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*****The Well at the World's End by William Morris [well10]****
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The Well at the World's End
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by William Morris
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September, 1994 [Etext #169
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The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Well at the World's End by Morris
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The Well at the World's End
|
||
by William Morris
|
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|
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|
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BOOK ONE
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The Road Unto Love
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|
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CHAPTER 1
|
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The Sundering of the Ways
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Long ago there was a little land, over which ruled a regulus or kinglet,
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||
who was called King Peter, though his kingdom was but little.
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||
He had four sons whose names were Blaise, Hugh, Gregory and Ralph:
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||
of these Ralph was the youngest, whereas he was but of twenty winters
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||
and one; and Blaise was the oldest and had seen thirty winters.
|
||
|
||
Now it came to this at last, that to these young men
|
||
the kingdom of their father seemed strait; and they longed
|
||
to see the ways of other men, and to strive for life.
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||
For though they were king's sons, they had but little world's wealth;
|
||
save and except good meat and drink, and enough or too
|
||
much thereof; house-room of the best; friends to be merry with,
|
||
and maidens to kiss, and these also as good as might be;
|
||
freedom withal to come and go as they would; the heavens
|
||
above them, the earth to bear them up, and the meadows and acres,
|
||
the woods and fair streams, and the little hills of Upmeads,
|
||
for that was the name of their country and the kingdom
|
||
of King Peter.
|
||
|
||
So having nought but this little they longed for much;
|
||
and that the more because, king's sons as they were,
|
||
they had but scant dominion save over their horses and dogs:
|
||
for the men of that country were stubborn and sturdy vavassors,
|
||
and might not away with masterful doings, but were like to pay
|
||
back a blow with a blow, and a foul word with a buffet.
|
||
So that, all things considered, it was little wonder if King
|
||
Peter's sons found themselves straitened in their little land:
|
||
wherein was no great merchant city; no mighty castle, or noble
|
||
abbey of monks: nought but fair little halls of yeomen, with here
|
||
and there a franklin's court or a shield-knight's manor-house;
|
||
with many a goodly church, and whiles a house of good canons,
|
||
who knew not the road to Rome, nor how to find the door
|
||
of the Chancellor's house.
|
||
|
||
So these young men wearied their father and mother a long while with
|
||
telling them of their weariness, and their longing to be gone:
|
||
till at last on a fair and hot afternoon of June King Peter rose up
|
||
from the carpet which the Prior of St. John's by the Bridge had given him
|
||
(for he had been sleeping thereon amidst the grass of his orchard after
|
||
his dinner) and he went into the hall of his house, which was called
|
||
the High House of Upmeads, and sent for his four sons to come to him.
|
||
And they came and stood before his high-seat and he said:
|
||
|
||
"Sons, ye have long wearied me with words concerning your longing
|
||
for travel on the roads; now if ye verily wish to be gone,
|
||
tell me when would ye take your departure if ye had your choice?"
|
||
|
||
They looked at one another, and the three younger ones nodded
|
||
at Blaise the eldest: so he began, and said: "Saving the love
|
||
and honour that we have for thee, and also for our mother, we would
|
||
be gone at once, even with the noon's meat still in our bellies.
|
||
But thou art the lord in this land, and thou must rule.
|
||
Have I said well, brethren?" And they all said "Yea, yea."
|
||
Then said the king; "Good! now is the sun high and hot;
|
||
yet if ye ride softly ye may come to some good harbour
|
||
before nightfall without foundering your horses.
|
||
So come ye in an hour's space to the Four-want-way, and there
|
||
and then will I order your departure."
|
||
|
||
The young men were full of joy when they heard his word; and they
|
||
departed and went this way and that, gathering such small matters as
|
||
each deemed that he needed, and which he might lightly carry with him;
|
||
then they armed themselves, and would bid the squires bring them
|
||
their horses; but men told them that the said squires had gone
|
||
their ways already to the Want-way by the king's commandment:
|
||
so thither they went at once a-foot all four in company,
|
||
laughing and talking together merrily.
|
||
|
||
It must be told that this Want-way aforesaid was but four
|
||
furlongs from the House, which lay in an ingle of the river
|
||
called Upmeads Water amongst very fair meadows at the end
|
||
of the upland tillage; and the land sloped gently up toward
|
||
the hill-country and the unseen mountains on the north;
|
||
but to the south was a low ridge which ran along the water,
|
||
as it wound along from west to east. Beyond the said ridge,
|
||
at a place whence you could see the higher hills to the south,
|
||
that stretched mainly east and west also, there was presently
|
||
an end of the Kingdom of Upmeads, though the neighbours on that
|
||
side were peaceable and friendly, and were wont to send gifts
|
||
to King Peter. But toward the north beyond the Want-way King
|
||
Peter was lord over a good stretch of land, and that of the best;
|
||
yet was he never a rich man, for he had no freedom to tax
|
||
and tail his folk, nor forsooth would he have used it if he had;
|
||
for he was no ill man, but kindly and of measure. On these northern
|
||
marches there was war at whiles, whereas they ended in a great
|
||
forest well furnished of trees; and this wood was debateable,
|
||
and King Peter and his sons rode therein at their peril:
|
||
but great plenty was therein of all wild deer, as hart,
|
||
and buck, and roe, and swine, and bears and wolves withal.
|
||
The lord on the other side thereof was a mightier man than
|
||
King Pete, albeit he was a bishop, and a baron of Holy Church.
|
||
To say sooth he was a close-fist and a manslayer; though he did
|
||
his manslaying through his vicars, the knights and men-at-arms
|
||
who held their manors of him, or whom he waged.
|
||
|
||
In that forest had King Peter's father died in battle,
|
||
and his eldest son also; therefore, being a man of peace,
|
||
he rode therein but seldom, though his sons, the three eldest
|
||
of them, had both ridden therein and ran therefrom valiantly.
|
||
As for Ralph the youngest, his father would not have him ride
|
||
the Wood Debateable as yet.
|
||
|
||
So came those young men to the Want-ways, and found their father
|
||
sitting there on a heap of stones, and over against him eight horses,
|
||
four destriers, and four hackneys, and four squires withal.
|
||
So they came and stood before their father, waiting for his word,
|
||
and wondering what it would be.
|
||
|
||
Now spake King Peter: "Fair sons, ye would go on all adventure to seek
|
||
a wider land, and a more stirring life than ye may get of me at home:
|
||
so be it! But I have bethought me, that, since I am growing old
|
||
and past the age of getting children, one of you, my sons, must abide
|
||
at home to cherish me and your mother, and to lead our carles in war
|
||
if trouble falleth upon us. Now I know not how to choose by mine own
|
||
wit which of you shall ride and which abide. For so it is that ye are
|
||
diverse of your conditions; but the evil conditions which one of you
|
||
lacks the other hath, and the valiancy which one hath, the other lacks.
|
||
Blaise is wise and prudent, but no great man of his hands.
|
||
Hugh is a stout rider and lifter, but headstrong and foolhardy,
|
||
and over bounteous a skinker; and Gregory is courteous and many worded,
|
||
but sluggish in deed; though I will not call him a dastard. As for Ralph,
|
||
he is fair to look on, and peradventure he may be as wise as Blaise,
|
||
as valiant as Hugh, and as smooth-tongued as Gregory; but of all this
|
||
we know little or nothing, whereas he is but young and untried.
|
||
Yet may he do better than you others, and I deem that he will do so.
|
||
All things considered, then, I say, I know not how to choose between you,
|
||
my sons; so let luck choose for me, and ye shall draw cuts for your roads;
|
||
and he that draweth longest shall go north, and the next longest shall
|
||
go east, and the third straw shall send the drawer west; but as to him
|
||
who draweth the shortest cut, he shall go no whither but back again
|
||
to my house, there to abide with me the chances and changes of life;
|
||
and it is most like that this one shall sit in my chair when I am gone,
|
||
and be called King of Upmeads.
|
||
|
||
"Now, my sons, doth this ordinance please you? For if so be it
|
||
doth not, then may ye all abide at home, and eat of my meat,
|
||
and drink of my cup, but little chided either for sloth or misdoing,
|
||
even as it hath been aforetime."
|
||
|
||
The young men looked at one another, and Blaise answered and said:
|
||
"Sir, as for me I say we will do after your commandment,
|
||
to take what road luck may show us, or to turn back home again."
|
||
They all yeasaid this one after the other; and then King Peter said:
|
||
"Now before I draw the cuts, I shall tell you that I have appointed
|
||
the squires to go with each one of you. Richard the Red shall
|
||
go with Blaise; for though he be somewhat stricken in years,
|
||
and wise, yet is he a fierce carle and a doughty, and knoweth
|
||
well all feats of arms.
|
||
|
||
"Lancelot Longtongue shall be squire to Hugh; for he is good
|
||
of seeming and can compass all courtesy, and knoweth logic
|
||
(though it be of the law and not of the schools), yet is he a
|
||
proper man of his hands; as needs must he be who followeth Hugh;
|
||
for where is Hugh, there is trouble and debate
|
||
|
||
"Clement the Black shall serve Gregory: for he is a careful carle,
|
||
and speaketh one word to every ten deeds that he doeth;
|
||
whether they be done with point and edge, or with the hammer
|
||
in the smithy.
|
||
|
||
"Lastly, I have none left to follow thee, Ralph, save Nicholas Longshanks;
|
||
but though he hath more words than I have, yet hath he more wisdom,
|
||
and is a man lettered and far-travelled, and loveth our house right well.
|
||
|
||
"How say ye, sons, is this to your liking?"
|
||
|
||
They all said "yea." Then quoth the king; "Nicholas, bring hither
|
||
the straws ready dight, and I will give them my sons to draw."
|
||
|
||
So each young man came up in turn and drew; and King Peter laid
|
||
the straws together and looked at them, and said:
|
||
|
||
"Thus it is, Hugh goeth north with Lancelot, Gregory westward with Clement."
|
||
He stayed a moment and then said: "Blaise fareth eastward and Richard
|
||
with him. As for thee, Ralph my dear son, thou shalt back with me and
|
||
abide in my house and I shall see thee day by day; and thou shalt help me
|
||
to live my last years happily in all honour; and thy love shall be my hope,
|
||
and thy valiancy my stay."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he arose and threw his arm about the young man's neck;
|
||
but he shrank away a little from his father, and his face grew troubled;
|
||
and King Peter noted that, and his countenance fell, and he said:
|
||
|
||
"Nay nay, my son; grudge not thy brethren the chances
|
||
of the road, and the ill-hap of the battle. Here at least
|
||
for thee is the bounteous board and the full cup, and the love
|
||
of kindred and well-willers, and the fellowship of the folk.
|
||
O well is thee, my son, and happy shalt thou be!"
|
||
|
||
But the young man knit his brows and said no word in answer.
|
||
|
||
Then came forward those three brethren who were to fare at all adventure,
|
||
and they stood before the old man saying nought. Then he laughed and said:
|
||
"O ho, my sons! Here in Upmeads have ye all ye need without money,
|
||
but when ye fare in the outlands ye need money; is it not a lack of yours
|
||
that your pouches be bare? Abide, for I have seen to it."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he drew out of his pouch three little bags, and said; "Take ye
|
||
each one of these; for therein is all that my treasury may shed as now.
|
||
In each of these is there coined money, both white and red, and some deal
|
||
of gold uncoined, and of rings and brooches a few, and by estimation
|
||
there is in each bag the same value reckoned in lawful silver of Upmeads
|
||
and the Wolds and the Overhill-Countries. Take up each what there is,
|
||
and do the best ye may therewith."
|
||
|
||
Then each took his bag, and kissed and embraced his father;
|
||
and they kissed Ralph and each other, and so got to horse and
|
||
departed with their squires, going softly because of the hot sun.
|
||
But Nicholas slowly mounted his hackney and led Ralph's war-horse
|
||
with him home again to King Peter's House.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 2
|
||
|
||
Ralph Goeth Back Home to the High House
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph and King Peter walked slowly home together, and as they
|
||
went King Peter fell to telling of how in his young days he rode
|
||
in the Wood Debateable, and was belated there all alone, and happed
|
||
upon men who were outlaws and wolfheads, and feared for his life;
|
||
but they treated him kindly, and honoured him, and saw him safe
|
||
on his way in the morning. So that never thereafter would
|
||
he be art and part with those who hunted outlaws to slay them.
|
||
"For," said he, "it is with these men as with others,
|
||
that they make prey of folk; yet these for the more part prey
|
||
on the rich, and the lawful prey on the poor. Otherwise it
|
||
is with these wolfheads as with lords and knights and franklins,
|
||
that as there be bad amongst them, so also there be good;
|
||
and the good ones I happed on, and so may another man."
|
||
|
||
Hereto paid Ralph little heed at that time, since he had heard
|
||
the tale and its morality before, and that more than once;
|
||
and moreover his mind was set upon his own matters and these
|
||
was he pondering. Albeit perchance the words abode with him.
|
||
So came they to the House, and Ralph's mother, who was a noble dame,
|
||
and well-liking as for her years, which were but little over fifty,
|
||
stood in the hall-door to see which of her sons should come back
|
||
to her, and when she saw them coming together, she went up to them,
|
||
and cast her arms about Ralph and kissed him and caressed him--
|
||
being exceeding glad that it was he and not one of the others
|
||
who had returned to dwell with them; for he was her best-beloved,
|
||
as was little marvel, seeing that he was by far the fairest
|
||
and the most loving. But Ralph's face grew troubled again
|
||
in his mother's arms, for he loved her exceeding well;
|
||
and forsooth he loved the whole house and all that dwelt there,
|
||
down to the turnspit dogs in the chimney ingle, and the swallows
|
||
that nested in the earthen bottles, which when he was little he had
|
||
seen his mother put up in the eaves of the out-bowers: but now,
|
||
love or no love, the spur was in his side, and he must needs
|
||
hasten as fate would have him. However, when he had disentangled
|
||
himself from his mother's caresses, he enforced himself to keep
|
||
a cheerful countenance, and upheld it the whole evening through,
|
||
and was by seeming merry at supper, and went to bed singing.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 3
|
||
|
||
Ralph Cometh to the Cheaping-Town
|
||
|
||
|
||
He slept in an upper chamber in a turret of the House,
|
||
which chamber was his own, and none might meddle with it.
|
||
There the next day he awoke in the dawning, and arose and
|
||
clad himself, and took his wargear and his sword and spear,
|
||
and bore all away without doors to the side of the Ford in that ingle
|
||
of the river, and laid it for a while in a little willow copse,
|
||
so that no chance-comer might see it; then he went back to
|
||
the stable of the House and took his destrier from the stall
|
||
(it was a dapple-grey horse called Falcon, and was right good,)
|
||
and brought him down to the said willow copse, and tied him
|
||
to a tree till he had armed himself amongst the willows,
|
||
whence he came forth presently as brisk-looking and likely
|
||
a man-at-arms as you might see on a summer day. Then he clomb
|
||
up into the saddle, and went his ways splashing across the ford,
|
||
before the sun had arisen, while the throstle-cocks were yet
|
||
amidst their first song.
|
||
|
||
Then he rode on a little trot south away; and by then the sun was up
|
||
he was without the bounds of Upmeads; albeit in the land thereabout
|
||
dwelt none who were not friends to King Peter and his sons:
|
||
and that was well, for now were folk stirring and were abroad in the fields;
|
||
as a band of carles going with their scythes to the hay-field; or a maiden
|
||
with her milking-pails going to her kine, barefoot through the seeding grass;
|
||
or a company of noisy little lads on their way to the nearest pool of
|
||
the stream that they might bathe in the warm morning after the warm night.
|
||
All these and more knew him and his armour and Falcon his horse, and gave
|
||
him the sele of the day, and he was nowise troubled at meeting them;
|
||
for besides that they thought it no wonder to meet one of the lords
|
||
of Upmeads going armed about his errands, their own errands were close
|
||
at home, and it was little likely that they should go that day so far
|
||
as to Upmeads Water, seeing that it ran through the meadows a half-score
|
||
miles to the north-ward.
|
||
|
||
So Ralph rode on, and came into the high road, that led one
|
||
way back again into Upmeads, and crossed the Water by a fair
|
||
bridge late builded between King Peter and a house of Canons
|
||
on the north side, and the other way into a good cheaping-town
|
||
hight Wulstead, beyond which Ralph knew little of the world
|
||
which lay to the south, and seemed to him a wondrous place,
|
||
full of fair things and marvellous adventures.
|
||
|
||
So he rode till he came into the town when the fair morning was still young,
|
||
the first mass over, and maids gathered about the fountain amidst
|
||
the market-place, and two or three dames sitting under the buttercross.
|
||
Ralph rode straight up to the house of a man whom he knew, and had
|
||
often given him guesting there, and he himself was not seldom seen
|
||
in the High House of Upmeads. This man was a merchant, who went
|
||
and came betwixt men's houses, and bought and sold many things needful
|
||
and pleasant to folk, and King Peter dealt with him much and often.
|
||
Now he stood in the door of his house, which was new and goodly,
|
||
sniffing the sweet scents which the morning wind bore into the town;
|
||
he was clad in a goodly long gown of grey welted with silver,
|
||
of thin cloth meet for the summer-tide: for little he wrought with
|
||
his hands, but much with his tongue; he was a man of forty summers,
|
||
ruddy-faced and black-bearded, and he was called Clement Chapman.
|
||
|
||
When he saw Ralph he smiled kindly on him, and came and held
|
||
his stirrup as he lighted down, and said: "Welcome, lord!
|
||
Art thou come to give me a message, and eat and drink in a poor
|
||
huckster's house, and thou armed so gallantly?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed merrily, for he was hungry, and he said:
|
||
"Yea, I will eat and drink with thee and kiss my gossip,
|
||
and go my ways."
|
||
|
||
Therewith the carle led him into the house; and if it were goodly without,
|
||
within it was better. For there was a fair chamber panelled with wainscot
|
||
well carven, and a cupboard of no sorry vessels of silver and latten:
|
||
the chairs and stools as fair as might be; no king's might be better:
|
||
the windows were glazed, and there were flowers and knots and posies in them;
|
||
and the bed was hung with goodly web from over sea such as the soldan useth.
|
||
Also, whereas the chapman's ware-bowers were hard by the chamber,
|
||
there was a pleasant mingled smell therefrom floating about. The table was
|
||
set with meat and drink and vessel of pewter and earth, all fair and good;
|
||
and thereby stood the chapman's wife, a very goodly woman of two-score years,
|
||
who had held Ralph at the font when she was a slim damsel new wedded;
|
||
for she was come of no mean kindred of the Kingdom of Upmeads:
|
||
her name was Dame Katherine.
|
||
|
||
Now she kissed Ralph's cheek friendly, and said:
|
||
"Welcome, gossip! thou art here in good time to break thy fast;
|
||
and we will give thee a trim dinner thereafter, when thou
|
||
hast been here and there in the town and done thine errand;
|
||
and then shalt thou drink a cup and sing me a song, and so home
|
||
again in the cool of the evening."
|
||
|
||
Ralph seemed a little troubled at her word, and he said:
|
||
"Nay, gossip, though I thank thee for all these good things
|
||
as though I had them, yet must I ride away south straightway
|
||
after I have breakfasted, and said one word to the goodman.
|
||
Goodman, how call ye the next town southward, and how far
|
||
is it thither?"
|
||
|
||
Quoth Clement: "My son, what hast thou to do with riding south?
|
||
As thou wottest, going hence south ye must presently ride the hill-country;
|
||
and that is no safe journey for a lonely man, even if he be a doughty
|
||
knight like to thee, lord."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph, reddening withal: "I have an errand that way."
|
||
|
||
"An errand of King Peter's or thine own?" said Clement.
|
||
|
||
"Of King Peter's, if ye must wot," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Clement were no chapman had he not seen that the lad was lying;
|
||
so he said:
|
||
|
||
"Fair lord, saving your worship, how would it be as to the speeding
|
||
of King Peter's errand, if I brought thee before our mayor, and swore
|
||
the peace against thee; so that I might keep thee in courteous prison
|
||
till I had sent to thy father of thy whereabouts?"
|
||
|
||
The young man turned red with anger; but ere he could speak
|
||
Dame Katherine said sharply: "Hold thy peace, Clement!
|
||
What hast thou to meddle or make in the matter? If our young lord
|
||
hath will to ride out and see the world, why should we let him?
|
||
Yea, why should his father let him, if it come to that?
|
||
Take my word for it that my gossip shall go through the world
|
||
and come back to those that love him, as goodly as he went forth.
|
||
And hold! here is for a token thereof."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she went to an ark that stood in the corner,
|
||
and groped in the till thereof and brought out a little necklace
|
||
of blue and green stones with gold knobs betwixt, like a pair
|
||
of beads; albeit neither pope nor priest had blessed them;
|
||
and tied to the necklace was a little box of gold with something
|
||
hidden therein. This gaud she gave to Ralph, and said to him:
|
||
"Gossip, wear this about thy neck, and let no man take it from thee,
|
||
and I think it will be salvation to thee in peril, and good luck
|
||
to thee in the time of questing; so that it shall be to thee
|
||
as if thou hadst drunk of the WELL AT THE WORLD'S END."
|
||
|
||
"What is that water?" said Ralph, "and how may I find it?"
|
||
|
||
"I know not rightly," she said, "but if a body might come by it,
|
||
I hear say it saveth from weariness and wounding and sickness;
|
||
and it winneth love from all, and maybe life everlasting.
|
||
Hast thou not heard tell of it, my husband?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said the chapman, "many times; and how that whoso hath drunk
|
||
thereof hath the tongue that none may withstand, whether in buying
|
||
or selling, or prevailing over the hearts of men in any wise.
|
||
But as for its wheraebouts, ye shall not find it in these parts.
|
||
Men say that it is beyond the Dry Tree; and that is afar, God wot!
|
||
But now, lord Ralph, I rede thee go back again this evening with Andrew,
|
||
my nephew, for company: forsooth, he will do little less gainful
|
||
than riding with thee to Upmeads than if he abide in Wulstead;
|
||
for he is idle. But, my lord, take it not amiss that I spake
|
||
about the mayor and the tipstaves; for it was but a jest, as thou
|
||
mayest well wot."
|
||
|
||
Ralph's face cleared at that word, and he stood smiling,
|
||
weighing the chaplet in his hand; but Dame Katherine said:
|
||
|
||
"Dear gossip, do it on speedily; for it is a gift from me unto thee:
|
||
and from a gossip even king's sons may take a gift."
|
||
|
||
Quoth Ralph: "But is it lawful to wear it? is there no wizardry within it?"
|
||
|
||
"Hearken to him!" she said, "and how like unto a man he speaketh;
|
||
if there were a brawl in the street, he would strike in and
|
||
ask no word thereof, not even which were the better side:
|
||
whereas here is my falcon-chick frighted at a little gold box
|
||
and a pair of Saracen beads."
|
||
|
||
"Well," quoth Ralph, "the first holy man I meet shall bless them for me."
|
||
|
||
"That shall he not," said the dame, "that shall he not.
|
||
Who wotteth what shall betide to thee or me if he do so?
|
||
Come, do them on, and then to table! For seest thou not that
|
||
the goodman is wearying for meat? and even thine eyes will shine
|
||
the brighter for a mouthful, king's son and gossip."
|
||
|
||
She took him by the hand and did the beads on his neck and
|
||
kissed and fondled him before he sat down, while the goodman
|
||
looked on, grinning rather sheepishly, but said nought to them;
|
||
and only called on his boy to lead the destrier to stable.
|
||
So when they were set down, the chapman took up the word
|
||
where it had been dropped, and said: "So, Lord Ralph,
|
||
thou must needs take to adventures, being, as thou deemest,
|
||
full grown. That is all one as the duck taketh to water
|
||
despite of the hen that hath hatched her. Well, it was not
|
||
to be thought that Upmeads would hold you lords much longer.
|
||
Or what is gone with my lords your brethren?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "They have departed at all adventure, north east,
|
||
and west, each bearing our father's blessing and a bag of pennies.
|
||
And to speak the truth, goodman, for I perceive I am no
|
||
doctor at lying, my father and mother would have me stay
|
||
at home when my brethren were gone, and that liketh me not;
|
||
therefore am I come out to seek my luck in the world:
|
||
for Upmeads is good for a star-gazer, maybe, or a simpler,
|
||
or a priest, or a worthy good carle of the fields, but not
|
||
for a king's son with the blood running hot in his veins.
|
||
Or what sayest thou, gossip?"
|
||
|
||
Quoth the dame: "I could weep for thy mother; but for thee nought at all.
|
||
It is good that thou shouldest do thy will in the season of youth
|
||
and the days of thy pleasure. Yea, and I deem that thou shalt come
|
||
back again great and worshipful; and I am called somewhat foreseeing.
|
||
Only look to it that thou keep the pretty thing that I have just given thee."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said the chapman, "this is fine talk about pleasure and
|
||
the doing of one's will; nevertheless a whole skin is good wares,
|
||
though it be not to be cheapened in any market of the world.
|
||
Now, lord, go thou where thou wilt, whether I say go or abide;
|
||
and forsooth I am no man of King Peter's, that I should stay thee.
|
||
As for the name of the next town, it is called Higham-on-the-Way,
|
||
and is a big town plenteous of victuals, with strong walls and a castle,
|
||
and a very rich abbey of monks: and there is peace within its walls,
|
||
because the father abbot wages a many men to guard him and his,
|
||
and to uphold his rights against all comers; wherein he doth wisely,
|
||
and also well. For much folk flocketh to his town and live well therein;
|
||
and there is great recourse of chapmen thither. No better market is
|
||
there betwixt this and Babylon. Well, Sir Ralph, I rede thee if thou
|
||
comest unhurt to Higham-on-the-Way, go no further for this time,
|
||
but take service with the lord abbot, and be one of his men of war;
|
||
thou may'st then become his captain if thou shouldest live;
|
||
which would be no bad adventure for one who cometh from Upmeads."
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked no brighter for this word, and he answered nought to it:
|
||
but said presently:
|
||
|
||
"And what is to be looked for beyond Higham if one goeth further?
|
||
Dost thou know the land any further?"
|
||
|
||
The carle smiled: "Yea forsooth, and down to the Wood Perilous,
|
||
and beyond it, and the lands beyond the Wood; and far away through them.
|
||
I say not that I have been to the Dry Tree; but I have spoken to one
|
||
who hath heard of him who hath seen it; though he might not come
|
||
by a draught of the Well at the World's End."
|
||
|
||
Ralph's eyes flashed, and his cheeks reddened as he listened hereto;
|
||
but he spake quietly:
|
||
|
||
"Master Clement, how far dost thou make it to Higham-on-the-Way?"
|
||
|
||
"A matter of forty miles," said the Chapman; "because, as
|
||
thou wottest, if ye ride south from hence, ye shall presently
|
||
bring your nose up against the big downs, and must needs
|
||
climb them at once; and when ye are at the top of Bear Hill,
|
||
and look south away ye shall see nought but downs on downs
|
||
with never a road to call a road, and never a castle,
|
||
or church, or homestead: nought but some shepherd's hut;
|
||
or at the most the little house of a holy man with a little
|
||
chapel thereby in some swelly of the chalk, where the water hath
|
||
trickled into a pool; for otherwise the place is waterless."
|
||
Therewith he took a long pull at the tankard by his side,
|
||
and went on:
|
||
|
||
"Higham is beyond all that, and out into the fertile plain;
|
||
and a little river hight Coldlake windeth about the meadows there;
|
||
and it is a fair land; though look you the wool of the downs
|
||
is good, good, good! I have foison of this year's fleeces with me.
|
||
Ye shall raise none such in Upmeads."
|
||
|
||
Ralph sat silent a little, as if pondering, and then he started up and said:
|
||
"Good master Clement, we have eaten thy meat and thank thee for that and
|
||
other matters. Wilt thou now be kinder, and bid thy boy bring round Falcon
|
||
our horse; for we have far to go, and must begone straight-away."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, lord," said Clement, "even so will I do." And he muttered
|
||
under his breath; "Thou talkest big, my lad, with thy 'we'; but thou
|
||
art pressed lest Nicholas be here presently to fetch thee back;
|
||
and to say sooth I would his hand were on thy shoulder even now."
|
||
|
||
Then he spake aloud again, and said:
|
||
|
||
"I must now begone to my lads, and I will send one round with thy
|
||
war-horse. But take my rede, my lord, and become the man of the Abbot
|
||
of St. Mary's of Higham, and all will be well."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he edged himself out of the chamber, and the dame fell to making
|
||
a mighty clatter with the vessel and trenchers and cups on the board,
|
||
while Ralph walked up and down the chamber his war-gear jingling upon him.
|
||
Presently the dame left her table-clatter and came up to Ralph and looked
|
||
kindly into his face and said: "Gossip, hast thou perchance any money?"
|
||
|
||
He flushed up red, and then his face fell; yet he spake gaily:
|
||
"Yea, gossip, I have both white and red: there are three golden
|
||
crowns in my pouch, and a little flock of silver pennies:
|
||
forsooth I say not as many as would reach from here to Upmeads,
|
||
if they were laid one after the other."
|
||
|
||
She smiled and patted his cheek, and said:
|
||
|
||
"Thou art no very prudent child, king's son. But it comes into
|
||
my mind that my master did not mean thee to go away empty-handed;
|
||
else had he not departed and left us twain together."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she went to the credence that stood in a corner,
|
||
and opened a drawer therein and took out a little bag,
|
||
and gave it into Ralph's hand, and said: "This is the gift
|
||
of the gossip; and thou mayst take it without shame;
|
||
all the more because if thy father had been a worser man,
|
||
and a harder lord he would have had more to give thee.
|
||
But now thou hast as much or more as any one of thy brethren."
|
||
|
||
He took the bag smiling and shame-faced, but she looked on him
|
||
fondly and said:
|
||
|
||
"Now I know not whether I shall lay old Nicholas on thine
|
||
heels when he cometh after thee, as come he will full surely;
|
||
or whether I shall suffer the old sleuth-hound nose out thy
|
||
slot of himself, as full surely he will set on to it."
|
||
|
||
"Thou mightest tell him," said Ralph, "that I am gone to take
|
||
service with the Abbot of St. Mary's of Higham: hah?"
|
||
|
||
She laughed and said: "Wilt thou do so, lord, and follow the rede
|
||
of that goodman of mine, who thinketh himself as wise as Solomon?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph smiled and answered her nothing.
|
||
|
||
"Well," she said, "I shall say what likes me when the hour is at hand.
|
||
Lo, here! thine horse. Abide yet a moment of time, and then go whither
|
||
thou needs must, like the wind of the summer day."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she went out of the chamber and came back again with
|
||
a scrip which she gave to Ralph and said: "Herein is a flask
|
||
of drink for the waterless country, and a little meat for the way.
|
||
Fare thee well, gossip! Little did I look for it when I rose up
|
||
this morning and nothing irked me save the dulness of our town,
|
||
and the littleness of men's doings therein, that I should have
|
||
to cut off a piece of my life from me this morning, and say,
|
||
farewell gossip, as now again I do."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she kissed him on either cheek and embraced him;
|
||
and it might be said of her and him that she let him go thereafter;
|
||
for though as aforesaid he loved her, and praised her kindness,
|
||
he scarce understood the eagerness of her love for him;
|
||
whereas moreover she saw him not so often betwixt Upmeads
|
||
and Wulstead: and belike she herself scarce understood it.
|
||
Albeit she was a childless woman.
|
||
|
||
So when he had got to horse, she watched him riding a moment,
|
||
and saw how he waved his hand to her as he turned the corner
|
||
of the market-place, and how a knot of lads and lasses stood
|
||
staring on him after she lost sight of him. Then she turned her
|
||
back into the chamber and laid her head on the table and wept.
|
||
Then came in the goodman quietly and stood by her and she
|
||
heeded him not. He stood grinning curiously on her awhile,
|
||
and then laid his hand on her shoulder, and said as she raised
|
||
her face to him:
|
||
|
||
"Sweetheart, it availeth nought; when thou wert young and
|
||
exceeding fair, he was but a little babe, and thou wert looking
|
||
in those days to have babes of thine own; and then it was too soon:
|
||
and now that he is such a beauteous young man, and a king's
|
||
son withal, and thou art wedded to a careful carle of no
|
||
weak heart, and thou thyself art more than two-score years old,
|
||
it is too late. Yet thou didst well to give our lord the money.
|
||
Lo! here is wherewithal to fill up the lack in thy chest;
|
||
and here is a toy for thee in place of the pair of beads thou
|
||
gavest him; and I bid thee look on it as if I had given him
|
||
my share of the money and the beads."
|
||
|
||
She turned to Clement, and took the bag of money,
|
||
and the chaplet which he held out to her, and she said:
|
||
"God wot thou art no ill man, my husband, but would God I
|
||
had a son like to him!"
|
||
|
||
She still wept somewhat; but the chapman said: "Let it rest there,
|
||
sweetheart! let it rest there! It may be a year or twain
|
||
before thou seest him again: and then belike he shall be come
|
||
back with some woman whom he loves better than any other;
|
||
and who knows but in a way he may deem himself our son.
|
||
Meanwhile thou hast done well, sweetheart, so be glad."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he kissed her and went his ways to his merchandize,
|
||
and she to the ordering of her house, grieved but not unhappy.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 4
|
||
|
||
Ralph Rideth the Downs
|
||
|
||
|
||
As for Ralph, he rode on with a merry heart, and presently came
|
||
to an end of the plain country, and the great downs rose up
|
||
before him with a white road winding up to the top of them.
|
||
Just before the slopes began to rise was a little thorp beside
|
||
a stream, and thereby a fair church and a little house of Canons:
|
||
so Ralph rode toward the church to see if therein were
|
||
an altar of St. Nicholas, who was his good lord and patron,
|
||
that he might ask of him a blessing on his journey.
|
||
But as he came up to the churchyard-gate he saw a great black
|
||
horse tied thereto as if abiding some one; and as he lighted
|
||
down from his saddle he saw a man coming hastily from out
|
||
the church-door and striding swiftly toward the said gate.
|
||
He was a big man, and armed; for he had a bright steel
|
||
sallet on his head, which covered his face all save the end
|
||
of his chin; and plates he had on his legs and arms.
|
||
He wore a green coat over his armour, and thereon was wrought
|
||
in gold an image of a tree leafless: he had a little steel
|
||
axe about his neck, and a great sword hung by his side.
|
||
Ralph stood looking on him with his hand on the latch of the gate,
|
||
but when the man came thereto he tore it open roughly and shoved
|
||
through at once, driving Ralph back, so that he well-nigh
|
||
overset him, and so sprang to his horse and swung himself
|
||
into the saddle, just as Ralph steadied himself and ruffled up
|
||
to him, half drawing his sword from the scabbard the while.
|
||
But the man-at-arms cried out, "Put it back, put it back!
|
||
If thou must needs deal with every man that shoveth thee
|
||
in his haste, thy life is like to be but short."
|
||
|
||
He was settling himself in his saddle as he spoke, and now
|
||
he shook his rein, and rode off speedily toward the hill-road.
|
||
But when he was so far off that Ralph might but see his face but
|
||
as a piece of reddish colour, he reined up for a moment of time,
|
||
and turning round in his saddle lifted up his sallet and left
|
||
his face bare, and cried out as if to Ralph, "The first time!"
|
||
And then let the head-piece fall again, and set spurs to his horse
|
||
and gallopped away.
|
||
|
||
Ralph stood looking at him as he got smaller on the long
|
||
white road, and wondering what this might mean, and how
|
||
the unknown man should know him, if he did know him.
|
||
But presently he let his wonder run off him, and went his ways
|
||
into the church, wherein he found his good lord and friend
|
||
St. Nicholas, and so said a paternoster before his altar,
|
||
and besought his help, and made his offering; and then departed
|
||
and gat to horse again, and rode softly the way to the downs,
|
||
for the day was hot.
|
||
|
||
The way was steep and winding, with a hollow cup of the hills below it,
|
||
and above it a bent so steep that Ralph could see but a few yards of it
|
||
on his left hand; but when he came to the hill's brow and could look
|
||
down on the said bent, he saw strange figures on the face thereof,
|
||
done by cutting away the turf so that the chalk might show clear. A tree
|
||
with leaves was done on that hill-side, and on either hand of it a beast
|
||
like a bear ramping up against the tree; and these signs were very ancient.
