riddle, and then we shall see what is to be done, as thou
|
|
sayest."
|
|
|
|
"Lord," said Jack, "dost thou see this young man standing by
|
|
me?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said the other, "he is big enough that I may see him
|
|
better than thy banner: if he but make old bones, as is
|
|
scarce like, since he is of thy flock, he shall one day make
|
|
a pretty man; he is a gay rider now. What else is he?"
|
|
|
|
Quoth Jack of the Tofts: "He is my King and thy King, and
|
|
the all-folk's King, and the King of Oakenrealm: and now,
|
|
hearken mine errand: it is to make all folk name him King."
|
|
|
|
Said the Lord: "This minstrel's tale goes with the song the
|
|
bird sang to me this morning; and therefore am I here
|
|
thronging--to win thy head, rank reiver, and this young
|
|
man's head, since it may not better be, and let the others
|
|
go free for this time. Hah! what sayest thou? and thou,
|
|
youngling? 'Tis but the stroke of a sword, since thou hast
|
|
fallen into my hands, and not into the hangman's or the
|
|
King's."
|
|
|
|
"Thou must win them first, Lord," said Jack of the Tofts.
|
|
"Therefore, what sayest thou? Where shall we cast down the
|
|
white shield and uprear the red?"
|
|
|
|
"Hot art thou, head, heart, and hand, rank reiver," said the
|
|
Lord; "bide a while." So he sat silent a little; then he
|
|
said: "Thou seest, Jack of the Tofts, that now thou hast
|
|
thrust the torch into the tow; if I go back to King Rolf
|
|
without the heads of you twain, I am like to pay for it with
|
|
mine own. Therefore hearken. If we buckle together in
|
|
fight presently, it is most like that I shall come to my
|
|
above, but thou art so wily and stout that it is not unlike
|
|
that thou, and perchance this luckless youngling, may slip
|
|
through my fingers into the wood; and then it will avail me
|
|
little with the King that I have slain a few score nameless
|
|
wolf-heads. So, look you! here is a fair field hazelled by
|
|
God; let us two use it to-day, and fight to the death here;
|
|
and then if thou win me, smite off my head, and let my men
|
|
fight it out afterwards, as best they may without me, and
|
|
'tis like they will be beaten then. But if I win thee, then
|
|
I win this youngling withal, and bear back both heads to my
|
|
Lord King, after I have scattered thy wolf-heads and slain
|
|
as many as I will; which shall surely befall, if thou be
|
|
slain first."
|
|
|
|
Then cried out Jack of the Tofts: "Hail to thy word,
|
|
stout-heart! this is well offered, and I take it for myself
|
|
and my Lord King here." And all that stood by and heard
|
|
gave a glad sound with their voices, and their armour
|
|
rattled and rang as man turned to man to praise their
|
|
captains.
|
|
|
|
But now spake Christopher: "Lord of Brimside, it is nought
|
|
wondrous though thou set me aside as of no account, whereas
|
|
thou deemest me no king or king's kindred; but thou, Lord
|
|
Earl, who wert once Jack of the Tofts, I marvel at thee,
|
|
that thou hast forgotten thy King so soon. Ye twain shall
|
|
now wot that this is my quarrel, and that none but I shall
|
|
take this battle upon him.
|
|
|
|
"Thou servant of Rolf, the traitor and murderer, hearken! I
|
|
say that I am King of Oakenrealm, and the very son of King
|
|
Christopher the Old; and that will I maintain with my body
|
|
against every gainsayer. Thou Lord of Brimside, wilt thou
|
|
gainsay it? Then I say thou liest, and lo here, my glove!"
|
|
And he cast it down before the Lord.
|
|
|
|
Again was there good rumour, and that from either side of
|
|
the bystanders; but Jack of the Tofts stood up silent and
|
|
stiff, and the Baron of Brimside laughed, and said: "Well,
|
|
swain, if thou art weary of life, so let it be, as for me;
|
|
but how sayest thou, Jack of the Tofts? Art thou content to
|
|
give thine head away in this fashion, whereas thou wottest
|
|
that I shall presently slay this king of thine?"
|
|
|
|
Said Jack: "The King of Oakenrealm must rule me as well as
|
|
others of his liege-men: he must fight if he will, and be
|
|
slain if he will." Then suddenly he fell a-laughing, and
|
|
beat his hand on his thigh till the armour rattled again,
|
|
and then he cried out: "Lord Gandolf, Lord Gandolf, have a
|
|
care, I bid thee! Where wilt thou please to be buried,
|
|
Lord?"
|
|
|
|
Said the other: "I wot not what thou wilt mean by thy
|
|
fooling, rank reiver. But here I take up this youngling's
|
|
glove; and on his head be his fate! Now as to this battle.
|
|
My will is, that we two champions be all alone and afoot on
|
|
the eyot. How say ye?"
|
|
|
|
"Even so be it," said Jack; "but I say that half a score on
|
|
each side shall be standing on their own bank to see the
|
|
play, and the rest of the host come no nigher than now we
|
|
are."
|
|
|
|
"I yea-say it," said the Baron; "and now do thou, rank
|
|
reiver, go back to thy fellowship and tell them what we have
|
|
areded, and do thou, Oliver Marson, do so much for our folk;
|
|
and bid them wot this, that if any of them break the troth,
|
|
he shall lose nought more than his life for that same."
|
|
|
|
Therewith all went ashore to either bank, save the Baron of
|
|
Brimside and Christopher. And the Baron laid him down on the
|
|
ground and fell to whistling the tune of a merry Yule dance;
|
|
but as for Christopher, he looked on his foeman, and deemed
|
|
he had seldom seen so big and stalwarth a man; and withal he
|
|
was of ripe age, and had seen some forty winters. Then he
|
|
also cast himself down on the grass, and fell into a kind of
|
|
dream, as he watched a pair of wagtails that came chirping
|
|
up from the sandy spit below the eyot; till suddenly great
|
|
shouting broke out, first from his own bent, and then from
|
|
the foemen's, and Christopher knew that the folk on either
|
|
side had just heard of the battle that was to be on the
|
|
holm. The Baron arose at the sound and looked to his own
|
|
men, whence were now coming that half-score who were to look
|
|
on the battle from the bank; but Christopher stirred not,
|
|
but lay quietly amongst the flowers of the grass, till he
|
|
heard the splash of horse-hoofs in the ford, and there
|
|
presently was come Jack of the Tofts bearing basnet and
|
|
shield for his lord. And he got off his horse and spake to
|
|
Christopher: "If I may not fight for thee, my son and King,
|
|
yet at least it is the right of thine Earl to play the
|
|
squire to thee: but a word before thy basnet is over thine
|
|
ears; the man yonder is well-nigh a giant for stature and
|
|
strength; yet I think thou mayest deal with him, and be none
|
|
the sorer when thou liest down to-night. To be short, this
|
|
is it: when thou hast got a stroke in upon him, and he
|
|
falters, then give him no time, but fly at him in thy
|
|
wild-cat manner and show what-like thews thou hast under thy
|
|
smooth skin; now thine helm, lad. So art thou dight; and
|
|
something tells me thou shalt do it off in victory."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXI.
|
|
|
|
THE BATTLE ON THE HOLM.
|
|
|
|
|
|
So when Christopher was armed, Jack turned about speedily,
|
|
and so gat him back through the ford and stood there on the
|
|
bank with the nine other folk of the Tofts. And by this
|
|
time was Gandolf of Brimside armed also, and Oliver Marson,
|
|
who had done his helm on him, was gone to his side of the
|
|
river.