|
||
This hill-side carving could not be seen from the thorp beneath,
|
||
which was called Netherton, because the bent looked westward down into
|
||
the hollow of the hill abovesaid; but from nigher to Wulstead they
|
||
were clear to see, and Ralph had often beheld them, but never so nigh:
|
||
and that hill was called after them Bear Hill. At the top of it was
|
||
an earth-work of the ancient folk, which also was called Bear Castle.
|
||
And now Ralph rode over the hill's brow into it; for the walls had been
|
||
beaten down in places long and long ago.
|
||
|
||
Now he rode up the wall, and at the topmost of it turned and
|
||
looked aback on the blue country which he had ridden through
|
||
stretching many a league below, and tried if he could pick out
|
||
Upmeads from amongst the diverse wealth of the summer land:
|
||
but Upmeads Water was hidden, and he could see nothing
|
||
to be sure of to tell him whereabouts the High House stood;
|
||
yet he deemed that he could make out the Debateable Wood and
|
||
the hills behind it well enough. Then he turned his horse about,
|
||
and had the down-country before him; long lines of hills to wit,
|
||
one rising behind the other like the waves of a somewhat quiet sea:
|
||
no trees thereon, nor houses that he might see thence:
|
||
nought but a green road that went waving up and down before him
|
||
greener than the main face of the slopes.
|
||
|
||
He looked at it all for a minute or two as the south-west wind went past
|
||
his ears, and played a strange tune on the innumerable stems of the bents
|
||
and the hard-stalked blossoms, to which the bees sang counterpoint.
|
||
Then the heart arose within him, and he drew the sword from the scabbard,
|
||
and waved it about his head, and shook it toward the south, and cried out,
|
||
"Now, welcome world, and be thou blessed from one end to the other,
|
||
from the ocean sea to the uttermost mountains!"
|
||
|
||
A while he held the white steel in his fist, and then sheathed the blade,
|
||
and rode down soberly over the turf bridge across the ancient fosse,
|
||
and so came on to the green road made many ages before by an ancient people,
|
||
and so trotted south along fair and softly.
|
||
|
||
Little is to be told of his journey through the downs:
|
||
as he topped a low hill whereon were seven grave-mounds of the ancient
|
||
folk in a row, he came on a shepherd lying amidst of his sheep:
|
||
the man sprang to his feet when he heard horse-hoofs anigh him
|
||
and saw the glint of steel, and he set his hand to a short
|
||
spear which lay by him; but when he saw nought but Ralph,
|
||
and heard how he gave him the sele of the day, he nodded his
|
||
head in a friendly way, though he said nought in salutation;
|
||
for the loneliness of the downs made the speech slow within him.
|
||
|
||
Again some two miles further on Ralph met a flock of sheep coming
|
||
down a bent which the road climbed, and with them were three men,
|
||
their drovers, and they drew nigh him as he was amidst of the sheep,
|
||
so that he could scarce see the way. Each of these three had a weapon;
|
||
one a pole-axe, another a long spear, and the third a flail
|
||
jointed and bound with iron, and an anlace hanging at his girdle.
|
||
So they stood in the way and hailed him when the sheep were
|
||
gone past; and the man with the spear asked him whither away.
|
||
"I am turned toward Higham-on-the-Way," quoth he; "and how many
|
||
miles shall I ride ere I get there?"
|
||
|
||
Said one of them: "Little less than twenty, lord." Now it was
|
||
past noon two hours, and the day was hot; so whereas the faces
|
||
of the men looked kind and friendly, albeit somewhat rugged,
|
||
he lighted down from his horse and sat down by the way-side,
|
||
and drew his bottle of good wine from out of his wallet,
|
||
and asked the men if they were in haste. "Nay, master,"
|
||
said he of the pole-axe, while all eyes turned to the bottle,
|
||
"HE has gone by too long; and will neither meddle with us,
|
||
nor may we deal with him."
|
||
|
||
"Well then," quoth Ralph, "there is time for bever.
|
||
Have ye ought of a cup, that we may drink to each other?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said the carle with the anlace, "that have I.'' Therewith he drew
|
||
from his pouch a ram's horn rimmed with silver, and held it up,
|
||
and said as if he were speaking to it: "Now, Thirly, rejoice! for ye
|
||
shall have lord's wine poured into thy maw."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he held it out toward Ralph, who laughed and filled it up,
|
||
and filled for himself a little silver cup which he carried,
|
||
and said: "To you, shepherds! Much wool and little cry!"
|
||
And he drank withal.
|
||
|
||
"And I," quoth the man with the horn, "call this health;
|
||
Much cry and little wool!"
|
||
|
||
"Well, well, how mean ye by that, Greasy Wat?" said the man with the spear,
|
||
taking the horn as he spake; "that is but a poor wish for a lord that drinketh
|
||
out of our cup."
|
||
|
||
Said Wat: "Why, neighbour, why! thy wit is none too hasty.
|
||
The wool that a knight sheareth is war and battle;
|
||
that is wounding and death; but the cry is the talk
|
||
and boasting and minstrelsy that goeth before all this.
|
||
Which is the best wish to wish him? the wounds and the death,
|
||
or the fore-rumour and stir thereof which hurteth no man?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed thereat, and was merry and blithe with them;
|
||
but the spearman, who was an old man, said:
|
||
|
||
"For all Wat sayeth, lord, and his japes, ye must not misdeem of us
|
||
that we shepherds of the Downs can do nought but run to ales and feasts,
|
||
and that we are but pot-valiant: maybe thou thyself mayst live to see things
|
||
go otherwise: and in that day may we have such as thee for captain.
|
||
Now, fair lord, I drink to thy crown of valour, and thy good luck;
|
||
and we thank thee for the wine and yet more for the blithe fellowship."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph filled up the ram's horn till Dame Katherine's good island
|
||
wine was well-nigh spent; and at last he said:
|
||
|
||
"Now, my masters, I must to horse; but I pray you tell or
|
||
we depart, what did ye mean when ye said that HE had gone past?
|
||
Who is HE?"
|
||
|
||
The merry faces of the men changed at his word, and they looked
|
||
in each other's faces, till at last the old spearman answered him:
|
||
|
||
"Fair lord, these things we have little will to talk about:
|
||
for we be poor men with no master to fleece us, and no lord to help us:
|
||
also we be folk unlearned and unlettered, and from our way of life,
|
||
whereas we dwell in the wilderness, we seldom come within the doors
|
||
of a church. But whereas we have drunk with thee, who seemest
|
||
to be a man of lineage, and thou hast been blithe with us, we will
|
||
tell thee that we have seen one riding south along the Greenway,
|
||
clad in a coat as green as the way, with the leafless tree done
|
||
on his breast. So nigh to him we were that we heard his cry
|
||
as he sped along, as ye may hear the lapwing whining; for he said:
|
||
'POINT AND EDGE, POINT AND EDGE! THE RED WATER AMIDST OF THE HILLS!'
|
||
In my lifetime such a man hath, to my knowledge, been seen thrice before;
|
||
and after each sight of him followed evil days and the death of men.
|
||
Moreover this is the Eve of St. John, and we deem the token
|
||
the worse therefor. Or how deemest thou?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph stood silent awhile; for he was thinking of the big man whom he had
|
||
met at the churchyard gate, and all this tale seemed wonderful to him.
|
||
But at last he said:
|
||
|
||
"I cannot tell what there is in it; herein am I no help to you.
|
||
To-day I am but little; though I may one day be great.
|
||
Yet this may I do for you; tomorrow will I let sing a mass
|
||
in St. Mary's Church on your behoof. And hereafter, if I wax
|
||
as my will is, and I come to be lord in these lands, I will
|
||
look to it to do what a good lord should do for the shepherds
|
||
of the Downs, so that they may live well, and die in good hope.
|
||
So may the Mother of God help me at need!"
|
||
|
||
Said the old shepherd: "Thou hast sworn an oath, and it is a good oath,
|
||
and well sworn. Now if thou dost as thou swearest, words can but
|
||
little thanks, yet deeds may. Wherefore if ever thou comest back hither,
|
||
and art in such need that a throng of men may help thee therein; then let
|
||
light a great fire upon each corner of the topmost wall of Bear Castle,
|
||
and call to mind this watch-word: 'SMITE ASIDE THE AXE, O BEAR-FATHER,'
|
||
and then shalt thou see what shall betide thee for thy good-hap: farewell now,
|
||
with the saints to aid!"
|
||
|
||
Ralph bade them live well and hail, and mounted his horse and rode off
|
||
down the Greenway, and as he rode the shepherds waved their weapons
|
||
to him in token of good-will.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 5
|
||
|
||
Ralph Cometh to Higham-on-the-Way
|
||
|
||
|
||
Nought more befell Ralph to tell of till he came to the end
|
||
of the Downs and saw Higham lying below him overlooked by a white
|
||
castle on a knoll, and with a river lapping it about and winding
|
||
on through its fair green meadows even as Clement had told.
|
||
From amidst its houses rose up three towers of churches above their
|
||
leaden roofs, and high above all, long and great, the Abbey Church;
|
||
and now was the low sun glittering on its gilded vanes and the wings
|
||
of the angels high upon the battlements.
|
||
|
||
So Ralph rode down the slopes and was brisk about it, for it was drawing
|
||
toward sunset, and he knew not at what hour they shut their gates.
|
||
The road was steep and winding, and it was the more part of an hour ere
|
||
he came to the gate, which was open, and like to be yet, for many folk
|
||
were thronging in, which throng also had hindered him soon after he came
|
||
into the plain country. The gate was fair and strong, but Ralph saw no
|
||
men-at-arms about it that evening. He rode into the street unquestioned,
|
||
and therein was the throng great of people clad in fair and gay attire;
|
||
and presently Ralph called to mind that this was St. John's Eve,
|
||
so that he knew that there was some feast toward.
|
||
|
||
At last the throng was so thick that he was stayed by it;
|
||
and therewithal a religious who was beside him and thrust
|
||
up against his horse, turned to him and gave him good even,
|
||
and said: "By thy weapons and gear thou art a stranger here
|
||
in our burg, Sir Knight?"
|
||
|
||
"So it is," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"And whither away?" said the monk; "hast thou some kinsman or friend
|
||
in the town?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "I seek a good hostelry where I may abide
|
||
the night for my money."
|
||
|
||
The monk shook his head and said: "See ye the folk? It is holiday time,
|
||
and midsummer after haysel. Ye shall scarce get lodging outside our house.
|
||
But what then? Come thou thither straightway and have harbour of the best,
|
||
and see our prior, who loveth young and brisk men-at-arms like to thee.
|
||
Lo now! the throng openeth a little; I will walk by thy bridle and lead thee
|
||
the shortest road thither."
|
||
|
||
Ralph gainsaid him not, and they bored through the throng of the street till
|
||
they came into the market-square, which was very great and clean, paved with
|
||
stones all over: tall and fair houses rose up on three sides of it,
|
||
and on the fourth was the Great Church which made those houses seem but low:
|
||
most of it was new-built; for the lord Abbot that then was, though he had
|
||
not begun it, had taken the work up from his forerunner and had pushed
|
||
it forward all he might; for he was very rich, and an open-handed man.
|
||
Like dark gold it showed under the evening sun, and the painted and gilded
|
||
imagery shone like jewels upon it.
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said the monk, as he noted Ralph's wonder at this wonder;
|
||
"a most goodly house it is, and happy shall they be that dwell there."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he led Ralph on, turning aside through the great square.
|
||
Ralph saw that there were many folk therein, though it was too big
|
||
to be thronged thick with them. Amidst of it was now a great pile
|
||
of wood hung about with flowers, and hard by it a stage built up
|
||
with hangings of rich cloth on one side thereof. He asked the monk
|
||
what this might mean, and he told him the wood was for the Midsummer
|
||
bale-fire, and the stage for the show that should come thereafter.
|
||
So the brother led Ralph down a lane to the south of the great west door,
|
||
and along the side of the minster and so came to the Abbey gate,
|
||
and there was Ralph well greeted, and had all things given him which
|
||
were due to a good knight; and then was he brought into the Guest-hall,
|
||
a very fair chamber, which was now full of men of all degrees.
|
||
He was shown to a seat on the dais within two of the subprior's,
|
||
and beside him sat an honourable lord, a vassal of St. Mary's. So was
|
||
supper served well and abundantly: the meat and drink was of the best,
|
||
and the vessel and all the plenishing was as good as might be;
|
||
and the walls of that chamber were hung with noble arras-cloth
|
||
picturing the Pilgrimage of the Soul of Man.
|
||
|
||
Every man there who spoke with Ralph, and they were many, was exceeding
|
||
courteous to him; and he heard much talk about him of the wealth
|
||
of the lands of St. Mary's at Higham, and how it was flourishing;
|
||
and of the Abbot how mighty he was, so that he might do what he would,
|
||
and that his will was to help and to give, and be blithe with all men:
|
||
and folk told of turmoil and war in other lands, and praised
|
||
the peace of Higham-on-the-Way.
|
||
|
||
Ralph listened to all this, and smiled, and said to himself that to
|
||
another man this might well be the end of his journey for that time;
|
||
but for him all this peace and well-being was not enough; for though it
|
||
were a richer land than Upmeads, yet to the peace and the quiet he was
|
||
well used, and he had come forth not for the winning of fatter peace,
|
||
but to try what new thing his youth and his might and his high hope
|
||
and his good hap might accomplish.
|
||
|
||
So when the supper was over, and the wine and spices had been brought,
|
||
the Guest-hall began to thin somewhat, and the brother who had brought
|
||
Ralph thither came to him and said:
|
||
|
||
"Fair lord, it were nowise ill if ye went forth, as others
|
||
of our guests have done, to see the deeds of Midsummer Eve
|
||
that shall be done in the great square in honour of Holy John;
|
||
for our manner therein at Higham has been much thought of.
|
||
Look my son!"
|
||
|
||
He pointed to the windows of the hall therewith, and lo! they grew
|
||
yellow and bright with some fire without, as if a new fiery day
|
||
had been born out of the dusk of the summer night; for the light
|
||
that shone through the windows out-did the candle-light in the hall.
|
||
Ralph started thereat and laid his right hand to the place of his sword,
|
||
which indeed he had left with the chamberlain; but the monk laughed
|
||
and said: "Fear nothing, lord; there is no foeman in Higham:
|
||
come now, lest thou be belated of the show."
|
||
|
||
So he led Ralph forth, and into the square, where there was a space
|
||
appointed for the brethren and their guests to see the plays;
|
||
and the square was now so full of folk that it seemed like as if that
|
||
there were no one man in the streets which were erewhile so thronged.
|
||
|
||
There were rows of men-at-arms in bright armour also to keep
|
||
the folk in their places, like as hurdles pen the sheep up;
|
||
howbeit they were nowise rough with folk, but humble and courteous.
|
||
Many and many were the torches and cressets burning steadily
|
||
in the calm air, so that, as aforesaid, night was turned into day.
|
||
But on the scaffold aforesaid were standing bright and gay figures,
|
||
whose names or what they were Ralph had no time to ask.
|
||
|
||
Now the bells began to clash from the great tower of the minster,
|
||
and in a little while they had clashed themselves into order and rang
|
||
clear and tuneably for a space; and while they were ringing, lo! those
|
||
gay-clad people departed from the scaffold, and a canvas painted like a
|
||
mountain-side, rocky and with caves therein, was drawn up at the back of it.
|
||
Then came thereon one clad like a king holding a fair maiden by the hand,
|
||
and with him was a dame richly clad and with a crown on her head.
|
||
So these two kissed the maiden, and lamented over her, and went
|
||
their ways, and the maiden left alone sat down upon a rock and covered
|
||
up her face and wept; and while Ralph wondered what this might mean,
|
||
or what grieved the maiden, there came creeping, as it were from out
|
||
of a cranny of the rocks, a worm huge-headed and covered over with scales
|
||
that glittered in the torch-light. Then Ralph sprang up in his place,
|
||
for he feared for the maiden that the worm would devour her: but the monk
|
||
who sat by him pulled him down by the skirt, and laughed and said:
|
||
"Sit still, lord! for the champion also has been provided."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph sat down again somewhat abashed and looked on; yet was his heart
|
||
in his mouth the while. And so while the maiden stood as one astonied
|
||
before the worm, who gaped upon her with wide open mouth, there came forth
|
||
from a cleft in the rocks a goodly knight who bore silver, a red cross;
|
||
and he had his sword in his hand, and he fell upon the worm to smite him;
|
||
and the worm ramped up against him, and there was battle betwixt them,
|
||
while the maiden knelt anigh with her hands clasped together.
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph knew that this was a play of the fight of
|
||
St. George with the worm; so he sat silent till the champion
|
||
had smitten off the worm's head and had come to the maiden
|
||
and kissed and embraced her, and shown her the grisly head.
|
||
Then presently came many folk on to the scaffold, to wit,
|
||
the king and queen who were the father and mother of the maiden,
|
||
and a bishop clad in very fair vestments, and knights withal;
|
||
and they stood about St. George and the maiden, and with them
|
||
were minstrels who fell to playing upon harps and fiddles;
|
||
while other some fell to singing a sweet song in honour
|
||
of St. George, and the maiden delivered.
|
||
|
||
So when it was all done, the monk said: "This play is set forth
|
||
by the men-at-arms of our lord Abbot, who have great devotion
|
||
toward St. George, and he is their friend and their good lord.
|
||
But hereafter will be other plays, of wild men and their
|
||
feasting in the woods in the Golden Age of the world;
|
||
and that is done by the scribes and the limners. And after
|
||
that will be a pageant of St. Agnes ordered by the clothiers
|
||
and the webbers, which be both many and deft in this good town.
|
||
Albeit thou art a young man and hast ridden far to-day belike,
|
||
and mayhappen thou wilt not be able to endure it:
|
||
so it may be well to bring thee out of this throng straightway.
|
||
Moreover I have bethought me, that there is much of what is
|
||
presently to come which we shall see better from the minster roof,
|
||
or even it may be from the tower: wilt thou come then?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph had liefer have sat there and seen all the plays to the end,
|
||
for they seemed to him exceeding fair, and like to ravish
|
||
the soul from the body; howbeit, being shamefaced, he knew
|
||
not how to gainsay the brother, who took him by the hand,
|
||
and led him through the press to the west front of the minster,
|
||
where on the north side was a little door in a nook.
|
||
So they went up a stair therein a good way till they came into
|
||
a gallery over the western door; and looking forth thence Ralph
|
||
deemed that he could have seen a long way had daylight been,
|
||
for it was higher than the tops of the highest houses.
|
||
|
||
So there they abode a space looking down on the square and its throng,
|
||
and the bells, which had been ringing when they came up, now ceased a while.
|
||
But presently there arose great shouts and clamour amongst the folk below,
|
||
and they could see men with torches drawing near to the pile of wood,
|
||
and then all of a sudden shot up from it a great spiring flame,
|
||
and all the people shouted together, while the bells broke out again
|
||
over their heads.
|
||
|
||
Then the brother pointed aloof with his finger and said:
|
||
"Lo you! fair lord, how bale speaks to bale all along the headlands
|
||
of the down-country, and below there in the thorps by the river!"
|
||
|
||
Forsooth Ralph saw fire after fire break out to the westward;
|
||
and the brother said: "And if we stood over the high altar and looked east,
|
||
ye would see more of such fires and many more; and all these bales
|
||
are piled up and lighted by vassals and villeins of my lord Abbot:
|
||
now to-night they are but mere Midsummer bale-fires; but doubt ye
|
||
not that if there came war into the land each one of these bales would
|
||
mean at least a half-score of stout men, archers and men-at-arms,
|
||
all ready to serve their lord at all adventure. All this the tyrants
|
||
round about, that hate holy Church and oppress the poor, know full well;
|
||
therefore we live in peace in these lands."
|
||
|
||
Ralph hearkened, but said nought; for amidst all this flashing of fire
|
||
and flame, and the crying out of folk, and the measured clash of the bells
|
||
so near him, his thought was confused, and he had no words ready to hand.
|
||
But the monk turned from the parapet and looked him full in the face
|
||
and said to him:
|
||
|
||
"Thou art a fair young man, and strong, and of gentle blood as I deem;
|
||
and thou seemest to me to have the lucky look in thine eyes:
|
||
now I tell thee that if thou wert to take service with my lord thou
|
||
shouldest never rue it. Yea, why shouldest thou not wax in his service,
|
||
and become his Captain of Captains, which is an office meet for kings?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked on him, but answered nought, for he could not
|
||
gather his thoughts for an answer; and the brother said:
|
||
"Think of it, I bid thee, fair young lord; and be sure
|
||
that nowhere shalt thou have a better livelihood, not even
|
||
wert thou a king's son; for the children of my lord Abbot
|
||
are such that none dareth to do them any displeasure;
|
||
neither is any overlord as good as is Holy Church."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "doubtless thou sayest sooth; yet I wot not that I
|
||
am come forth to seek a master."
|
||
|
||
Said the brother: "Nay, do but see the lord Abbot, as thou mayst
|
||
do to-morrow, if thou wilt."
|
||
|
||
"I would have his blessing," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"No less shalt thou have," said the brother; "but look you down yonder;
|
||
for I can see tokens that my lord is even now coming forth."
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked down and beheld the folk parting to right and left,
|
||
and a lane made amidst the throng, guarded by men-at-arms mingled
|
||
with the cross-bearers and brethren; and the sound of trumpets
|
||
blared forth over the noises of the throng.
|
||
|
||
"If the lord Abbot cometh," said Ralph, "I were fain of his blessing
|
||
to-night before I sleep: so go we down straightway that I may kneel
|
||
before him with the rest."
|
||
|
||
"What!" said the monk, "Wilt thou, my lord, kneel amongst all these burgesses
|
||
and vavassors when thou mightest see the Abbot in his own chamber face to face
|
||
alone with him?"
|
||
|
||
"Father," said Ralph, "I am no great man, and I must needs depart
|
||
betimes to-morrow; for I perceive that here are things too mighty
|
||
and over-mastering for such as I be."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said the monk, "yet mayst thou come back again;
|
||
so at present I will make no more words about it."
|
||
|
||
So they went down, and came out amidst the throng, above which
|
||
the bale still flared high, making the summer night as light as day.
|
||
The brother made way for Ralph, so that they stood in the front
|
||
row of folk: they had not been there one minute ere they
|
||
heard the sound of the brethren singing, and the Abbot
|
||
came forth out of the lane that went down to the gate.
|
||
Then all folk went down upon their knees, and thus abode him.
|
||
Right so Ralph deemed that he felt some one pull his sleeve,
|
||
but in such a throng that was nought of a wonder; howbeit, he turned
|
||
and looked to his left, whence came the tug, and saw kneeling beside
|
||
him a tall man-at-arms, who bore a sallet on his head in such
|
||
wise that it covered all his face save the point of his chin.
|
||
Then Ralph bethought him of the man of the leafless tree,
|
||
and he looked to see what armoury the man bore on his coat;
|
||
but he had nothing save a loose frock of white linen over
|
||
his hauberk. Nevertheless, he heard a voice in his ear,
|
||
which said, "The second time!" whereon he deemed that it was
|
||
verily that same man: yet had he nought to do to lay hold
|
||
on him, and he might not speak with him, for even therewith
|
||
came the Abbot in garments all of gold, going a-foot under
|
||
a canopy of baudekyn, with the precious mitre on his head,
|
||
and the crozier borne before him, as if he had been a patriarch:
|
||
for he was an exceeding mighty lord.
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked hard on him as he passed by, blessing the folk with
|
||
upraised hand; and he saw that he was a tall spare man, clean-shaven,
|
||
and thin-faced; but no old man, belike scarce of fifty winters.
|
||
Ralph caught his eye, and he smiled on the goodly young man so kindly,
|
||
that for a moment Ralph deemed that he would dwell in St. Mary's
|
||
House for a little while; for, thought he, if my father, or Nicholas,
|
||
hear of me therein, they must even let me alone to abide here.
|
||
|
||
Therewith the Abbot went forth to his place, and sat him
|
||
down under a goodly cloth of estate, and folk stood up again;
|
||
but when Ralph looked for the man in the sallet he could see
|
||
nought of him. Now when the Abbot was set down, men made
|
||
a clear ring round about the bale, and there came into the said
|
||
ring twelve young men, each clad in nought save a goat-skin,
|
||
and with garlands of leaves and flowers about their middles:
|
||
they had with them a wheel done about with straw and hemp
|
||
payed with pitch and brimstone. They set fire to the same,
|
||
and then trundled it blazing round about the bale twelve times.
|
||
Then came to them twelve damsels clad in such-like guise as
|
||
the young men: then both bands, the young men and the maidens,
|
||
drew near to the bale, which was now burning low, and stood
|
||
about it, and joined hands, and so danced round it a while,
|
||
and meantime the fiddles played an uncouth tune merrily:
|
||
then they sundered, and each couple of men and maids leapt
|
||
backward and forward over the fire; and when they had
|
||
all leapt, came forward men with buckets of water which they
|
||
cast over the dancers till it ran down them in streams.
|
||
Then was all the throng mingled together, and folk trod
|
||
the embers of the bale under foot, and scattered them hither
|
||
and thither all over the square.
|
||
|
||
All this while men were going about with pitchers of wine and ale,
|
||
and other good drinks; and every man drank freely what he would,
|
||
and there was the greatest game and joyance.
|
||
|
||
But now was Ralph exceeding weary, and he said: "Father, mightest thou lead
|
||
me out of this throng, and show me some lair where I may sleep in peace,
|
||
I would thank thee blithely."
|
||
|
||
As he spake there sounded a great horn over the square, and the
|
||
Abbot rose in his place and blessed all the people once more.
|
||
Then said the monk:
|
||
|
||
"Come then, fair field-lord, now shalt thou have thy will of bed."
|
||
And he laughed therewith, and drew Ralph out of the throng and brought him
|
||
into the Abbey, and into a fair little chamber, on the wall whereof was
|
||
pictured St. Christopher, and St. Julian the lord and friend of wayfarers.
|
||
Then he brought Ralph the wine and spices, and gave him good-night,
|
||
and went his ways.
|
||
|
||
As Ralph put the raiment from off him he said to himself a long
|
||
day forsooth, so long that I should have thought no day could
|
||
have held all that has befallen me. So many strange things
|
||
have I seen, that surely my dreams shall be full of them;
|
||
for even now I seem to see them, though I waken.
|
||
|
||
So he lay down in his bed and slept, and dreamed that he was fishing
|
||
with an angle in a deep of Upmeads Water; and he caught many fish;
|
||
but after a while whatsoever he caught was but of gilded paper
|
||
stuffed with wool, and at last the water itself was gone, and he was
|
||
casting his angle on to a dry road. Therewith he awoke and saw
|
||
that day was dawning, and heard the minster clock strike three,
|
||
and heard the thrushes singing their first song in the Prior's garden.
|
||
Then he turned about and slept, and dreamed no more till he woke up
|
||
in the bright sunny morning.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 6
|
||
|
||
Ralph Goeth His Ways From the Abbey of St. Mary at Higham
|
||
|
||
|
||
It was the monk who had been his guide the day before who had now waked him,
|
||
and he stood by the bedside holding a great bowl of milk in his hand,
|
||
and as Ralph sat up, and rubbed his eyes, with all his youthful sloth
|
||
upon him, the monk laughed and said:
|
||
|
||
"That is well, lord, that is well! I love to see a young
|
||
man so sleepy in the morning; it is a sign of thriving;
|
||
and I see thou art thriving heartily for the time when thou
|
||
shalt come back to us to lead my lord's host in battle."
|
||
|
||
"Where be the bale-fires?" said Ralph, not yet fully awake.
|
||
|
||
"Where be they!" said the brother, "where be they! They be sunken
|
||
to cold coals long ago, like many a man's desires and hopes,
|
||
who hath not yet laid his head on the bosom of the mother,
|
||
that is Holy Church. Come, my lord, arise, and drink
|
||
the monk's wine of morning, and then if ye must need ride,
|
||
ride betimes, and ride hard; for the Wood Perilous beginneth
|
||
presently as ye wend your ways; and it were well for thee
|
||
to reach the Burg of the Four Friths ere thou be benighted.
|
||
For, son, there be untoward things in the wood; and though
|
||
some of them be of those for whom Christ's Cross was shapen,
|
||
yet have they forgotten hell, and hope not for heaven,
|
||
and their by-word is, 'Thou shalt lack ere I lack.'
|
||
Furthermore there are worse wights in the wood than they be--
|
||
God save us!--but against them have I a good hauberk,
|
||
a neck-guard which I will give thee, son, in token that I look
|
||
to see thee again at the lovely house of Mary our Mother."
|
||
|
||
Ralph had taken the bowl and was drinking, but he looked over
|
||
the brim, and saw how the monk drew from his frock a pair of beads,
|
||
as like to Dame Katherine's gift as one pea to another,
|
||
save that at the end thereof was a little box shapen crosswise.
|
||
Ralph emptied the bowl hastily, got out of bed, and sat on
|
||
the bed naked, save that on his neck was Dame Katherine's gift.
|
||
He reached out his hand and took the beads from the monk and reddened
|
||
therewith, as was his wont when he had to begin a contest in words:
|
||
but he said:
|
||
|
||
"I thank thee, father; yet God wot if these beads will lie
|
||
sweetly alongside the collar which I bear on my neck as now,
|
||
which is the gift of a dear friend."
|
||
|
||
The monk made up a solemn countenance and said:
|
||
"Thou sayest sooth, my son; it is most like that my chaplet,
|
||
which hath been blessed time was by the holy Richard,
|
||
is no meet fellow for the gift of some light love of thine:
|
||
or even," quoth he, noting Ralph's flush deepen, and his brow knit,
|
||
"or even if it were the gift of a well-willer, yet belike it
|
||
is a worldly gift; therefore, since thy journey is with peril,
|
||
thou wert best do it off and let me keep it for thee till
|
||
thou comest again."
|
||
|
||
Now as he spake he looked anxiously, nay, it may be said greedily,
|
||
at the young man. But Ralph said nought; for in his heart he was determined
|
||
not to chaffer away his gossip's gift for any shaveling's token.
|
||
Yet he knew not how to set his youthful words against the father's wisdom;
|
||
so he stood up, and got his shirt into his hand, and as he did it over
|
||
his head he fell to singing to himself a song of eventide of the High
|
||
House of Upmeads, the words whereof were somewhat like to these:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Art thou man, art thou maid, through the long grass a-going?
|
||
For short shirt thou bearest, and no beard I see,
|
||
And the last wind ere moonrise about thee is blowing.
|
||
Would'st thou meet with thy maiden or look'st thou for me?
|
||
|
||
Bright shineth the moon now, I see thy gown longer;
|
||
And down by the hazels Joan meeteth her lad:
|
||
But hard is thy palm, lass, and scarcely were stronger
|
||
Wat's grip than thine hand-kiss that maketh me glad.
|
||
|
||
And now as the candles shine on us and over,
|
||
Full shapely thy feet are, but brown on the floor,
|
||
As the bare-footed mowers amidst of the clover
|
||
When the gowk's note is broken and mid-June is o'er.
|
||
|
||
O hard are mine hand-palms because on the ridges
|
||
I carried the reap-hook and smote for thy sake;
|
||
And in the hot noon-tide I beat off the midges
|
||
As thou slep'st 'neath the linden o'er-loathe to awake.
|
||
|
||
And brown are my feet now because the sun burneth
|
||
High up on the down-side amidst of the sheep,
|
||
And there in the hollow wherefrom the wind turneth,
|
||
Thou lay'st in my lap while I sung thee to sleep.
|
||
|
||
O friend of the earth, O come nigher and nigher,
|
||
Thou art sweet with the sun's kiss as meads of the May,
|
||
O'er the rocks of the waste, o'er the water and fire,
|
||
Will I follow thee, love, till earth waneth away.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The monk hearkened to him with knitted brow, and as one that liketh
|
||
not the speech of his fellow, though it be not wise to question it:
|
||
then he went out of the chamber, but left the pair of beads lying in
|
||
the window. But Ralph clad himself in haste, and when he was fully clad,
|
||
went up to the window and took the beads in his hand, and looked
|
||
into them curiously and turned them over, but left them lying there.
|
||
Then he went forth also, and came into the forecourt of the house,
|
||
and found there a squire of the men-at-arms with his weapons and horse,
|
||
who helped him to do on his war-gear.
|
||
|
||
So then, just as he was setting his foot in the stirrup, came the
|
||
Brother again, with his face once more grown smiling and happy;
|
||
and in his left hand he held the chaplet, but did not offer it
|
||
to Ralph again, but nodded his head to him kindly, and said:
|
||
"Now, lord, I can see by thy face that thou art set on beholding
|
||
the fashion of this world, and most like it will give thee the rue."
|
||
|
||
Then came a word into Ralph's mouth, and he said:
|
||
"Wilt thou tell me, father, whose work was the world's fashion?"
|
||
|
||
The monk reddened, but answered nought, and Ralph spake again:
|
||
|
||
"Forsooth, did the craftsman of it fumble over his work?"
|
||
|
||
Then the monk scowled, but presently he enforced himself to speak blithely,
|
||
and said: "Such matters are over high for my speech or thine, lord; but I
|
||
tell thee, who knoweth, that there are men in this House who have tried
|
||
the world and found it wanting."
|
||
|
||
Ralph smiled, and said stammering:
|
||
|
||
"Father, did the world try them, and find them wanting perchance?"
|
||
|
||
Then he reddened, and said: "Are ye verily all such as this in this House?
|
||
Who then is it who hath made so fair a lordship, and so goodly a governance
|
||
for so many people? Know ye not at all of the world's ways!"
|
||
|
||
"Fair sir," said the monk sternly, "they that work for us work
|
||
for the Lord and all his servants."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "so it is; and will the Lord be content with the service
|
||
of him whom the devil hath cast out because he hath found him a dastard?"
|
||
|
||
The monk frowned, yet smiled somewhat withal, and said:
|
||
"Sir, thou art young, but thy wits are over old for me;
|
||
but there are they in this House who may answer thee featly;
|
||
men who have read the books of the wise men of the heathen,
|
||
and the doctors of Holy Church, and are even now making books
|
||
for the scribes to copy." Then his voice softened, and he said:
|
||
"Dear lord, we should be right fain of thee here, but since thou
|
||
must needs go, go with my blessing, and double blessing shalt thou
|
||
have when thou comest back to us." Then Ralph remembered his promise
|
||
to the shepherds and took a gold crown from his pouch, and said:
|
||
"Father, I pray thee say a mass for the shepherd downsmen;
|
||
and this is for the offering."
|
||
|
||
The monk praised the gift and the bidding, and kissed Ralph,
|
||
who clomb into his saddle; and the brother hospitalier brought
|
||
him his wallet with good meat and drink therein for the way.
|
||
Then Ralph shook his rein, and rode out of the abbey-gate, smiling
|
||
at the lay-brethren and the men-at-arms who hung about there.
|
||
|
||
But he sighed for pleasure when he found himself in the street again,
|
||
and looked on the shops of the chapmen and the booths of the petty craftsmen,
|
||
as shoe-smiths and glovers, and tinsmiths and coppersmiths, and horners
|
||
and the like; and the folk that he met as he rode toward the southern
|
||
gate seemed to him merry and in good case, and goodly to look on.
|
||
And he thought it pleasant to gaze on the damsels in the street, who were
|
||
fair and well clad: and there were a many of them about his way now,
|
||
especially as he drew nigh the gate before the streets branched off:
|
||
for folk were coming in from the countryside with victual and other wares
|
||
for the town and the Abbey; and surely as he looked on some of the maidens
|
||
he deemed that Hall-song of Upmeads a good one.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 7
|
||
|
||
The Maiden of Bourton Abbas
|
||
|
||
|
||
So went he through the gate, and many, both of men and maids gazed at him,
|
||
for he was fair to look on, but none meddled with him.
|
||
|
||
There was a goodly fauburg outside the gate, and therein were fair houses,
|
||
not a few, with gardens and orchards about them; and when these were
|
||
past he rode through very excellent meadows lying along the water,
|
||
which he crossed thrice, once by a goodly stone bridge and twice by fords;
|
||
for the road was straight, and the river wound about much.
|
||
|
||
After a little while the road led him off the plain meads into
|
||
a country of little hills and dales, the hill-sides covered with
|
||
vineyards and orchards, and the dales plenteous of corn-fields;
|
||
and now amongst these dales Higham was hidden from him.
|
||
|
||
Through this tillage and vine-land he rode a good while, and thought
|
||
he had never seen a goodlier land; and as he went he came on
|
||
husbandmen and women of the country going about their business:
|
||
yet were they not too busy to gaze on him, and most greeted him;
|
||
and with some he gave and took a little speech.
|
||
|
||
These people also he deemed well before the world, for they
|
||
were well clad and buxom, and made no great haste as they went,
|
||
but looked about them as though they deemed the world worth
|
||
looking at, and as if they had no fear either of a blow or a hard
|
||
word for loitering.
|
||
|
||
So he rode till it was noon, and he was amidst a little thorp of grey
|
||
stone houses, trim enough, in a valley wherein there was more of
|
||
wild-wood trees and less of fruit-bearers than those behind him.
|
||
In the thorp was a tavern with the sign of the Nicholas, so Ralph
|
||
deemed it but right to enter a house which was under the guard
|
||
of his master and friend; therefore he lighted down and went in.
|
||
Therein he found a lad of fifteen winters, and a maiden spinning,
|
||
they two alone, who hailed him and asked his pleasure, and he bade
|
||
them bring him meat and drink, and look to his horse, for that he had
|
||
a mind to rest a while. So they brought him bread and flesh, and good
|
||
wine of the hill-side, in a little hall well arrayed as of its kind;
|
||
and he sat down and the damsel served him at table, but the lad,
|
||
who had gone to see to his horse, did not come back.
|
||
|
||
So when he had eaten and drunk, and the damsel was still there,
|
||
he looked on her and saw that she was sad and drooping of aspect;
|
||
and whereas she was a fair maiden, Ralph, now that he was full,
|
||
fell to pitying her, and asked her what was amiss. "For," said he,
|
||
"thou art fair and ailest nought; that is clear to see;
|
||
neither dwellest thou in penury, but by seeming hast enough and to spare.
|
||
Or art thou a servant in this house, and hath any one misused thee?"
|
||
|
||
She wept at his words, for indeed he spoke softly to her;
|
||
then she said: "Young lord, thou art kind, and it is thy
|
||
kindness that draweth the tears from me; else it were not well
|
||
to weep before a young man: therefore I pray thee pardon me.
|
||
As for me, I am no servant, nor has any one misused me:
|
||
the folk round about are good and neighbourly; and this house
|
||
and the croft, and a vineyard hard by, all that is mine own
|
||
and my brother's; that is the lad who hath gone to tend
|
||
thine horse. Yea, and we live in peace here for the most part;
|
||
for this thorp, which is called Bourton Abbas, is a land
|
||
of the Abbey of Higham; though it be the outermost of its lands
|
||
and the Abbot is a good lord and a defence against tyrants.
|
||
All is well with me if one thing were not."
|
||
|
||
"What is thy need then?" said Ralph, "if perchance I might amend it."
|
||
And as he looked on her he deemed her yet fairer than he had done at first.
|
||
But she stayed her weeping and sobbing and said: "Sir, I fear me that I
|
||
have lost a dear friend." "How then," said he, "why fearest thou,
|
||
and knowest not? doth thy friend lie sick between life and death?"
|
||
"O Sir," she said, "it is the Wood which is the evil and disease."
|
||
|
||
"What wood is that?" said he.
|
||
|
||
She said: "The Wood Perilous, that lieth betwixt us and the Burg
|
||
of the Four Friths, and all about the Burg. And, Sir, if ye
|
||
be minded to ride to the Burg to-day, do it not, for through
|
||
the wood must thou wend thereto; and ye are young and lovely.
|
||
Therefore take my rede, and abide till the Chapmen wend thither
|
||
from Higham, who ride many in company. For, look you, fair lord,
|
||
ye have asked of my grief, and this it is and nought else;
|
||
that my very earthly love and speech-friend rode five days
|
||
ago toward the Burg of the Four Friths all alone through
|
||
the Wood Perilous, and he has not come back, though we looked
|
||
to see him in three days' wearing: but his horse has come back,
|
||
and the reins and the saddle all bloody."
|
||
|
||
And she fell a-weeping with the telling of the tale. But Ralph said
|
||
(for he knew not what to say): "Keep a good heart, maiden; maybe he is safe
|
||
and sound; oft are young men fond to wander wide, even as I myself."
|
||
|
||
She looked at him hard and said: "If thou hast stolen
|
||
thyself away from them that love thee, thou hast done amiss.
|
||
Though thou art a lord, and so fair as I see thee, yet will I
|
||
tell thee so much."
|
||
|
||
Ralph reddened and answered nought; but deemed the maiden both fair
|
||
and sweet. But she said: "Whether thou hast done well or ill, do no worse;
|
||
but abide till the Chapmen come from Higham, on their way to the Burg
|
||
of the Four Friths. Here mayst thou lodge well and safely if thou wilt.
|
||
Or if our hall be not dainty enough for thee, then go back to Higham:
|
||
I warrant me the monks will give thee good guesting as long as thou wilt."
|
||
|
||
"Thou art kind, maiden," said Ralph, "but why should I tarry for an
|
||
host? and what should I fear in the Wood, as evil as it may be?
|
||
One man journeying with little wealth, and unknown, and he no weakling,
|
||
but bearing good weapons, hath nought to dread of strong-thieves,
|
||
who ever rob where it is easiest and gainfullest. And what worse
|
||
may I meet than strong-thieves?"
|
||
|
||
"But thou mayest meet worse," she said; and therewith fell a-weeping again,
|
||
and said amidst her tears: "O weary on my life! And why should I heed thee
|
||
when nought heedeth me, neither the Saints of God's House, nor the Master
|
||
of it; nor the father and the mother that were once so piteous kind to me?
|
||
O if I might but drink a draught from the WELL AT THE WORLD'S END!"
|
||
|
||
He turned about on her hastily at that word; for he had risen to depart;
|
||
being grieved at her grief and wishful to be away from it, since he might
|
||
not amend it. But now he said eagerly:
|
||
|
||
"Where then is that Well? Know ye of it in this land?"
|
||
|
||
"At least I know the hearsay thereof," she said; "but as now thou shalt
|
||
know no more from me thereof; lest thou wander the wider in seeking it.
|
||
I would not have thy life spilt."
|
||
|
||
Ever as he looked on her he thought her still fairer;
|
||
and now he looked long on her, saying nought, and she on him
|
||
in likewise, and the blood rose to her cheeks and her brow,
|
||
but she would not turn her from his gaze. At last he said:
|
||
"Well then, I must depart, no more learned than I came:
|
||
but yet am I less hungry and thirsty than I came; and have
|
||
thou thanks therefor."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he took from his pouch a gold piece of Upmeads, which was good,
|
||
and of the touch of the Easterlings, and held it out to her.
|
||
And she put out her open hand and he put the money in it; but thought
|
||
it good to hold her hand a while, and she gainsayed him not.
|
||
|
||
Then he said: "Well then, I must needs depart with things left as they are:
|
||
wilt thou bid thy brother bring hither my horse, for time presses."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said (and her hand was still in his), "Yet do
|
||
thine utmost, yet shalt thou not get to the Burg before nightfall.
|
||
O wilt thou not tarry?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay," he said, "my heart will not suffer it; lest I deem myself a dastard."
|
||
|
||
Then she reddened again, but as if she were wroth; and she drew her
|
||
hand away from his and smote her palms together thrice and cried out:
|
||
"Ho Hugh! bring hither the Knight's horse and be speedy!"
|
||
|
||
And she went hither and thither about the hall and into the buttery
|
||
and back, putting away the victual and vessels from the board and making
|
||
as if she heeded him not: and Ralph looked on her, and deemed that each
|
||
way she moved was better than the last, so shapely of fashion she was;
|
||
and again he bethought him of the Even-song of the High House at Upmeads,
|
||
and how it befitted her; for she went barefoot after the manner of maidens
|
||
who work afield, and her feet were tanned with the sun of hay harvest,
|
||
but as shapely as might be; but she was clad goodly withal, in a green
|
||
gown wrought with flowers.
|
||
|
||
So he watched her going to and fro; and at last he said:
|
||
"Maiden, wilt thou come hither a little, before I depart?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said; and came and stood before him:
|
||
and he deemed that she was scarce so sad as she had been;
|
||
and she stood with her hands joined and her eyes downcast.
|
||
Then he said:
|
||
|
||
"Now I depart. Yet I would say this, that I am sorry of thy sorrow:
|
||
and now since I shall never see thee more, small would be the harm if I
|
||
were to kiss thy lips and thy face."
|
||
|
||
And therewith he took her hands in his and drew her to him, and put his arms
|
||
about her and kissed her many times, and she nothing lothe by seeming;
|
||
and he found her as sweet as May blossom.
|
||
|
||
Thereafter she smiled on him, yet scarce for gladness, and said:
|
||
"It is not all so sure that I shall not see thee again;
|
||
yet shall I do to thee as thou hast done to me."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she took his face between her hands, and kissed him well-favouredly;
|
||
so that the hour seemed good to him.
|
||
|
||
Then she took him by the hand and led him out-a-doors to his horse,
|
||
whereby the lad had been standing a good while; and he when he saw his
|
||
sister come out with the fair knight he scowled on them, and handled
|
||
a knife which hung at his girdle; but Ralph heeded him nought.
|
||
As for the damsel, she put her brother aside, and held the stirrup
|
||
for Ralph; and when he was in the saddle she said to him:
|
||
|
||
"All luck go with thee! Forsooth I deem thee safer in the Wood than my
|
||
words said. Verily I deem that if thou wert to meet a company of foemen,
|
||
thou wouldest compel them to do thy bidding."
|
||
|
||
"Farewell to thee maiden," said Ralph, "and mayst thou find thy
|
||
beloved whole and well, and that speedily. Fare-well!"
|
||
|
||
She said no more; so he shook his rein and rode his ways; but looked
|
||
over his shoulder presently and saw her standing yet barefoot on the dusty
|
||
highway shading her eyes from the afternoon sun and looking after him,
|
||
and he waved his hand to her and so went his ways between the houses
|
||
of the Thorp.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 8
|
||
|
||
Ralph Cometh to the Wood Perilous. An Adventure Therein
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now when he was clear of the Thorp the road took him out
|
||
of the dale; and when he was on the hill's brow he saw that
|
||
the land was of other fashion from that which lay behind him.
|
||
For the road went straight through a rough waste, no pasture,
|
||
save for mountain sheep or goats, with a few bushes scattered
|
||
about it; and beyond this the land rose into a long ridge;
|
||
and on the ridge was a wood thick with trees, and no break in them.
|
||
So on he rode, and soon passed that waste, which was dry and parched,
|
||
and the afternoon sun was hot on it; so he deemed it good to come
|
||
under the shadow of the thick trees (which at the first were
|
||
wholly beech trees), for it was now the hottest of the day.
|
||
There was still a beaten way between the tree-boles, though
|
||
not overwide, albeit, a highway, since it pierced the wood.
|
||
So thereby he went at a soft pace for the saving of his horse,
|
||
and thought but little of all he had been told of the perils
|
||
of the way, and not a little of the fair maid whom he had left
|
||
behind at the Thorp.
|
||
|
||
After a while the thick beech-wood gave out, and he came into a place
|
||
where great oaks grew, fair and stately, as though some lord's
|
||
wood-reeve had taken care that they should not grow over close together,
|
||
and betwixt them the greensward was fine, unbroken, and flowery.
|
||
Thereby as he rode he beheld deer, both buck and hart and roe,
|
||
and other wild things, but for a long while no man.
|
||
|
||
The afternoon wore and still he rode the oak wood,
|
||
and deemed it a goodly forest for the greatest king on earth.
|
||
At last he came to where another road crossed the way he followed,
|
||
and about the crossway was the ground clearer of trees,
|
||
while beyond it the trees grew thicker, and there was some
|
||
underwood of holly and thorn as the ground fell off as towards
|
||
a little dale.
|
||
|
||
There Ralph drew rein, because he doubted in his mind which was
|
||
his right road toward the Burg of the Four Friths; so he got off
|
||
his horse and abode a little, if perchance any might come by;
|
||
he looked about him, and noted on the road that crossed his,
|
||
and the sward about it, the sign of many horses having gone by,
|
||
and deemed that they had passed but a little while.
|
||
So he lay on the ground to rest him and let his horse stray
|
||
about and bite the grass; for the beast loved him and would
|
||
come at his call or his whistle.
|
||
|
||
Ralph was drowsy when he lay down, and though he said to
|
||
himself that he would nowise go to sleep, yet as oft happens,
|
||
he had no defence to make against sleepiness, and presently
|
||
his hands relaxed, his head fell aside, and he slept quietly.
|
||
When he woke up in a little space of time, he knew at once that
|
||
something had awaked him and that he had not had his sleep out;
|
||
for in his ears was the trampling of horse-hoofs and the clashing
|
||
of weapons and loud speech of men. So he leapt up hastily,
|
||
and while he was yet scarce awake, took to whistling on his horse;
|
||
but even therewith those men were upon him, and two came up to him
|
||
and laid hold of him; and when he asked them what they would,
|
||
they bade him hold his peace.
|
||
|
||
Now his eyes cleared, and he saw that those men were in goodly war-gear,
|
||
and bore coats of plate, and cuir-bouilly, or of bright steel; they held
|
||
long spears and were girt with good swords; there was a pennon with them,
|
||
green, whereon was done a golden tower, embattled, amidst of four white ways;
|
||
and the same token bore many of the men on their coats and sleeves.
|
||
Unto this same pennon he was brought by the two men who had taken him,
|
||
and under it, on a white horse, sat a Knight bravely armed at all points
|
||
with the Tower and Four Ways on his green surcoat; and beside him was
|
||
an ancient man-at-arms, with nought but an oak wreath on his bare head,
|
||
and his white beard falling low over his coat: but behind these twain a tall
|
||
young man, also on a white horse and very gaily clad, upheld the pennon.
|
||
On one side of these three were five men, unarmed, clad in green coats,
|
||
with a leafless tree done on them in gold: they were stout carles,
|
||
bearded and fierce-faced: their hands were bound behind their backs
|
||
and their feet tied together under their horses' bellies. The company
|
||
of those about the Knight, Ralph deemed, would number ten score men.
|
||
|
||
So when those twain stayed Ralph before the Knight, he turned
|
||
to the old man and said:
|
||
|
||
"It is of no avail asking this lither lad if he be of them or no:
|
||
for no will be his answer. But what sayest thou, Oliver?"
|
||
|
||
The ancient man drew closer to Ralph and looked at him up
|
||
and down and all about; for those two turned him about
|
||
as if he had been a joint of flesh on the roasting-jack;
|
||
and at last he said:
|
||
|
||
"His beard is sprouting, else might ye have taken him for a maid
|
||
of theirs, one of those of whom we wot. But to say sooth I seem to know
|
||
the fashion of his gear, even as Duke Jacob knew Joseph's tabard.
|
||
So ask him whence he is, lord, and if he lie, then I bid bind
|
||
him and lead him away, that we may have a true tale out of him;
|
||
otherwise let him go and take his chance; for we will not waste
|
||
the bread of the Good Town on him."
|
||
|
||
The Knight looked hard on Ralph, and spake to him somewhat courteously:
|
||
|
||
"Whence art thou, fair Sir, and what is thy name? for we have many foes
|
||
in the wildwood."
|
||
|
||
Ralph reddened as he answered: "I am of Upmeads beyond
|
||
the down country; and I pray thee let me be gone on mine errands.
|
||
It is meet that thou deal with thine own robbers and reivers,
|
||
but not with me."
|
||
|
||
Then cried out one of the bounden men: "Thou liest, lad, we be no robbers."
|
||
But he of the Knight's company who stood by him smote the man on the mouth
|
||
and said: "Hold thy peace, runagate! Thou shalt give tongue to-morrow
|
||
when the hangman hath thee under his hands."
|
||
|
||
The Knight took no heed of this; but turned to the ancient warrior and said:
|
||
"Hath he spoken truth so far?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, Sir Aymer," quoth Oliver; "And now meseems I know him better
|
||
than he knoweth me."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he turned to Ralph and said: "How fareth Long Nicholas, my lord?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph reddened again: "He is well," said he.
|
||
|
||
Then said the Knight: "Is the young man of a worthy house, Oliver?"
|
||
|
||
But ere the elder could speak, Ralph brake in and said:
|
||
"Old warrior, I bid thee not to tell out my name,
|
||
as thou lovest Nicholas."
|
||
|
||
Old Oliver laughed and said: "Well, Nicholas and I have
|
||
been friends in a way, as well as foes; and for the sake
|
||
of the old days his name shall help thee, young lord."
|
||
Then he said to his Knight: "Yea, Sir Aymer, he is of a goodly
|
||
house and an ancient; but thou hearest how he adjureth me.
|
||
Ye shall let his name alone."
|
||
|
||
The Knight looked silently on Ralph for a while; then he said:
|
||
"Wilt thou wend with us to the Burg of the Four Friths, fair Sir?
|
||
Wert thou not faring thither? Or what else dost thou in
|
||
the Wood Perilous?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph turned it over in his mind; and though he saw no cause why
|
||
he should not join himself to their company, yet something in his
|
||
heart forbade him to rise to the fly too eagerly; so he did but say:
|
||
"I am seeking adventures, fair lord."
|
||
|
||
The Knight smiled: "Then mayst thou fill thy budget with them if thou
|
||
goest with us," quoth he. Now Ralph did not know how he might gainsay
|
||
so many men at arms in the long run, though he were scarce willing to go;
|
||
so he made no haste to answer; and even therewith came a man running,
|
||
through the wood up from the dale; a long, lean carle, meet for running,
|
||
with brogues on his feet, and nought else but a shirt; the company parted
|
||
before him to right and left to let him come to the Knight, as though
|
||
he had been looked for; and when he was beside him, the Knight leaned
|
||
down while the carle spake softly to him and all men drew out of ear-shot.
|
||
And when the carle had given his message the Knight drew himself straight
|
||
up in his saddle again and lifted up his hand and cried out:
|
||
|
||
"Oliver! Oliver! lead on the way thou wottest! Spur! spur, all men!"
|
||
|
||
Therewith he blew one blast from a horn which hung at his saddle-bow;
|
||
the runner leapt up behind old Oliver, and the whole company went off
|
||
at a smart trot somewhat south-east, slantwise of the cross-roads,
|
||
where the wood was nought cumbered with undergrowth; and presently
|
||
they were all gone to the last horse-tail, and no man took any more
|
||
note of Ralph.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 9
|
||
|
||
Another Adventure in the Wood Perilous
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph left alone pondered a little; and thought that he would
|
||
by no means go hastily to the Burg of the Four Friths.
|
||
Said he to himself; This want-way is all unlike to the one near
|
||
our house at home: for belike adventures shall befall here:
|
||
I will even abide here for an hour or two; but will have my horse
|
||
by me and keep awake, lest something hap to me unawares.
|
||
|
||
Therewith he whistled for Falcon his horse, and the beast came to him,
|
||
and whinnied for love of him, and Ralph smiled and tied him to a
|
||
sapling anigh, and himself sat down on the grass, and pondered many things;
|
||
as to what folk were about at Upmeads, and how his brethren were faring;
|
||
and it was now about five hours after noon, and the sun's rays fell aslant
|
||
through the boughs of the noble oaks, and the scent of the grass and bracken
|
||
trodden by the horse-hoofs of that company went up into the warm summer air.
|
||
A while he sat musing but awake, though the faint sound of a little stream
|
||
in the dale below mingled with all the lesser noises of the forest did
|
||
its best to soothe him to sleep again: and presently had its way with him;
|
||
for he leaned his head back on the bracken, and in a minute or two was
|
||
sleeping once more and dreaming some dream made up of masterless memories
|
||
of past days.
|
||
|
||
When he awoke again he lay still a little while, wondering where in the world
|
||
he was, but as the drowsiness left him, he arose and looked about,
|
||
and saw that the sun was sinking low and gilding the oakboles red.
|
||
He stood awhile and watched the gambols of three hares, who had drawn
|
||
nigh him while he slept, and now noted him not; and a little way he saw
|
||
through the trees a hart and two hinds going slowly from grass to grass,
|
||
feeding in the cool eventide; but presently he saw them raise their heads
|
||
and amble off down the slope of the little dale, and therewith he himself
|
||
turned his face sharply toward the north-west, for he was fine-eared
|
||
as well as sharp-eyed, and on a little wind which had just arisen came
|
||
down to him the sound of horse-hoofs once more.
|
||
|
||
So he went up to Falcon and loosed him, and stood by him bridle
|
||
in hand, and looked to it that his sword was handy to him:
|
||
and he hearkened, and the sound drew nigher and nigher to him.
|
||
Then lightly he got into the saddle and gathered the reins into
|
||
his left hand, and sat peering up the trodden wood-glades, lest
|
||
he should have to ride for his life suddenly. Therewith he heard
|
||
voices talking roughly and a man whistling, and athwart the glade
|
||
of the wood from the northwest, or thereabout, came new folk;
|
||
and he saw at once that there went two men a-horseback and armed;
|
||
so he drew his sword and abode them close to the want-ways. Presently
|
||
they saw the shine of his war-gear, and then they came but a little
|
||
nigher ere they drew rein, and sat on their horses looking toward him.
|
||
Then Ralph saw that they were armed and clad as those of the company
|
||
which had gone before. One of the armed men rode a horse-length
|
||
after his fellow, and bore a long spear over his shoulder.
|
||
But the other who rode first was girt with a sword, and had a little
|
||
axe hanging about his neck, and with his right hand he seemed
|
||
to be leading something, Ralph could not see what at first,
|
||
as his left side was turned toward Ralph and the want-way.
|
||
|
||
Now, as Ralph looked, he saw that at the spearman's saddle-bow was
|
||
hung a man's head, red-haired and red-bearded; for this man now drew
|
||
a little nigher, and cried out to Ralph in a loud and merry voice:
|
||
"Hail, knight! whither away now, that thou ridest the green-wood
|
||
sword in hand?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph was just about to answer somewhat, when the first man moved a little
|
||
nigher, and as he did so he turned so that Ralph could see what betid on his
|
||
right hand; and lo! he was leading a woman by a rope tied about her neck
|
||
(though her hands were loose), as though he were bringing a cow to market.
|
||
When the man stayed his horse she came forward and stood within the slack
|
||
of the rope by the horse's head, and Ralph could see her well, that though she
|
||
was not to say naked, her raiment was but scanty, for she had nought to cover
|
||
her save one short and strait little coat of linen, and shoes on her feet.
|
||
Yet Ralph deemed her to be of some degree, whereas he caught the gleam
|
||
of gold and gems on her hands, and there was a golden chaplet on her head.
|
||
She stood now by the horse's head with her hands folded, looking on,
|
||
as if what was tiding and to betide, were but a play done for her pleasure.
|
||
|
||
So when Ralph looked on her, he was silent a while; and the spearman cried
|
||
out again: "'Ho, young man, wilt thou speak, or art thou dumb-foundered
|
||
for fear of us?"
|
||
|
||
But Ralph knit his brows, and was first red and then pale;
|
||
for he was both wroth, and doubtful how to go to work;
|
||
but he said:
|
||
|
||
"I ride to seek adventures; and here meseemeth is one come to hand.
|
||
Or what will ye with the woman?"
|
||
|
||
Said the man who had the woman in tow: "Trouble not thine head therewith;
|
||
we lead her to her due doom. As for thee, be glad that thou art
|
||
not her fellow; since forsooth thou seemest not to be one of them;
|
||
so go thy ways in peace."
|
||
|
||
"No foot further will I go," said Ralph, "till ye loose the woman
|
||
and let her go; or else tell me what her worst deed is."
|
||
|
||
The man laughed, and said: "That were a long tale to tell; and it
|
||
is little like that thou shalt live to hear the ending thereof."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he wagged his head at the spearman, who suddenly let his spear
|
||
fall into the rest, and spurred, and drave on at Ralph all he might.
|
||
There and then had the tale ended, but Ralph, who was wary,
|
||
though he were young, and had Falcon well in hand, turned his wrist
|
||
and made the horse swerve, so that the man-at-arms missed his attaint,
|
||
but could not draw rein speedily enough to stay his horse;
|
||
and as he passed by all bowed over his horse's neck, Ralph gat his
|
||
sword two-handed and rose in his stirrups and smote his mightiest;
|
||
and the sword caught the foeman on the neck betwixt sallet and jack,
|
||
and nought held before it, neither leather nor ring-mail, so that the man's
|
||
head was nigh smitten off, and he fell clattering from his saddle:
|
||
yet his stirrups held him, so that his horse went dragging him on earth
|
||
as he gallopped over rough and smooth betwixt the trees of the forest.
|
||
Then Ralph turned about to deal with his fellow, and even through
|
||
the wrath and fury of the slaying saw him clear and bright against
|
||
the trees as he sat handling his axe doubtfully, but the woman was
|
||
fallen back again somewhat.
|
||
|
||
But even as Ralph raised his sword and pricked forward, the woman sprang
|
||
as light as a leopard on to the saddle behind the foeman, and wound her arms
|
||
about him and dragged him back just as he was raising his axe to smite her,
|
||
and as Ralph rode forward she cried out to him, "Smite him, smite!
|
||
O lovely creature of God!"
|
||
|
||
Therewith was Ralph beside them, and though he were loth to slay
|
||
a man held in the arms of a woman, yet he feared lest the man
|
||
should slay her with some knife-stroke unless he made haste;
|
||
so he thrust his sword through him, and the man died at once,
|
||
and fell headlong off his horse, dragging down the woman with him.
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph lighted down from his horse, and the woman rose
|
||
up to him, her white smock all bloody with the slain man.
|
||
Nevertheless was she as calm and stately before him, as if she
|
||
were sitting on the dais of a fair hall; so she said to him:
|
||
|
||
"Young warrior, thou hast done well and knightly, and I shall
|
||
look to it that thou have thy reward. And now I rede thee go
|
||
not to the Burg of the Four Friths; for this tale of thee shall
|
||
get about and they shall take thee, if it were out of the very
|
||
Frith-stool, and there for thee should be the scourge and the gibbet;
|
||
for they of that Burg be robbers and murderers merciless.
|
||
Yet well it were that thou ride hence presently; for those
|
||
be behind my tormentors whom thou hast slain, who will be
|
||
as an host to thee, and thou mayst not deal with them.
|
||
If thou follow my rede, thou wilt take the way that goeth hence
|
||
east away, and then shalt thou come to Hampton under Scaur,
|
||
where the folk are peaceable and friendly."
|
||
|
||
He looked at her hard as she spake, and noted that she spake but slowly,
|
||
and turned red and white and red again as she looked at him.
|
||
But whatever she did, and in spite of her poor attire, he deemed he had
|
||
never seen woman so fair. Her hair was dark red, but her eyes grey,
|
||
and light at whiles and yet at whiles deep; her lips betwixt thin
|
||
and full, but yet when she spoke or smiled clad with all enticements;
|
||
her chin round and so wrought as none was ever better wrought;
|
||
her body strong and well-knit; tall she was, with fair and large arms,
|
||
and limbs most goodly of fashion, of which but little was hidden,
|
||
since her coat was but thin and scanty. But whatever may be said
|
||
of her, no man would have deemed her aught save most lovely.
|
||
Now her face grew calm and stately again as it was at the first,
|
||
and she laid a hand on Ralph's shoulder, and smiled in his face and said:
|
||
|
||
"Surely thou art fair, though thy strokes be not light."
|
||
Then she took his hand and caressed it, and said again:
|
||
"Dost thou deem that thou hast done great things,
|
||
fair child? Maybe. Yet some will say that thou hast but slain
|
||
two butchers: and if thou wilt say that thou hast delivered me;
|
||
yet it may be that I should have delivered myself ere long.
|
||
Nevertheless hold up thine heart, for I think that greater
|
||
things await thee."
|
||
|
||
Then she turned about, and saw the dead man, how his
|
||
feet yet hung in the stirrups as his fellow's had done,
|
||
save that the horse of this one stood nigh still, only reaching
|
||
his head down to crop a mouthful of grass; so she said:
|
||
"Take him away, that I may mount on his horse."
|
||
|
||
So he drew the dead man's feet out of the stirrups, and dragged
|
||
him away to where the bracken grew deep, and laid him down there,
|
||
so to say hidden. Then he turned back to the lady, who was pacing up
|
||
and down near the horse as the beast fed quietly on the cool grass.
|
||
When Ralph came back she took the reins in her hand and put one
|
||
foot in the stirrup as if she would mount at once; but suddenly
|
||
lighted down again, and turning to Ralph, cast her arms about him,
|
||
and kissed his face many times, blushing red as a rose meantime.
|
||
Then lightly she gat her up into the saddle, and bestrode the beast,
|
||
and smote his flanks with her heels, and went her ways riding speedily
|
||
toward the south-east, so that she was soon out of sight.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph stood still looking the way she had gone and wondering at
|
||
the adventure; and he pondered her words and held debate with himself
|
||
whether he should take the road she bade him. And he said within himself:
|
||
"Hitherto have I been safe and have got no scratch of a weapon upon me,
|
||
and this is a place by seeming for all adventures; and little way moreover
|
||
shall I make in the night if I must needs go to Hampton under Scaur,
|
||
where dwell those peaceable people; and it is now growing dusk already.
|
||
So I will abide the morning hereby; but I will be wary and let the wood
|
||
cover me if I may."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he went and drew the body of the slain man down into a little
|
||
hollow where the bracken was high and the brambles grew strong, so that it
|
||
might not be lightly seen. Then he called to him Falcon, his horse,
|
||
and looked about for cover anigh the want-way, and found a little thin
|
||
coppice of hazel and sweet chestnut, just where two great oaks had been
|
||
felled a half score years ago; and looking through the leaves thence,
|
||
he could see the four ways clearly enough, though it would not be easy
|
||
for anyone to see him thence.
|
||
|
||
Thither he betook him, and he did the rein off Falcon,
|
||
but tethered him by a halter in the thickest of the copse, and sat
|
||
down himself nigher to the outside thereof; he did off his helm
|
||
and drew what meat he had from out his wallet and ate and drank
|
||
in the beginning of the summer night; and then sat pondering
|
||
awhile on what had befallen on this second day of his wandering.
|
||
The moon shone out presently, little clouded, but he saw her not,
|
||
for though he strove to wake awhile, slumber soon overcame him,
|
||
and nothing waked him till the night was passing, nor did
|
||
he see aught of that company of which the lady had spoken,
|
||
and which in sooth came not.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 10
|
||
|
||
A Meeting and a Parting in the Wood Perilous
|
||
|
||
|
||
When the first glimmer of dawn was in the sky he awoke in
|
||
the fresh morning, and sat up and hearkened, for even as he woke
|
||
he had heard something, since wariness had made him wakeful.
|
||
Now he hears the sound of horse-hoofs on the hard road,
|
||
and riseth to his feet and goeth to the very edge of the copse;
|
||
looking thence he saw a rider who was just come to the very
|
||
crossing of the roads. The new comer was much muffled
|
||
in a wide cloak, but he seemed to be a man low of stature.
|
||
He peered all round about him as if to see if the way were clear,
|
||
and then alighted down from horseback and let the hood fall off
|
||
his head, and seemed pondering which way were the best to take.
|
||
By this time it was grown somewhat lighter and Ralph,
|
||
looking hard, deemed that the rider was a woman; so he stepped
|
||
forward lightly, and as he came on to the open sward about the way,
|
||
the new comer saw him and put a foot into the stirrup to mount,
|
||
but yet looked at him over the shoulder, and then presently left
|
||
the saddle and came forward a few steps as if to meet Ralph,
|
||
having cast the cloak to the ground.
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph saw that it was none other than the damsel of the hostelry
|
||
of Bourton Abbas, and he came up to her and reached out his hand
|
||
to her, and she took it in both hers and held it and said, smiling:
|
||
"It is nought save mountains that shall never meet. Here have I followed
|
||
on thy footsteps; yet knew I not where thou wouldst be in the forest.
|
||
And now I am glad to have fallen in with thee; for I am going a long way."