|
|
|
|
Drew the huge man-at-arms then toward Christopher, but his
|
|
sword was yet in the sheath: Christopher set his point to
|
|
the earth and abode him; and the Baron spake: "Lad, thou art
|
|
fair and bold both, as I can see it, and Jack of the Tofts
|
|
is so much an old foe of mine that he is well-nigh a friend:
|
|
so what sayest thou? If thou wilt yield thee straightway, I
|
|
will have both thine head and the outlaw's with me to King
|
|
Rolf, but yet on your shoulders and ye two alive. Haps will
|
|
go as haps will; and it maybe that ye shall both live for
|
|
another battle, and grow wiser, and mayhappen abide in the
|
|
wood with the reiver's men. Hah? What sayest thou?"
|
|
|
|
Christopher laughed and said: "Wouldst thou pardon one who
|
|
is not yet doomed, Baron? And yet thy word is pleasant to
|
|
us; for we see that if we win thee, thou shalt be good
|
|
liegeman of us. Now, Baron, sword in fist!"
|
|
|
|
Gandolf drew his sword, muttering: "Ah, hah! he is lordly
|
|
and kingly enough, yet may this learn him a lesson. "Indeed
|
|
the blade was huge and brown and ancient, and sword and man
|
|
had looked a very terror save to one great-hearted.
|
|
|
|
But Christopher said: "What sayest thou now, Baron, shall
|
|
we cast down our shields to earth? For why should we chop
|
|
into wood and leather?"
|
|
|
|
The Baron cast down his shield, and said: "Bold are thy
|
|
words, lad; if thy deeds go with them, it may be better for
|
|
thee than for me. Now keep thee."
|
|
|
|
And therewith he leapt forward and swept his huge sword
|
|
around; but Christopher swerved speedily and enough, so that
|
|
the blade touched him not, and the huge man had over-reached
|
|
himself, and ere he had his sword well under sway again,
|
|
Christopher had smitten him so sharply on the shoulder that
|
|
the mails were sundered & the blood ran; and withal the
|
|
Baron staggered with the mere weight of the stroke. Then
|
|
Christopher saw his time, and leapt aloft and dealt such a
|
|
stroke on the side of his head, that the Baron tottered yet
|
|
more; but now was he taught by those two terrible strokes,
|
|
and he gathered all his heart to him, and all the might of
|
|
his thews, and leapt aback and mastered his sword, and came
|
|
on fierce but wary, shouting out for Brimside and the King.
|
|
|
|
Christopher cried never a cry, but swung his sword well
|
|
within his sway, and the stroke came on Gandolf's fore-arm
|
|
and brake the mails and wounded him, and then as the Baron
|
|
rushed forward, the wary lad gat his blade under his
|
|
foeman's nigh the hilts, and he gave it a wise twist and
|
|
forth flew the ancient iron away from its master.
|
|
|
|
Gandolf seemed to heed not that he was swordless, but gave
|
|
out a great roar and rushed at Christopher to close with
|
|
him, and the well-knit lad gave back before him and turned
|
|
from side to side, and kept the sword-point before Gandolf's
|
|
eyes ever, till suddenly, as the Baron was running his
|
|
fiercest, he made a mighty sweep at his right leg, since he
|
|
had no more to fear his sword, and the edge fell so strong
|
|
and true, that but for the byrny-hose he had smitten the
|
|
limb asunder, and even as it was it made him agrievous
|
|
wound, so that the Lord of Brimside fell clattering to the
|
|
earth, and Christopher bestrode him and cried: "How sayest
|
|
thou, champion, is it enough?"
|
|
|
|
"Yea, enough, and maybe more," said the Baron. "Wilt thou
|
|
smite off mine head? Or what wilt thou?"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "Here hath been enough smiting,
|
|
meseemeth, save thy lads and ours have a mind to buckle to;
|
|
and lo thou! men are running down from the bents towards us
|
|
from both sides, yet not in any warlike manner as yet. Now,
|
|
Baron, here cometh thy grim squire that I heard called
|
|
Oliver, and if thou wilt keep the troth, thou shalt bid him
|
|
order thy men so that they fall not upon us till the battle
|
|
be duly pitched. Then shalt thou be borne home, since thou
|
|
canst not go, with no hindrance from us."
|
|
|
|
Now was Oliver come indeed, and the other nine with him, and
|
|
on the other side was come Jack of the Tofts and four
|
|
others.
|
|
|
|
Then spake the Baron of Brimside: "I may do better than
|
|
thou biddest me; for now I verily trow herein, that thou art
|
|
the son of Christopher the Old; so valiant as thou art, and
|
|
so sad a smiter, and withal that thou fearest not to let thy
|
|
foeman live. So hearken all ye, and thou specially, Oliver
|
|
Marson, my captain: I am now become the man of my lord King
|
|
Christopher, and will follow him whereso he will; and I deem
|
|
that will presently be to Oakenham, and the King's seat
|
|
there. Now look to it that thou, Oliver, order my men under
|
|
King Christopher's banner, till I be healed; and then if all
|
|
be not over, I shall come forth myself, shield on neck and
|
|
spear in fist, to do battle for my liege lord; so help me
|
|
God and St. James of the Water!"
|
|
|
|
Therewith speech failed him and his wit therewith; so
|
|
betwixt them they unarmed him and did him what leechdom they
|
|
might do there and then; and he was nowise hurt deadly: as
|
|
for Child Christopher, he had no scratch of steel on him.
|
|
And Oliver knelt before him when he had dight his own lord,
|
|
and swore fealty to him then and there; and so departed, to
|
|
order the folk of Brimside and tell them the tidings, and
|
|
swear them liege men of King Christopher.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXII.
|
|
|
|
OF GOLDILIND AND CHRISTOPHER.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now Jack of the Tofts said a word to one of his men, and he
|
|
rode straightway up into the field under the wood, and spake
|
|
to three of the captains of the folk, and they ranked a
|
|
hundred of the men, of those who were best dight, and
|
|
upraised amongst them the banner of Oakenrealm, and led all
|
|
them down to the river bank; and with these must needs go
|
|
Goldilind; and when they came down thither, Christopher and
|
|
Jack were there on the bank to hail them, and they raised a
|
|
great shout when they saw their King and their Earl standing
|
|
there, and the shout was given back from the wood-side; and
|
|
then the men of Brimside took it up, for they had heard the
|
|
bidding of their Lord, and he was now in a pavilion which
|
|
they had raised for him on the mead, and the leeches were
|
|
looking to his hurts; and they feared him, but rather loved
|
|
than hated him, and he was more to them than the King in
|
|
Oakenrealm and they were all ready to do his will.
|
|
|
|
But as to Goldilind, her mind it had been, as she was going
|
|
down the meadow, that she would throw herself upon
|
|
Christopher's bosom and love him with glad tears of love;
|
|
but as she came and stood over against him, she was abashed,
|
|
and stood still looking on him, and spake no word; and he
|
|
also was ashamed before all that folk to say the words
|
|
whereof his heart was full, and longed for the night, that
|
|
they might be alone together.
|
|
|
|
But at last he said: "Lady and Queen, thou seest that we be
|
|
well-beloved that they rejoice so much in a little deed of
|
|
mine." And still she spake nought, and held hand in hand.
|
|
|
|
But Jack of the Tofts spake and said: "By St. Hubert! the
|
|
deed may be little, though there be men who would think no
|
|
little of overcoming the biggest man and the fellest fighter
|
|
of Oakenrealm, but at least great things shall come thereof.