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked on her and himseemed some pain or shame touched his heart,
|
||
and he said: "I am a knight adventurous; I have nought to do save
|
||
to seek adventures. Why should I not go with thee?"
|
||
|
||
She looked at him earnestly awhile and said: "Nay, it may
|
||
not be; thou art a lord's son, and I a yeoman's daughter."
|
||
She stopped, and he said nothing in answer.
|
||
|
||
"Furthermore," said she, "it is a long way, and I know not how long."
|
||
Again he made no answer, and she said: "I am going to seek the WELL AT
|
||
THE WORLD'S END, and to find it and live, or to find it not, and die."
|
||
|
||
He spake after a while: "Why should I not come with thee?"
|
||
|
||
It was growing light now, and he could see that she reddened
|
||
and then turned pale and set her lips close.
|
||
|
||
Then she said: "Because thou willest it not: because thou hadst
|
||
liefer make that journey with some one else."
|
||
|
||
He reddened in his turn, and said: "I know of no one else who shall
|
||
go with me."
|
||
|
||
"Well," she said, "it is all one, I will not have thee go with me."
|
||
"Yea, and why not?" said he. She said: "Wilt thou swear to me that
|
||
nought hath happed to thee to change thee betwixt this and Bourton?
|
||
If thou wilt, then come with me; if thou wilt not, then refrain thee.
|
||
And this I say because I see and feel that there is some change in thee
|
||
since yesterday, so that thou wouldst scarce be dealing truly in being
|
||
my fellow in this quest: for they that take it up must be single-hearted,
|
||
and think of nought save the quest and the fellow that is with them."
|
||
|
||
She looked on him sadly, and his many thoughts tongue-tied him a while;
|
||
but at last he said: "Must thou verily go on this quest?"
|
||
"Ah," she said, "now since I have seen thee and spoken with thee again,
|
||
all need there is that I should follow it at once."
|
||
|
||
Then they both kept silence, and when she spoke again her
|
||
voice was as if she were gay against her will. She said:
|
||
"Here am I come to these want-ways, and there are three roads
|
||
besides the one I came by, and I wot that this that goeth south
|
||
will bring me to the Burg of the Four Friths; and so much I
|
||
know of the folk of the said Burg that they would mock at me
|
||
if I asked them of the way to the Well at the World's End.
|
||
And as for the western way I deem that that will lead me back
|
||
again to the peopled parts whereof I know; therefore I am minded
|
||
to take the eastern way. What sayest thou, fair lord?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "I have heard of late that it leadeth presently to Hampton
|
||
under the Scaur, where dwelleth a people of goodwill."
|
||
|
||
"Who told thee this tale?" said she. Ralph answered, reddening again,
|
||
"I was told by one who seemed to know both of that folk, and of the Burg
|
||
of the Four Friths, and she said that the folk of Hampton were a good folk,
|
||
and that they of the Burg were evil."
|
||
|
||
The damsel smiled sadly when she heard him say 'She,' and when
|
||
he had done she said: "And I have heard, and not from yesterday,
|
||
that at Hampton dwelleth the Fellowship of the Dry Tree,
|
||
and that those of the fellowship are robbers and reivers.
|
||
Nevertheless they will perchance be little worse than the others;
|
||
and the tale tells that the way to the Well at the World's
|
||
End is by the Dry Tree; so thither will I at all adventure.
|
||
And now will I say farewell to thee, for it is most like that I
|
||
shall not see thee again."
|
||
|
||
"O, maiden!" said Ralph, "why wilt thou not go back to Bourton Abbas?
|
||
There I might soon meet thee again, and yet, indeed, I also am like to go
|
||
to Hampton. Shall I not see thee there?"
|
||
|
||
She shook her head and said: "Nay, since I must go so far,
|
||
I shall not tarry; and, sooth to say, if I saw thee coming
|
||
in at one gate I should go out by the other, for why
|
||
should I dally with a grief that may not be amended.
|
||
For indeed I wot that thou shalt soon forget to wish to see me,
|
||
either at Bourton Abbas or elsewhere; so I will say no more
|
||
than once again farewell."
|
||
|
||
Then she came close to him and put her hands on his shoulders
|
||
and kissed his mouth; and then she turned away swiftly,
|
||
caught up her cloak, and gat lightly into the saddle,
|
||
and so shook her reins and rode away east toward Hampton,
|
||
and left Ralph standing there downcast and pondering many things.
|
||
It was still so early in the summer morning, and he knew
|
||
so little what to do, that presently he turned and walked
|
||
back to his lair amongst the hazels, and there he lay down,
|
||
and his thoughts by then were all gone back again to the lovely
|
||
lady whom he had delivered, and he wondered if he should ever
|
||
see her again, and, sooth to say, he sorely desired to see her.
|
||
Amidst such thoughts he fell asleep again, for the night yet
|
||
owed him something of rest, so young as he was and so hard
|
||
as he had toiled, both body and mind, during the past day.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 11
|
||
|
||
Now Must Ralph Ride For It
|
||
|
||
|
||
When he awoke again the sun was shining through the hazel leaves, though it
|
||
was yet early; he arose and looked to his horse, and led him out of the hazel
|
||
copse and stood and looked about him; and lo! a man coming slowly through
|
||
the wood on Ralph's right hand, and making as it seemed for the want-way;
|
||
he saw Ralph presently, and stopped, and bent a bow which he held
|
||
in his hand, and then came towards him warily, with the arrow nocked.
|
||
But Ralph went to meet him with his sword in his sheath, and leading Falcon
|
||
by the rein, and the man stopped and took the shaft from the string:
|
||
he had no armour, but there was a little axe and a wood-knife in his girdle;
|
||
he was clad in homespun, and looked like a carle of the country-side.
|
||
Now he greeted Ralph, and Ralph gave him the sele of the day, and saw
|
||
that the new-comer was both tall and strong, dark of skin and black-haired,
|
||
but of a cheerful countenance. He spake frank and free to Ralph, and said:
|
||
"Whither away, lord, out of the woodland hall, and the dwelling of deer
|
||
and strong-thieves? I would that the deer would choose them a captain,
|
||
and gather head and destroy the thieves--and some few others with them."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "I may scarce tell thee till I know myself.
|
||
Awhile ago I was minded for the Burg of the Four Friths;
|
||
but now I am for Hampton under Scaur."
|
||
|
||
"Yea?" said the carle, "when the Devil drives, to hell must we."
|
||
|
||
"What meanest thou, good fellow?" said Ralph, "Is Hampton then so evil
|
||
an abode?" And indeed it was in his mind that the adventure of the lady
|
||
led captive bore some evil with it.
|
||
|
||
Said the carle: "If thou wert not a stranger in these parts I
|
||
need not to answer thy question; but I will answer it presently,
|
||
yet not till we have eaten, for I hunger, and have in this wallet
|
||
both bread and cheese, and thou art welcome to a share thereof,
|
||
if thou hungerest also, as is most like, whereas thou art young
|
||
and fresh coloured."
|
||
|
||
"So it is," said Ralph, laughing, "and I also may help to spread this
|
||
table in the wilderness, since there are yet some crumbs in my wallet.
|
||
Let us sit down and fall to at once."
|
||
|
||
"By your leave, Sir Gentleman," said the carle, "we will go
|
||
a few yards further on, where there is a woodland brook,
|
||
whereof we may drink when my bottle faileth."
|
||
|
||
"Nay, I may better that," said Ralph, "for I have wherewithal."
|
||
"Nevertheless," said the carle, "we will go thither, for here
|
||
is it too open for so small a company as ours, since this
|
||
want-way hath an ill name, and I shall lead thee whereas we
|
||
shall be somewhat out of the way of murder-carles. So come on,
|
||
if thou trusteth in me."
|
||
|
||
Ralph yeasaid him, and they went together a furlong from
|
||
the want-way into a little hollow place wherethrough ran a clear
|
||
stream betwixt thick-leaved alders. The carle led Ralph
|
||
to the very lip of the water so that the bushes covered them;
|
||
there they sat down and drew what they had from their wallets,
|
||
and so fell to meat; and amidst of the meat the carle said:
|
||
|
||
"Fair Knight, as I suppose thou art one, I will ask thee if any need
|
||
draweth thee to Hampton?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "The need of giving the go-by to the Burg of the Four Friths,
|
||
since I hear tell that the folk thereof be robbers and murderers."
|
||
|
||
"Thou shalt find that out better, lord, by going thither; but I shall
|
||
tell thee, that though men may slay and steal there time and time about,
|
||
yet in regard to Hampton under Scaur, it is Heaven, wherein men sin not.
|
||
And I am one who should know, for I have been long dwelling in Hell,
|
||
that is Hampton; and now am I escaped thence, and am minded for the Burg,
|
||
if perchance I may be deemed there a man good enough to ride in their host,
|
||
whereby I might avenge me somewhat on them that have undone me:
|
||
some of whom meseemeth must have put in thy mouth that word against the Burg.
|
||
Is it not so?"
|
||
|
||
"Maybe," said Ralph, "for thou seemest to be a true man."
|
||
No more he spake though he had half a mind to tell the carle
|
||
all the tale of that adventure; but something held him back when
|
||
he thought of that lady and her fairness. Yet again his heart
|
||
misgave him of what might betide that other maiden at Hampton,
|
||
and he was unquiet, deeming that he must needs follow her thither.
|
||
The carle looked on him curiously and somewhat anxiously,
|
||
but Ralph's eyes were set on something that was not there;
|
||
or else maybe had he looked closely on the carle he might have
|
||
deemed that longing to avenge him whereof he spoke did not change
|
||
his face much; for in truth there was little wrath in it.
|
||
|
||
Now the carle said: "Thou hast a tale which thou deemest unmeet
|
||
for my ears, as it well may be. Well, thou must speak, or refrain
|
||
from speaking, what thou wilt; but thou art so fair a young knight,
|
||
and so blithe with a poor man, and withal I deem that thou mayest
|
||
help me to some gain and good, that I will tell thee a true tale:
|
||
and first that the Burg is a good town under a good lord,
|
||
who is no tyrant nor oppressor of peaceful men; and that thou mayest
|
||
dwell there in peace as to the folk thereof, who be good folk,
|
||
albeit they be no dastards to let themselves be cowed by murder-carles.
|
||
And next I will tell thee that the folk of the town of Hampton
|
||
be verily as harmless and innocent as sheep; but that they be under
|
||
evil lords who are not their true lords, who lay heavy burdens
|
||
on them and torment them even to the destroying of their lives:
|
||
and lastly I will tell thee that I was one of those poor people,
|
||
though not so much a sheep as the more part of them, therefore have
|
||
these tyrants robbed me of my croft, and set another man in my house;
|
||
and me they would have slain had I not fled to the wood that it
|
||
might cover me. And happy it was for me that I had neither wife,
|
||
nor chick, nor child, else had they done as they did with my brother,
|
||
whose wife was too fair for him, since he dwelt at Hampton; so that
|
||
they took her away from him to make sport for them of the Dry Tree,
|
||
who dwell in the Castle of the Scaur, who shall be thy masters
|
||
if thou goest thither.
|
||
|
||
"This is my tale, and thine, I say, I ask not; but I deem that thou shalt
|
||
do ill if thou go not to the Burg either with me or by thyself alone;
|
||
either as a guest, or as a good knight to take service in their host."
|
||
|
||
Now so it was that Ralph was wary; and this time he looked closely
|
||
at the carle, and found that he spake coldly for a man with so much
|
||
wrath in his heart; therefore he was in doubt about the thing;
|
||
moreover he called to mind the words of the lady whom he had
|
||
delivered, and her loveliness, and the kisses she had given him,
|
||
and he was loth to find her a liar; and he was loth also to think
|
||
that the maiden of Bourton had betaken her to so evil a dwelling.
|
||
So he said:
|
||
|
||
"Friend, I know not that I must needs be a partaker in the strife betwixt
|
||
Hampton and the Burg, or go either to one or the other of these strongholds.
|
||
Is there no other way out of this wood save by Hampton or the Burg?
|
||
or no other place anigh, where I may rest in peace awhile, and then go
|
||
on mine own errands?"
|
||
|
||
Said the Carle: "There is a thorp that lieth somewhat west
|
||
of the Burg, which is called Apthorp; but it is an open place,
|
||
not fenced, and is debateable ground, whiles held by them
|
||
of the Burg, whiles by the Dry Tree; and if thou tarry there,
|
||
and they of the Dry Tree take thee, soon is thine errand sped;
|
||
and if they of the Burg take thee, then shalt thou be led into the Burg
|
||
in worse case than thou wouldest be if thou go thereto uncompelled.
|
||
What sayest thou, therefore? Who shall hurt thee in the Burg,
|
||
a town which is under good and strong law, if thou be a true man,
|
||
as thou seemest to be? And if thou art seeking adventures,
|
||
as may well be, thou shalt soon find them there ready to hand.
|
||
I rede thee come with me to the Burg; for, to say sooth, I shall
|
||
find it somewhat easier to enter therein if I be in the company
|
||
of thee, a knight and a lord."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph considered and thought that there lay indeed but little peril
|
||
to him in the Burg, whereas both those men with whom he had striven were
|
||
hushed for ever, and there was none else to tell the tale of the battle,
|
||
save the lady, whose peril from them of the Burg was much greater than his;
|
||
and also he thought that if anything untoward befel, he had some one to fall
|
||
back on in old Oliver: yet on the other hand he had a hankering after Hampton
|
||
under Scaur, where, to say sooth, he doubted not to see the lady again.
|
||
|
||
So betwixt one thing and the other, speech hung on his
|
||
lips awhile, when suddenly the carle said: "Hist! thou hast
|
||
left thy horse without the bushes, and he is whinnying"
|
||
(which indeed he was), "there is now no time to lose.
|
||
To horse straightway, for certainly there are folk at hand,
|
||
and they may be foemen, and are most like to be."
|
||
|
||
Therewith they both arose and hastened to where Falcon stood just
|
||
outside the alder bushes, and Ralph leapt a-horseback without more ado,
|
||
and the carle waited no bidding to leap up behind him, and pointing
|
||
to a glade of the wood which led toward the highway, cried out,
|
||
"Spur that way, thither! they of the Dry Tree are abroad this morning.
|
||
Spur! 'tis for life or death!"
|
||
|
||
Ralph shook the rein and Falcon leapt away without waiting for the spur,
|
||
while the carle looked over his shoulder and said, "Yonder they come! they
|
||
are three; and ever they ride well horsed. Nay, nay! They are four,"
|
||
quoth he, as a shout sounded behind them. "Spur, young lord! spur!
|
||
And thine horse is a mettlesome beast. Yea, it will do, it will do."
|
||
|
||
Therewith came to Ralph's ears the sound of their horse-hoofs beating
|
||
the turf, and he spurred indeed, and Falcon flew forth.
|
||
|
||
"Ah," cried the carle! "but take heed, for they see that thy horse is good,
|
||
and one of them, the last, hath a bent Turk bow in his hand, and is laying an
|
||
arrow on it; as ever their wont is to shoot a-horseback: a turn of thy rein,
|
||
as if thine horse were shying at a weasel on the road!"
|
||
|
||
Ralph stooped his head and made Falcon swerve, and heard therewith
|
||
the twang of the bowstring and straightway the shaft flew
|
||
past his ears. Falcon galloped on, and the carle cried out:
|
||
"There is the highway toward the Burg! Do thy best, do thy best!
|
||
Lo you again!"
|
||
|
||
For the second shaft flew from the Turkish bow, and the noise of
|
||
the chase was loud behind them. Once again twanged the bow-string,
|
||
but this time the arrow fell short, and the woodland man,
|
||
turning himself about as well as he might, shook his clenched
|
||
fist at the chase, crying out in a voice broken by the gallop:
|
||
"Ha, thieves! I am Roger of the Rope-walk, I go to twist a rope
|
||
for the necks of you!"
|
||
|
||
Then he spake to Ralph: "They are turning back: they are beaten,
|
||
and withal they love not the open road: yet slacken not yet,
|
||
young knight, unless thou lovest thine horse more than thy life;
|
||
for they will follow on through the thicket on the way-side to see
|
||
whether thou wert born a fool and hast learned nothing later."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and now I deem thou wilt tell me that to the Burg
|
||
I needs must."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, forsooth," said the carle, "nor shall we be long, riding thus,
|
||
ere we come to the Burg Gate."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, or even slower," said Ralph, drawing rein somewhat,
|
||
"for now I deem the chase done: and after all is said,
|
||
I have no will to slay Falcon, who is one of my friends,
|
||
as thou perchance mayest come to be another."
|
||
|
||
Thereafter he went a hand-gallop till the wood began to thin, and there
|
||
were fields of tillage about the highway; and presently Roger said:
|
||
"Thou mayst breathe thy nag now, and ride single, for we are amidst friends;
|
||
not even a score of the Dry Tree dare ride so nigh the Burg save
|
||
by night and cloud."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph stayed his horse, and he and Roger lighted down,
|
||
and Ralph looked about him and saw a stone tower builded on
|
||
a little knoll amidst a wheatfield, and below it some simple
|
||
houses thatched with straw; there were folk moreover working,
|
||
or coming and going about the fields, who took little heed
|
||
of the two when they saw them standing quiet by the horse's head;
|
||
but each and all of these folk, so far as could be seen,
|
||
had some weapon.
|
||
|
||
Then said Ralph: "Good fellow, is this the Burg of the Four Friths?"
|
||
The carle laughed, and said: "Simple is the question, Sir Knight:
|
||
yonder is a watch-tower of the Burg, whereunder husbandmen can live,
|
||
because there be men-at-arms therein. And all round the outskirts
|
||
of the Frank of the Burg are there such-like towers to the number
|
||
of twenty-seven. For that, say folk, was the tale of the winters
|
||
of the Fair Lady who erewhile began the building of the Burg, when she
|
||
was first wedded to the Forest Lord, who before that building had dwelt,
|
||
he and his fathers, in thatched halls of timber here and there
|
||
about the clearings of the wild-wood. But now, knight, if thou wilt,
|
||
thou mayest go on softly toward the Gate of the Burg, and if thou
|
||
wilt I will walk beside thy rein, which fellowship, as aforesaid,
|
||
shall be a gain to me."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "I pray thee come with me, good fellow, and show me how
|
||
easiest to enter this stronghold." So, when Falcon was well breathed,
|
||
they went on, passing through goodly acres and wide meadows, with here
|
||
and there a homestead on them, and here and there a carle's cot.
|
||
Then came they to a thorp of the smallest on a rising ground, from the
|
||
further end of which they could see the walls and towers of the Burg.
|
||
Thereafter right up to the walls were no more houses or cornfields,
|
||
nought but reaches of green meadows plenteously stored with sheep and kine,
|
||
and with a little stream winding about them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 12
|
||
|
||
Ralph Entereth Into the Burg of the Four Friths
|
||
|
||
|
||
When they came up to the wall they saw that it was well builded of
|
||
good ashlar, and so high that they might not see the roofs of the town
|
||
because of it; but there were tall towers on it, a many of them,
|
||
strong and white. The road led up straight to the master-gate
|
||
of the Burg, and there was a bailey before it strongly walled,
|
||
and manned with weaponed men, and a captain going about amongst them.
|
||
But they entered it along with men bringing wares into the town,
|
||
and none heeded them much, till they came to the very gate,
|
||
on the further side of a moat that was both deep and clean;
|
||
but as now the bridge was down and the portcullis up, so that the
|
||
market-people might pass in easily, for it was yet early in the day.
|
||
But before the door on either side stood men-at-arms well weaponed,
|
||
and on the right side was their captain, a tall man with bare
|
||
grizzled head, but otherwise all-armed, who stopped every one whom
|
||
he knew not, and asked their business.
|
||
|
||
As Ralph came riding up with Roger beside him, one of the guard laid his spear
|
||
across and bade them stand, and the captain spake in a dry cold voice:
|
||
"Whence comest thou, man-at-arms?" "From the Abbey of St. Mary at Higham,"
|
||
said Ralph. "Yea," said the captain, smiling grimly, "even so I
|
||
might have deemed: thou wilt be one of the Lord Abbot's lily lads."
|
||
"No I am not," quoth Ralph angrily. "Well, well," said the captain,
|
||
"what is thy name?"
|
||
|
||
"Ralph Motherson," quoth Ralph, knitting his brow. Said the captain
|
||
"And whither wilt thou?" Said Ralph, "On mine own errands."
|
||
"Thou answerest not over freely," quoth the captain.
|
||
Said Ralph, "Then is it even; for thou askest freely enough."
|
||
"Well, well," said the captain, grinning in no unfriendly wise,
|
||
"thou seemest a stout lad enough; and as to my asking, it is my
|
||
craft as captain of the North Gate: but now tell me friendly,
|
||
goest thou to any kinsman or friend in the Burg?"
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph's brow cleared and he said, "Nay, fair sir."
|
||
"Well then," said the captain, "art thou but riding straight
|
||
through to another gate, and so away again?" "Nay," said Ralph,
|
||
"if I may, I would abide here the night over, or may-happen longer."
|
||
"Therein thou shalt do well, young man," said the captain;
|
||
"then I suppose thou wilt to some hostelry? tell me which one."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph, "Nay, I wot not to which one, knowing not the town."
|
||
But Roger close by him spake and said: "My lord shall go to the Flower
|
||
de Luce, which is in the big square."
|
||
|
||
"Truly," said the captain, "he goes to a good harbour; and moreover,
|
||
fair sir, to-morrow thou shalt see a goodly sight from thine inn;
|
||
thou mayst do no better, lord. But thou, carle, who art thou,
|
||
who knowest the inside of our Burg so well, though I know thee not,
|
||
for as well as I know our craftsmen and vavassors?"
|
||
|
||
Then Roger's words hung on his lips awhile, and the knight bent
|
||
his brow on him, till at last he said, "Sir Captain, I was minded
|
||
to lie, and say that I am this young knight's serving-man."
|
||
The captain broke in on him grimly, "Thou wert best not lie."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, sir," quoth Roger, "I deemed, as it was on my tongue's end, that thou
|
||
wouldst find me out, so I have nought to do but tell thee the very sooth:
|
||
this it is: I am a man made masterless by the thieves of the Dry Tree.
|
||
From my land at Hampton under Scaur have I been driven, my chattels have
|
||
been lifted, and my friends slain; and therefore by your leave would I
|
||
ride in the host of the Burg, that I may pay back the harm which I had,
|
||
according to the saw, 'better bale by breeding bale.' So, lord, I ask thee
|
||
wilt thou lend me the sword and give me the loaf, that I may help both thee,
|
||
and the Burg, and me?"
|
||
|
||
The captain looked at him closely and sharply, while the carle
|
||
faced him with open simple eyes, and at last he said:
|
||
"Well, carle, thou wert about to name thyself this young
|
||
knight's serving-man; be thou even so whiles he abideth in the Burg;
|
||
and when he leaveth the Burg then come back to me here any day
|
||
before noon, and may be I shall then put a sword in thy fist
|
||
and horse between thy thighs. But," (and he wagged his head
|
||
threateningly at Roger) "see that thou art at the Flower de
|
||
Luce when thou art called for."
|
||
|
||
Roger held his peace and seemed somewhat abashed at this word,
|
||
and the captain turned to Ralph and said courteously: "Young knight,
|
||
if thou art seeking adventures, thou shalt find them in our host;
|
||
and if thou be but half as wise as thou seemest bold, thou wilt
|
||
not fail to gain honour and wealth both, in the service of the Burg;
|
||
for we be overmuch beset with foemen that we should not welcome any
|
||
wight and wary warrior, though he be an alien of blood and land.
|
||
If thou thinkest well of this, then send me thy man here and give me
|
||
word of thy mind, and I shall lead thee to the chiefs of the Port,
|
||
and make the way easy for thee."
|
||
|
||
Ralph thanked him and rode through the gate into the street,
|
||
and Roger still went beside his stirrup.
|
||
|
||
Presently Ralph turned to Roger and spake to him somewhat sourly,
|
||
and said: "Thou hadst one lie in thy mouth and didst swallow it;
|
||
but how shall I know that another did not come out thence?
|
||
Withal thou must needs be my fellow here, will I, nill I;
|
||
for thou it was that didst put that word into the captain's
|
||
mouth that thou shouldst serve me while I abide in the Burg.
|
||
So I will say here and now, that my mind misgives me concerning thee,
|
||
whether thou be not of those very thieves and tyrants whom thou
|
||
didst mis-say but a little while ago."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Roger, "thou art wise indeed to set me down as one of the
|
||
Dry Tree; doubtless that is why I delivered thee from their ambush even now.
|
||
And as for my service, thou mayst need it; for indeed I deem thee not so safe
|
||
as thou deemest thyself in this Burg."
|
||
|
||
"What!" said Ralph, "Dost thou blow hot and cold? why even now,
|
||
when we were in the wood, thou wert telling me that I
|
||
had nought at all to fear in the Burg of the Four Friths,
|
||
and that all was done there by reason and with justice.
|
||
What is this new thing then which thou hast found out,
|
||
or what is that I have to fear?"
|
||
|
||
Roger changed countenance thereat and seemed somewhat confused,
|
||
as one who has been caught unawares; but he gat his own face presently,
|
||
and said: "Nay, Sir Knight, I will tell thee the truth right out.
|
||
In the wood yonder thy danger was great that thou mightest run into
|
||
the hands of them of the Dry Tree; therefore true it is that I spake
|
||
somewhat beyond my warrant concerning the life of the folk of the Burg,
|
||
as how could I help it? But surely whatever thy peril may be here,
|
||
it is nought to that which awaited thee at Hampton."
|
||
|
||
"Nay, but what is the peril?" said Ralph. Quoth Roger, "If thou wilt become
|
||
their man and enter into their host, there is none; for they will ask few
|
||
questions of so good a man-at-arms, when they know that thou art theirs;
|
||
but if thou naysay that, it may well be that they will be for turning
|
||
the key on thee till thou tellest them what and whence thou art."
|
||
Ralph answered nought, thinking in his mind that this was like enough;
|
||
so he rode on soberly, till Roger said:
|
||
|
||
"Anyhow, thou mayst turn the cold shoulder on me if thou wilt.
|
||
Yet were I thee, I would not, for so it is, both that I can help thee,
|
||
as I deem, in time to come, and that I have helped thee somewhat
|
||
in time past."
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph was young and could not abide the blame of thanklessness;
|
||
so he said, "Nay, nay, fellow, go we on together to the Flower de Luce."
|
||
|
||
Roger nodded his head and grumbled somewhat, and they made
|
||
no stay except that now and again Ralph drew rein to look
|
||
at goodly things in the street, for there were many open
|
||
booths therein, so that the whole street looked like a market.
|
||
The houses were goodly of building, but not very tall,
|
||
the ways wide and well-paved. Many folk were in the street,
|
||
going up and down on their errands, and both men and women of them
|
||
seemed to Ralph stout and strong, but not very fair of favour.
|
||
Withal they seemed intent on their business, and payed little
|
||
heed to Ralph and his fellow, though he was by his attire
|
||
plainly a stranger.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph sees a house more gaily adorned than most, and a sign hung
|
||
out from it whereon was done an image of St. Loy, and underneath the same
|
||
a booth on which was set out weapons and war-gear exceeding goodly;
|
||
and two knaves of the armourer were standing by to serve folk,
|
||
and crying their wares with "what d'ye lack?" from time to time.
|
||
So he stayed and fell to looking wistfully at the gleam and glitter
|
||
of those fair things, till one of the aforesaid knaves came to his
|
||
side and said:
|
||
|
||
"Fair Sir, surely thou lackest somewhat; what have we here for
|
||
thy needs?" So Ralph thought and called to mind that strong
|
||
little steel axe of the man whom he had slain yesterday,
|
||
and asked for the sight of such a weapon, if he might perchance
|
||
cheapen it. And the lad brought a very goodly steel axe,
|
||
gold-inlaid about the shaft, and gave him the price thereof,
|
||
which Ralph deemed he might compass; so he brought round
|
||
his scrip to his hand, that he might take out the money.
|
||
But while his hand was yet in the bag, out comes the master-armourer,
|
||
a tall and very stark carle, and said in courteous wise:
|
||
"Sir Knight, thou art a stranger to me and I know thee not;
|
||
so I must needs ask for a sight of thy license to buy weapons,
|
||
under the seal of the Burg."
|
||
|
||
"Hear a wonder," said Ralph, "that a free man for his money
|
||
shall not buy wares set out to be bought, unless he have
|
||
the Burg-Reeve's hand and seal for it! Nay, take thy florins,
|
||
master, and give me the axe and let the jest end there."
|
||
"I jest not, young rider," quoth the armourer. "When we know
|
||
thee for a liegeman of the Burg, thou shalt buy what thou wilt
|
||
without question; but otherwise I have told thee the law,
|
||
and how may I, the master of the craft, break the law?
|
||
Be not wrath, fair sir, I will set aside thine axe for thee,
|
||
till thou bring me the license, or bid me come see it, and thou
|
||
shalt get the said license at the Town Hall straight-way,
|
||
when they may certify thee no foeman of the Burg."
|
||
|
||
Ralph saw that it availed nothing to bicker with the smith,
|
||
and so went his way somewhat crestfallen, and that the more
|
||
as he saw Roger grinning a little.
|
||
|
||
Now they come into the market-place, on one side whereof was the master
|
||
church of the town, which was strongly built and with a tall tower
|
||
to it, but was not very big, and but little adorned. Over against it
|
||
they saw the sign of the Flower de Luce, a goodly house and great.
|
||
Thitherward they turned; but in the face of the hostelry amidmost the place
|
||
was a thing which Roger pointed at with a grin that spoke as well as words;
|
||
and this was a high gallows-tree furnished with four forks or arms,
|
||
each carved and wrought in the fashion of the very bough of a tree,
|
||
from which dangled four nooses, and above them all was a board whereon
|
||
was written in big letters THE DRY TREE. And at the foot of this gallows
|
||
were divers folk laughing and talking.
|
||
|
||
So Ralph understood at once that those four men whom he had
|
||
seen led away bound yesterday should be hanged thereon;
|
||
so he stayed a franklin who was passing by, and said to him,
|
||
"Sir, I am a stranger in the town, and I would know if justice
|
||
shall be done on the four woodmen to-day." "Nay," said the man,
|
||
"but to-morrow; they are even now before the judges."
|
||
|
||
Then said Roger in a surly voice, "Why art thou not there to look on?"
|
||
"Because," quoth the man, "there is little to see there, and not much
|
||
more to hearken. The thieves shall be speedily judged, and not questioned
|
||
with torments, so that they may be the lustier to feel what the hangman
|
||
shall work on them to-morrow; then forsooth the show shall be goodly.
|
||
But far better had it been if we had had in our hands the great witch
|
||
of these dastards, as we looked to have her; but now folk say that she
|
||
has not been brought within gates, and it is to be feared that she hath
|
||
slipped through our fingers once more."
|
||
|
||
Roger laughed, and said: "Simple are ye folk of the Burg and know nought
|
||
of her shifts. I tell thee it is not unlike that she is in the Burg even now,
|
||
and hath in hand to take out of your prison the four whom ye have caught."
|
||
|
||
The franklin laughed scornfully in his turn and said:
|
||
"If we be simple, thou art a fool merely: are we not stronger
|
||
and more than the Dry Tree? How should she not be taken?
|
||
How should she not be known if she were walking about these streets?
|
||
Have we no eyes, fool-carle?" And he laughed again,
|
||
for he was wroth.
|
||
|
||
Ralph hearkened, and a kind of fear seemed griping his heart,
|
||
so he asked the franklin: "Tell me, sir, are ye two speaking
|
||
of a woman who is Queen of these strong-thieves?" "Yea," said he,
|
||
"or it might better be said that she is their goddess, their mawmet,
|
||
their devil, the very heart and soul of their wickedness.
|
||
But one day shall we have her body and soul, and then shall her
|
||
body have but an evil day of it till she dieth in this world."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, forsooth, if she can die at all," quoth Roger.
|
||
|
||
The franklin looked sourly on him and said: "Good man,
|
||
thou knowest much of her, meseemeth--Whence art thou?"
|
||
Said Roger speedily: "From Hampton under Scaur;
|
||
and her rebel I am, and her dastard, and her runaway.
|
||
Therefore I know her forsooth."
|
||
|
||
"Well," the Franklin said "thou seemest a true man, and yet I would counsel
|
||
thee to put a rein on thy tongue when thou art minded to talk of the Devil
|
||
of the Dry Tree, or thou mayst come to harm in the Burg."
|
||
|
||
He walked away towards the gallows therewith; and Roger said, almost as
|
||
if he were talking to himself; "A heavy-footed fool goeth yonder;
|
||
but after this talk we were better hidden by the walls of the Flower-de-Luce."
|
||
So therewith they went on toward the hostel.
|
||
|
||
But the market place was wide, and they were yet some minutes getting to
|
||
the door, and ere they came there Ralph said, knitting his brows anxiously:
|
||
"Is this woman fair or foul to look on?" "That is nought so easy
|
||
to tell of," said Roger, "whiles she is foul, whiles very fair,
|
||
whiles young and whiles old; whiles cruel and whiles kind.
|
||
But note this, when she is the kindest then are her carles the cruellest;
|
||
and she is the kinder to them because they are cruel."
|
||
|
||
Ralph pondered what he said, and wondered if this were
|
||
verily the woman whom he had delivered, or some other.
|
||
As if answering to his unspoken thought, Roger went on:
|
||
"They speak but of one woman amongst them of the Dry Tree,
|
||
but in sooth they have many others who are like unto her in one
|
||
way or other; and this again is a reason why they may not lay
|
||
hands on the very Queen of them all."'
|
||
|
||
Therewithal they came unto the hostel, and found it fair
|
||
enough within, the hall great and goodly for such a house,
|
||
and with but three chapmen-carles therein. Straightway they called
|
||
for meat, for it was now past noon, and the folk of the house
|
||
served them when the grooms had taken charge of Falcon.
|
||
And Roger served Ralph as if he were verily his man.
|
||
Then Ralph went to his chamber aloft and rested a while,
|
||
but came down into the hall a little before nones, and found
|
||
Roger there walking up and down the hall floor, and no man else,
|
||
so he said to him: "Though thou art not of the Burg,
|
||
thou knowest it; wilt thou not come abroad then, and show it
|
||
me? for I have a mind to learn the ways of the folk here."
|
||
|
||
Said Roger, and smiled a little: "If thou commandest me as my lord,
|
||
I will come; yet I were better pleased to abide behind; for I am
|
||
weary with night-waking and sorrow; and have a burden of thought,
|
||
one which I must bear to the end of the road; and if I put it down I
|
||
shall have to go back and take it up again."
|
||
|
||
Ralph thought that he excused himself with more words than were needed;
|
||
but he took little heed of it, but nodded to him friendly, and went
|
||
out of the house afoot, but left his weapons and armour behind him
|
||
by the rede of Roger.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 13
|
||
|
||
The Streets of the Burg of the Four Friths
|
||
|
||
|
||
He went about the streets and found them all much like to the one which
|
||
they had entered by the north gate; he saw no poor or wretched houses,
|
||
and none very big as of great lords; they were well and stoutly builded,
|
||
but as aforesaid not much adorned either with carven work or painting:
|
||
there were folk enough in the streets, and now Ralph, as was like
|
||
to be, looked specially at the women, and thought many of them
|
||
little better-favoured than the men, being both dark and low;
|
||
neither were they gaily clad, though their raiment, like the houses,
|
||
was stout and well wrought. But here and there he came on a woman
|
||
taller and whiter than the others, as though she were of another blood;
|
||
all such of these as he saw were clad otherwise than the darker women:
|
||
their heads uncoifed, uncovered save for some garland or silken band:
|
||
their gowns yellow like wheat-straw, but gaily embroidered;
|
||
sleeveless withal and short, scarce reaching to the ancles, and whiles
|
||
so thin that they were rather clad with the embroidery than the cloth;
|
||
shoes they had not, but sandals bound on their naked feet with white thongs,
|
||
and each bore an iron ring about her right arm.
|
||
|
||
The more part of the men wore weapons at their sides and had staves
|
||
in hand, and were clad in short jerkins brown or blue of colour,
|
||
and looked ready for battle if any moment should call them thereto;
|
||
but among them were men of different favour and stature from these,
|
||
taller for the most part, unarmed, and clad in long gowns of fair colours
|
||
with cloths of thin and gay-coloured web twisted about their heads.
|
||
These he took for merchants, as they were oftenest standing in and about
|
||
the booths and shops, whereof there were some in all the streets,
|
||
though the market for victuals and such like he found over for that day,
|
||
and but scantily peopled.
|
||
|
||
Out of one of these markets, which was the fish and fowl market,
|
||
he came into a long street that led him down to a gate right over
|
||
against that whereby he had entered the Burg; and as he came
|
||
thereto he saw that there was a wide way clear of all houses inside
|
||
of the wall, so that men-at-arms might go freely from one part
|
||
to the other; and he had also noted that a wide way led from each
|
||
ort out of the great place, and each ended not but in a gate.
|
||
But as to any castle in the town, he saw none; and when he asked
|
||
a burgher thereof, the carle laughed in his face, and said
|
||
to him that the whole Burg, houses and all, was a castle,
|
||
and that it would turn out to be none of the easiest to win.
|
||
And forsooth Ralph himself was much of that mind.
|
||
|
||
Now he was just within the south gate when he held this talk,
|
||
and there were many folk thereby already, and more flocking thereto;
|
||
so he stood there to see what should betide; and anon he heard
|
||
great blowing of horns and trumpets all along the wall, and,
|
||
as he deemed, other horns answered from without; and so it was;
|
||
for soon the withoutward horns grew louder, and the folk fell back
|
||
on either side of the way, and next the gates were thrown wide open
|
||
(which before had been shut save for a wicket) and thereafter came
|
||
the first of a company of men-at-arms, foot-men, with bills some,
|
||
and some with bows, and all-armed knights and sergeants a-horseback.
|
||
|
||
So streamed in these weaponed men till Ralph saw that it was a great
|
||
host that was entering the Burg; and his heart rose within him,
|
||
so warrior-like they were of men and array, though no big men
|
||
of their bodies; and many of them bore signs of battle about them,
|
||
both in the battering of their armour and the rending of their raiment,
|
||
and the clouts tied about the wounds on their bodies.
|
||
|
||
After a while among the warriors came herds of neat and flocks of
|
||
sheep and strings of horses, of the spoil which the host had lifted;
|
||
and then wains filled, some with weapons and war gear, and some
|
||
with bales of goods and household stuff. Last came captives,
|
||
some going afoot and some for weariness borne in wains;
|
||
for all these war-taken thralls were women and women-children;
|
||
of males there was not so much as a little lad. Of the women
|
||
many seemed fair to Ralph despite their grief and travel;
|
||
and as he looked on them he deemed that they must be of the kindred
|
||
and nation of the fair white women he had seen in the streets;
|
||
though they were not clad like those, but diversely.
|
||
|
||
So Ralph gazed on this pageant till all had passed, and he was
|
||
weary with the heat and the dust and the confused clamour
|
||
of shouting and laughter and talking; and whereas most of
|
||
the folk followed after the host and their spoil, the streets
|
||
of the town there about were soon left empty and peaceful.
|
||
So he turned into a street narrower than most, that went east
|
||
from the South Gate and was much shaded from the afternoon sun,
|
||
and went slowly down it, meaning to come about the inside of
|
||
the wall till he should hit the East Gate, and so into the Great
|
||
Place when the folk should have gone their ways home.
|
||
|
||
He saw no folk in the street save here and there an old woman
|
||
sitting at the door of her house, and maybe a young child with her.
|
||
As he came to where the street turned somewhat, even such a
|
||
carline was sitting on a clean white door-step on the sunny side,
|
||
somewhat shaded by a tall rose-laurel tree in a great tub, and she
|
||
sang as she sat spinning, and Ralph stayed to listen in his idle mood,
|
||
and he heard how she sang in a dry, harsh voice:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Clashed sword on shield In the harvest field; And no man blames The red
|
||
red flames, War's candle-wick On roof and rick. Now dead lies the yeoman
|
||
unwept and unknown On the field he hath furrowed, the ridge he hath sown:
|
||
And all in the middle of wethers and neat The maidens are driven with blood on
|
||
their feet; For yet 'twixt the Burg-gate and battle half-won The dust-driven
|
||
highway creeps uphill and on, And the smoke of the beacons goes coiling aloft,
|
||
While the gathering horn bloweth loud, louder and oft.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Throw wide the gates For nought night waits; Though the chase is
|
||
dead The moon's o'erhead And we need the clear Our spoil to share.
|
||
Shake the lots in the helm then for brethren are we, And the goods
|
||
of my missing are gainful to thee. Lo! thine are the wethers,
|
||
and his are the kine; And the colts of the marshland unbroken
|
||
are thine, With the dapple-grey stallion that trampled his groom;
|
||
And Giles hath the gold-blossomed rose of the loom. Lo! leaps
|
||
out the last lot and nought have I won, But the maiden unmerry,
|
||
by battle undone.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Even as her song ended came one of those fair yellow-gowned damsels round
|
||
the corner of the street, bearing in her hand a light basket full of flowers:
|
||
and she lifted up her head and beheld Ralph there; then she went slowly
|
||
and dropped her eyelids, and it was pleasant to Ralph to behold her;
|
||
for she was as fair as need be. Her corn-coloured gown was dainty and thin,
|
||
and but for its silver embroidery had hidden her limbs but little;
|
||
the rosiness of her ancles showed amidst her white sandal-thongs, and there
|
||
were silver rings and gold on her arms along with the iron ring.
|
||
|
||
Now she lifted up her eyes and looked shyly at Ralph, and he smiled
|
||
at her well-pleased, and deemed it would be good to hear her voice;
|
||
so he went up to her and greeted her, and she seemed to take
|
||
his greeting well, though she glanced swiftly at the carline
|
||
in the doorway.