|
|
King, thy strokes of this day have won thee Oakenrealm, or
|
|
no man I know in field, and many a mother's son have they
|
|
saved from death. For look thou yonder over the river,
|
|
Goldilind, my Lady, and tell me what thou seest." She
|
|
turned to him and said: "Lord Earl, I see warriors a many."
|
|
|
|
"Yea," said Jack, "and stout fellows be they for the more
|
|
part; and hard had been the hand-play had we met, ere they
|
|
had turned their backs; but now, see thou, we shall wend
|
|
side by side toward Oakenrealm, for our Lord there hath won
|
|
them to his friends; and doubt thou not that when they see
|
|
him and thee anigh, they shall be friends indeed. What! dost
|
|
thou weep for this? Or is it because he hath done the deed
|
|
and not thou? or rather, because thine heart is full for the
|
|
love of him?"
|
|
|
|
She smiled kindly on Jack, but even therewith she felt two
|
|
hands laid on her shoulders, and Christopher kissed her
|
|
without any word.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXIII.
|
|
|
|
A COUNCIL OF CAPTAINS: THE HOST COMES TO BROADLEES, AND
|
|
MAKES FOR WOODWALL.
|
|
|
|
|
|
That night, though there was some little coming and going
|
|
between the Tofters and the Brimsiders, yet either flock
|
|
slept on their own side of the river. Moreover, before the
|
|
midst of the night, cometh David to the wood-side, and had
|
|
with him all men defensible of the Tofts and the houses
|
|
thereabout, and most of the women also many of whom bore
|
|
spear or bow, so that now by the wood-side, what with them
|
|
of the Tofts and the folk who joined them thereto from the
|
|
country-side about Hazeldale, there were well-nigh ten
|
|
hundreds of folk under weapons; and yet more came in the
|
|
night through; for the tidings of the allegiance of Brimside
|
|
was spreading full fast.
|
|
|
|
Betimes on the morrow was King Christopher afoot, and he and
|
|
Jack and David and Gilbert, and they twelve in company, went
|
|
down to the banner by the water-side; and to them presently
|
|
came Oliver Marson and ten other of the captains of
|
|
Brimside, and did them to wit that the Baron were fain if
|
|
they would come to his pavilion and hold counsel therein,
|
|
for that he was not so sick but he might well speak his mind
|
|
from where he lay. So thither they went all, with good will,
|
|
and the Baron greeted them friendly, and made what reverence
|
|
he might to Christopher, and bade him say what was his mind
|
|
and his will. But Christopher bade them who were his elders
|
|
in battle to speak; and the Baron laughed outright and said:
|
|
"Meseemeth, Lord King, thou didst grow old yesterday at my
|
|
costs; but since thou wilt have me to speak, I will even do
|
|
so. And to make matters the shorter, I will say that I wot
|
|
well what ye have to do; and that is, to fall upon the Earl
|
|
Marshal's folk ere they fall upon us. Now some folk deem we
|
|
should fare to Brimside and have a hosting there; but I say
|
|
nay; whereas it lieth out of the road to Oakenham, and
|
|
thereby is our road, meseemeth; and it is but some six days'
|
|
riding hence, save, as is most like, two of those days be
|
|
days of battle But if we go straight forward with banners
|
|
displayed, each day's faring shall be a day of hosting and
|
|
gathering; for I tell thee, Lord King, the fame of thee has
|
|
by now gone far in this country-side. Wherefore I say no
|
|
more, since I wax weary, than this: to the road this
|
|
morning, and get we so far as Broadlees ere night-fall, for
|
|
there we shall get both victual and folk."
|
|
|
|
There was good cheer made at his word, so Christopher spake:
|
|
"Baron of Brimside, thou hast spoken my very mind and will;
|
|
and but if these lords and captains gainsay it, let us tarry
|
|
no longer, but array all our folk in good order and take
|
|
tale of them, and so for Broadlees. What say ye, lords?"
|
|
|
|
None nay-said it, so there was no more talk save as to the
|
|
ordering of this or the other company. And it was so areded
|
|
that the Brimside men should fare first at the head of the
|
|
host with the banner of Brimside, and that then should go
|
|
the mingled folk of the country-side, and lastly the folk of
|
|
the Tofts with the banner of Oakenrealm; so that if the host
|
|
came upon foemen, they might be for a cloud to hide the
|
|
intent of their battles awhile till they might take their
|
|
advantage.
|
|
|
|
So went the captains to their companies, and the Tofters and
|
|
their mates crossed the river to the men of Brimside, who
|
|
gave them good cheer when they came amongst them; and it was
|
|
hard to order the host for a while, so did the upland folk
|
|
throng about the King and the Queen; and happy were they who
|
|
had a full look on Goldilind; and yet were some so lucky and
|
|
so bold that they kissed a hand of her; and one there was, a
|
|
very tall young man, and a goodly, who stood there and
|
|
craved to kiss her cheek, and she did not gainsay him, and
|
|
thereafter nought was good to him save an occasion to die
|
|
for her.
|
|
|
|
As for Christopher, he spake to many, and said to them that
|
|
wheresoever his banner was, he at least should be at the
|
|
forefront whenso they came upon unpeace; and so soon as they
|
|
gat to the road, he went from company to company, speaking
|
|
to many, and that so sweetly and friendly that all praised
|
|
him, and said that here forsooth was a king who was all good
|
|
and nothing bad, whereas hitherto men had deemed them lucky
|
|
indeed if their king were half good and half bad.
|
|
|
|
Merry then was the road to Broadlees, and they came there
|
|
before night-fall; and it was a little cheaping town and
|
|
unwalled, and if the folk had had any will to ward them,
|
|
they lacked might. But when they found they were not to be
|
|
robbed, and that it was but the proclaiming of King
|
|
Christopher in the market-place, and finding victual and
|
|
house-room for the host, and the Mayor taking a paper in
|
|
payment thereof, none stirred against them, and a many
|
|
joined the host to fight for the fair young King. Now
|
|
nought as yet had they heard at Broadlees of any force
|
|
stirring against them.
|
|
|
|
But in the morning when they went on their ways again, and
|
|
were bound for Cheaping Woodwall, which was a fenced town,
|
|
they sent out well-horsed riders to espy the road, who came
|
|
back on the spur two hours after noon, and did them to wit
|
|
that there was a host abiding them beneath the walls of
|
|
Woodwall under the banner of Walter the White, an old
|
|
warrior and fell fighter; but what comfort he might have
|
|
from them of Woodwall they wotted not; but they said that
|
|
the tidings of their coming had gone abroad, and many folk
|
|
were abiding the issue of this battle ere they joined them
|
|
to either host. Now on these tidings the captains were of
|
|
one mind, to wit, to fare on softly till they came to a
|
|
defensible place not far from the foemen, since they could
|
|
scarce come to Woodwall in good order before nightfall, and
|
|
if they were unfoughten before, to push forward to battle in
|
|
the morning.
|
|
|
|
Even so did they, and made a halt at sunset on a pleasant
|
|
hill above a river some three miles from Woodwall, and there
|
|
they passed the night unmeddled with.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXIV.
|
|
|
|
BATTLE BEFORE WOODWALL.
|
|
|
|
|
|
When morning was, the captains came to King Christopher to
|
|
council: but while they were amidst of their talk came the
|
|
word that the foe was anigh and come close to the
|
|
river-bank; whereat was none abashed; but to all it seemed
|
|
wisdom to abide them on the vantage-ground. So then there
|
|
was girding of swords and doing on of helms; as for ordering
|
|
of the folk, it was already done, for all the host was
|
|
ranked on the bent-side, with the banner of Oakenrealm in
|
|
the midst; on its left hand the banner of the Tofts, and on
|
|
the right the banner of Brimside.
|
|
|
|
Now when Christopher was come to his place, he looked down
|
|
and saw how the foemen were pouring over the river, for it
|
|
was nowhere deep, and there were four quite shallow fords:
|
|
many more were they than his folk, but he deemed that they
|
|
fared somewhat tumultuously; and when the bowmen of the
|
|
Tofts began shooting, the foemen, a many of them, stayed
|
|
amidst of the river to bend bow in their turn, and seemed to
|
|
think that were nigh enough already; nay, some went back
|
|
again to the other bank, to shoot thence the surer and the
|
|
drier, and some went yet a little further back on the field.
|
|
So that when their sergeants and riders were come on to the
|
|
hither bank, they lacked about a fifth of all their host;
|
|
and they themselves, for all they were so many, had some ado
|
|
to make up their minds to go forward.
|
|
|
|
Forsooth, when they looked up to the bent and saw the three
|
|
banners of Oakenrealm and the Tofts and Brimside all waving
|
|
over the same ranks, they knew not what to make of it. And
|
|
Christopher's host, when they saw them hang back, brake out
|
|
into mocking whoops and shouts, and words were heard in
|
|
them: "Come and dine at Brimside, good fellows! Come up to
|
|
the Tofts for supper and bed! A Christopher! A Christopher!"
|
|
and so forth. Now all King Christopher's men were afoot,
|
|
saving a band of the riders of Brimside, who bestrode strong
|
|
and tall horses, and bore jack and sallet and spear, but no
|
|
heavy armour.
|
|
|
|
So Christopher heard and saw, and the heart rose high in
|
|
him, and he sent messengers to the right and the left, and
|
|
bade the captains watch till he waved his sword aloft, and
|
|
then all down the bent together; and he bade the Brimside
|
|
riders edge a little outward and downward, and be ready for
|
|
the chase, and suffer not any of the foemen to gather
|
|
together when once they fell to running; for he knew in his
|
|
heart that the folk before him would never abide their
|
|
onfall. And the day was yet young, and it lacked four hours
|
|
of noon.
|
|
|
|
King Christopher abode ill he saw the foemen were come off
|
|
the level ground, and were mounting the bent slowly, and not
|
|
in very good order or in ranks closely serried. Then he
|
|
strode forth three paces, and waved his sword high above his
|
|
head, and cried out: "A Christopher! A Christopher!
|
|
Forward, banner of the Realm!" And forth he went, steady and
|
|
strong, and a great shout arose behind him, and none shrank
|
|
or lagged, but spears and bills, and axes and swords, all
|
|
came on like a wall of steel, so that to the foemen the
|
|
earth seemed alive with death, and they made no show of
|
|
abiding the onset, but all turned and ran, save Walter the
|
|
White and a score of his knights, who forsooth were borne
|
|
down in a trice, and were taken to mercy, those of them who
|
|
were not slain at the first crash of weapons.
|
|
|
|
There then ye might have seen great clumps of men making no
|
|
defence, but casting down their weapons and crying mercy;
|
|
and forsooth so great was the throng, that no great many
|
|
were slain; but on the other hand, but few gat away across
|
|
the water, and on them presently fell the Brimside riders,
|
|
and hewed down and slew and took few to mercy. And some few
|
|
besides the first laggards of the bowmen, it might be three
|
|
hundreds in all, escaped, and gat to Woodwall, but when they
|
|
of the town saw them, they made up their minds speedily, and
|
|
shut their gates, and the poor fleers found but the points
|
|
of shafts and the heads of quarrels before them.
|
|
|
|
But on the field of deed those captives were somewhat
|
|
fearful as to what should be done with them, and they spake
|
|
one to the other about it, that they would be willing to
|
|
serve the new King, since he was so mighty. And amidst of
|
|
their talk came the captains of King Christopher, and they
|
|
drew into a ring around them, and the lords bade them look
|
|
to it whether they would be the foemen of the King, the son
|
|
of that King Christopher the Old. "If so ye be," said they,
|
|
"ye may escape this time; but ye see how valiant a man he
|
|
is, and how lucky withal, and happy shall they be whom he
|
|
calleth friends. Now what say ye, will ye take up your
|
|
weapons again, and be under the best of kings and a true
|
|
one, or will ye depart and take the chance of his wrath in
|
|
the coming days? We say, how many of you will serve King
|
|
Christopher.
|
|
|
|
Then arose from them a mighty shout: "All! All! One and
|
|
All!" Albeit some there were who slunk away and said nought;
|
|
and none heeded them.
|
|
|
|
So then all the sergeants and the common folk swore
|
|
allegiance to King Christopher; but of the knights who were
|
|
left alive, some said Yea, and some Nay; and these last were
|
|
suffered to depart, but must needs ride unarmed.
|
|
|
|
Now by the time all was done, and the new men had dined
|
|
along with the rest of the host, and of the new-comers tale
|
|
had been taken, the day was wearing; so they set off for
|
|
Woodwall, and on the way they met the Mayor and Aldermen
|
|
thereof, who came before King Christopher and knelt to him,
|
|
and gave him the keys of their town; so he was gracious to
|
|
them, and thanked them, and bade see to the victual and
|
|
lodging of the host, and that all should be paid thereafter.
|
|
And they said that they had seen to all this before they
|
|
came forth of the town, and that if the Lord King would ride
|
|
forth, he would find fair lodging in the good town. So King
|
|
Christopher was pleased, and bade the burgesses ride beside
|
|
him, and he talked merrily with them on the way, so that
|
|
their hearts rejoiced over the kindness of their lord.
|
|
|
|
So they came to the gate, and there the King made stay till
|
|
Goldilind was fetched to him, so that they might ride into
|
|
the good town side by side. And in the street was much
|
|
people thronging, and the sun was scarce set, so that the
|
|
folk could see their King and Queen what they were; and they
|
|
who were nighest unto them, they let their shouts die out,
|
|
so were their hearts touched with the sight of them and the
|
|
love of their beauty.
|
|
|
|
Thus rode they in triumph through the street till they were
|
|
come to their lodging, which was great and goodly as for a
|
|
cheaping town; and so the day was gone and the night was
|
|
come, and the council and the banquet were over; then were
|
|
the King and Goldilind together again, like any up-country
|
|
lad and lass. But she stood before him and said: "O thou
|
|
King and mighty warrior, surely I ought to fear thee now,
|
|
but it is not so, so sore as I desire thee; but yet it
|
|
maketh both laughter and tears come to me when I think of
|
|
the day we rode away from Greenharbour with thee, and I
|
|
seemed to myself a great lady, though I were unhappy; and
|
|
though I loved thy body, I feared lest the churl's blood in
|
|
thee might shame me perchance, and I was proud and unkind to
|
|
thee, and I hurt thee sorely; and now I will say it, and
|
|
confess, that somewhat I joyed to see thine anguish, for I
|
|
knew that it meant thy love for me and thy desire to me. Lo
|
|
now, wilt thou forgive me this, or wilt thou punish me, O
|
|
Lord King?"
|
|
|
|
He laughed. "Sweetling," he said, "meseemeth now all day
|
|
long I have been fighting against raiment rather than men;
|
|
no man withstood me in the battle, for that they feared the
|
|
crown on my helm and the banner over my head; and when those
|
|
good men of the town brought me the keys, how should I have
|
|
known them from borrel folk but for their scarlet gowns and
|
|
fur hoods? And meseemed that when they knelt to me, it was
|
|
the scarlet gowns kneeling to the kingly armour. Therefore,
|
|
sweetheart, if thou fearest that the King should punish thee
|
|
for so wounding the poor Christopher of those few days ago,
|
|
as belike thou deservest it, bid the King do off his
|
|
raiment, and do thou in likewise, and then there shall be no
|
|
King to punish, and no King's scather to thole the
|
|
punishment, but only Christopher and Goldilind, even as they
|
|
met erewhile on the dewy grass of Littledale."