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Fair maiden, I am a stranger in this town, and have seen
|
||
things I do not wholly understand; now wilt thou tell me before l
|
||
ask the next question, who will be those war-taken thralls whom even
|
||
now I saw brought into the Burg by the host? of what nation be they,
|
||
and of what kindred?"
|
||
|
||
Straightway was the damsel all changed; she left her dainty tricks,
|
||
and drew herself up straight and stiff. She looked at him in the eyes,
|
||
flushing red, and with knit brows, a moment, and then passed by him
|
||
with swift and firm feet as one both angry and ashamed.
|
||
|
||
But the carline who had beheld the two with a grin on her wrinkled face
|
||
changed aspect also, and cried out fiercely after the damsel, and said:
|
||
"What! dost thou flee from the fair young man, and he so kind and soft
|
||
with thee, thou jade? Yea, I suppose thou dost fetch and carry
|
||
for some mistress who is young and a fool, and who has not yet
|
||
learned how to deal with the daughters of thine accursed folk.
|
||
Ah! if I had but money to buy some one of you, and a good one,
|
||
she should do something else for me than showing her fairness to
|
||
young men; and I would pay her for her long legs and her white skin,
|
||
till she should curse her fate that she had not been born little
|
||
and dark-skinned and free, and with heels un-bloodied with the blood
|
||
of her back."
|
||
|
||
Thus she went on, though the damsel was long out of ear-shot of her curses;
|
||
and Ralph tarried not to get away from her spiteful babble, which he now
|
||
partly understood; and that all those yellow-clad damsels were thralls
|
||
to the folk of the Burg; and belike were of the kindred of those captives
|
||
late-taken whom he had seen amidst the host at its entering into the Burg.
|
||
|
||
So he wandered away thence thinking on what he should do till
|
||
the sun was set, and he had come into the open space underneath
|
||
the walls, and had gone along it till he came to the East Gate:
|
||
there he looked around him a little and found people flowing
|
||
back from the Great Place, whereto they had gathered to see
|
||
the host mustered and the spoil blessed; then he went on still
|
||
under the wall, and noted not that here and there a man turned
|
||
about to look upon him curiously, for he was deep in thought,
|
||
concerning the things which he had seen and heard of,
|
||
and pondered much what might have befallen his brethren since they
|
||
sundered at the Want-way nigh to the High House of Upmeads.
|
||
Withal the chief thing that he desired was to get him away
|
||
from the Burg, for he felt himself unfree therein; and he said
|
||
to himself that if he were forced to dwell among this folk,
|
||
that he had better never have stolen himself away from his
|
||
father and mother; and whiles even he thought that he would do
|
||
his best on the morrow to get him back home to Upmeads again.
|
||
But then when he thought of how his life would go in his old home,
|
||
there seemed to him a lack, and when he questioned himself
|
||
as to what that lack was, straightway he seemed to see that Lady
|
||
of the Wildwood standing before the men-at-arms in her scanty raiment
|
||
the minute before his life was at adventure because of them.
|
||
And in sooth he smiled to himself then with a beating heart,
|
||
as he told himself that above all things he desired to see that Lady,
|
||
whatever she might be, and that he would follow his adventure
|
||
to the end until he met her.
|
||
|
||
Amidst these thoughts he came unto the North Gate, whereby he had first
|
||
entered the Burg, and by then it was as dark as the summer night would be;
|
||
so he woke up from his dream, as it were, and took his way briskly back
|
||
to the Flower de Luce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 14
|
||
|
||
What Ralph Heard of the Matters of the Burg of the Four Friths
|
||
|
||
|
||
There was no candle in the hall when he entered, but it was not so dark
|
||
therein but he might see Roger sitting on a stool near the chimney,
|
||
and opposite to him on the settle sat two men; one very tall and big,
|
||
the other small; Roger was looking away from these, and whistling;
|
||
and it came into Ralph's mind that he would have him think
|
||
that he had nought to do with them, whether that were so or not.
|
||
But he turned round as Ralph came up the hall and rose and came up to him,
|
||
and fell to talking with him and asking him how he liked the Burg;
|
||
and ever he spake fast and loud, so that again it came on Ralph
|
||
that he was playing a part.
|
||
|
||
Ralph heeded him little, but ever looked through the hall-dusk
|
||
on those twain, who presently arose and went toward the hall door,
|
||
but when they were but half-way across the floor a chamberlain came
|
||
in suddenly, bearing candles in his hands, and the light fell on
|
||
those guests and flashed back from a salade on the head of the big man,
|
||
and Ralph saw that he was clad in a long white gaberdine, and he
|
||
deemed that he was the very man whom he had seen last in the Great
|
||
Place at Higham, nigh the church, and before that upon the road.
|
||
As for the smaller man Ralph had no knowledge of him, for he could
|
||
see but little of his face, whereas he was wrapped up in a cloak,
|
||
for as warm as the evening was, and wore a slouch hat withal;
|
||
but his eyes seemed great and wondrous bright.
|
||
|
||
But when they were gone Ralph asked Roger if he knew aught of them, or if they
|
||
had told him aught. "Nay," said Roger, "they came in here as I sat alone,
|
||
and had their meat, and spake nought to me, and little to each other.
|
||
I deem them not to be of the Burg. Nay, sooth to say, I doubt if they
|
||
be true men."
|
||
|
||
As he spake came in a sort of the townsmen somewhat merry
|
||
and noisy, and called for meat and drink and more lights;
|
||
so that the board was brought and the hall was speedily astir.
|
||
These men, while supper was being dight, fell to talking to Ralph
|
||
and Roger, and asking them questions of whence and whither,
|
||
but nowise uncourteously: to whom Roger answered with the tale
|
||
which he had told Ralph, and Ralph told what he would,
|
||
and that was but little.
|
||
|
||
But when the board was dight they bade them sit down with them and eat.
|
||
Ralph sat down at once, and Roger would have served him, but Ralph bade
|
||
him do it not, and constrained him to sit by his side, and they two sat
|
||
a little apart from the townsmen.
|
||
|
||
So when they had eaten their fill, and wine was brought,
|
||
and men were drinking kindly, Ralph began to ask Roger concerning
|
||
those women whom he had seen in the street, and the captives whom
|
||
he had seen brought in by the host, and if they were of one kindred,
|
||
and generally how it was with them: and he spake somewhat
|
||
softly as if he would not break into the talk of the townsmen:
|
||
but Roger answered him in a loud voice so that all could hear:
|
||
|
||
"Yea, lord, I will tell thee the tale of them, which setteth
|
||
forth well both the wise policy and the great mercy of the folk
|
||
of the Burg and their rulers."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Are these women also of the Dry Tree?
|
||
For I perceive them to be born of the foes of the Burg."
|
||
|
||
Now the townsmen had let their talk drop a while to listen to
|
||
the talk of the aliens; and Roger answered still in a loud voice:
|
||
"Nay, nay, it is not so. These queens are indeed war-taken thralls,
|
||
but not from them of the Dry Tree, or they would have been
|
||
slain at once, like as the carles of those accursed ones.
|
||
But these are of the folk of the Wheat-wearers, even as those
|
||
whom thou sawest brought to-day amidst the other spoil.
|
||
And to this folk the Burg showeth mercy, and whenso the host goeth
|
||
against them and over-cometh (and that is well-nigh whenever they meet)
|
||
these worthy lords slay no woman of them, but the men only,
|
||
whether they be old or young or youngest. As for their women they
|
||
are brought hither and sold at the market-cross to the highest bidder.
|
||
And this honour they have, that such of them as be fair,
|
||
and that is the more part of the younger ones, fetch no ill penny.
|
||
Yet for my part I were loth to cheapen such wares: for they make
|
||
but evil servants, being proud, and not abiding stripes lightly,
|
||
or toiling the harder for them; and they be somewhat too handy
|
||
with the knife if they deem themselves put upon. Speak I sooth,
|
||
my masters?" quoth he, turning toward them of the town.
|
||
|
||
Said a burgher somewhat stricken in years, "Nought but sooth;
|
||
peaceable men like to me eschew such servants; all the more because of this,
|
||
that if one of these queens misbehave with the knife, or strayeth
|
||
from her master's bed, the laws of the Burg meddle not therein.
|
||
For the wise men say that such folk are no more within the law than kine be,
|
||
and may not for their deeds be brought before leet or assize any more
|
||
than kine. So that if the master punish her not for her misdoings,
|
||
unpunished she needs must go; yea even if her deed be mere murder."
|
||
|
||
"That is sooth," said a somewhat younger man; "yet whiles it fareth ill
|
||
with them at the hands of our women. To wit, my father's brother has
|
||
even now come from the war to find his thrall all spoilt by his wife:
|
||
and what remedy may he have against his wife? his money is gone,
|
||
even as if she had houghed his horse or his best cow."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said a third, "we were better without such cattle.
|
||
A thrust with a sword and all the tale told, were the better
|
||
way of dealing with them."
|
||
|
||
Said another; "Yet are the queens good websters, and, lacking them,
|
||
figured cloth of silk would be far-fetched and dear-bought here."
|
||
|
||
A young man gaily clad, who had been eyeing the speakers disdainfully,
|
||
spake next and said: "Fair sirs, ye are speaking like hypocrites,
|
||
and as if your lawful wives were here to hearken to you;
|
||
whereas ye know well how goodly these thralls be, and that many
|
||
of them can be kind enough withal; and ye would think yourselves
|
||
but ill bestead if ye might not cheapen such jewels for your money.
|
||
Which of you will go to the Cross next Saturday and there buy him
|
||
a fairer wife than he can wed out of our lineages? and a wife
|
||
withal of whose humours he need take no more account of than
|
||
the dullness of his hound or the skittish temper of his mare,
|
||
so long as the thong smarts, and the twigs sting."
|
||
|
||
One or two grinned as he spake, but some bent their brows at him,
|
||
yet scarce in earnest, and the talk thereover dropped, nor did Ralph ask any
|
||
more questions; for he was somewhat down-hearted, calling to mind the frank
|
||
and free maidens of Upmead, and their friendly words and hearty kisses.
|
||
And him seemed the world was worse than he had looked to find it.
|
||
|
||
Howsoever, the oldest and soberest of the guests,
|
||
seeing that he was a stranger and of noble aspect,
|
||
came unto him and sat by him, and fell to telling him tales
|
||
of the wars of the men of the Burg with the Wheat-wearers;
|
||
and how in time past, when the town was but little fenced,
|
||
the Wheat-wearers had stormed their gates and taken the city,
|
||
and had made a great slaughter; but yet had spared many of
|
||
the fighting-men, although they had abided there as the masters
|
||
of them, and held them enthralled for three generations of men:
|
||
after which time the sons' sons of the old Burg-dwellers
|
||
having grown very many again, and divers of them being
|
||
trusted in sundry matters by the conquerors, who oppressed
|
||
them but little, rose up against them as occasion served,
|
||
in the winter season and the Yule feast, and slew their masters,
|
||
save for a few who were hidden away.
|
||
|
||
"And thereafter," quoth he, "did we make the Burg strong and hard to win,
|
||
as ye see it to-day; and we took for our captain the Forest Lord,
|
||
who ere-while had dwelt in the clearings of the wildwood, and he wedded
|
||
the Fair Lady who was the son's daughter of him who had been our lord ere
|
||
the Wheat-wearers overcame us; and we grew safe and free and mighty again.
|
||
And the son of the Forest Lord, he whom we call the War-smith, he it
|
||
was who beheld the Burg too much given to pleasure, and delighting
|
||
in the softness of life; and he took order to harden our hearts,
|
||
and to cause all freemen to learn the craft of war and battle,
|
||
and let the women and thralls and aliens see to other craftsmanship
|
||
and to chaffer; and even so is it done as he would; and ye shall find
|
||
us hardy of heart enough, though belike not so joyous as might be.
|
||
Yet at least we shall not be easy to overcome."
|
||
|
||
"So indeed it seemeth," said Ralph. "Yet will I ask of you
|
||
first one question, and then another."
|
||
|
||
"Ask on," said the burgher.
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "How is it that ye, being so strong, should still
|
||
suffer them of the Dry Tree, taking a man here and a man there,
|
||
when ye might destroy them utterly?"
|
||
|
||
The Burgher reddened and cleared his throat and said:
|
||
"Sir, it must be made clear to you that these evil beasts are no
|
||
peril to the Burg of the Four Friths; all the harm they may do us,
|
||
is as when a cur dog biteth a man in the calf of the leg;
|
||
whereby the man shall be grieved indeed, but the dog slain.
|
||
Such grief as that they have done us at whiles: but the grief
|
||
is paid for thus, that the hunting and slaying of them keeps
|
||
our men in good trim, and pleasures them; shortly to say it,
|
||
they are the chief deer wherewith our wood is stocked."
|
||
|
||
He stopped awhile and then went on again and said: "To say sooth
|
||
they be not very handy for crushing as a man crushes a wasp,
|
||
because sorcery goes with them, and the wiles of one who is their Queen,
|
||
the evilest woman who ever spat upon the blessed Host of the Altar:
|
||
yet is she strong, a devouring sea of souls, God help us!"
|
||
And he blessed himself therewith.
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Yet a word on these Wheat-wearers; it seemeth that ye
|
||
never fail to overcome them in battle?"
|
||
|
||
"But seldom at least," quoth the Burgher.
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Then it were no great matter for you to gather
|
||
a host overwhelming, and to take their towns and castles,
|
||
and forbid them weapons, and make them your thralls to till
|
||
the land for you which now they call theirs; so that ye might
|
||
have of their gettings all save what were needful for them
|
||
to live as thralls."
|
||
|
||
"I deem it were an easy thing," said the burgher.
|
||
|
||
Quoth Ralph: "Then why do ye not so?"
|
||
|
||
"It were but a poor game to play," said the burgher.
|
||
"Such of their wealth as we have a mind to, we can have now at
|
||
the cost of a battle or two, begun one hour and ended the next:
|
||
were we their masters sitting down amidst of their hatred,
|
||
and amidst of their plotting, yea, and in the very place where
|
||
that were the hottest and thickest, the battle would be to begin
|
||
at every sun's uprising, nor would it be ended at any sunset.
|
||
Hah! what sayest thou?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "This seemeth to me but the bare truth; yet it
|
||
is little after the manner of such masterful men as ye be.
|
||
But why then do ye slay all their carles that are taken;
|
||
whereas ye bear away the women and make thralls of them at home,
|
||
that is to say, foes in every house?"
|
||
|
||
"It may be," said the Burgher, "that this is not amongst the wisest
|
||
of our dealings. Yet may we do no otherwise; for thus we swore to do
|
||
by all the greatest oaths that we might swear, in the days when we
|
||
first cast off their yoke, and yet were not over strong at the first;
|
||
and now it hath so grown into a part of our manners, yea, and of our very
|
||
hearts and minds, that the slaying of a Wheat-wearer is to us a lighter
|
||
matter than the smiting of a rabbit or a fowmart. But now, look you,
|
||
fair sir, my company ariseth from table; so I bid thee a good night.
|
||
And I give thee a good rede along with the good wish, to wit,
|
||
that thou ask not too many questions in this city concerning its foemen:
|
||
for here is the stranger looked upon with doubt, if he neither will take
|
||
the wages of the Burg for battle, nor hath aught to sell."
|
||
|
||
Ralph reddened at his word, and the other looked at him steadily
|
||
as he spoke, so that Ralph deemed that he mistrusted him:
|
||
he deemed moreover that three or four of the others looked
|
||
hard at him as they went towards the door, while Roger stood
|
||
somewhat smiling, and humming a snatch of an old song.
|
||
|
||
But when the other guests had left the hostelry, Roger left
|
||
his singing, and turned to Ralph and said: "Master, meseems
|
||
that they mistrust us, and now maybe is that peril that I spake
|
||
of nigher than I deemed when we came into the Burg this morning.
|
||
And now I would that we were well out of the Burg and in the merry
|
||
greenwood again, and it repents me that I brought thee hither."
|
||
|
||
"Nay, good fellow," quoth Ralph, "heed it not: besides, it was me,
|
||
not thee, that they seemed to doubt of. I will depart hence to-morrow
|
||
morning no worser than I came, and leave thee to seek thy fortune here;
|
||
and good luck go with thee."
|
||
|
||
Roger looked hard at him and said: "Not so, young lord; if thou goest
|
||
I will go with thee, for thou hast won my heart, I know not how:
|
||
and I would verily be thy servant, to follow thee whithersoever thou goest;
|
||
for I think that great deeds will come of thee."
|
||
|
||
This word pleased Ralph, for he was young and lightly put
|
||
faith in men's words, and loved to be well thought of,
|
||
and was fain of good fellowship withal. So he said:
|
||
"This is a good word of thine, and I thank thee for it;
|
||
and look to it that in my adventures, and the reward of them
|
||
thou shalt have thy due share. Lo here my hand on it!"
|
||
|
||
Roger took his hand, yet therewith his face seemed
|
||
a little troubled, but he said nought. Then spoke Ralph:
|
||
"True it is that I am not fain to take the wages of the Burg;
|
||
for it seems to me that they be hard men, and cruel and joyless,
|
||
and that their service shall be rather churlish than knightly.
|
||
Howbeit, let night bring counsel, and we will see to this to-morrow;
|
||
for now I am both sleepy and weary." Therewith he called
|
||
the chamberlain, who bore a wax light before him to his chamber,
|
||
and he did off his raiment and cast himself on his bed, and fell
|
||
asleep straightway, before he knew where Roger was sleeping,
|
||
whether it were in the hall or some place else.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 15
|
||
|
||
How Ralph Departed From the Burg of the Four Friths
|
||
|
||
|
||
Himseemed he had scarce been asleep a minute ere awoke with a sound
|
||
of someone saying softly, "Master, master, awake!" So he sat
|
||
up and answered softly in his turn: "Who is it? what is amiss,
|
||
since the night is yet young?"
|
||
|
||
"I am thy fellow-farer, Roger," said the speaker, "and this thou hast
|
||
to do, get on thy raiment speedily, and take thy weapons without noise,
|
||
if thou wouldst not be in the prison of the Burg before sunrise."
|
||
|
||
Ralph did as he was bidden without more words; for already when
|
||
he lay down his heart misgave him that he was in no safe place;
|
||
he looked to his weapons and armour that they should not clash,
|
||
and down they came into the hall and found the door on the latch;
|
||
so out they went and Ralph saw that it was somewhat cloudy;
|
||
the moon was set and it was dark, but Ralph knew by the scent
|
||
that came in on the light wind, and a little stir of blended sounds,
|
||
that it was hard on dawning; and even therewith he heard
|
||
the challenge of the warders on the walls and their crying
|
||
of the hour; and the chimes of the belfry rang clear and loud,
|
||
and seeming close above him, two hours and a half after midnight.
|
||
Roger spake not, and Ralph was man-at-arms enough to know that he must
|
||
hold his peace; and though he longed sore to have his horse Falcon
|
||
with him, yet he wotted that it availed not to ask of his horse,
|
||
since he durst not ask of his life.
|
||
|
||
So they went on silently till they were out of the Great Place
|
||
and came into a narrow street, and so into another which led
|
||
them straight into the houseless space under the wall.
|
||
Roger led right on as if he knew the way well, and in a twinkling
|
||
were they come to a postern in the wall betwixt the East Gate
|
||
and the South. By the said postern Ralph saw certain men standing;
|
||
and on the earth near by, whereas he was keen-eyed, he saw
|
||
more than one man lying moveless.
|
||
|
||
Spake Roger softly to the men who stood on their feet:
|
||
"Is the rope twined?" "Nay, rope-twiner," said one of them.
|
||
Then Roger turned and whispered to Ralph: "Friends. Get out thy sword!"
|
||
Wherewithal the gate was opened, and they all passed out through the wall,
|
||
and stood above the ditch in the angle-nook of a square tower.
|
||
Then Ralph saw some of the men stoop and shoot out a broad
|
||
plank over the ditch, which was deep but not wide thereabout,
|
||
and straightway he followed the others over it, going last save Roger.
|
||
By then they were on the other side he saw a glimmer of the dawn in the
|
||
eastern heaven, but it was still more than dusk, and no man spoke again.
|
||
They went on softly across the plain fields outside the wall,
|
||
creeping from bush to bush, and from tree to tree, for here,
|
||
if nowhere about the circuit of the Burg, were a few trees growing.
|
||
Thus they came into a little wood and passed through it, and then
|
||
Ralph could see that the men were six besides Roger; by the glimmer
|
||
of the growing dawn he saw before them a space of meadows with high
|
||
hedges about them, and a dim line that he took for the roof of a barn
|
||
or grange, and beyond that a dark mass of trees.
|
||
|
||
Still they pressed on without speaking; a dog barked not far off
|
||
and the cocks were crowing, and close by them in the meadow a cow lowed
|
||
and went hustling over the bents and the long, unbitten buttercups.
|
||
Day grew apace, and by then they were under the barn-gable which he had seen
|
||
aloof he saw the other roofs of the grange and heard the bleating of sheep.
|
||
And now he saw those six men clearly, and noted that one of them was
|
||
very big and tall, and one small and slender, and it came into his mind
|
||
that these two were none other than the twain whom he had come upon
|
||
the last night sitting in the hall of the Flower de Luce.
|
||
|
||
Even therewith came a man to the gate of the sheep-cote by the grange,
|
||
and caught sight of them, and had the wits to run back at once shouting out:
|
||
"Hugh, Wat, Richard, and all ye, out with you, out a doors! Here be men!
|
||
Ware the Dry Tree! Bows and bills! Bows and bills!"
|
||
|
||
With that those fellows of Ralph made no more ado, but set off running
|
||
at their best toward the wood aforesaid, which crowned the slope
|
||
leading up from the grange, and now took no care to go softly,
|
||
nor heeded the clashing of their armour. Ralph ran with the best
|
||
and entered the wood alongside the slim youth aforesaid,
|
||
who stayed not at the wood's edge but went on running still:
|
||
but Ralph stayed and turned to see what was toward, and beheld
|
||
how that tall man was the last of their company, and ere he entered
|
||
the wood turned about with a bent bow in his hand, and even
|
||
as he nocked the shaft, the men from the Grange, who were seven
|
||
in all, came running out from behind the barn-gable, crying out:
|
||
"Ho thieves! ho ye of the Dry Tree, abide till we come! flee
|
||
not from handy strokes." The tall man had the shaft to his ear
|
||
in a twinkling, and loosed straightway, and nocked and loosed
|
||
another shaft without staying to note how the first had sped.
|
||
But Ralph saw that a man was before each of the shafts, and had
|
||
fallen to earth, though he had no time to see aught else, for even
|
||
therewith the tall man caught him by the hand, and crying out,
|
||
"The third time!" ran on with him after the rest of their company;
|
||
and whereas he was long-legged and Ralph lightfooted, they speedily
|
||
came up with them, who were running still, but laughing as they ran,
|
||
and jeering at the men of the Burgh; and the tall man shouted
|
||
out to them: "Yea, lads, the counterfeit Dry Tree that they
|
||
have raised in the Burg shall be dry enough this time."
|
||
"Truly," said another, "till we come to water it with the blood
|
||
of these wretches."
|
||
|
||
"Well, well, get on," said a third, "waste not your wind in talk;
|
||
those carles will make but a short run of it to the walls long
|
||
as it was for us, creeping and creeping as we behoved to."
|
||
|
||
The long man laughed; "Thou sayest sooth," said he,
|
||
"but thou art the longest winded of all in talking:
|
||
get on, lads."
|
||
|
||
They laughed again at his word and sped on with less noise;
|
||
while Ralph thought within himself that he was come into strange company,
|
||
for now he knew well that the big man was even he whom he had
|
||
first met at the churchyard gate of the thorp under Bear Hill.
|
||
Yet he deemed that there was nought for it now but to go on.
|
||
|
||
Within a while they all slacked somewhat, and presently did
|
||
but walk, though swiftly, through the paths of the thicket,
|
||
which Ralph deemed full surely was part of that side of the Wood
|
||
Perilous that lay south of the Burg of the Four Friths.
|
||
And now Roger joined himself to him, and spake to him aloud and said:
|
||
"So, fair master, thou art out of the peril of death for this bout."
|
||
|
||
"Art thou all so sure of that?" quoth Ralph, "or who are these that be
|
||
with us? meseems they smell of the Dry Tree."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, or rebels and runaways therefrom," said Roger, with a dry grin.
|
||
"But whosoever they may be, thou shalt see that they will suffer
|
||
us to depart whither we will, if we like not their company.
|
||
I will be thy warrant thereof."
|
||
|
||
"Moreover," said Ralph, "I have lost Falcon my horse;
|
||
it is a sore miss of him."
|
||
|
||
"Maybe," quoth Roger, "but at least thou hast saved thy skin; and whereas
|
||
there are many horses on the earth, there is but one skin of thine:
|
||
be content; if thou wilt, thou shall win somewhat in exchange
|
||
for thine horse."
|
||
|
||
Ralph smiled, but somewhat sourly, and even therewith he heard
|
||
a shrill whistle a little aloof, and the men stayed and held
|
||
their peace, for they were talking together freely again now.
|
||
Then the big man put his fingers to his mouth and whistled
|
||
again in answer, a third whistle answered him; and lo,
|
||
presently, as their company hastened on, the voices of men,
|
||
and anon they came into a little wood-lawn wherein standing
|
||
about or lying on the grass beside their horses were more than
|
||
a score of men well armed, but without any banner or token,
|
||
and all in white armour with white Gaberdines thereover;
|
||
and they had with them, as Ralph judged, some dozen of horses
|
||
more than they needed for their own riding.
|
||
|
||
Great was the joy at this meeting, and there was embracing and kissing
|
||
of friends: but Ralph noted that no man embraced that slender youth,
|
||
and that he held him somewhat aloof from the others, and all seemed
|
||
to do him reverence.
|
||
|
||
Now spake one of the runaways: "Well, lads, here be all we four
|
||
well met again along with those twain who came to help us at
|
||
our pinch, as their wont is, and Roger withal, good at need again,
|
||
and a friend of his, as it seemeth, and whom we know not.
|
||
See ye to that."
|
||
|
||
Then stood forth the big man and said: "He is a fair young knight,
|
||
as ye may see; and he rideth seeking adventures, and Roger did us to wit
|
||
that he was abiding in the Burg at his peril, and would have him away,
|
||
even if it were somewhat against his will: and we were willing that it
|
||
should be so, all the more as I have a guess concerning what he is;
|
||
and a foreseeing man might think that luck should go with him."
|
||
Therewith he turned to Ralph and said: "How say ye, fair sir,
|
||
will ye take guesting with us a while and learn our ways?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Certain I am that whither ye will have me go,
|
||
thither must I; yet I deem that I have an errand that lies not your way.
|
||
Therefore if I go with you, ye must so look upon it that I am
|
||
in your fellowship as one compelled. To be short with you,
|
||
I crave leave to depart and go mine own road."
|
||
|
||
As he spoke he saw the youth walking up and down in short turns; but his face
|
||
he could scarce see at all, what for his slouched hat, what for his cloak;
|
||
and at last he saw him go up to the tall man and speak softly to him awhile.
|
||
The tall man nodded his head, and as the youth drew right back nigh to
|
||
the thicket, spake to Ralph again.
|
||
|
||
"Fair sir, we grant thine asking; and add this thereto that we give thee
|
||
the man who has joined himself to thee, Roger of the Rope-walk to wit, to help
|
||
thee on the road, so that thou mayst not turn thy face back to the Burg of
|
||
the Four Friths, where thine errand, and thy life withal, were soon sped now,
|
||
or run into any other trap which the Wood Perilous may have for thee.
|
||
And yet if thou think better of it, thou mayst come with us straightway;
|
||
for we have nought to do to tarry here any longer. And in any case,
|
||
here is a good horse that we will give thee, since thou hast lost thy steed;
|
||
and Roger who rideth with thee, he also is well horsed."
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked hard at the big man, who now had his salade thrown back
|
||
from his face, to see if he gave any token of jeering or malice,
|
||
but could see nought such: nay, his face was grave and serious,
|
||
not ill-fashioned, though it were both long and broad like his body:
|
||
his cheek-bones somewhat high, his eyes grey and middling great,
|
||
and looking, as it were, far away.
|
||
|
||
Now deems Ralph that as for a trap of the Wood Perilous,
|
||
he had already fallen into the trap; for he scarce needed to be
|
||
told that these were men of the Dry Tree. He knew also that it
|
||
was Roger who had led him into this trap, although he deemed it
|
||
done with no malice against him. So he said to himself that if
|
||
he went with Roger he but went a roundabout road to the Dry Tree;
|
||
so that he was well nigh choosing to go on with their company.
|
||
Yet again he thought that something might well befall which would
|
||
free him from that fellowship if he went with Roger alone;
|
||
whereas if he went with the others it was not that he might be,
|
||
but that he was already of the fellowship of the Dry Tree,
|
||
and most like would go straight thence to their stronghold.
|
||
So he spake as soberly as the tall man had done.
|
||
|
||
"Since ye give me the choice, fair sir, I will depart hence with Roger alone,
|
||
whom ye call my man, though to me he seemeth to be yours. Howbeit, he has
|
||
led me to you once, and belike will do so once more."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," quoth the big man smiling no whit more than erst,
|
||
"and that will make the fourth time. Depart then, fair sir,
|
||
and take this word with thee that I wish thee good and not evil."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 16
|
||
|
||
Ralph Rideth the Wood Perilous Again
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now Roger led up to Ralph a strong horse, red roan of hue, duly harnessed
|
||
for war, and he himself had a good grey horse, and they mounted at once,
|
||
and Ralph rode slowly away through the wood at his horse's will, for he was
|
||
pondering all that had befallen him, and wondering what next should hap.
|
||
Meanwhile those others had not loitered, but were a-horseback at once,
|
||
and went their ways from Ralph through the wildwood.
|
||
|
||
Nought spake Ralph for a while till Roger came close up to him and said:
|
||
"Whither shall we betake us, fair lord? hast thou an inkling of the road
|
||
whereon lies thine errand?"
|
||
|
||
Now to Ralph this seemed but mockery, and he answered sharply:
|
||
"I wot not, thou wilt lead whither thou wilt, even as thou hast trained
|
||
me hitherward with lies and a forged tale. I suppose thou wilt lead
|
||
me now by some roundabout road to the stronghold of the Dry Tree.
|
||
It matters little, since thou durst not lead me back into the Burg.
|
||
Yet now I come to think of it, it is evil to be alone with a found
|
||
out traitor and liar; and I had belike have done better to go
|
||
with their company."
|
||
|
||
"Nay nay," quoth Roger, "thou art angry, and I marvel not thereat;
|
||
but let thy wrath run off thee if thou mayest; for indeed what I
|
||
have told thee of myself and my griefs is not all mere lying.
|
||
Neither was it any lie that thou wert in peril of thy life amongst
|
||
those tyrants of the Burg; thou with thy manly bearing, and free
|
||
tongue, and bred, as I judge, to hate cruel deeds and injustice.
|
||
Such freedom they cannot away with in that fellowship of
|
||
hard men-at-arms; and soon hadst thou come to harm amongst them.
|
||
And further, let alone that it is not ill to be sundered
|
||
from yonder company, who mayhap will have rough work to do
|
||
or ever they win home, I have nought to do to bring thee
|
||
to Hampton under Scaur if thou hast no will to go thither:
|
||
though certes I would lead thee some whither, whereof thou
|
||
shalt ask me nought as now; yet will I say thereof this much,
|
||
that there thou shalt be both safe and well at ease.
|
||
Now lastly know this, that whatever I have done, I have done
|
||
it to do thee good and not ill; and there is also another one,
|
||
whom I will not name to thee, who wisheth thee better yet,
|
||
by the token of those two strokes stricken by thee in the Wood
|
||
Perilous before yesterday was a day."
|
||
|
||
Now when Ralph heard those last words, such strong and sweet hope
|
||
and desire stirred in him to see that woman of the Want-ways
|
||
of the Wood Perilous that he forgat all else, except that he must
|
||
nowise fall to strife with Roger, lest they should sunder,
|
||
and he should lose the help of him, which he now deemed would
|
||
bring him to sight of her whom he had unwittingly come to long
|
||
for more than aught else; so he spake to Roger quietly and humbly:
|
||
"Well, faring-fellow, thou seest how I am little more than
|
||
a lad, and have fallen into matters mighty and perilous,
|
||
which I may not deal with of my own strength, at least until
|
||
I get nigher to them so that I may look them in the eyes,
|
||
and strike a stroke or two on them if they be at enmity with me.
|
||
So I bid thee lead me whither thou wilt, and if thou be a traitor
|
||
to me, on thine own head be it; in good sooth, since I know
|
||
nought of this wood and since I might go astray and so come back
|
||
to the Burg where be those whom thou hast now made my foemen,
|
||
I am content to take thee on thy word, and to hope the best of thee,
|
||
and ask no question of thee, save whitherward."
|
||
|
||
"Fair sir," said Roger, "away from this place at least;
|
||
for we are as yet over nigh to the Burg to be safe:
|
||
but as to elsewhither we may wend, thereof we may speak on
|
||
the road as we have leisure."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he smote his horse with his heel and they went forward at
|
||
a smart trot, for the horses were unwearied, and the wood thereabouts
|
||
of beech and clear of underwood; and Roger seemed to know his way well,
|
||
and made no fumbling over it.
|
||
|
||
Four hours or more gone, the wood thinned and the beeches failed,
|
||
and they came to a country, still waste, of little low hills,
|
||
stony for the more part, beset with scraggy thorn-bushes, and here
|
||
and there some other berry-tree sown by the birds. Then said Roger:
|
||
"Now I deem us well out of the peril of them of the Burg, who if they
|
||
follow the chase as far as the sundering of us and the others,
|
||
will heed our slot nothing, but will follow on that of the company:
|
||
so we may breathe our horses a little, though their bait will be
|
||
but small in this rough waste: therein we are better off than they,
|
||
for lo you, saddle bags on my nag and meat and drink therein."
|
||
|
||
So they lighted down and let their horses graze what they could,
|
||
while they ate and drank; amidst which Ralph again asked Roger
|
||
of whither they were going. Said Roger: "I shall lead thee
|
||
to a good harbour, and a noble house of a master of mine,
|
||
wherein thou mayst dwell certain days, if thou hast a mind thereto,
|
||
not without solace maybe."
|
||
|
||
"And this master," said Ralph, "is he of the Dry Tree?"
|
||
Said Roger: "I scarce know how to answer thee without lying:
|
||
but this I say, that whether he be or not, this is true;
|
||
amongst those men I have friends and amongst them foes;
|
||
but fate bindeth me to them for a while." Said Ralph reddening:
|
||
"Be there any women amongst them?" "Yea, yea," quoth Roger,
|
||
smiling a little, "doubt not thereof."
|
||
|
||
"And that Lady of the Dry Tree," quoth Ralph, reddening yet more,
|
||
but holding up his head, "that woman whereof the Burgher spoke
|
||
so bitterly, threatening her with torments and death if they
|
||
might but lay hold of her; what wilt thou tell me concerning her?"
|
||
"But little," said Roger, "save this, that thou desirest to see her,
|
||
and that thou mayest have thy will thereon if thou wilt be
|
||
guided by me."
|
||
|
||
Ralph hearkened as if he heeded little what Roger said;
|
||
but presently he rose up and walked to and fro in short
|
||
turns with knit brows as one pondering a hard matter.
|
||
He spake nought, and Roger seemed to heed him nothing, though in
|
||
sooth he looked at him askance from time to time, till at last
|
||
he came and lay down again by Roger, and in a while he spake:
|
||
"I wot not why ye of the Dry Tree want me, or what ye will
|
||
do with me; and but for one thing I would even now ride away
|
||
from thee at all adventure."