|
|
|
|
She blushed blood-red; but ere his words were done, her
|
|
hands were busy with girdle and clasp, and her raiment fell
|
|
from her to the earth, and his kingly raiment was cast from
|
|
him, and he took her by the hand and led her to the bed of
|
|
honour, that their love might have increase that night also.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXV.
|
|
|
|
AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE AND AN EVIL DEED.
|
|
|
|
|
|
When morning was, and it was yet early, the town was all
|
|
astir and the gates were thrown open, and weaponed men
|
|
thronged into it crying out for Christopher the King. Then
|
|
the King came forth, and Jack o' the Tofts and his sons, and
|
|
Oliver Marson, and the captains of Brimside; and the host
|
|
was blown together to the market-place, and there was a new
|
|
tale of them taken, and they were now hard on seventy
|
|
hundreds of men. So then were new captains appointed, and
|
|
thereafter they tarried not save to eat a morsel, but went
|
|
out a-gates faring after the banners to Oakenrealm, all folk
|
|
blessing them as they went.
|
|
|
|
Nought befell them of evil that day, but ever fresh
|
|
companies joined them on the road; and they gat harbour in
|
|
another walled town, hight Sevenham, and rested there in
|
|
peace that night, and were now grown to eighty hundreds.
|
|
|
|
Again on the morrow they were on the road betimes, and again
|
|
much folk joined them, and they heard no tidings of any
|
|
foeman faring against them; whereat Jack o' the Tofts
|
|
marvelled, for he and others had deemed that now at last
|
|
would Rolf the traitor come out against them. Forsooth,
|
|
when they had gone all day and night was at hand, it seemed
|
|
most like to the captains that he would fall upon them that
|
|
night, whereas they were now in a somewhat perilous pass;
|
|
for they must needs rest at a little thorpe amidst of great
|
|
and thick woods, which lay all round about the frank of
|
|
Oakenham as a garland about a head. So there they kept
|
|
watch and ward more heedfully than their wont was; and King
|
|
Christopher lodged with Goldilind at the house of a good man
|
|
of the thorpe.
|
|
|
|
Now when it lacked but half an hour of midnight, and Jack o'
|
|
the Tofts and Oliver Marson and the Captain of Woodwall had
|
|
just left him, after they had settled the order of the next
|
|
day's journey, and Goldilind lay abed in the inner chamber,
|
|
there entered one of the men of the watch and said: "Lord
|
|
King, here is a man hereby who would see thee; he is
|
|
weaponed, and he saith that he hath a gift for thee: what
|
|
shall we do with him?"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "Bring him in hither, good fellow." And
|
|
the man went back, and came in again leading a tall man,
|
|
armed, but with a hood done over his steel hat, so that his
|
|
face was hidden, and he had a bag in his hand with something
|
|
therein.
|
|
|
|
Then spake the King and said: "Thou man, since thy face is
|
|
hidden, this trusty man-at-arms shall stand by thee while
|
|
we talk together."
|
|
|
|
"Lord," said the man, "let there be a dozen to hear our talk
|
|
I care not; for I tell thee that I come to give thee a gift,
|
|
and gift-bearers are oftenest welcome."
|
|
|
|
Quoth the King: "Maybe, yet before thou bring it forth I
|
|
would see thy face, for meseems I have an inkling of thy
|
|
voice."
|
|
|
|
So the man cast back his hood, and lo, it was Simon the
|
|
squire. "Hah!" said Christopher, "is it thou then! hast
|
|
thou another knife to give me?"
|
|
|
|
"Nay," said Simon, "only the work of the knife." And
|
|
therewith he set his hand to the bag and drew out by the
|
|
hair a man's head, newly hacked off and bleeding, and said:
|
|
"Hast thou seen him before, Lord? He was a great man
|
|
yesterday, though not so great as thou shalt be to-morrow."
|
|
|
|
"Once only I have seen him, "said Christopher," and then he
|
|
gave me this gift" (and he showed his father's ring on his
|
|
finger): "thou hast slain the Earl Marshal, who called
|
|
himself the King of Oakenrealm: my traitor and dastard he
|
|
was but thy friend. Wherefore have I two evil deeds to
|
|
reward thee, Simon, the wounding of me and the slaying of
|
|
him. Dost thou not deem thee gallows-ripe?"
|
|
|
|
"King," said Simon, "what wouldst thou have done with him
|
|
hadst thou caught him?"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "I had slain him had I met him with a
|
|
weapon in his fist; and if we had taken him I had let the
|
|
folk judge him."
|
|
|
|
Said Simon: "That is to say, that either thou hadst slain
|
|
him thyself, or bidden others to slay him. Now then I ask
|
|
thee, King, for which deed wilt thou slay me, for not
|
|
slaying thee, or for doing thy work and slaying thy foe?"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher to the guard: "Good fellow, fetch here a
|
|
good horse ready saddled and bridled, and be speedy."
|
|
|
|
So the man went: and Christopher said to Simon: "For the
|
|
knife in my side, I forgive it thee; and as to the slaying
|
|
of thy friend, it is not for me to take up the feud. But
|
|
this is no place for thee: if Jack of the Tofts, or any of
|
|
his sons, or one of the captains findeth thee, soon art thou
|
|
sped; wherefore I rede thee, when yonder lad hath brought
|
|
thee the horse, show me the breadth of thy back, and mount
|
|
the beast, and put the most miles thou canst betwixt me and
|
|
my folk; for they love me."
|
|
|
|
Said Simon: "Sorry payment for making thee a king!"
|
|
|
|
Said Christopher: "Well, thou art in the right; I may well
|
|
give gold for getting rid of such as thou." And he put his
|
|
hand into a pouch that hung on his chair, and drew out
|
|
thence a purse, and gave it unto Simon, who took it and
|
|
opened it and looked therein, and then flung it down on the
|
|
ground.
|
|
|
|
Christopher looked on him wrathfully with reddened face, and
|
|
cried out: "Thou dog! wouldst thou be an earl and rule the
|
|
folk? What more dost thou want?"
|
|
|
|
"This!" cried out Simon, and leapt upon him, knife aloft.
|
|
Christopher was unarmed utterly; but he caught hold of the
|
|
felon's right arm with his right hand, and gripped the wrist
|
|
till he shrieked; then he raised up his mighty left hand,
|
|
and drave it down on Simon's head by the ear, and all gave
|
|
way before it, and the murderer fell crushed and dead to
|
|
earth.
|
|
|
|
Therewith came in the man-at-arms to tell him that the horse
|
|
was come; but stared wild when he saw the dead man on the
|
|
ground. But Christopher said: "My lad, here hath been one
|
|
who would have thrust a knife into an unarmed man, wherefore
|
|
I must needs give him his wages. But now thou hast this to
|
|
do: take thou this dead man and bind him so fast on the
|
|
horse thou hast brought that he will not come off till the
|
|
bindings be undone; and bind withal the head of this other,
|
|
who was once a great man and an evil, before the slayer of
|
|
him, so that it also may be fast; then get thee to horse and
|
|
lead this beast and its burden till ye are well on the
|
|
highway to Oakenham, and then let him go and find his way to
|
|
the gate of the city if God will. And hearken, my lad;
|
|
seest thou this gold which lieth scattering on the floor
|
|
here? this was mine, but is no longer, since I have given it
|
|
away to the dead man just before he lifted his hand against
|
|
me. Wherefore now I will keep it for thee against thou
|
|
comest back safe to me in the morning betimes, as I deem
|
|
thou wilt, if thou wilt behight to St. Julian the helping of
|
|
some poor body on the road. Go therefore, but send hither
|
|
the guard; for I am weary now, and would go to sleep without
|
|
slaying any man else."
|
|
|
|
So departed the man full of joy, and Christopher gathered
|
|
his money together again, and so fared to his bed
|
|
peacefully.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXVI.
|
|
|
|
KING CHRISTOPHER COMES TO OAKENHAM.
|
|
|
|
|
|
But on the morrow the first man who came to the King was the
|
|
man-at-arms aforesaid; and he told that he had done the
|
|
King's errand, and ridden a five miles on the road to
|
|
Oakenham before he had left the horse with his felon load,
|
|
and that he had found nought stirring all that way when he
|
|
had passed through their own out-guards, where folk knew him
|
|
and let him go freely. "And," quoth he, "it is like enough
|
|
that this gift to Oakenham, Lord King, has by now come to
|
|
the gate thereof." Then the King gave that man the gold
|
|
which he had promised, and he kissed the King's hand and
|
|
went his ways a happy man.
|
|
|
|
Thereafter sent Christopher for Jack of the Tofts, and told
|
|
him in few words what had betid, and that Rolf the traitor
|
|
was dead. Then spake Jack: "King and fosterling, never
|
|
hath so mighty a warrior as thou waged so easy a war for so
|
|
goodly a kingdom as thou hast done; for surely thy war was
|
|
ended last night, wherefore will we straight to Oakenham, if
|
|
so thou wilt. But if it be thy pleasure I will send a
|
|
chosen band of riders to wend on the spur thereto, and bid
|
|
them get ready thy kingly house, and give word to the Barons
|
|
and the Prelates, and the chiefs of the Knighthood, and the
|
|
Mayor and the Aldermen, and the Masters of the Crafts, to
|
|
show themselves of what mind they be towards thee. But I
|
|
doubt it not that they will deem of thee as thy father come
|
|
back again and grown young once more."
|
|
|
|
Now was Christopher eager well nigh unto weeping to behold
|
|
his people that he should live amongst, and gladly he
|
|
yea-said the word of Jack of the Tofts. So were those
|
|
riders sent forward; and the host was ordered, and
|
|
Christopher rode amidst it with Goldilind by his side; and
|
|
the sun was not yet gone down when they came within sight of
|
|
the gate of Oakenham, and there before the gate and in the
|
|
fields on either side of it was gathered a very great and
|
|
goodly throng, and there went forth from it to meet the King
|
|
the Bishop of Oakenham, and the Abbot of St. Mary's and the
|
|
Priors of the other houses of religion, all fairly clad in
|
|
broidered copes, with the clerks and the monks dight full
|
|
solemnly; and they came singing to meet him, and the Bishop
|
|
blessed him and gave him the hallowed bread, and the King
|
|
greeted him and craved his prayers. Then came the Burgreve
|
|
of Oakenham, and with him the Barons and the Knights, and
|
|
they knelt before him, and named him to king, and the
|
|
Burgreve gave him the keys of the city. Thereafter came the
|
|
Mayor and the Aldermen, and the Masters of the Crafts, and
|
|
they craved his favour, and warding of his mighty sword; and
|
|
all these he greeted kindly and meekly, rather as a friend
|
|
than as a great lord.
|
|
|
|
Thereafter were the gates opened, and King Christopher
|
|
entered, and there was no gainsaying, and none spake a word
|
|
of the Traitor Rolf.
|
|
|
|
But the bells of the minster and of all the churches rang
|
|
merrily, and songs were sung sweetly by fair women
|
|
gloriously clad; and whereas King Christopher and Queen
|
|
Goldilind had lighted down from their horses and went afoot
|
|
through the street, roses and all kinds of sweet flowers
|
|
were cast down before the feet of them all the way from the
|
|
city gate to the King's High House of Oakenham.
|
|
|
|
There then in the great hall of his father's house stood
|
|
Christopher the King on the dais, and Goldilind beside him.
|
|
And Jack of the Tofts and the chiefest of the Captains, and
|
|
the Bishop, and the greatest lords of the Barons, and the
|
|
doughtiest of the Knights, and the Mayor and the Aldermen,
|
|
and the Masters of the Crafts, sat at the banquet with the
|
|
King and his mate; they brake bread together and drank cups
|
|
of renown, till the voidee cup was borne in. Then at last
|
|
were the King & the Queen brought to their chamber with
|
|
string-play and songs and all kinds of triumph; and that
|
|
first night since he lay in his mother's womb did Child
|
|
Christopher fall asleep in the house which the fathers had
|
|
builded for him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXXVII.
|
|
|
|
OF CHILD CHRISTOPHER'S DEALINGS WITH HIS FRIENDS & HIS FOLK.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was in the morning when King Christopher arose, and
|
|
Goldilind stood before him in the kingly chamber, that he
|
|
clipped her and kissed her, and said: "This is the very
|
|
chamber whence my father departed when he went to his last
|
|
battle, and left my mother sickening with the coming birth
|
|
of me. And never came he back hither, nor did mine eyes
|
|
behold him ever. Here also lay my mother and gave birth to
|
|
me, and died of sorrow, and her also I never saw, save with
|
|
eyes that noted nought that I might remember. And my third
|
|
kinsman was the traitor, that cast me forth of mine
|
|
heritage, and looked to it that I should wax up as a churl,
|
|
and lose all hope of high deeds; and at the last he strove
|
|
to slay me.
|
|
|
|
"Therefore, sweet, have I no kindred, and none that are
|
|
bound to cherish me, and it is for thee to take the place of
|
|
them, and be unto me both father and mother, and brother and
|
|
sister, and all kindred."
|
|
|
|
She said: "My mother I never saw, and I was but little when
|
|
my father died; and if I had any kindred thereafter they
|
|
loved me not well enough to strike one stroke for me, nay,
|
|
or to speak a word even, when I was thrust out of my place
|
|
and delivered over to the hands of pitiless people, and my
|
|
captivity worsened on me as the years grew. Wherefore to me
|
|
also art thou in the stead of all kindred and affinity."
|
|
|
|
Now Christopher took counsel with Jack of the Tofts and the
|
|
great men of the kingdom, and that same day, the first day
|
|
of his kingship in Oakenham, was summoned a great mote of
|
|
the whole folk; and in half a month was it holden, and
|
|
thereat was Christopher taken to king with none gainsaying.
|
|
|
|
Began now fair life for the people of Oakenrealm; for Jack
|
|
of the Tofts abode about the King in Oakenham; and wise was
|
|
his counsel, and there was no greed in him, and yet he
|
|
wotted of greed and guile in others, and warned the King
|
|
thereof when he saw it, and the tyrants were brought low,
|
|
and no poor and simple man had need to thieve. As for
|
|
Christopher, he loved better to give than to take; and the
|
|
grief and sorrow of folk irked him sorely; it was to him as
|
|
if he had gotten a wound when he saw so much as one unhappy
|
|
face in a day; and all folk loved him, and the fame of him
|
|
went abroad through the lands and the roads of travel, so
|
|
that many were the wise and valiant folk that left their own
|
|
land and came into Oakenrealm to dwell there, because of the
|
|
good peace and the kindliness that there did abound; so that
|
|
Oakenrealm became both many-peopled and joyous.