|
||
|
||
Roger said: "All this ye shall learn later on, and shalt find it
|
||
but a simple matter; and meanwhile I tell thee again that all is
|
||
for thy gain and thy pleasure. So now ride away if thou wilt;
|
||
who hindereth thee? certes not I."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "I will ride with thee first to that fair house;
|
||
and afterwards we shall see what is to hap." "Yea," quoth Roger,
|
||
"then let us to horse straightway, so that we may be there
|
||
if not before dark night yet at least before bright morn;
|
||
for it is yet far away."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 17
|
||
|
||
Ralph Cometh to the House of Abundance
|
||
|
||
|
||
Therewithal they gat to horse and rode away through that
|
||
stony land, wherein was no river, but for water many pools
|
||
in the bottoms, with little brooks running from them.
|
||
But after a while they came upon a ridge somewhat high,
|
||
on the further side whereof was a wide valley well-grassed and
|
||
with few trees, and no habitation of man that they might see.
|
||
But a wide river ran down the midst of it; and it was now four
|
||
hours after noon. Quoth Roger: "The day wears and we shall by no
|
||
means reach harbour before dark night, even if we do our best:
|
||
art thou well used to the water, lord?" "Much as a mallard is,"
|
||
said Ralph. Said Roger: "That is well, for though there is
|
||
a ford some mile and a half down stream, for that same reason it
|
||
is the way whereby men mostly cross the water into the wildwood;
|
||
and here again we are more like to meet foes than well-wishers;
|
||
or at the least there will be question of who we are, and whence
|
||
and whither; and we may stumble in our answers." Said Ralph:
|
||
"There is no need to tarry, ride we down to the water."
|
||
|
||
So did they, and took the water, which was deep, but not swift.
|
||
On the further side they clomb up a hill somewhat steep;
|
||
at the crown they drew rein to give their horses breath,
|
||
and Ralph turned in his saddle and looked down on to the valley,
|
||
and as aforesaid he was clear-sighted and far-sighted; now he said:
|
||
"Fellow-farer, I see the riding of folk down below there,
|
||
and meseems they be spurring toward the water; and they have weapons:
|
||
there! dost thou not see the gleam?"
|
||
|
||
"I will take thy word for it, fair sir," said Roger, "and will even spur,
|
||
since they be the first men whom we have seen since we left the thickets."
|
||
And therewith he went off at a hand gallop, and Ralph followed him
|
||
without more ado.
|
||
|
||
They rode up hill and down dale of a grassy downland, till at
|
||
last they saw a wood before them again, and soon drew rein
|
||
under the boughs; for now were their horses somewhat wearied.
|
||
Then said Ralph: "Here have we ridden a fair land, and seen
|
||
neither house nor herd, neither sheep-cote nor shepherd.
|
||
I wonder thereat."
|
||
|
||
Said Roger: "Thou wouldst wonder the less didst thou know the story of it."
|
||
"What story?" said Ralph. Quoth Roger: "A story of war and wasting."
|
||
"Yea?" said Ralph, "yet surely some bold knight or baron hath rights
|
||
in the land, and might be free to build him a strong house and gather men
|
||
to him to guard the shepherds and husbandmen from burners and lifters."
|
||
"Sooth is that," said Roger; "but there are other things in the tale."
|
||
"What things?" said Ralph. Quoth Roger: "Ill hap and sorrow
|
||
and the Hand of Fate and great Sorcery." "And dastards withal?"
|
||
said Ralph. "Even so," said Roger, "yet mingled with valiant men.
|
||
Over long is the tale to tell as now, so low as the sun is;
|
||
so now ride we on with little fear of foemen. For look you, this wood,
|
||
like the thickets about the Burg of the Four Friths, hath an evil name,
|
||
and few folk ride it uncompelled; therefore it is the safer for us.
|
||
And yet I will say this to thee, that whereas awhile agone thou mightest
|
||
have departed from me with little peril of aught save the stumbling
|
||
on some of the riders of the Burg of the Four Friths, departing from me
|
||
now will be a hard matter to thee; for the saints in Heaven only know
|
||
whitherward thou shouldest come, if thou wert to guide thyself now.
|
||
This a rough word, but a true one, so help me God and Saint Michael!
|
||
What sayest thou; art thou content, or wilt thou cast hard words
|
||
at me again?"
|
||
|
||
So it was that for all that had come and gone Ralph
|
||
was light-hearted and happy; so he laughed and said:
|
||
"Content were I, even if I were not compelled thereto.
|
||
For my heart tells me of new things, and marvellous and joyous
|
||
that I shall see ere long."
|
||
|
||
"And thine heart lieth not," said Roger, "for amidst of this
|
||
wood is the house where we shall have guesting to-night, which
|
||
will be to thee, belike, the door of life and many marvels.
|
||
For thence have folk sought ere now to the WELL AT THE WORLD'S END."
|
||
|
||
Ralph turned to him sharply and said: "Many times in these few days have
|
||
I heard that word. Dost thou know the meaning thereof? For as to me I
|
||
know it not." Said Roger: "Thou mayest well be as wise as I am thereon:
|
||
belike men seek to it for their much thriving, and oftenest find it not.
|
||
Yet have I heard that they be the likeliest with whom all women are in love."
|
||
|
||
Ralph held his peace, but Roger noted that he reddened at the word.
|
||
|
||
Now they got on horseback again, for they had lighted down to breathe
|
||
their beasts, and they rode on and on, and never was Roger at fault:
|
||
long was the way and perforce they rested at whiles, so that night
|
||
fell upon them in the wood, but the moon rose withal. So night being
|
||
fairly come, they rested a good while, as it would be dawn before moonset.
|
||
Then they rode on again, till now the summer night grew old and waned,
|
||
but the wood hid the beginnings of dawn.
|
||
|
||
At last they came out of the close wood suddenly into an open plain,
|
||
and now, as the twilight of the dawn was passing into early day,
|
||
they saw that wide grassy meadows and tilled fields lay before them,
|
||
with a little river running through the plain; and amidst the meadows,
|
||
on a green mound, was a white castle, strong, and well built,
|
||
though not of the biggest.
|
||
|
||
Roger pointed to it, and said, "Now we are come home," and cried on his
|
||
wearied beast, who for his part seemed to see the end of his journey.
|
||
They splashed through a ford of the river and came to the gate of the castle
|
||
as day drew on apace; Roger blew a blast on a great horn that hung
|
||
on the gate, and Ralph looking round deemed he had never seen fairer
|
||
building than in the castle, what he could see of it, and yet it was
|
||
built from of old. They waited no long while before they were answered;
|
||
but whereas Ralph looked to see armed gatewards peer from the battlements
|
||
or the shot window, and a porter espying them through a lattice,
|
||
it happened in no such way, but without more ado the wicket was opened
|
||
to them by a tall old woman, gaunt and grey, who greeted them courteously:
|
||
Roger lighted down and Ralph did in likewise, and they led their horses
|
||
through the gate into the court of the castle; the old woman going
|
||
before them till they came to the hall door, which she opened to them,
|
||
and taking the reins of their horses led them away to the stable,
|
||
while those twain entered the hall, which was as goodly as might be.
|
||
Roger led Ralph up to a board on the dais, whereon there was meat and
|
||
drink enow, and Ralph made his way-leader sit down by him, and they fell to.
|
||
There was no serving-man to wait on them nor a carle of any kind did they see;
|
||
the old woman only, coming back from the horses, served them at table.
|
||
Ever as she went about she looked long on Ralph, and seemed as if she
|
||
would have spoken to him, but as often, she glanced at Roger and forbore.
|
||
|
||
So when they were well nigh done with their meat Ralph spake to the carline
|
||
and said: "Belike the lord or the lady of this house are abed and we shall
|
||
not see them till the morrow?"
|
||
|
||
Ere the carline could speak Roger broke in and said:
|
||
"There is neither lord nor lady in the castle as now, nor belike
|
||
will there be to-morrow morning, or rather, before noon on this day;
|
||
so now ye were better to let this dame lead thee to bed,
|
||
and let the next hours take care of themselves."
|
||
|
||
"So be it," said Ralph, who was by this time heartily wearied,
|
||
"shall we two lie in the same chamber?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said the carline shortly, "lodging for the master and lodging
|
||
for the man are two different things."
|
||
|
||
Roger laughed and said nought, and Ralph gave him good night,
|
||
and followed the carline nothing loth, who led him to a fair
|
||
chamber over the solar, as if he had been the very master of
|
||
the castle, and he lay down in a very goodly bed, nor troubled
|
||
himself as to where Roger lay, nor indeed of aught else,
|
||
nor did he dream of Burg, or wood, or castle, or man, or woman;
|
||
but lay still like the image of his father's father on the painted
|
||
tomb in the choir of St. Laurence of Upmeads.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 18
|
||
|
||
Of Ralph in the Castle of Abundance
|
||
|
||
|
||
Broad lay the sun upon the plain amidst the wildwood when
|
||
he awoke and sprang out of bed and looked out of the window
|
||
(for the chamber was in the gable of the hall and there was nought
|
||
of the castle beyond it). It was but little after noon of a fair
|
||
June day, for Ralph had slumbered as it behoved a young man.
|
||
The light wind bore into the chamber the sweet scents of
|
||
the early summer, the chief of all of them being the savour
|
||
of the new-cut grass, for about the wide meadows the carles
|
||
and queens were awork at the beginning of hay harvest;
|
||
and late as it was in the day, more than one blackbird
|
||
was singing from the bushes of the castle pleasance.
|
||
Ralph sighed for very pleasure of life before he had yet
|
||
well remembered where he was or what had befallen of late;
|
||
but as he stood at the window and gazed over the meadows,
|
||
and the memory of all came back to him, he sighed once
|
||
more for a lack of somewhat that came into his heart,
|
||
and he smiled shamefacedly, though there was no one near,
|
||
as his thought bade him wonder if amongst the haymaking women
|
||
yonder there were any as fair as those yellow-clad thrall-women
|
||
of the Burg; and as he turned from the window a new hope
|
||
made his heart beat, for he deemed that he had been brought
|
||
to that house that he might meet some one who should change
|
||
his life and make him a new man.
|
||
|
||
So he did on his raiment and went his ways down to the hall, and looked
|
||
about for Roger, but found him not, nor any one else save the carline,
|
||
who presently came in from the buttery, and of whom he asked,
|
||
where was Roger. Quoth she: "He has been gone these six hours,
|
||
but hath left a word for thee, lord, to wit, that he beseeches thee
|
||
to abide him here for two days at the least, and thereafter thou
|
||
art free to go if thou wilt. But as for me" (and therewith she
|
||
smiled on him as sweetly as her wrinkled old face might compass)
|
||
"I say to thee, abide beyond those two days if Roger cometh not,
|
||
and as long as thou art here I will make thee all the cheer I may.
|
||
And who knoweth but thou mayest meet worthy adventures here.
|
||
Such have ere now befallen good knights in this house or anigh it."
|
||
|
||
"I thank thee, mother," quoth Ralph, "and it is like that I may abide
|
||
here beyond the two days if the adventure befall me not ere then.
|
||
But at least I will bide the eating of my dinner here to-day."
|
||
|
||
"Well is thee, fair lord," said the carline. "If thou wilt but walk
|
||
in the meadow but a little half hour all shall be ready for thee.
|
||
Forsooth it had been dight before now, but that I waited thy coming
|
||
forth from thy chamber, for I would not wake thee. And the saints be
|
||
praised for the long sweet sleep that hath painted thy goodly cheeks."
|
||
So saying she hurried off to the buttery, leaving Ralph laughing
|
||
at her outspoken flattering words.
|
||
|
||
Then he got him out of the hall and the castle, for no door was shut,
|
||
and there was no man to be seen within or about the house.
|
||
So he walked to and fro the meadow and saw the neat-herds in
|
||
the pasture, and the hay-making folk beyond them, and the sound
|
||
of their voices came to him on the little airs that were breathing.
|
||
He thought he would talk to some of these folk ere the world
|
||
was much older, and also he noted between the river and the wood
|
||
many cots of the husbandmen trimly builded and thatched,
|
||
and amidst them a little church, white and delicate of fashion;
|
||
but as now his face was set toward the river because of the hot day.
|
||
He came to a pool a little below where a wooden foot-bridge
|
||
crossed the water, and about the pool were willows growing,
|
||
which had not been shrouded these eight years, and the water
|
||
was clear as glass with a bottom of fine sand. There then
|
||
he bathed him, and as he sported in the water he bethought him
|
||
of the long smooth reaches of Upmeads Water, and the swimming
|
||
low down amidst the long swinging weeds between the chuckle of
|
||
the reed sparrows, when the sun was new risen in the July morning.
|
||
When he stood on the grass again, what with the bright weather
|
||
and fair little land, what with the freshness of the water,
|
||
and his good rest, and the hope of adventure to come, he felt
|
||
as if he had never been merrier in his life-days. Withal it
|
||
was a weight off his heart that he had escaped from the turmoil
|
||
of the wars of the Burg of the Four Friths, and the men
|
||
of the Dry Tree, and the Wheat-wearers, with the thralldom
|
||
and stripes and fire-raising, and the hard life of strife
|
||
and gain of the walled town and strong place.
|
||
|
||
When he came back to the castle gate there was the carline in the wicket
|
||
peering out to right and left, seeking him to bring him in to dinner.
|
||
And when she saw him so joyous, with his lips smiling and his eyes dancing
|
||
for mirth, she also became joyous, and said: "Verily, it is a pity of thee
|
||
that there is never a fair damsel or so to look on thee and love thee
|
||
here to-day. Far would many a maiden run to kiss thy mouth, fair lad.
|
||
But now come to thy meat, that thou mayest grow the fairer and
|
||
last the longer."
|
||
|
||
He laughed gaily and went into the hall with her, and now was it
|
||
well dight with bankers and dorsars of goodly figured cloth,
|
||
and on the walls a goodly halling of arras of the Story of Alexander.
|
||
So he sat to table, and the meat and drink was of the best,
|
||
and the carline served him, praising him ever with fulsome words
|
||
as he ate, till he wished her away.
|
||
|
||
After dinner he rested awhile, and called to the carline and bade
|
||
her bring him his sword and his basnet. "Wherefore?" said she.
|
||
"Whither wilt thou?"
|
||
|
||
Said he, "I would walk abroad to drink the air."
|
||
|
||
"Wilt thou into the wildwood?" said she.
|
||
|
||
"Nay, mother," he said, "I will but walk about the meadow and look
|
||
on the hay-making folk."
|
||
|
||
"For that," said the carline, "thou needest neither sword nor helm.
|
||
I was afeard that thou wert about departing, and thy departure would
|
||
be a grief to my heart: in the deep wood thou mightest be so bestead
|
||
as to need a sword in thy fist; but what shouldst thou do with it
|
||
in this Plain of Abundance, where are nought but peaceful husbandmen
|
||
and frank and kind maidens? and all these are as if they had drunk
|
||
a draught of the WELL AT THE WORLD'S END."
|
||
|
||
Ralph started as she said the word, but held his peace awhile.
|
||
Then he said: "And who is lord of this fair land?"
|
||
"There is no lord, but a lady," said the carline.
|
||
"How hight she?" said Ralph. "We call her the Lady of Abundance,"
|
||
said the old woman. Said Ralph: "Is she a good lady?"
|
||
"She is my lady," said the carline, "and doeth good to me,
|
||
and there is not a carle in the land but speaketh well of her--
|
||
it may be over well." "Is she fair to look on?" said Ralph.
|
||
"Of women-folk there is none fairer," said the carline;
|
||
"as to men, that is another thing."
|
||
|
||
Ralph was silent awhile, then he said: "What is the Well
|
||
at the World's End?"
|
||
|
||
"They talk of it here," said she, "many things too long to tell
|
||
of now: but there is a book in this house that telleth of it;
|
||
I know it well by the look of it though I may not read in it.
|
||
I will seek it for thee to-morrow if thou wilt."
|
||
|
||
"Have thou thanks, dame," said he; "and I pray thee forget it not;
|
||
but now I will go forth."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said the carline, "but abide a little."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she went into the buttery, and came back bearing
|
||
with her a garland of roses of the garden, intermingled with
|
||
green leaves, and she said: "The sun is yet hot and over hot,
|
||
do this on thine head to shade thee from the burning.
|
||
I knew that thou wouldst go abroad to-day, so I made this
|
||
for thee in the morning; and when I was young I was called
|
||
the garland-maker. It is better summer wear than thy basnet."
|
||
|
||
He thanked her and did it on smiling, but somewhat ruefully;
|
||
for he said to himself: "This is over old a dame that I should
|
||
wear a love-token from her." But when it was on his head, the old
|
||
dame clapped her hands and cried: "O there, there! Now art thou
|
||
like the image of St. Michael in the Choir of Our Lady of the Thorn:
|
||
there is none so lovely as thou. I would my Lady could see
|
||
thee thus; surely the sight of thee should gladden her heart.
|
||
And withal thou art not ill clad otherwise."
|
||
|
||
Indeed his raiment was goodly, for his surcoat was new,
|
||
and it was of fine green cloth, and the coat-armour of Upmead
|
||
was beaten on it, to wit, on a gold ground an apple-tree fruited,
|
||
standing by a river-side.
|
||
|
||
Now he laughed somewhat uneasily at her words, and so went forth
|
||
from the castle again, and made straight for the hay-making folk
|
||
on the other side of the water; for all this side was being
|
||
fed by beasts and sheep; but at the point where he crossed,
|
||
the winding of the stream brought it near to the castle gate.
|
||
So he came up with the country folk and greeted them,
|
||
and they did as much by him in courteous words:
|
||
they were goodly and well-shapen, both men and women, gay and
|
||
joyous of demeanour and well clad as for folk who work afield.
|
||
So Ralph went from one to another and gave them a word or two,
|
||
and was well pleased to watch them at their work awhile; but yet
|
||
he would fain speak somewhat more with one or other of them.
|
||
At last under the shade of a tall elm-tree he saw an old man
|
||
sitting heeding the outer raiment of the haymakers and their
|
||
victual and bottles of drink; and he came up to him and gave
|
||
him the sele of the day; and the old man blessed him and said:
|
||
"Art thou dwelling in my lady's castle, fair lord?"
|
||
"A while at least," said Ralph. Said the old man:
|
||
"We thank thee for coming to see us; and meseemeth from the look
|
||
of thee thou art worthy to dwell in my Lady's House."
|
||
|
||
"What sayest thou?" said Ralph. "Is she a good lady and a gracious?"
|
||
"O yea, yea," said the carle. Said Ralph: "Thou meanest, I suppose,
|
||
that she is fair to look on, and soft-spoken when she is pleased?"
|
||
|
||
"I mean far more than that," said the carle; "surely is she
|
||
most heavenly fair, and her voice is like the music of heaven:
|
||
but withal her deeds, and the kindness of her to us poor
|
||
men and husbandmen, are no worse than should flow forth
|
||
from that loveliness."
|
||
|
||
"Will you be her servants?" said Ralph, "or what are ye?" Said the carle:
|
||
"We be yeomen and her vavassors; there is no thralldom in our land."
|
||
"Do ye live in good peace for the more part?" said Ralph.
|
||
Said the carle: "Time has been when cruel battles were fought
|
||
in these wood-lawns, and many poor people were destroyed therein:
|
||
but that was before the coming of the Lady of Abundance."
|
||
|
||
"And when was that?" said Ralph. "I wot not," said the old carle;
|
||
"I was born in peace and suckled in peace; and in peace
|
||
I fell to the loving of maidens, and I wedded in peace,
|
||
and begat children in peace, and in peace they dwell about me,
|
||
and in peace shall I depart."
|
||
|
||
"What then," said Ralph (and a grievous fear was born in his
|
||
heart), "is not the Lady of Abundance young?" Said the carle:
|
||
"I have seen her when I was young and also since I have been old,
|
||
and ever was she fair and lovely, and slender handed, as straight
|
||
as a spear, and as sweet as white clover, and gentle-voiced and kind,
|
||
and dear to our souls."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and she doth not dwell in this castle always;
|
||
where else then doth she dwell?" "I wot not," said the carle,
|
||
"but it should be in heaven: for when she cometh to us all our joys
|
||
increase in us by the half."
|
||
|
||
"Look you, father," said Ralph, "May it not have been more than one Lady
|
||
of Abundance that thou hast seen in thy life-days; and that this one
|
||
that now is, is the daughter's daughter of the one whom thou first sawest--
|
||
how sayest thou?" The carle laughed: "Nay, nay," said he, "It is not so:
|
||
never has there been another like to her in all ways, in body and voice,
|
||
and heart and soul. It is as I say, she is the same as she was always."
|
||
"And when," said Ralph, with a beating heart, "does she come hither?
|
||
Is it at some set season?" "Nay, from time to time, at all seasons,"
|
||
said the carle; "and as fair she is when she goeth over the snow,
|
||
as when her feet are set amidst the June daisies."
|
||
|
||
Now was Ralph so full of wonder that he scarce knew what to say;
|
||
but he bethought him of that fair waste on the other side of the forest,
|
||
the country through which that wide river flowed, so he said:
|
||
"And that land north-away beyond the wildwood, canst thou tell
|
||
me the tale of its wars, and if it were wasted in the same
|
||
wars that tormented this land?" The carle shook his head:
|
||
"As to the land beyond this wood," quoth he, "I know nought of it,
|
||
for beyond the wood go we never: nay, most often we go but a little
|
||
way into it, no further than we can see the glimmer of the open
|
||
daylight through its trees,--the daylight of the land of Abundance--
|
||
that is enough for us."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Ralph, "I thank thee for the tale thou hast told me,
|
||
and wish thee more years of peace."
|
||
|
||
"And to thee, young man," said the carle, "I wish a good wish indeed, to wit
|
||
that thou mayest see the Lady of Abundance here before thou departest."
|
||
|
||
His words once more made Ralph's heart beat and his cheek flush,
|
||
and he went back to the castle somewhat speedily; for he said
|
||
to himself, after the folly of lovers, "Maybe she will be come
|
||
even now, and I not there to meet her." Yet when he came to the
|
||
castle-gate his heart misgave him, and he would not enter at once,
|
||
but turned about to go round the wall by the north and west.
|
||
In the castle he saw no soul save the old dame looking
|
||
out of the window and nodding to him, but in the pasture
|
||
all about were neatherds and shepherds, both men and women;
|
||
and at the north-west corner, whereas the river drew quite close
|
||
to the wall, he came upon two damsels of the field-folk fishing
|
||
with an angle in a quiet pool of the stream. He greeted them,
|
||
and they, who were young and goodly, returned his greeting,
|
||
but were shamefaced at his gallant presence, as indeed was he at
|
||
the thoughts of his heart mingled with the sight of their fairness.
|
||
So he passed on at first without more words than his greeting.
|
||
Yet presently he turned back again, for he longed to hear
|
||
some word more concerning the Lady whose coming he abode.
|
||
They stood smiling and blushing as he came up to them again,
|
||
and heeded their angles little.
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Fair maidens, do ye know at all when the Lady of the castle
|
||
may be looked for?" They were slow to answer, but at last one said:
|
||
"No, fair sir, such as we know nothing of the comings and goings
|
||
of great folk."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph, smiling on her for kindness, and pleasure of her fairness:
|
||
"Is it not so that ye will be glad of her coming?"
|
||
|
||
But she answered never a word, only looked at him steadily,
|
||
with her great grey eyes fixed in wonderment, while the other
|
||
one looked down as if intent on her angling tools.
|
||
|
||
Ralph knew not how to ask another question, so he turned about with a greeting
|
||
word again, and this time went on steadily round about the wall.
|
||
|
||
And now in his heart waxed the desire of that Lady, once seen,
|
||
as he deemed, in such strange wise; but he wondered within
|
||
himself if the devil had not sown that longing within him:
|
||
whereas it might be that this woman on whom he had set
|
||
his heart was herself no real woman but a devil, and one
|
||
of the goddesses of the ancient world, and his heart
|
||
was sore and troubled by many doubts and hopes and fears;
|
||
but he said to himself that when he saw her then could he judge
|
||
between the good and the evil, and could do or forbear,
|
||
and that the sight of her would cure all.
|
||
|
||
Thus thinking he walked swiftly, and was soon round at
|
||
the castle gate again, and entered, and went into the hall,
|
||
where was the old dame, busied about some household matter.
|
||
Ralph nodded to her and hastened away, lest she should fall
|
||
to talk with him; and he set himself now to go from chamber
|
||
to chamber, that he might learn the castle, what it was.
|
||
He came into the guard-chamber and found the walls thereof all hung
|
||
with armour and weapons, clean and in good order, though there
|
||
was never a man-at-arms there, nor any soul except the old woman.
|
||
He went up a stair therefrom on to the battlements,
|
||
and went into the towers of the wall, and found weapons
|
||
both for hand, and for cast and shot in each one of them,
|
||
and all ready as if for present battle; then he came down
|
||
into the court again and went into a very goodly ambulatory
|
||
over against the hall, and he entered a door therefrom,
|
||
which was but on the latch, and went up a little stair into
|
||
a chamber, which was the goodliest and the richest of all.
|
||
Its roof was all done with gold and blue from over sea,
|
||
and its pavement wrought delicately in Alexandrine work.
|
||
On the dais was a throne of carven ivory, and above it a canopy
|
||
of baudekin of the goodliest fashion, and there was a foot-carpet
|
||
before it, wrought with beasts and the hunting of the deer.
|
||
As for the walls of that chamber, they were hung with a
|
||
marvellous halling of arras, wherein was wrought the greenwood,
|
||
and there amidst in one place a pot-herb garden, and a green garth
|
||
with goats therein, and in that garth a little thatched house.
|
||
And amidst all this greenery were figured over and over again
|
||
two women, whereof one old and the other young; and the old
|
||
one was clad in grand attire, with gold chains and brooches
|
||
and rings, and sat with her hands before her by the house door,
|
||
or stood looking on as the young one worked, spinning or digging
|
||
in the garth, or milking the goats outside of it, or what not;
|
||
and this one was clad in sorry and scanty raiment.
|
||
|
||
What all this might mean Ralph knew not; but when he had looked
|
||
long at the greenery and its images, he said to himself that if
|
||
he who wrought that cloth had not done the young woman after
|
||
the likeness of the Lady whom he had helped in the wildwood,
|
||
then it must have been done from her twin sister.
|
||
|
||
Long he abode in that chamber looking at the arras,
|
||
and wondering whether the sitter in the ivory throne
|
||
would be any other than the thrall in the greenwood cot.
|
||
He abode there so long that the dusk began to gather in the house,
|
||
and he could see the images no more; for he was filled with
|
||
the sweetness of desire when he looked on them.
|
||
|
||
Then he went back slowly to the hall, and found the carline, who had
|
||
lighted the waxlights and made meat ready for him; and when she saw
|
||
him she cried out joyously: "Ah, I knew that thou wouldst come back.
|
||
Art thou well content with our little land?"
|
||
|
||
"I like it well, dame," said he; "but tell me, if thou canst, what is
|
||
the meaning of the halling in the chamber with the ivory throne?"
|
||
|
||
Said the carline: "Thereof shall another tell thee, who can
|
||
tell of it better than I; but it is nought to hide that yonder
|
||
chamber is the chamber of estate of our Lady, and she sitteth
|
||
there to hear the cases of folk and to give dooms."
|
||
|
||
The old woman crossed herself as she spoke, and Ralph wondered thereat,
|
||
but asked no more questions, for he was scarce sorry that the carline
|
||
would not tell him thereof, lest she should spoil the tale.
|
||
|
||
So passed the evening, and he went to bed and slept as a young
|
||
man should, and the next day he was up betimes and went abroad
|
||
and mingled with the carles and queens afield; but this time he spake
|
||
not of the Lady, and heard nought to heed from any of that folk.
|
||
So he went back to the castle and gat him a bow and arrows, and entered
|
||
the thicket of the wood nigh where he and Roger first came out of it.
|
||
He had prayed a young man of the folk to go with him, but he was not over
|
||
willing to go, though he would not say wherefore. So Ralph went himself
|
||
by himself and wandered some way into the wood, and saw nought worse
|
||
than himself. As he came back, making a circuit toward the open meadows,
|
||
he happened on a herd of deer in a lonely place, half wood half meadow,
|
||
and there he slew a hart with one shaft, for he was a deft bowman.
|
||
Then he went and fetched a leash of carles, who went with him somewhat
|
||
less than half willingly, and between them they broke up the hart
|
||
and carried him home to the castle, where the carline met them.
|
||
She smiled on Ralph and praised the venison, and said withal that the hunting
|
||
was well done; "For, as fond and as fair as thou mayst be, it is not
|
||
good that young men should have their minds set on one thing only."
|
||
Therewith she led him in to his meat, and set him down and served him;
|
||
and all the while of his dinner he was longing to ask her if she
|
||
deemed that the Lady would come that day, since it was the last day
|
||
of those which Roger had bidden him wait; but the words would not out
|
||
of his mouth.
|
||
|
||
She looked at him and smiled, as though she had a guess of his thought, and at
|
||
last she said to him: "Thy tongue is tied to-day. Hast thou, after all,
|
||
seen something strange in the wood?" He shook his head for naysay.
|
||
Said she: "Why, then, dost thou not ask more concerning the Well at
|
||
the World's End?"
|
||
|
||
He laughed, and said: "Maybe because I think that thou
|
||
canst not tell me thereof." "Well," she said, "if I cannot,
|
||
yet the book may, and this evening, when the sun is down,
|
||
thou shalt have it."
|
||
|
||
"I thank thee, mother," said he; "but this is now the last day
|
||
that Roger bade me wait. Dost thou think that he will come
|
||
back to-night?" and he reddened therewith. "Nay," she said,
|
||
"I know not, and thou carest not whether he will come or not.
|
||
Yet I know that thou wilt abide here till some one else come,
|
||
whether that be early or late." Again he reddened, and said,
|
||
in a coaxing way: "And wilt thou give me guesting, mother, for a
|
||
few more summer days?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said, "and till summer is over, if need be, and the corn is cut
|
||
and carried, and till the winter is come and the latter end of winter
|
||
is gone." He smiled faintly, though his heart fell, and he said:
|
||
"Nay, mother, and can it by any chance be so long a-coming?"
|
||
|
||
"O, fair boy," she said, "thou wilt make it long,
|
||
howsoever short it be. And now I will give thee a rede,
|
||
lest thou vex thyself sick and fret thy very heart.
|
||
To-morrow go see if thou canst meet thy fate instead of abiding it.
|
||
Do on thy war-gear and take thy sword and try the adventure
|
||
of the wildwood; but go not over deep into it." Said he:
|
||
"But how if the Lady come while I am away from this house?"
|
||
|
||
"Sooth to say," said the carline, "I deem not that she will,
|
||
for the way is long betwixt us and her."
|
||
|
||
"Dost thou mean," said Ralph, standing up from the board,
|
||
"that she will not come ever? I adjure thee not to
|
||
beguile me with soft words, but tell me the very sooth."
|
||
"There, there!" said she, "sit down, king's son; eat thy
|
||
meat and drink thy wine; for to-morrow is a new day.
|
||
She will come soon or late, if she be yet in the world.
|
||
And now I will say no more to thee concerning this matter."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she went her ways from the hall, and when she came back with
|
||
hand-basin and towel, she said no word to him, but only smiled kindly.
|
||
He went out presently into the meadow (for it was yet but early afternoon)
|
||
and came among the haymaking folk and spake with them, hoping that
|
||
perchance some of them might speak again of the Lady of Abundance;
|
||
but none of them did so, though the old carle he had spoken with was there,
|
||
and there also were the two maidens whom he had seen fishing; and as for him,
|
||
he was over faint-hearted to ask them any more questions concerning her.
|
||
|
||
Yet he abode with them long, and ate and drank amidst the hay with them
|
||
till the moon shone brightly. Then he went back to the castle and found
|
||
the carline in the hall, and she had the book with her and gave it to him,
|
||
and he sat down in the shot-window under the waxlights and fell to
|
||
reading of it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 19
|
||
|
||
Ralph Readeth in a Book Concerning the Well at the World's End
|
||
|
||
|
||
Fairly written was that book, with many pictures therein,
|
||
the meaning of which Ralph knew not; but amongst them was the image
|
||
of the fair woman whom he had holpen at the want-ways of the wood,
|
||
and but four days ago was that, yet it seemed long and long to him.
|
||
The book told not much about the Well at the World's End,
|
||
but much it told of a certain woman whom no man that saw her
|
||
could forbear to love: of her it told that erewhile she dwelt
|
||
lonely in the wildwood (though how she came there was not said)
|
||
and how a king's son found her there and brought her to his
|
||
father's kingdom and wedded her, whether others were lief or loth:
|
||
and in a little while, when the fame of her had spread,
|
||
he was put out of his kingdom and his father's house for the love
|
||
of her, because other kings and lords hankered after her;
|
||
whereof befel long and grievous war which she abode not to the end,
|
||
but sought to her old place in the wildwood; and how she found
|
||
there another woman a sorceress, who made her her thrall;
|
||
and tormented her grievously with toil and stripes.
|
||
And how again there came a knight to that place who was
|
||
seeking the Well at the World's End, and bore her away
|
||
with him; and how the said knight was slain on the way,
|
||
and she was taken by tyrants and robbers of the folk:
|
||
but these being entangled in her love fought amongst themselves
|
||
and she escaped, and went seeking that Well, and found it
|
||
at the long last, and drank thereof, and throve ever after:
|
||
and how she liveth yet, and is become the servant of the Well
|
||
to entangle the seekers in her love and keep them from
|
||
drinking thereof; because there was no man that beheld her,
|
||
but anon he was the thrall of her love, and might not pluck
|
||
his heart away from her to do any of the deeds whereby men
|
||
thrive and win the praise of the people.
|
||
|
||
Ralph read on and on till the short night waned, and the wax-lights
|
||
failed one after the other, and the windows of the hall grew grey
|
||
and daylight came, and the throstles burst out a-singing at once in
|
||
the castle pleasaunce, and the sun came up over the wood, and the sound
|
||
of men-folk bestirring themselves a-field came to his ears through
|
||
the open windows; and at last he was done with the tale, and the carline
|
||
came not near him though the sun had clomb high up the heavens.
|
||
As for Ralph, what he had read was sweet poison to him; for if before he was
|
||
somewhat tormented by love, now was his heart sick and sore with it.
|
||
Though he knew not for certain whether this tale had to do with the Lady
|
||
of the Forest, and though he knew not if the Lady who should come
|
||
to the castle were even she, yet he needs must deem that so it was,
|
||
and his heart was weary with love, and his manhood seemed changed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 20
|
||
|
||
Ralph Meeteth a Man in the Wood
|
||
|
||
|
||
But the morning began to wear as he sat deep in these thoughts
|
||
and still the Carline came not to him; and he thought:
|
||
"She leaveth me alone that I may do her bidding:
|
||
so will I without tarrying." And he arose and did on his hauberk
|
||
and basnet, and girt his sword to his side, and went forth,
|
||
a-foot as before. He crossed the river by a wide ford
|
||
and stepping stones somewhat below the pool wherein he had
|
||
bathed on that first day; and already by then he had got
|
||
so far, what with the fresh air of the beauteous morning,
|
||
what with the cheerful tinkling of his sword and hauberk,
|
||
he was somewhat amended of his trouble and heaviness of spirit.
|
||
A little way across the river, but nigher to the wood,
|
||
was a house or cot of that country-folk, and an old woman sat
|
||
spinning in the door. So Ralph went up thither, and greeted her,
|
||
and craved of her a draught of milk; so the goody turned
|
||
about and cried out to one within, and there came forth one
|
||
of the maidens whom Ralph had met fishing that other day,
|
||
and the old woman bade her bring forth milk and bread.
|
||
Then the carline looked hard at Ralph, and said: "Ah! I have
|
||
heard tell of thee: thou art abiding the turn of the days
|
||
up at the castle yonder, as others have done before thee.
|
||
Well, well, belike thou shalt have thy wish, though whether
|
||
it shall be to thy profit, who shall say?"
|
||
|
||
Thereat Ralph's heart fell again, and he said: "Sayest thou,
|
||
mother, that there have been others abiding like me in the tower?
|
||
I know not what thy words mean."
|
||
|
||
The carline laughed. "Well," said she, "here comes thy morning's
|
||
bait borne by shapely hands enough; eat and drink first;
|
||
and then will I tell thee my meaning."
|
||
|
||
Therewith came the maiden forth with the bowl and the loaf;
|
||
and indeed she was fair enough, and shy and kind; but Ralph
|
||
heeded her little, nor was his heart moved by her at all.
|
||
She set a stool for him beside the door and he sat down and ate
|
||
and drank, though his heart was troubled; and the maiden hung about,
|
||
and seemed to find it no easy matter to keep her eyes off him.
|
||
|
||
Presently the carline, who had been watching the two, said:
|
||
"Thou askest of the meaning of my words; well, deemest thou that I
|
||
have had more men than one to love me?" "I know not, mother,"
|
||
said Ralph, who could scarce hold himself patient. "There now!"
|
||
quoth the carline, "look at my damsel! (she is not my daughter,
|
||
but my brother's,) there is a man, and a brisk lad too, whom she
|
||
calleth her batchelor, and is as I verily deem well-pleased with him:
|
||
yet lo you how she eyeth thee, thou fair man, and doth so with
|
||
her raiment that thou mayst best see how shapely she is of limb
|
||
and foot, and toyeth her right hand with her left wrist,
|
||
and the like.--Well, as for me, I have had more lovers than
|
||
one or two. And why have I had just so many and no more?
|
||
Nay, thou needest not make any long answer to me.
|
||
I am old now, and even before I was old I was not young:
|
||
I am now foul of favour, and even before I became foul,
|
||
I was not so fair--well then?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, what then?" said Ralph. "This then, fair young fool," said she:
|
||
"the one whom thou lovest, long hath she lived, but she is not old to look on,
|
||
nor foul; but fair--O how fair!"