|
|
|
|
Though Jack of the Tofts abode with the King at Oakenham,
|
|
his sons went back to the Tofts, and Gilbert was deemed the
|
|
head man of them; folk gathered to them there, and the
|
|
wilderness about them became builded in many places, and the
|
|
Tofts grew into a goodly cheaping town, for those brethren
|
|
looked to it that all roads in the woodland should be safe
|
|
and at peace, so that no chapman need to arm him or his
|
|
folk; nay, a maiden might go to and fro on the woodland
|
|
ways, with a golden girdle about her, without so much as the
|
|
crumpling of a lap of her gown unless by her own will.
|
|
|
|
As to David, at first Christopher bade him strongly to abide
|
|
with him ever, for he loved him much. But David nay-said
|
|
it, and would go home to the Tofts; and when the King
|
|
pressed him sore, at last he said: "Friend and fellow, I
|
|
must now tell thee the very sooth, and then shalt thou
|
|
suffer me to depart, though the sundering be but sorrow to
|
|
me. For this it is, that I love thy Lady and wife more than
|
|
meet is, and here I find it hard to thole my desire and my
|
|
grief; but down in the thicket yonder amongst my brethren of
|
|
the woods, and man and maid, and wife and babe, nay, the
|
|
very deer of the forest, I shall become a man again, and be
|
|
no more a peevish and grudging fool; and as the years wear,
|
|
shall sorrow wear, and then, who knows but we may come
|
|
together again."
|
|
|
|
Then Christopher smiled kindly on him and embraced him, but
|
|
they spake no more of that matter, but sat talking a while,
|
|
and then bade each other farewell, and David went his ways
|
|
to the Tofts. But a few months thereafter, when a son had
|
|
been born to Christopher, David came to Oakenrealm, but
|
|
stayed there no longer than to greet the King, and do him to
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wit that he was boun for over-sea to seek adventure. Many
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gifts the King gave him, and they sundered in all
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loving-kindness, and the King said: "Farewell, friend, I
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|
shall remember thee and thy kindness for ever." But David
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|
said: "By the roof in Littledale and by the hearth thereof,
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thou shalt be ever in my mind."
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Thus they parted for that time; but five and twenty years
|
|
afterwards, when Child Christopher was in his most might and
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majesty, and Goldilind was yet alive and lovely, and sons
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and daughters sat about their board, it was the Yule feast
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in the King's Hall at Oakenham, and there came a man into
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the hall that none knew, big of stature, grey-eyed and
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hollow-cheeked, with red hair grizzled, and worn with the
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helm; a weaponed man, chieftain-like and warrior-like. And
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|
when the serving-men asked him of his name, and whence and
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|
whither, he said: "I have come from over-seas to look upon
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the King, and when he seeth me he will know my name." Then
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|
he put them all aside and would not be gainsaid, but strode
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up the hall to the high-seat, and stood before the King and
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|
said: "Hail, little King Christopher! Hail, stout babe of
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the woodland!"
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Then the King looked on him and knew him at once, and stood
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up at once with a glad cry, and came round unto him, and
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took his arms about him and kissed him, and led him into the
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high-seat, and set him betwixt him and Goldilind, and she
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|
also greeted him and took him by the hand and kissed him;
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|
and Jack of the Tofts, now a very old man, but yet hale and
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stark, who sat on the left hand of the King, leaned toward
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him and kissed him and blessed him; for lo! it was David of
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the Tofts.
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Spake he now and said: "Christopher, this is now a happy
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day!"
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Said the King: "David, whither away hence, and what is
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thine heart set upon?"
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"On the renewal of our youth," said David, "and the abiding
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with thee. By my will no further will I go than this thine
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house. How sayest thou?"
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"As thou dost," said Christopher, "that this is indeed a
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happy day; drink out of my cup now, to our abiding together,
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and the end of sundering till the last cometh."
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So they drank together, they two, and were happy amidst the
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|
folk of the hall; and at last the King stood up and spake
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|
aloud, and did all to wit that this was his friend and
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|
fellow of the old days; and he told of his doughty deeds,
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|
whereof he had heard many a tale, and treasured them in his
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|
heart while they were apart, and he bade men honour him, all
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|
such as would be his friends. And all men rejoiced at the
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coming of this doughty man and the friend of the King.
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So there abode David, holden in all honour, and in great
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|
love of Child Christopher and Goldilind; and when his father
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|
died, his earldom did the King give to David his friend, who
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|
never sundered from him again, but was with him in peace and
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|
in war, in joy and in sorrow.
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CHAPTER XXXVIII.
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OF MATTERS OF MEADHAM.
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GOES the tale back now to the time when the kingship of
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Child Christopher was scarce more than one month old; and
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|
tells that as the King sat with his Queen in the cool of his
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|
garden on a morning of August, there came to him a swain of
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|
service, who did him to wit that an outland lord was come,
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|
and would see him and give him a message.
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So the King bade bring him in to the garden to him
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|
straight-way; so the man went, and came back again leading
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|
in a knight somewhat stricken in years, on whose green
|
|
surcoat was beaten a golden lion.
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He came to those twain and did obeisance to them, but spake,
|
|
as it seemed, to Goldilind alone: "Lady, and Queen of
|
|
Meadham," said he, "it is unto thee, first of all, that mine
|
|
errand is."
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|
Then she spoke and said: "Welcome to thee, Sir Castellan of
|
|
Greenharbour, we shall hear thy words gladly."
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|
Said the new-comer: "Lady, I am no longer the Burgreve of
|
|
Greenharbour, but Sir Guisebert, lord of the Green March,
|
|
and thy true servant and a suitor for thy grace and pardon."
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|
|
"I pardon thee not, but thank thee for what thou didst of
|
|
good to me," said Goldilind, "and I think that now thine
|
|
errand shall be friendly."
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|
|
Then turned the Green Knight to the King, and he said:
|
|
"Have I thy leave to speak, Lord King?" and he smiled
|
|
covertly.
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|
|
But Christopher looked on the face and coat-armour of him,
|
|
and called him to mind as the man who had stood betwixt him
|
|
and present death that morning in the porch of the
|
|
Littledale house; so he looked on him friendly, and said:
|
|
"My leave thou hast, Sir Knight, to speak fully and freely,
|
|
and that the more as meseemeth I saw thee first when thou
|
|
hadst weaponed men at thy back, and wert turning their
|
|
staves away from my breast."
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|
"Even so it is, Lord King," said the Knight; "and to say
|
|
sooth, I fear thee less for thy kingship, than because I wot
|
|
well that thou mayst lightly take me up by the small of my
|
|
back and cast me over thy shoulder if thou have a mind
|
|
therefor."
|
|
|
|
Christopher laughed at his word, and bade him sit down upon
|
|
the green grass and tell his errand straightway; and the
|
|
Knight tarried not, but spake out: "Queen of Meadham, I am
|
|
a friend and fellow, and in some sort a servant, to Earl
|
|
Geoffrey, Regent of Meadham, whom thou knowest; and he hath
|
|
put a word in my mouth which is both short and easy for me
|
|
to tell. All goes awry in Meadham now, and men are arming
|
|
against each other, and will presently be warring, but if
|
|
thou look to it; because all this is for lack of thee. But
|
|
if thou wilt vouchsafe to come to Meadhamstead, and sit on
|
|
thy throne for a little while, commanding and forbidding;
|
|
and if thou wilt appoint one of the lords for thine Earl
|
|
there, and others for thy captains, and governors and
|
|
burgreves and so forth; then if the people see thee and hear
|
|
thee, the swords will go into their sheaths, and the spears
|
|
will hang on the wall again, and we shall have peace in
|
|
Meadham, for all will do thy bidding. Wherefore, Lady and
|
|
Queen, I beseech thee to come to us, and stave off the riot
|
|
and ruin. What sayest thou?"