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph forgot his fear, and his heart grew greedy
|
||
and his eyes glistened, and he said, yet he spoke faintly:
|
||
"Yea, is she fair?" "What! hast thou not seen her?" said the carline.
|
||
Ralph called to mind the guise in which he had seen her and
|
||
flushed bright red, as he answered: "Yea, I deem that I have:
|
||
surely it was she." The carline laughed: "Well," said she;
|
||
"however thou hast seen her, thou hast scarce seen her as I have."
|
||
Said Ralph, "How was that?" Said she: "It is her way here
|
||
in the summer-tide to bathe her in yonder pool up the water:"
|
||
(and it was the same pool wherein Ralph had bathed) "And she
|
||
hath me and my niece and two other women to hold up the silken
|
||
cloth betwixt her body and the world; so that I have seen her
|
||
as God made her; and I shall tell thee that when he was about
|
||
that work he was minded to be a craftsmaster; for there is no
|
||
blemish about her that she should hide her at all or anywhere.
|
||
Her sides are sleek, and her thighs no rougher than her face,
|
||
and her feet as dainty as her hands: yea, she is a pearl all over,
|
||
withal she is as strong as a knight, and I warrant her hardier
|
||
of heart than most knights. A happy man shalt thou be;
|
||
for surely I deem thou hast not come hither to abide her without
|
||
some token or warrant of her."
|
||
|
||
Ralph held down his head, and he could not meet the old
|
||
woman's eyes as she spake thus; and the maiden took herself
|
||
out of earshot at the first words of the carline hereof,
|
||
and was halfway down to the river by now.
|
||
|
||
Ralph spake after a while and said: "Tell me, is she good,
|
||
and a good woman?" The dame laughed scornfully and said:
|
||
"Surely, surely; she is the saint of the Forest Land,
|
||
and the guardian of all poor folk. Ask the carles else!"
|
||
|
||
Ralph held his peace, and rose to be gone and turning saw the damsel
|
||
wading the shallow ford, and looking over her shoulder at him.
|
||
He gave the dame good day, and departed light-foot but heavy hearted.
|
||
Yet as he went, he kept saying to himself: "Did she not send
|
||
that Roger to turn my ways hither? yet she cometh not. Surely she
|
||
hath changed in these last days, or it may be in these last hours:
|
||
yea, or this very hour."
|
||
|
||
Amidst such thoughts he came into the wood, and made his way
|
||
by the paths and open places, going south and east of the House:
|
||
Whereas the last day he had gone west and north. He went a soft pace,
|
||
but wandered on without any stay till it was noon, and he had
|
||
seen nought but the wild things of the wood, nor many of them.
|
||
But at last he heard the tinkle of a little bell coming towards him:
|
||
so he stood still and got the hilt of his sword ready to his hand;
|
||
and the tinkle drew nearer, and he heard withal the trample
|
||
of some riding-beast; so he went toward the sound, and presently
|
||
in a clearer place of the wood came upon a man of religion,
|
||
a clerk, riding on a hackney, to whose neck hung a horse-bell:
|
||
the priest had saddle bags beside him and carried in his right hand
|
||
a book in a bag. When he met Ralph he blessed him, and Ralph
|
||
gave him the sele of the day, and asked him whither he would.
|
||
Said the Priest: "I am for the Little Plain and the Land
|
||
of Abundance; whence art thou, my son, and whither wilt thou?"
|
||
"From that very land I come," said Ralph, "and as to whither,
|
||
I seek adventures; but unless I see more than I have this forenoon,
|
||
or thou canst tell me of them, back will I whence I came:
|
||
yet to say sooth, I shall not be sorry for a fellow to help me back,
|
||
for these woodland ways are some-what blind."
|
||
|
||
Said the Priest: "I will bear thee company with a good will;
|
||
and I know the road right well; for I am the Vicar appointed by
|
||
the fathers of the Thorn to serve the church of the Little Plain,
|
||
and the chapel of St. Anthony yonder in the wood, and to-day I
|
||
go to the church of the good folk there."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph turned, and went along with him, walking by his bridle-rein. And
|
||
as they went the priest said to him: "Art thou one of my lady's lords?"
|
||
Ralph reddened as he sighed, and said: "I am no captain of hers."
|
||
Then smiled the priest and said: "Then will I not ask thee of thine errand;
|
||
for belike thou wouldest not tell me thereof."
|
||
|
||
Ralph said nought, but waxed shamefaced as he deemed that
|
||
the priest eyed him curiously. At last he said: "I will ask
|
||
thee a question in turn, father." "Yea," said the priest.
|
||
Said Ralph: "This lady of the land, the Lady of Abundance,
|
||
is she a very woman?" "Holy Saints!" quoth the priest,
|
||
blessing himself, "what meanest thou?" Said Ralph:
|
||
"I mean, is she of those who outwardly have a woman's semblance,
|
||
but within are of the race of the ancient devils, the gods
|
||
of the Gentiles?"
|
||
|
||
Then the priest crossed himself again, and spake as solemnly
|
||
as a judge on the bench: "Son, I pray that if thou art not
|
||
in thy right mind, thou will come thereinto anon. Know this,
|
||
that whatever else she may be, she is a right holy woman.
|
||
Or hast thou perchance heard any evil tales concerning her?"
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph was confused at his word, and knew not what to say; for though
|
||
in his mind he had been piecing together all that he had heard of the lady
|
||
both for good and for evil, he had no clear tale to tell even to himself:
|
||
so he answered nothing.
|
||
|
||
But the priest went on: "Son, I shall tell thee that such tales
|
||
I have heard, but from whose mouth forsooth? I will tell thee;
|
||
from a sort of idle jades, young women who would be thought fairer
|
||
than they be, who are afraid of everything save a naked man,
|
||
and who can lie easier than they can say their paternoster:
|
||
from such as these come the stories; or from old crones who live
|
||
in sour anger with themselves and all else, because they have lived
|
||
no goodly life in their youth, and have not learned the loveliness
|
||
of holy church. Now, son, shall the tales of such women,
|
||
old and young, weigh in thy mind beside the word I tell thee of what I
|
||
have seen and know concerning this most excellent of ladies?
|
||
I trow not. And for my part I tell thee, that though she is verily
|
||
as fair as Venus (God save us) yet is she as chaste as Agnes,
|
||
as wise as Katherine, and as humble and meek as Dorothy.
|
||
She bestoweth her goods plentifully to the church, and is merciful
|
||
to poor men therewith; and so far as occasion may serve her she
|
||
is constant at the Holy Office; neither doth she spare to confess
|
||
her sins, and to do all penance which is bidden her, yea and more.
|
||
For though I cannot say to my knowledge that she weareth a hair;
|
||
yet once and again have I seen her wending this woodland toward
|
||
the chapel of her friend St. Anthony by night and cloud,
|
||
so that few might see her, obedient to the Scripture which sayeth,
|
||
'Let not thy right hand know what thy left hand doeth,' and she
|
||
barefoot in her smock amidst the rugged wood, and so arrayed fairer
|
||
than any queen in a golden gown. Yea, as fair as the woodwives
|
||
of the ancient heathen."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Therewith the priest stayed his words, and seemed as if
|
||
he were fallen into a dream; and he sighed heavily.
|
||
But Ralph walked on by his bridle-rein dreamy no less;
|
||
for the words that he had heard he heeded not, save as they
|
||
made pictures for him of the ways of that woman of the forest.
|
||
|
||
So they went on soberly till the priest lifted up his head and looked
|
||
about like one come out of slumber, and said in a firm voice:
|
||
"I tell thee, my son, that thou mayest set thy love upon
|
||
her without sin." And therewith suddenly he fell a-weeping;
|
||
and Ralph was ill at ease of his weeping, and went along
|
||
by him saying nought; till the priest plucked up heart again,
|
||
and said, turning to Ralph, but not meeting his eye:
|
||
"My son, I weep because men and women are so evil, and mis-say
|
||
each other so sorely, even as they do by this holy woman."
|
||
As he spake his tears brake out again, and Ralph strode on fast,
|
||
so as to outgo him, thinking it unmannerly to seem as if he noted
|
||
not his sorrow; yet withal unable to say aught to him thereof.
|
||
Moreover it irked him to hear a grown man weeping for grief,
|
||
even though it were but a priest.
|
||
|
||
Within a while the priest caught up with him, his tears
|
||
all staunched, and fell to talk with him cheerfully concerning
|
||
the wood, and the Little Land and the dwellers therein and the
|
||
conditions of them, and he praised them much, save the women.
|
||
Ralph answered him with good cheer in likewise; and thus they came
|
||
to the cot of the old woman, and both she and the maiden were without
|
||
the house, the old carline hithering and thithering on some errand,
|
||
the maiden leaning against a tree as if pondering some matter.
|
||
As they passed by, the priest blessed them in words,
|
||
but his eyes scowled on them, whereat the carline grinned,
|
||
but the damsel heeded him not, but looked wistfully on Ralph.
|
||
The priest muttered somewhat as he passed, which Ralph
|
||
caught not the meaning of, and fell moody again;
|
||
and when he was a little past the ford he drew rein and said:
|
||
"Now, son, I must to my cell hard by the church yonder:
|
||
but yet I will say one word to thee ere we sunder; to wit,
|
||
that to my mind the Holy Lady will love no one but the saints
|
||
of heaven, save it be some man with whom all women are in love."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he turned away suddenly, and rode smartly towards
|
||
his church; and Ralph deemed that he was weeping once more.
|
||
As for Ralph, he went quietly home toward the castle,
|
||
for the sun was setting now, and as he went he pondered all
|
||
these things in his heart.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 21
|
||
|
||
Ralph Weareth Away Three Days Uneasily
|
||
|
||
|
||
He read again in the book that night, till he had gotten the whole tale
|
||
into his head, and he specially noted this of it, that it told not whence
|
||
that Lady came, nor what she was, nor aught else save that there she
|
||
was in the wood by herself, and was found therein by the king's son:
|
||
neither told the tale in what year of the world she was found there,
|
||
though it told concerning all the war and miseries which she had bred,
|
||
and which long endured. Again, he could not gather from that book
|
||
why she had gone back to the lone place in the woods, whereas she
|
||
might have wedded one of those warring barons who sorely desired her:
|
||
nor why she had yielded herself to the witch of that place and endured
|
||
with patience her thralldom, with stripes and torments of her body,
|
||
like the worst of the thralls of the ancient heathen men.
|
||
Lastly, he might not learn from the book where in the world was that
|
||
lone place, or aught of the road to the Well at the World's End.
|
||
But amidst all his thinking his heart came back to this:
|
||
"When I meet her, she will tell me of it all; I need be no wiser
|
||
than to learn how to meet her and to make her love me; then shall
|
||
she show me the way to the Well at the World's End, and I shall
|
||
drink thereof and never grow old, even as she endureth in youth,
|
||
and she shall love me for ever, and I her for ever."
|
||
|
||
So he thought; but yet amidst these happy thoughts came in this evil one,
|
||
that whereas all the men-folk spoke well of her and worshipped her,
|
||
the women-folk feared her or hated her; even to the lecherous old
|
||
woman who had praised the beauty of her body for his torment.
|
||
So he thought till his head grew heavy, and he went and lay
|
||
down in his bed and slept, and dreamed of the days of Upmead;
|
||
and things forgotten in his waking time came between him and any
|
||
memories of his present longing and the days thereof.
|
||
|
||
He awoke and arose betimes in the morning, and when he had breakfasted he bade
|
||
the carline bring him his weapons. "Wilt thou again to the wood?" said she.
|
||
"Didst thou not bid me fare thither yesterday?" said he. "Yea," she said;
|
||
"but to-day I fear lest thou depart and come not back." He laughed and said:
|
||
"Seest thou not, mother, that I go afoot, and I in hauberk and helm?
|
||
I cannot run far or fast from thee. Also" (and here he broke off his speech
|
||
a little) "where should I be but here?"
|
||
|
||
"Ah," she said, "but who knows what may happen?" Nevertheless she went
|
||
and fetched his war-gear and looked at him fondly as he did it on,
|
||
and went his ways from the hall.
|
||
|
||
Now he entered the wood more to the south than he had done yesterday,
|
||
and went softly as before, and still was he turning over in his mind
|
||
the thoughts of last night, and ever they came back. "Might I but see her!
|
||
Would she but love me! O for a draught of the Well at the World's End,
|
||
that the love might last long and long!"
|
||
|
||
So he went on a while betwixt the trees and the thickets, till it was
|
||
a little past noon. But all on a sudden a panic fear took him, lest she
|
||
should indeed come to the castle while he was away, and not finding him,
|
||
depart again, who knows whither; and when this thought came upon him,
|
||
he cried aloud, and hastened at his swiftest back again to the castle,
|
||
and came there breathless and wearied, and ran to the old woman,
|
||
and cried out to her; "Is she come? is she come?"
|
||
|
||
The carline laughed and said, "Nay, she is not, but thou art come:
|
||
praise be to the saints! But what aileth thee? Nay, fear not,
|
||
she shall come at last."
|
||
|
||
Then grew Ralph shamefaced and turned away from her, and miscalled
|
||
himself for a fool and a dastard that could not abide the pleasure
|
||
of his lady at the very place whereto she had let lead him.
|
||
So he wore through the remnant of the day howso he might,
|
||
without going out-adoors again; and the carline came and spake
|
||
with him; but whatever he asked her about the lady, she would
|
||
not tell aught of any import, so he refrained him from that talk,
|
||
and made a show of hearkening when she spake of other matters;
|
||
as tales concerning the folk of the land, and the Fathers of the Thorn,
|
||
and so forth.
|
||
|
||
On the next morning he arose and said to himself, that whatever betid,
|
||
he would bide in the castle and the Plain of Abundance till the lady came;
|
||
and he went amongst the haymaking folk in the morning and ate his dinner
|
||
with them, and strove to be of good cheer, and belike the carles and queens
|
||
thought him merry company; but he was now wearying his heart with longing,
|
||
and might not abide any great while in one place; so when, dinner over,
|
||
they turned to their work again, he went back to the Castle, and read in
|
||
that book, and looked at the pictures thereof, and kept turning his wonder
|
||
and hope and fear over and over again in his mind, and making to himself
|
||
stories of how he should meet the Lady and what she would say to him,
|
||
and how he should answer her, till at last the night came, and he went
|
||
to his bed, and slept for the very weariness of his longing.
|
||
|
||
When the new day came he arose and went into the hall, and found
|
||
the carline there, who said to him, "Fair sir, will thou to the wood
|
||
again to-day?" "Nay," said Ralph, "I must not, I dare not."
|
||
"Well," she said, "thou mayest if thou wilt; why shouldst thou not go?"
|
||
Said Ralph, reddening and stammering: "Because I fear to;
|
||
thrice have I been away long from the castle and all has gone well;
|
||
but the fourth time she will come and find me gone."
|
||
|
||
The carline laughed: "Well," she said, "I shall be here if thou goest;
|
||
for I promise thee not to stir out of the house whiles thou art away."
|
||
Said Ralph: "Nay, I will abide here." "Yea," she said, "I see:
|
||
thou trustest me not. Well, no matter; and to-day it will be handy
|
||
if thou abidest. For I have an errand to my brother in the flesh,
|
||
who is one of the brethren of the Thorn over yonder. If thou wilt
|
||
give me leave, it will be to my pleasure and gain."
|
||
|
||
Ralph was glad when he heard this, deeming that if she left him
|
||
alone there, he would be the less tempted to stray into the wood again.
|
||
Besides, he deemed that the Lady might come that day when he was alone
|
||
in the Castle, and that himseemed would make the meeting sweeter yet.
|
||
So he yea-said the carline's asking joyously, and in an hour's time
|
||
she went her ways and left him alone there.
|
||
|
||
Ralph said to himself, when he saw her depart, that he would
|
||
have the more joy in the castle of his Lady if he were alone,
|
||
and would wear away the day in better patience therefor.
|
||
But in sooth the hours of that day were worse to wear than
|
||
any day there had yet been. He went not without the house
|
||
at all that day, for he deemed that the folk abroad would note
|
||
of him that he was so changed and restless.
|
||
|
||
Whiles he read in that book, or turned the leaves over,
|
||
not reading it; whiles he went into the Chamber of Estate,
|
||
and pored over the woven pictures there wherein the Lady was figured.
|
||
Whiles he wandered from chamber to chamber, not knowing
|
||
what to do.
|
||
|
||
At last, a little after dark, back comes the carline again, and he met
|
||
her at the door of the hall, for he was weary of his own company,
|
||
and the ceaseless turning over and over of the same thoughts.
|
||
|
||
As for her, she was so joyous of him that she fairly threw her arms about
|
||
him and kissed and clipped him, as though she had been his very mother.
|
||
Whereof he had some shame, but not much, for he deemed that her goodwill
|
||
to him was abundant, which indeed it was.
|
||
|
||
Now she looks on him and says: "Truly it does my heart good to see thee:
|
||
but thou poor boy, thou art wearing thyself with thy longing,
|
||
and thy doubting, and if thou wilt do after my rede, thou wilt
|
||
certainly go into the wood to-morrow and see what may befall;
|
||
and indeed and in sooth thou wilt leave behind thee a trusty friend."
|
||
|
||
He looked on her kindly, and smiled, and said, "In sooth,
|
||
mother, I deem thou art but right; though it be hard for me
|
||
to leave this house, to which in a way my Lady hath bidden me.
|
||
Yet I will do thy bidding herein." She thanked him, and he went
|
||
to his bed and slept; for now that he had made up his mind to go,
|
||
he was somewhat more at rest.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 22
|
||
|
||
An Adventure in the Wood
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph arrayed himself for departure next morning without more words;
|
||
and when he was ready the carline said to him: "When thou wentest
|
||
forth before, I was troubled at thy going and feared for thy returning:
|
||
but now I fear not; for I know that thou wilt return; though it may be
|
||
leading a fair woman by the hand. So go, and all luck go with thee."
|
||
Ralph smiled at her words and went his ways, and came into the wood
|
||
that lay due south from the Castle, and he went on and on and had
|
||
no thought of turning back. He rested twice and still went on,
|
||
till the fashion of the thickets and the woods changed about him;
|
||
and at last when the sun was getting low, he saw light gleaming
|
||
through a great wood of pines, which had long been dark before him
|
||
against the tall boles, and soon he came to the very edge of the wood,
|
||
and going heedfully, saw between the great stems of the outermost trees,
|
||
a green strand, and beyond it a long smooth water, a little lake between
|
||
green banks on either side. He came out of the pinewood on to the grass;
|
||
but there were thornbushes a few about, so that moving warily
|
||
from one to the other, he might perchance see without being seen.
|
||
Warily he went forsooth, going along the green strand to the east
|
||
and the head of that water, and saw how the bank sloped up gently from
|
||
its ending toward the pine-wood, in front of whose close-set trees stood
|
||
three great-boled tall oak-trees on a smooth piece of green sward.
|
||
And now he saw that there were folk come before him on this green place,
|
||
and keen-sighted as he was, could make out that three men were on
|
||
the hither side of the oak-trees, and on the further side of them was
|
||
a white horse. Thitherward then he made, stealing from bush to bush,
|
||
since he deemed that he needed not be seen of men who might be foes,
|
||
for at the first sight he had noted the gleam of weapons there.
|
||
And now he had gone no long way before he saw the westering sun shine
|
||
brightly from a naked sword, and then another sprang up to meet it,
|
||
and he heard faintly the clash of steel, and saw withal that the third
|
||
of the folk had long and light raiment and was a woman belike.
|
||
Then he bettered his pace, and in a minute or two came so near that he could
|
||
see the men clearly, that they were clad in knightly war-gear, and were
|
||
laying on great strokes so that the still place rang with the clatter.
|
||
As for the woman, he could see but little of her, because of the fighting
|
||
men before her; and the shadow of the oak boughs fell on her withal.
|
||
|
||
Now as he went, hidden by the bushes, they hid the men also from him,
|
||
and when he was come to the last bush, some fifty paces from them,
|
||
and peered out from it, in that very nick of time the two knights
|
||
were breathing them somewhat, and Ralph saw that one of them,
|
||
the furthest from him, was a very big man with a blue surcoat
|
||
whereon was beaten a great golden sun, and the other,
|
||
whose back was towards Ralph, was clad in black over his armour.
|
||
Even as he looked and doubted whether to show himself or not,
|
||
he of the sun raised his sword aloft, and giving forth a great
|
||
roar as of wrath and grief mingled together, rushed on his foe
|
||
and smote so fiercely that he fell to the earth before him,
|
||
and the big man fell upon him as he fell, and let knee and
|
||
sword-pommel and fist follow the stroke, and there they wallowed
|
||
on the earth together.
|
||
|
||
Straightway Ralph came forth from the bushes with his drawn sword
|
||
in his hand, and even therewith what with the two knights being
|
||
both low upon the earth, what with the woman herself coming from
|
||
out the shadow of the oak boughs, and turning her toward Ralph,
|
||
he saw her clearly, and stood staring and amazed--for lo! it
|
||
was the Lady whom he had delivered at the want-ways. His heart
|
||
well nigh stood still with joy, yet was he shamefaced also:
|
||
for though now she was no longer clad in that scanty raiment,
|
||
yet did he seem to see her body through that which covered it.
|
||
But now her attire was but simple; a green gown, thin and short,
|
||
and thereover a cote-hardy of black cloth with orphreys
|
||
of gold and colours: but on her neck was a collar that seemed
|
||
to him like to that which Dame Katherine had given him;
|
||
and the long tresses of her hair, which he had erst seen floating
|
||
loose about her, were wound as a garland around her head.
|
||
She looked with a flushed and joyous face on Ralph, and seemed
|
||
as if she heeded nought the battle of the knights, but saw him only:
|
||
but he feared her, and his love for her and stood still,
|
||
and durst not move forward to go to her.
|
||
|
||
Thus they abode for about the space of one minute: and meanwhile
|
||
the big man rose up on one knee and steadied him with his sword for a
|
||
moment of time, and the blade was bloody from the point half way up
|
||
to the hilt; but the black knight lay still and made no sign of life.
|
||
Then the Knight of the Sun rose up slowly and stood on his feet and faced
|
||
the Lady and seemed not to see Ralph, for his back was towards him.
|
||
He came slowly toward the Lady, scowling, and his face white as chalk;
|
||
then he spake to her coldly and sternly, stretching out his bloody
|
||
sword before her.
|
||
|
||
"I have done thy bidding, and slain my very earthly friend of friends
|
||
for thy sake. Wherewith wilt thou reward me?"
|
||
|
||
Then once more Ralph heard the voice, which he remembered so
|
||
sweet amidst peril and battle aforetime, as she said as coldly
|
||
as the Knight: "I bade thee not: thine own heart bade thee
|
||
to strive with him because thou deemedst that he loved me.
|
||
Be content! thou hast slain him who stood in thy way,
|
||
as thou deemedst. Thinkest thou that I rejoice at his slaying?
|
||
O no! I grieve at it, for all that I had such good cause
|
||
to hate him."
|
||
|
||
He said: "My own heart! my own heart! Half of my heart biddeth me
|
||
slay thee, who hast made me slay him. What wilt thou give me?"
|
||
She knit her brow and spake angrily: "Leave to depart," she said.
|
||
Then after a while, and in a kinder voice: "And thus much
|
||
of my love, that I pray thee not to sorrow for me, but to have
|
||
a good heart, and live as a true knight should." He frowned:
|
||
"Wilt thou not go with me?" said he. "Not uncompelled," she said:
|
||
"if thou biddest me go with threats of hewing and mangling
|
||
the body which thou sayest thou lovest, needs must I go then.
|
||
Yet scarce wilt thou do this."
|
||
|
||
"I have a mind to try it," said he; "If I set thee on thine
|
||
horse and bound thine hands for thee, and linked thy feet
|
||
together under the beast's belly; belike thou wouldest come.
|
||
Shall I have slain my brother-in-arms for nought?"
|
||
|
||
"Thou hast the mind," said she, "hast thou the might?"
|
||
"So I deem," said he, smiling grimly.
|
||
|
||
She looked at him proudly and said: "Yea, but I misdoubt me thereof."
|
||
He still had his back to Ralph and was staring at the lady; she turned her
|
||
head a little and made a sign to Ralph, just as the Knight of the Sun said:
|
||
"Thou misdoubtest thee? Who shall help thee in the desert?"
|
||
|
||
"Look over thy left shoulder," she said. He turned, and saw
|
||
Ralph drawing near, sword in hand, smiling, but somewhat pale.
|
||
He drew aback from the Lady and, spinning round on his heel, faced Ralph,
|
||
and cried out: "Hah! Hast thou raised up a devil against me,
|
||
thou sorceress, to take from me my grief and my lust, and my life?
|
||
Fair will the game be to fight with thy devil as I have fought with
|
||
my friend! Yet now I know not whether I shall slay him or thee."
|
||
|
||
She spake not, but stood quietly looking on him, not unkindly,
|
||
while a wind came up from the water and played with a few light
|
||
locks of hair that hung down from that ruddy crown, and blew
|
||
her raiment from her feet and wrapped it close round her limbs;
|
||
and Ralph beheld her, and close as was the very death to him
|
||
(for huge and most warrior-like was his foeman) yet longing
|
||
for her melted the heart within him, and he felt the sweetness
|
||
of life in his inmost soul as he had never felt it before.
|
||
|
||
Suddenly the Knight of the Sun turned about to the Lady again,
|
||
and fell down on his knees before her, and clasped his hands as
|
||
one praying, and said: "Now pardon me all my words, I pray thee;
|
||
and let this young man depart unhurt, whether thou madest him,
|
||
or hast but led him away from country and friends and all.
|
||
Then do thou come with me, and make some semblance of loving me,
|
||
and suffer me to love thee. And then shall all be well, for in a
|
||
few days we will go back to thy people, and there will I be their
|
||
lord or thy servant, or my brother's man, or what thou wilt.
|
||
O wilt thou not let the summer days be sweet?"
|
||
|
||
But she spake, holding up her head proudly and speaking in a clear
|
||
ringing voice: "I have said it, that uncompelled I will not go with thee
|
||
at all." And therewithal she turned her face toward Ralph, as she might
|
||
do on any chance-met courteous man, and he saw her smiling, but she said
|
||
nought to him, and gave no token of knowing him. Then the Knight of the Sun
|
||
sprang to his feet, and shook his sword above his head and ran furiously
|
||
on Ralph, who leapt nimbly on one side (else had he been slain at once)
|
||
and fetched a blow at the Sun-Knight, and smote him, and brake the mails
|
||
on his left shoulder, so that the blood sprang, and fell on fiercely enough,
|
||
smiting to right and left as the other gave back at his first onset.
|
||
But all was for nought, for the Knight of the Sun, after his giving aback
|
||
under that first stroke drew himself up stark and stiff, and pressing
|
||
on through all Ralph's strokes, though they rent his mail here and there,
|
||
ran within his sword, and smote him furiously with the sword-pommel on
|
||
the side of the head, so that the young man of Upmeads could not stand up
|
||
under the weight of the blow, but fell to the earth swooning, and the Knight
|
||
of the Sun knelt on him, and drew out an anlace, short, thick and sharp,
|
||
and cried out: "Now, Devil, let see whether thou wilt bleed black."
|
||
Therewith he raised up his hand: but the weapon was stayed or ever it fell,
|
||
for the Lady had glided up to them when she saw that Ralph was overcome,
|
||
and now she stretched out her arm and caught hold of the Knight's hand
|
||
and the anlace withal, and he groaned and cried out: "What now! thou
|
||
art strong-armed as well as white-armed; (for she had rent the sleeve
|
||
back from her right arm) and he laughed in the extremity of his wrath.
|
||
But she was pale and her lips quivered as she said softly and sweetly:
|
||
"Wilt thou verily slay this young man?"
|
||
|
||
"And why not?" said he, "since I have just slain the best
|
||
friend that I ever had, though he was nought willing to fight
|
||
with me, and only for this, that I saw thee toying with him;
|
||
though forsooth thou hast said truly that thou hadst more reason
|
||
to hate him than love him. Well, since thou wilt not have
|
||
this youngling slain, I may deem at least that he is no devil
|
||
of thy making, else wouldst thou be glad of his slaying,
|
||
so that he might be out of the path of thee; so a man he is,
|
||
and a well-favoured one, and young; and valiant, as it seemeth:
|
||
so I suppose that he is thy lover, or will be one day--well then--"
|
||
|
||
And he lifted his hand again, but again she stayed him, and said:
|
||
"Look thou, I will buy him of thee: and, indeed, I owe him a life."
|
||
"How is that?" said he. "Why wouldst thou know?" she said; "thou who,
|
||
if thou hadst me in thine hands again, wouldst keep me away from all men.
|
||
Yea, I know what thou wouldst say, thou wouldst keep me from sinning again."
|
||
And she smiled, but bitterly. "Well, the tale is no long one:
|
||
"five days ago I was taken by them of the Burg: and thou wottest what they
|
||
would do with me; yea, even if they deemed me less than they do deem me:
|
||
well, as two of their men-at-arms were leading me along by a halter,
|
||
as a calf is led to the butcher, we fell in with this goodly lad,
|
||
who slew them both in manly fashion, and I escaped for that time:
|
||
though, forsooth, I must needs put my neck in the noose again
|
||
in delivering four of our people, who would else have been tormented
|
||
to death by the Burgers."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said the knight, "perchance thou hast more mercy than I
|
||
looked for of thee; though I misdoubt thee that thou mayst yet pray
|
||
me or some other to slay him for thee. Thou art merciful, my Queen,
|
||
though not to me, and a churl were I if I were less merciful than thou.
|
||
Therefore will I give his life to him, yet not to thee will I give
|
||
him if I may help it--Lo you, Sweet! he is just opening his eyes."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he rose up from Ralph, who raised himself a little, and sat
|
||
up dazed and feeble. The Knight of the Sun stood up over him beside
|
||
the lady with his hands clasped on his sword-hilt, and said to Ralph:
|
||
"Young man, canst thou hear my words?" Ralph smiled feebly and
|
||
nodded a yea-say. "Dost thou love thy life then?" said the Knight.
|
||
Ralph found speech and said faintly, "Yea." Said the Knight:
|
||
"Where dost thou come from, where is thine home?" Said Ralph, "Upmeads."
|
||
"Well then," quoth the big knight, "go back to Upmeads, and live."
|
||
Ralph shook his head and knit his brows and said, "I will not."
|
||
"Yea," said the Knight, "thou wilt not live? Then must I shape me
|
||
to thy humour. Stand on thy feet and fight it out; for now I am cool
|
||
I will not slay a swordless man."
|
||
|
||
Ralph staggered up to his feet, but was so feeble still, that he sank
|
||
down again, and muttered: "I may not; I am sick and faint;"
|
||
and therewith swooned away again. But the Knight stood a while
|
||
leaning on his sword, and looking down on him not unkindly.
|
||
Then he turned about to the Lady, but lo! she had left his side.
|
||
She had glided away, and got to her horse, which was tethered on
|
||
the other side of the oak-tree, and had loosed him and mounted him,
|
||
and so sat in the saddle there, the reins gathered in her hands.
|
||
She smiled on the knight as he stood astonished, and cried to him;
|
||
"Now, lord, I warn thee, draw not a single foot nigher to me;
|
||
for thou seest that I have Silverfax between my knees, and thou knowest
|
||
how swift he is, and if I see thee move, he shall spring away with me.
|
||
Thou wottest how well I know all the ways of the woodland,
|
||
and I tell thee that the ways behind me to the Dry Tree be all
|
||
safe and open, and that beyond the Gliding River I shall come on
|
||
Roger of the Ropewalk and his men. And if thou thinkest to ride
|
||
after me, and overtake me, cast the thought out of thy mind.
|
||
For thy horse is strong but heavy, as is meet for so big a knight,
|
||
and morever he is many yards away from me and Silverfax:
|
||
so before thou art in the saddle, where shall I be? Yea," (for the
|
||
Knight was handling his anlace) "thou mayst cast it, and peradventure
|
||
mayst hit Silverfax and not me, and peradventure not; and I deem
|
||
that it is my body alive that thou wouldest have back with thee.
|
||
So now, wilt thou hearken?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," quoth the knight, though for wrath he could scarce bring
|
||
the word from his mouth.
|
||
|
||
"Hearken," she said, "this is the bargain to be struck between us:
|
||
even now thou wouldst not refrain from slaying this young man,
|
||
unless perchance he should swear to depart from us; and as for me,
|
||
I would not go back with thee to Sunhome, where erst thou shamedst me.
|
||
Now will I buy thy nay-say with mine, and if thou give the youngling his life,
|
||
and suffer him to come his ways with us, then will I go home with thee
|
||
and will ride with thee in all the love and duty that I owe thee; or if thou
|
||
like this fashion of words better, I will give thee my body for his life.
|
||
But if thou likest not the bargain, there is not another piece of goods
|
||
for thee in the market, for then I will ride my ways to the Dry Tree,
|
||
and thou shalt slay the poor youth, or make of him thy sworn friend,
|
||
like as was Walter--which thou wilt."
|
||
|
||
So she spake, and Ralph yet lay on the grass and heard nought.
|
||
But the Knight's face was dark and swollen with anger as he answered:
|
||
"My sworn friend! yea, I understand thy gibe. I need not thy words
|
||
to bring to my mind how I have slain one sworn friend for thy sake."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," she said, "not for my sake, for thine own folly's sake."
|
||
He heeded her not, but went on: "And as for this one, I say again
|
||
of him, if he be not thy devil, then thou meanest him for thy lover.
|
||
And now I deem that I will verily slay him, ere he wake again;
|
||
belike it were his better luck."
|
||
|
||
She said: "I wot not why thou hagglest over the price of that thou
|
||
wouldest have. If thou have him along with thee, shall he not
|
||
be in thy power--as I shall be? and thou mayst slay him--or me--
|
||
when thou wilt."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," he said, grimly, "when thou art weary of him.
|
||
O art thou not shameless amongst women! Yet must I needs pay
|
||
thy price, though my honour and the welfare of my life go with it.
|
||
Yet how if he have no will to fare with us?" She laughed and said:
|
||
"Then shalt thou have him with thee as thy captive and thrall.
|
||
Hast thou not conquered him in battle?" He stood silent a moment
|
||
and then he said: "Thou sayest it; he shall come with me, will he,
|
||
nill he, unarmed, and as a prisoner, and the spoil of my valiancy."
|
||
And he laughed, not altogether in bitterness, but as if some joy
|
||
were rising in his heart. "Now, my Queen," said he, "the bargain
|
||
is struck betwixt us, and thou mayest light down off Silverfax;
|
||
as for me, I will go fetch water from the lake, that we may wake
|
||
up this valiant and mighty youth, this newfound jewel, and bring
|
||
him to his wits again."
|
||
|
||
She answered nought, but rode her horse close to him and lighted
|
||
down nimbly, while his greedy eyes devoured her beauty.
|
||
Then he took her hand and drew her to him, and kissed
|
||
her cheek, and she suffered it, but kissed him not again.
|
||
Then he took off his helm, and went down to the lake to fetch
|
||
up water therein.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 23
|
||
|
||
The Leechcraft of the Lady
|
||
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile she went to Ralph and stood by him, who now began to stir again;
|
||
and she knelt down by him and kissed his face gently, and rose up hastily
|
||
and stood a little aloof again.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph sat up and looked about him, and when he saw
|
||
the Lady he first blushed red, and then turned very pale;
|
||
for the full life was in him again, and he knew her,
|
||
and love drew strongly at his heart-strings. But she looked
|
||
on him kindly and said to him: "How fares it with thee?
|
||
I am sorry of thy hurt which thou hast had for me." He said:
|
||
"Forsooth, Lady, a chance knock or two is no great matter
|
||
for a lad of Upmeads. But oh! I have seen thee before."
|
||
"Yea," she said, "twice before, fair knight." "How is that?"
|
||
he said; "once I saw thee, the fairest thing in the world,
|
||
and evil men would have led thee to slaughter; but not twice."
|
||
|
||
She smiled on him still more kindly, as if he were a
|
||
dear friend, and said simply: "I was that lad in the cloak
|
||
that ye saw in the Flower de Luce; and afterwards when ye,
|
||
thou and Roger, fled away from the Burg of the Four Friths.
|
||
I had come into the Burg with my captain of war at the peril
|
||
of our lives to deliver four faithful friends of mine who were
|
||
else doomed to an evil death."
|
||
|
||
He said nought, but gazed at her face, wondering at her valiancy
|
||
and goodness. She took him by the hand now, and held it without
|
||
speaking for a little while, and he sat there still looking up
|
||
into her face, wondering at her sweetness and his happiness.
|
||
Then she said, as she drew her hand away and spake in such a voice,
|
||
and so looking at him, that every word was as a caress to him:
|
||
"Thy soul is coming back to thee, my friend, and thou art well at ease:
|
||
is it not so?"
|
||
|
||
"O yea," he said, "and I woke up happily e'en now;
|
||
for me-dreamed that my gossip came to me and kissed me kindly;
|
||
and she is a fair woman, but not a young woman."
|
||
|
||
As he spoke the knight, who had come nearly noiselessly over
|
||
the grass, stood by them, holding his helm full of water,
|
||
and looking grimly upon them; but the Lady looked up at him
|
||
with wide eyes wonderingly, and Ralph, beholding her, deemed that
|
||
all he had heard of her goodness was but the very sooth.
|
||
But the knight spake: "Young man, thou hast fought with me,
|
||
thou knowest not wherefore, and grim was my mood when thou
|
||
madest thine onset, and still is, so that never but once wilt
|
||
thou be nigher thy death than thou hast been this hour.
|
||
But now I have given thee life because of the asking of this lady;
|
||
and therewith I give thee leave to come thy ways with us:
|
||
nay, rather I command thee to come, for thou art my prisoner,
|
||
to be kept or ransomed, or set free as I will. But my will is
|
||
that thou shalt not have thine armour and weapons; and there
|
||
is a cause for this, which mayhappen I will tell thee hereafter.
|
||
But now I bid thee drink of this water, and then do off
|
||
thine helm and hauberk and give me thy sword and dagger,
|
||
and go with us peaceably; and be not overmuch ashamed, for I
|
||
have overcome men who boasted themselves to be great warriors.
|
||
|
||
So Ralph drank of the water, and did off his helm, and cast water on his face,
|
||
and arose, and said smiling: "Nay, my master, I am nought ashamed
|
||
of my mishaps: and as to my going with thee and the Lady, thou hast
|
||
heard me say under thy dagger that I would not forbear to follow her;
|
||
so I scarce need thy command thereto." The knight scowled on him and said:
|
||
"Hold thy peace, fool! Thou wert best not stir my wrath again."