|
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|
|
Goldilind made answer in a while: "Sir Guisebert, true it
|
|
is that I long to see my people, and to look once more on my
|
|
father's house, and the place where he was born and died.
|
|
But how know I but this is some wile of Earl Geoffrey, for
|
|
he hath not been abounding in trustiness toward us?"
|
|
|
|
But Sir Guisebert swore on his salvation that there was no
|
|
guile therein, and they were undone save Goldilind came unto
|
|
them. Then spake Christopher: "Sir Knight, I am willing to
|
|
pleasure my Lady, who, as I can see, longeth to behold her
|
|
own land and people; and also by thy voice and thy face I
|
|
deem that thou art not lying unto me, and that no harm will
|
|
befall the Lady; yet will I ask thee right out what thou and
|
|
thy lord would think thereof if she come into Meadham
|
|
accompanied; to wit, if I rode with her, and had five
|
|
hundreds of good riders at my back, would ye have guesting
|
|
for so many and such stark lads?"
|
|
|
|
The Knight took up the word eagerly, and said: "Wilt thou
|
|
but come, dearlord, and bring a thousand or more, then the
|
|
surer and the safer it would be for us."
|
|
|
|
Said the King, smiling: "Well, it shall be thought on; and
|
|
meantime be thou merry with us; for indeed I deem of thee,
|
|
that but for thy helping my life had been cast away that
|
|
morning in Littledale."
|
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|
|
So they made much of the Meadham man for three days, and
|
|
thereafter they rode into Meadham and to Meadhamstead,
|
|
Christopher, and Jack of the Tofts, and Goldilind, in all
|
|
honour and triumph, they and seven hundreds of spears, and
|
|
never were lords received with such joy and kindness as were
|
|
they, but it were on the day when Christopher and his
|
|
entered Oakenham.
|
|
|
|
The Earl Geoffrey was not amongst them that met them; but
|
|
whenas they sat at the banquet in the hall, and Goldilind
|
|
was in the high-seat, gloriously clad and with the kingly
|
|
crown on her head, there came a tall man up to the dais,
|
|
grey-headed and keen-eyed, and he was unarmed, without so
|
|
much as a sword by his side, and clad in simple black; and
|
|
he knelt before Goldilind, and laid his head on her lap, and
|
|
spake: "Lady and Queen, here is my head to do with as thou
|
|
wilt; for I have been thy dastard, and I crave thy pardon,
|
|
if so it may be, for I am Geoffrey."
|
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|
|
She looked kindly on him, and raised him up; and then she
|
|
turned to the chief of the serving-men, and said: "Fetch me
|
|
a sword with its sheath and its girdle, and see that it be a
|
|
good blade, and all well-adorned, both sword and sheath and
|
|
girdle." Even so it was done; and when she had the sword,
|
|
she bade Sir Geoffrey kneel again before her, and she girt
|
|
him with the said sword and spake: "Sir Geoffrey, all the
|
|
wrong which thou didest to me, I forgive it thee and forget
|
|
it; but wherein thou hast done well, I will remember it, for
|
|
thou hast given me a mighty King to be my man; nay, the
|
|
mightiest and the loveliest on earth; wherefore I bless
|
|
thee, and will make thee my Earl to rule all Meadham under
|
|
me, if so be the folk gainsay it not. Wherefore now let
|
|
these folk fetch thee seemly garments and array thee, and
|
|
then come sit amongst us, and eat and drink on this high
|
|
day; for a happy day it is when once again I sit in my
|
|
father's house, and see the faces of my folk that loveth
|
|
me."
|
|
|
|
She spake loud and clear, so that most folk in the hall
|
|
heard her; and they rejoiced at her words, for Sir Geoffrey
|
|
was no ill ruler, but wise and of great understanding, keen
|
|
of wit and deft of word, and a mighty warrior withal; only
|
|
they might not away with it that their Lady and Queen had
|
|
become as alien to them. So when they heard her speak her
|
|
will, they shouted for joy of the peace and goodwill that
|
|
was to be.
|
|
|
|
There then sat Geoffrey at the banquet; and Christopher
|
|
smiled on him, and said: "See now, lord, if I have not done
|
|
as thou badest when thou gavest me the treasure of
|
|
Greenharbour, for I have brought the wolf-heads to thy
|
|
helping and not to thy scathing. Do thou as much for me, and
|
|
be thou a good earl to thy Lady and mine, and then shalt
|
|
thou yet live and die a happy man, and my friend. Or
|
|
else--"
|
|
|
|
"There shall be no else, Lord King," quoth Geoffrey; "all
|
|
men henceforth shall tell of me as a true man."
|
|
|
|
So they were blithe and joyous together. But a seven days
|
|
thence was the Allmen's Mote gathered to the wood-side
|
|
without Meadhamstead, and thronged it was: and there
|
|
Goldilind stood up before all the folk and named Sir
|
|
Geoffrey for Earl to rule the land under her, and none
|
|
gainsaid it, for they knew him meet thereto. Then she named
|
|
from the baronage and knighthood such men as she had been
|
|
truly told were meet thereto to all the offices of the
|
|
kingdom, and there was none whom she named but was well-
|
|
pleasing to the folk; for she had taken counsel beforehand
|
|
with all the wisest men of all degrees.
|
|
|
|
As for herself, all loved and worshipped her; and this alone
|
|
seemed hard unto them, that she must needs go back to
|
|
Oakenrealm in a few days: but when she heard them murmur
|
|
thereat, she behight them, that once in every year she would
|
|
come into Meadham and spend one whole month therein; and,
|
|
were it possible, ever should that be the month of May. So
|
|
when they heard that, they all praised her, and were the
|
|
more content. This custom she kept ever thereafter, and she
|
|
lay in with her second son in the city of Meadhamstead, so
|
|
that he was born therein; and she named him to be King after
|
|
her, to the great joy of that folk; and he grew up strong
|
|
and well-liking, and came to the kingship while his mother
|
|
was yet alive, and was a good man and well-beloved of his
|
|
folk.
|
|
|
|
Before she turned back with her man, she let seek out
|
|
Aloyse, and when she came before her, gave her gifts and
|
|
bade her come back with her to Oakenham and serve her there
|
|
if she would: and the damsel was glad, for there in
|
|
Meadhamstead was she poor and not well seen to, whereas it
|
|
was rumoured of her that she had been one of the jailers of
|
|
Goldilind.
|
|
|
|
When they came back to Oakenham, there they met Gandolf,
|
|
Baron of Brimside, now whole of his hurts, and the King
|
|
greeted him kindly, and did well to him all his life; and
|
|
found him ever a true man.
|
|
|
|
Good thenceforward was the life of Child Christopher and
|
|
Goldilind: whiles indeed they happed on unpeace or other
|
|
trouble; but never did fair love and good worship depart
|
|
from them, either of each unto each, or of the whole folk
|
|
unto them twain.
|
|
|
|
To no man did Christopher mete out worse than his deserts,
|
|
nay, to most far better he meted: no man he feared, nor
|
|
hated any save the tormentors of poor folk; and but a little
|
|
while abided his hatred of those, for it cut short their
|
|
lives, so that they were speedily done with and forgotten.
|
|
And when he died a very old man but one year after Goldilind
|
|
his dear, no king that ever lived was so bewailed by his
|
|
folk as was Child Christopher.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
The end of Project Gutenberg etext of Child Christopher by
|
|
William Morris.
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