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "thou hast my sword, and mayst slay me if thou wilt;
|
||
therefore be not word-valiant with me."
|
||
|
||
Said the Knight of the Sun: "Well, well, thou hast the right of it there.
|
||
Only beware lest thou try me overmuch. But now must we set forth on our road;
|
||
and here is work for thee to do: a hundred yards within the thick
|
||
wood in a straight line from the oak-tree thou shalt find two horses,
|
||
mine and the knight's who fell before me; go thou and bring them hither;
|
||
for I will not leave thee with my lady, lest I have to slay thee in the end,
|
||
and maybe her also."
|
||
|
||
Ralph nodded cheerfully, and set off on his task, and was the readier therein
|
||
because the Lady looked on him kindly and compassionately as he went by her.
|
||
He found the horses speedily, a black horse that was of the Black Knight,
|
||
and a bay of the Knight of the Sun, and he came back with them lightly.
|
||
|
||
But when he came to the oak-tree again, lo, the knight and the Lady both
|
||
kneeling over the body of the Black Knight, and Ralph saw that the Knight
|
||
of the Sun was sobbing and weeping sorely, so that he deemed that he was
|
||
taking leave of his friend that lay dead there: but when Ralph had tied
|
||
up those other two steeds by Silverfax and drawn rear to those twain,
|
||
the Knight of the Sun looked up at him, and spake in a cheerful voice:
|
||
"Thou seemest to be no ill man, though thou hast come across my lady;
|
||
so now I bid thee rejoice that there is a good knight more in the world than
|
||
we deemed e'en now; for this my friend Walter the Black is alive still."
|
||
"Yea," said the Lady, "and belike he shall live a long while yet."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph looked, and saw that they had stripped the knight of his hauberk
|
||
and helm, and bared his body, and that the Lady was dressing a great and sore
|
||
wound in his side; neither was he come to himself again: he was a young man,
|
||
and very goodly to look on, dark haired and straight of feature, fair of face;
|
||
and Ralph felt a grief at his heart as he beheld the Lady's hands dealing
|
||
with his bare flesh, though nought the man knew of it belike.
|
||
|
||
As for the Knight of the Sun, he was no more grim and moody,
|
||
but smiling and joyous, and he spake and said: "Young man,
|
||
this shall stand thee in good stead that I have not slain my
|
||
friend this bout. Sooth to say, it might else have gone hard
|
||
with thee on the way to my house, or still more in my house.
|
||
But now be of good heart, for unless of thine own folly thou
|
||
run on the sword's point, thou mayst yet live and do well."
|
||
Then he turned to the Lady and said: "Dame, for as good
|
||
a leech as ye be, ye may not heal this man so that he may sit
|
||
in his saddle within these ten days; and now what is to do
|
||
in this matter?"
|
||
|
||
She looked on him with smiling lips and a strange light
|
||
in her eyes, and said: "Yea, forsooth, what wilt thou do?
|
||
Wilt thou abide here by Walter thyself alone, and let me bring
|
||
the imp of Upmeads home to our house? Or wilt thou ride home
|
||
and send folk with a litter to us? Or shall this youngling ride
|
||
at all adventure, and seek to Sunway through the blind woodland?
|
||
Which shall it be?"
|
||
|
||
The knight laughed outright, and said: "Yea, fair one, this is much
|
||
like to the tale of the carle at the ferry with the fox, and the goat,
|
||
and the cabbage."
|
||
|
||
There was scarce a smile on her face as she said gently:
|
||
"One thing is to be thought of, that Walter's soul is not yet
|
||
so fast in his body that either thou or some rough-handed leech
|
||
may be sure of healing him; it must be this hand, and the learning
|
||
which it hath learned which must deal with him for a while.
|
||
And she stretched out her arm over the wounded man,
|
||
with the fingers pointing down the water, and reddened withal,
|
||
as if she felt the hearts' greediness of the two men who were
|
||
looking on her beauty.
|
||
|
||
The big knight sighed, and said: "Well, unless I am to kill him
|
||
over again, there is nothing for it but our abiding with him
|
||
for the next few hours at least. To-morrow is a new day, and fair
|
||
is the woodland-hall of summer-tide; neither shall water fail us.
|
||
But as to victual, I wot not save that we have none."
|
||
|
||
The Lady laughed, and said to Ralph; "Who knoweth what thou mayst
|
||
find if thou go to the black horse and look into the saddle-bags
|
||
which I saw upon him awhile agone? For indeed we need somewhat,
|
||
if it were but to keep the life in the body of this wounded man."
|
||
|
||
Ralph sprang up and turned to the horse, and found the saddle-bags
|
||
on him, and took from them bread and flesh, and a flask of good wine,
|
||
and brought them to the Lady, who laughed and said: "Thou art a good seeker
|
||
and no ill finder." Then she gave the wounded man to drink of the wine,
|
||
so that he stirred somewhat, and the colour came into his face a little.
|
||
Then she bade gather store of bracken for a bed for the Black Knight,
|
||
and Ralph bestirred himself therein, but the Knight of the Sun sat
|
||
looking at the Lady as she busied herself with his friend, and gloom
|
||
seemed gathering on him again.
|
||
|
||
But when the bracken was enough, the Lady made a bed deftly and speedily;
|
||
and between the three they laid the wounded man thereon, who seemed coming
|
||
to himself somewhat, and spake a few words, but those nothing to the point.
|
||
Then the Lady took her gay embroidered cloak, which lay at the foot of
|
||
the oak tree, and cast it over him and, as Ralph deemed, eyed him lovingly,
|
||
and belike the Knight of the Sun thought in likewise, for he scowled upon her;
|
||
and for awhile but little was the joyance by the ancient oak, unless it
|
||
were with the Lady.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Supper and Slumber in the Woodland Hall
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 24
|
||
|
||
|
||
But when all was done to make the wounded knight as easy as
|
||
might be, the Lady turned to the other twain, and said kindly:
|
||
"Now, lords, it were good to get to table, since here is wherewithal."
|
||
And she looked on them both full kindly as she spake the words,
|
||
but nowise wantonly; even as the lady of a fair house might
|
||
do by honoured guests. So the hearts of both were cheered,
|
||
and nothing loth they sat down by her on the grass and fell to meat.
|
||
Yet was the Knight of the Sun a little moody for a while,
|
||
but when he had eaten and drunken somewhat, he said:
|
||
"It were well if someone might come hereby, some hermit
|
||
or holy man, to whom we might give the care of Walter:
|
||
then might we home to Sunway, and send folk with a litter
|
||
to fetch him home softly when the due time were."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said the Lady, "that might happen forsooth, and perchance it will;
|
||
and if it were before nightfall it were better."
|
||
|
||
Ralph saw that as she spake she took hold of the two fingers of her
|
||
left hand with her right forefinger, and let the thumb meet it,
|
||
so that it made a circle about them, and she spake something therewith
|
||
in a low voice, but he heeded it little, save as he did all ways
|
||
that her body moved. As for the Knight of the Sun, he was looking
|
||
down on the grass as one pondering matters, and noted this not.
|
||
But he said presently: "What hast thou to say of Walter now?
|
||
Shall he live?" "Yea," she said, "maybe as long as either of you twain."
|
||
The knight looked hard at Ralph, but said nothing, and Ralph heeded
|
||
not his looks, for his eyes were busy devouring the Lady.
|
||
|
||
So they abode a little, and the more part of what talk there was came
|
||
from the Lady, and she was chiefly asking Ralph of his home in Upmeads,
|
||
and his brethren and kindred, and he told her all openly, and hid naught,
|
||
while her voice ravished his very soul from him, and it seemed strange
|
||
to him, that such an one should hold him in talk concerning these simple
|
||
matters and familiar haps, and look on him so kindly and simply.
|
||
Ever and anon would she go and look to the welfare of the wounded man,
|
||
and come back from him (for they sat a little way aloof), and tell
|
||
them how he did. And still the Knight of the Sun took little heed,
|
||
and once again gloom settled down on him.
|
||
|
||
Amidst all this the sun was set, and the long water lay beneath the heavens
|
||
like a sheet of bright, fairhued metal, and naught stirred it: till at
|
||
last the Lady leaned forward to Ralph, and touched his shoulder (for he was
|
||
sitting over against her, with his back to the water), and she said:
|
||
"Sir Knight, Sir Knight, his wish is coming about, I believe verily."
|
||
He turned his head to look over his shoulder, and, as if by chance-hap,
|
||
his cheek met the outstretched hand she was pointing with:
|
||
she drew it not away very speedily, and as sweet to him was the touch
|
||
of it as if his face had been brushed past by a summer lily.
|
||
|
||
"Nay, look! something cometh," she cried; and he looked and saw
|
||
a little boat making down the water toward the end anigh them.
|
||
Then the Knight of the Sun seemed to awake at her word,
|
||
and he leapt to his feet, and stood looking at the new comer.
|
||
|
||
It was but a little while ere the boat touched the shore, and a man
|
||
stepped out of it on to the grass and made it fast to the bank,
|
||
and then stood and looked about him as if seeking something; and lo,
|
||
it was a holy man, a hermit in the habit of the Blackfriars.
|
||
|
||
Then the Knight of the Sun hastened down to the strand to
|
||
meet him, and when Ralph was thus left alone with the Lady,
|
||
though it were but for a little, his heart beat and he longed
|
||
sore to touch her with his hand, but durst not, and did but
|
||
hope that her hand would stray his way as it had e'en now.
|
||
But she arose and stood a little way from him, and spake to him
|
||
sweetly of the fairness of the evening, and the wounded man,
|
||
and the good hap of the friar's coming before nightfall;
|
||
and his heart was wrung sore with the love of her.
|
||
|
||
So came the knight up from the strand, and the holy man with him,
|
||
who greeted Ralph and the Lady and blessed them, and said:
|
||
"Now, daughter, show me thy sick man; for I am somewhat of a leech,
|
||
and this thy baron would have me heal him, and I have a right
|
||
good will thereto."
|
||
|
||
So he went to the Black Knight, and when he had looked to his hurts,
|
||
he turned to them and said: "Have ye perchance any meat in the wilderness?"
|
||
"Yea," quoth the Knight of the Sun; "there is enough for a day or more,
|
||
and if we must needs abide here longer, I or this young man may well make
|
||
shift to slay some deer, great or little, for our sustenance and the healing
|
||
of my friend."
|
||
|
||
"It is well," said the Friar; "my hermitage is no great way hence,
|
||
in the thicket at the end of this water. But now is the fever
|
||
on this knight, and we may not move him ere morning at soonest;
|
||
but to-morrow we may make a shift to bear him hence by boat:
|
||
or, if not, then may I go and fetch from my cell bread and other meat,
|
||
and milk of my goats; and thus shall we do well till we may bring
|
||
him to my cell, and then shall ye leave him there; and afterwards I
|
||
will lead him home to Sunway where thou dwellest, baron, when he is
|
||
well enough healed; or, if he will not go thither, let him go his ways,
|
||
and I myself will come to Sunway and let thee wot of his welfare."
|
||
|
||
The knight yeasaid all this, and thereafter the Friar and the Lady together
|
||
tended the wounded knight, and gave him water to drink, and wine.
|
||
And meanwhile Ralph and the Knight of the Sun lay down on the grass
|
||
and watched the eve darkening, and Ralph marvelled at his happiness,
|
||
and wondered what the morrow would bring forth.
|
||
|
||
But amidst his happy thoughts the Knight of the Sun spake to him and said:
|
||
"Young knight, I have struck a bargain with her that thou shalt follow
|
||
us home, if thou wilt: but to say sooth, I think when the bargain was
|
||
struck I was minded when I had thee at Sunway to cast thee into my prison.
|
||
But now I will do otherwise, and if thou must needs follow after thine
|
||
own perdition, as I have, thou shalt do so freely; therefore take
|
||
again thine armour and weapons, and do what thou wilt with them.
|
||
But if thou wilt do after my rede, get thee away to-morrow, or better,
|
||
to-night, and desire our fellowship no more."
|
||
|
||
Ralph heard him, and the heart within him was divided.
|
||
It was in his mind to speak debonairely to the knight;
|
||
but again he felt as if he hated him, and the blythe
|
||
words would not come, and he answered doggedly:
|
||
"I will not leave my Lady since she biddeth me go with her.
|
||
If thou wilt then, make the most of it that thou art stronger
|
||
than I, and a warrior more proven; set me before thy sword,
|
||
and fight with me and slay me."
|
||
|
||
Then rose the wrath to the knight's lips, and he brake forth: "Then is
|
||
there one other thing for thee to do, and that is that thou take thy sword,
|
||
which I have just given back to thee, and thrust her through therewith.
|
||
That were better for thee and for me, and for him who lieth yonder."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he arose and strode up and down in the dusk, and Ralph
|
||
wondered at him, yet hated him now not so much, since he deemed
|
||
that the Lady would not love him, and that he was angered thereby.
|
||
Yet about Ralph's heart there hung a certain fear of what should be.
|
||
|
||
But presently the knight came and sat down by him again, and again
|
||
fell to speech with him, and said: "Thou knowest that I may not
|
||
slay thee, and yet thou sayest, fight with me; is this well done?"
|
||
"Is it ill done?" said Ralph, "I wot not why."
|
||
|
||
The knight was silent awhile, and then he said: "With what
|
||
words shall I beseech thee to depart while it is yet time?
|
||
It may well be that in days to come I shall be good to thee,
|
||
and help thee."
|
||
|
||
But Ralph said never a word. Then said the knight, and sighed withal:
|
||
"I now see this of thee, that thou mayst not depart; well, so let it be!"
|
||
and he sighed heavily again. Then Ralph strove with himself,
|
||
and said courteously: "Sir, I am sorry that I am a burden irksome
|
||
to thee; and that, why I know not, thou mayst not rid thyself of me
|
||
by the strong hand, and that otherwise thou mayst not be rid of me.
|
||
What then is this woman to thee, that thou wouldst have me slay her,
|
||
and yet art so fierce in thy love for her?" The Knight of the Sun
|
||
laughed wrathfully thereat, and was on the point of answering him,
|
||
when up came those two from the wounded man, and the Friar said:
|
||
"The knight shall do well; but well it is for him that the Lady
|
||
of Abundance was here for his helping; for from her hands
|
||
goeth all healing, as it was with the holy men of old time.
|
||
May the saints keep her from all harm; for meek and holy indeed she is,
|
||
as oft we have heard it."
|
||
|
||
The Lady put her hand on his shoulder, as if to bid him silence,
|
||
and then set herself down on the grass beside the Knight of the Sun,
|
||
and fell to talking sweetly and blithely to the three men.
|
||
The Friar answered her with many words, and told her of the deer
|
||
and fowl of the wood and the water that he was wont to see nigh to
|
||
his hermitage; for of such things she asked him, and at last he said:
|
||
"Good sooth, I should be shy to say in all places and before all men
|
||
of all my dealings with God's creatures which live about me there.
|
||
Wot ye what? E'en now I had no thought of coming hitherward;
|
||
but I was sitting amongst the trees pondering many things, when I
|
||
began to drowse, and drowsing I heard the thornbushes speaking to me
|
||
like men, and they bade me take my boat and go up the water to help
|
||
a man who was in need; and that is how I came hither; benedicite."
|
||
|
||
So he spake; but the Knight of the Sun did but put in a word
|
||
here and there, and that most often a sour and snappish word.
|
||
As for Ralph, he also spake but little, and strayed somewhat
|
||
in his answers; for he could not but deem that she spake softlier
|
||
and kinder to him than to the others; and he was dreamy with love
|
||
and desire, and scarce knew what he was saying.
|
||
|
||
Thus they wore away some two hours, the Friar or the Lady turning
|
||
away at whiles to heed the wounded man, who was now talking wildly
|
||
in his fever.
|
||
|
||
But at last the night was grown as dark as it would be,
|
||
since cloud and storm came not, for the moon had sunk down:
|
||
so the Lady said: "Now, lords, our candle hath gone out,
|
||
and I for my part will to bed; so let us each find a meet chamber
|
||
in the woodland hall; and I will lie near to thee, father, and the
|
||
wounded friend, lest I be needed to help thee in the night;
|
||
and thou, Baron of Sunway, lie thou betwixt me and the wood,
|
||
to ward me from the wild deer and the wood-wights. But thou,
|
||
Swain of Upmeads, wilt thou deem it hard to lie anear the horses,
|
||
to watch them if they be scared by aught?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said the Knight of the Sun, "thou art Lady here forsooth;
|
||
even as men say of thee, that thou swayest man and beast in the wildwood.
|
||
But this time at least it is not so ill-marshalled of thee:
|
||
I myself would have shown folk to chamber here in likewise."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he rose up, and walked to and fro for a little,
|
||
and then went, and sat down on a root of the oak-tree,
|
||
clasping his knees with his hands, but lay not down awhile.
|
||
But the Lady made herself a bed of the bracken which was over from
|
||
those that Ralph had gathered for the bed of the wounded Knight;
|
||
and the Friar lay down on the grass nigh to her, and both
|
||
were presently asleep.
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph got up quietly; and, shamefacedly for very love,
|
||
passed close beside the sleeping woman as he went to his place
|
||
by the horses, taking his weapons and wargear with him:
|
||
and he said to himself as he laid him down, that it was good
|
||
for him to be quite alone, that he might lie awake and think
|
||
at his ease of all the loveliness and kindness of his Lady.
|
||
Howbeit, he was a young man, and a sturdy, used to lying abroad
|
||
in the fields or the woods, and it was his custom to sleep
|
||
at once and sweetly when he lay down after the day's work
|
||
had wearied him, and even so he did now, and was troubled
|
||
by no dreams of what was past or to come.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BOOK TWO
|
||
|
||
The Road Unto Trouble
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 1
|
||
|
||
Ralph Meets With Love in the Wilderness
|
||
|
||
|
||
He woke up while it was yet night, and knew that he had been
|
||
awakened by a touch; but, like a good hunter and warrior,
|
||
he forebore to start up or cry out till sleep had so much
|
||
run off him that he could tell somewhat of what was toward.
|
||
So now he saw the Lady bending over him, and she said in a kind
|
||
and very low voice: "Rise up, young man, rise up, Ralph, and say
|
||
no word, but come with me a little way into the wood ere dawn come,
|
||
for I have a word for thee."
|
||
|
||
So he stood up and was ready to go with her, his heart beating
|
||
hard for joy and wonder. "Nay," she whispered, "take thy sword
|
||
and war-gear lest ill befall: do on thine hauberk; I will be
|
||
thy squire." And she held his war-coat out for him to do on.
|
||
"Now," she said, still softly, "hide thy curly hair with the helm,
|
||
gird thy sword to thee, and come without a word."
|
||
|
||
Even so he did, and therewithal felt her hand take his
|
||
(for it was dark as they stepped amidst the trees), and she
|
||
led him into the Seventh Heaven, for he heard her voice,
|
||
though it were but a whisper, as it were a caress and a laugh
|
||
of joy in each word.
|
||
|
||
She led him along swiftly, fumbling nought with the paths betwixt
|
||
the pine-tree boles, where it was as dark as dark might be.
|
||
Every minute he looked to hear her say a word of why she had brought
|
||
him thither, and that then she would depart from him; so he prayed
|
||
that the silence and the holding of his hand might last a long while--
|
||
for he might think of naught save her--and long it lasted forsooth,
|
||
and still she spake no word, though whiles a little sweet chuckle,
|
||
as of the garden warbler at his softest, came from her lips,
|
||
and the ripple of her raiment as her swift feet drave it,
|
||
sounded loud to his eager ears in the dark, windless wood.
|
||
|
||
At last, and it was more than half-an-hour of their walking thus,
|
||
it grew lighter, and he could see the shape of her alongside of him;
|
||
and still she held his hand and glided on swifter and swifter, as he thought;
|
||
and soon he knew that outside the wood dawn was giving place to day,
|
||
and even there, in the wood, it was scarce darker than twilight.
|
||
|
||
Yet a little further, and it grew lighter still, and he heard
|
||
the throstles singing a little way off, and knew that they
|
||
were on the edge of the pine-wood, and still her swift feet sped
|
||
on till they came to a little grassy wood-lawn, with nought anear
|
||
it on the side away from the wood save maples and thorn-bushes:
|
||
it was broad daylight there, though the sun had not yet arisen.
|
||
|
||
There she let fall his hand and turned about to him and faced him
|
||
flushed and eager, with her eyes exceeding bright and her lips
|
||
half open and quivering. He stood beholding her, trembling,
|
||
what for eagerness, what for fear of her words when he had told
|
||
her of his desire. For he had now made up his mind to do no less.
|
||
He put his helm from off his head and laid it down on the grass,
|
||
and he noted therewith that she had come in her green gown only,
|
||
and had left mantle and cote hardie behind.
|
||
|
||
Now he stood up again and was just going to speak, when lo!
|
||
she put both her palms to her face, and her bosom heaved,
|
||
and her shoulders were shaken with sobs, and she burst
|
||
out a weeping, so that the tears ran through her fingers.
|
||
Then he cast himself on the ground before her, and kissed
|
||
her feet, and clasped her about the knees, and laid his cheek
|
||
to her raiment, and fawned upon her, and cried out many an idle
|
||
word of love, and still she wept a while and spake not.
|
||
At last she reached her hand down to his face and fondled it,
|
||
and he let his lips lie on the hand, and she suffered it a while,
|
||
and then took him by the arm and raised him up and led him
|
||
on swiftly as before; and he knew not what to do or say,
|
||
and durst by no means stay her, and could frame no word
|
||
to ask her wherefore.
|
||
|
||
So they sped across a waste not much beset with trees, he silent,
|
||
she never wearying or slacking her pace or faltering as to the way,
|
||
till they came into the thick wood again, and ever when he would
|
||
have spoken she hushed him, with "Not yet! Not yet!"
|
||
Until at last when the sun had been up for some three hours,
|
||
she led him through a hazel copse, like a deep hedge, into a
|
||
cleared grassy place where were great grey stones lying about,
|
||
as if it had been the broken doom-ring of a forgotten folk.
|
||
There she threw herself down on the grass and buried her face amidst
|
||
the flowers, and was weeping and sobbing again and he bending over her,
|
||
till she turned to him and drew him down to her and put her hands
|
||
to his face, and laid her cheeks all wet with tears to his,
|
||
and fell to kissing him long and sweetly, so that in his turn
|
||
he was like to weep for the very sweetness of love.
|
||
|
||
Then at last she spake: "This is the first word, that now I
|
||
have brought thee away from death; and so sweet it is to me
|
||
that I can scarce bear it."
|
||
|
||
"Oh, sweet to me," he said, "for I have waited for thee many days."
|
||
And he fell to kissing and clipping her, as one who might not be satisfied.
|
||
At last she drew herself from him a little, and, turning on him a face
|
||
smiling with love, she said: "Forbear it a little, till we talk together."
|
||
"Yea," quoth he, "but may I hold thine hand awhile?" "No harm in that,"
|
||
she said, laughing, and she gave him her hand and spake:
|
||
|
||
"I spake it that I have brought thee from death,
|
||
and thou hast asked me no word concerning what and how."
|
||
"I will ask it now, then," said he, "since thou wilt have it so."
|
||
She said: "Dost thou think that he would have let thee live?"
|
||
|
||
"Who," said he, "since thou lettest me live?"
|
||
|
||
"He, thy foeman, the Knight of the Sun," she said.
|
||
"Why didst thou not flee from him before? For he did not so much
|
||
desire to slay thee, but that he would have had thee depart;
|
||
but if thou wert once at his house, he would thrust a sword
|
||
through thee, or at the least cast thee into his prison and let
|
||
thee lie there till thy youth be gone--or so it seemed to me,"
|
||
she said, faltering as she looked on him.
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "How could I depart when thou wert with him?
|
||
Didst thou not see me there? I was deeming that thou wouldst
|
||
have me abide."
|
||
|
||
She looked upon him with such tender love that he made as if he would
|
||
cast himself upon her; but she refrained him, and smiled and said:
|
||
"Ah, yes, I saw thee, and thought not that thou wouldst sunder thyself
|
||
from me; therefore had I care of thee." And she touched his cheek with
|
||
her other hand; and he sighed and knit his brows somewhat, and said:
|
||
"But who is this man that he should slay me? And why is he thy tyrant,
|
||
that thou must flee from him?"
|
||
|
||
She laughed and said: "Fair creature, he is my husband."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph flushed red, and his visage clouded, and he
|
||
opened his mouth to speak; but she stayed him and said:
|
||
"Yet is he not so much my husband but that or ever we were bedded
|
||
he must needs curse me and drive me away from his house."
|
||
And she smiled, but her face reddened so deeply that her grey
|
||
eyes looked strange and light therein.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph leapt up, and half drew his sword, and cried out loud:
|
||
"Would God I had slain him! Wherefore could I not slay him?"
|
||
And he strode up and down the sward before her in his wrath.
|
||
But she leaned forward to him and laughed and said:
|
||
"Yet, O Champion, we will not go back to him,
|
||
for he is stronger than thou, and hath vanquished thee.
|
||
This is a desert place, but thou art loud, and maybe over loud.
|
||
Come rest by me."
|
||
|
||
So he came and sat down by her, and took her hand again
|
||
and kissed the wrist therof and fondled it and said:
|
||
"Yea, but he desireth thee sorely; that was easy to see.
|
||
It was my ill-luck that I slew him not."
|
||
|
||
She stroked his face again and said: "Long were the tale if I told
|
||
thee all. After he had driven me out, and I had fled from him,
|
||
he fell in with me again divers times, as was like to be;
|
||
for his brother is the Captain of the Dry Tree; the tall man
|
||
whom thou hast seen with me: and every time this baron hath
|
||
come on me he has prayed my love, as one who would die despaired
|
||
if I granted it not, but O my love with the bright sword"
|
||
(and she kissed his cheek therewith, and fondled his hand with
|
||
both her hands), "each time I said him nay, I said him nay."
|
||
And again her face burned with blushes.
|
||
|
||
"And his brother," said Ralph, "the big captain that I have
|
||
come across these four times, doth he desire thee also?"
|
||
She laughed and said: "But as others have, no more:
|
||
he will not slay any man for my sake."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Didst thou wot that I was abiding thy coming at
|
||
the Castle of Abundance?" "Yea," she said, "have I not told thee
|
||
that I bade Roger lead thee thither?" Then she said softly:
|
||
"That was after that first time we met; after I had ridden away
|
||
on the horse of that butcher whom thou slayedst."
|
||
|
||
"But why camest thou so late?" said he; "Wouldst thou have come
|
||
if I had abided there yet?" She said: "What else did I desire
|
||
but to be with thee? But I set out alone looking not for any peril,
|
||
since our riders had gone to the north against them of the Burg:
|
||
but as I drew near to the Water of the Oak, I fell in with my husband
|
||
and that other man; and this time all my naysays were of no avail,
|
||
and whatsoever I might say he constrained me to go with them;
|
||
but straightway they fell out together, and fought, even as thou sawest."
|
||
And she looked at him sweetly, and as frankly as if he had been
|
||
naught but her dearest brother.
|
||
|
||
But he said: "It was concerning thee that they fought:
|
||
hast thou known the Black Knight for long?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said, "I may not hide that he hath loved me:
|
||
but he hath also betrayed me. It was through him that the Knight
|
||
of the Sun drave me from him. Hearken, for this concerneth thee:
|
||
he made a tale of me of true and false mingled, that I was
|
||
a wise-wife and an enchantress, and my lord trowed in him,
|
||
so that I was put to shame before all the house, and driven
|
||
forth wrung with anguish, barefoot and bleeding."
|
||
|
||
He looked and saw pain and grief in her face, as it had been
|
||
the shadow of that past time, and the fierceness of love in him
|
||
so changed his face, that she arose and drew a little way from him,
|
||
and stood there gazing at him. But he also rose and knelt before her,
|
||
and reached up for her hands and took them in his and said:
|
||
"Tell me truly, and beguile me not; for I am a young man,
|
||
and without guile, and I love thee, and would have thee
|
||
for my speech-friend, what woman soever may be in the world.
|
||
Whatever thou hast been, what art thou now? Art thou good or evil?
|
||
Wilt thou bless me or ban me? For it is the truth that I
|
||
have heard tales and tales of thee: many were good, though it
|
||
maybe strange; but some, they seemed to warn me of evil in thee.
|
||
O look at me, and see if I love thee or not! and I may not help it.
|
||
Say once for all, shall that be for my ruin or my bliss?
|
||
If thou hast been evil, then be good this one time and tell me."
|
||
|
||
She neither reddened now, nor paled at his words, but her eyes
|
||
filled with tears, and ran over, and she looked down on him
|
||
as a woman looks on a man that she loves from the heart's root,
|
||
and she said: "O my lord and love, may it be that thou shalt
|
||
find me no worse to thee than the best of all those tales.
|
||
Forsooth how shall I tell thee of myself, when, whatever I say,
|
||
thou shalt believe every word I tell thee? But O my heart,
|
||
how shouldest thou, so sweet and fair and good, be taken
|
||
with the love of an evil thing? At the least I will say this,
|
||
that whatsoever I have been, I am good to thee--I am good to thee,
|
||
and will be true to thee."
|
||
|
||
He drew her down to him as he knelt there, and took his arms about her,
|
||
and though she yet shrank from him a little and the eager flame of his love,
|
||
he might not be gainsayed, and she gave herself to him and let her
|
||
body glide into his arms, and loved him no less than he loved her.
|
||
And there between them in the wilderness was all the joy of love
|
||
that might be.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 2
|
||
|
||
They Break Their Fast in the Wildwood
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now when it was hard on noon, and they had lain long in
|
||
that grassy place, Ralph rose up and stood upon his feet,
|
||
and made as one listening. But the Lady looked on him and said:
|
||
"It is naught save a hart and his hind running in the wood;
|
||
yet mayhappen we were best on the road, for it is yet long."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and it may be that my master will
|
||
gather folk and pursue us." "Nay, nay," she said,
|
||
"that were to wrong him, to deem that he would gather folk
|
||
to follow one man; if he come, he will be by himself alone.
|
||
When he found us gone he doubtless cast himself on Silverfax,
|
||
my horse, in trust of the beast following after my feet."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Ralph, "and if he come alone, there is yet a sword
|
||
betwixt him and thee."
|
||
|
||
She was standing up by him now with her hand on his shoulder,
|
||
"Hear now the darling, the champion! how he trusteth well in his
|
||
heart and his right hand. But nay, I have cared for thee well.
|
||
Hearken, if thou wilt not take it amiss that I tell thee all I do,
|
||
good or evil. I said a word in the ear of Silverfax or ever
|
||
I departed, and now the good beast knows my mind, and will lead
|
||
the fierce lord a little astray, but not too much, lest he follow
|
||
us with his eager heart and be led by his own keen woodcraft.
|
||
Indeed, I left the horse behind to that end, else hadst thou
|
||
ridden the woodland ways with me, instead of my wearying thee
|
||
by our going afoot; and thou with thy weapons and wargear."
|
||
|
||
He looked upon her tenderly, and said smiling: "And thou, my dear,
|
||
art thou not a little wearied by what should weary a knight
|
||
and one bred afield?" "Nay," she said, "seest thou not how I walk
|
||
lightly clad, whereas I have left behind my mantle and cote-hardie?"
|
||
Thereat she gathered up her gown into her girdle ready for the way,
|
||
and smiled as she saw his eyes embrace the loveliness of her feet;
|
||
and she spake as she moved them daintily on the flowery grass:
|
||
"Sooth to say, Knight, I am no weakling dame, who cannot move her limbs
|
||
save in the dance, or to back the white palfrey and ride the meadows,
|
||
goshawk on wrist; I am both well-knit and light-foot as the Wood-wife
|
||
and Goddess of yore agone. Many a toil hath gone to that,
|
||
whereof I may tell thee presently; but now we were best on our way.
|
||
Yet before we go, I will at least tell thee this, that in my knowing
|
||
of these woods, there is no sorcery at all; for in the woods,
|
||
though not in these woods, was I bred; and here also I am at home,
|
||
as I may say."
|
||
|
||
Hand in hand then they went lightly through the hazel copse,
|
||
and soon was the wood thick about them, but, as before, the Lady led
|
||
unfalteringly through the thicket paths. Now Ralph spake and said:
|
||
"It is good that thou lead me whither thou wilt; but this I may say, that it
|
||
is clear to me that we are not on the way to the Castle of Abundance."
|
||
"Even so," said she; "indeed had I come to thee there, as I was minded,
|
||
I should presently have brought thee on the way which we are wending now,
|
||
or one nigh to it; and that is that which leadeth to Hampton under Scaur,
|
||
and the Fellowship of Champions who dwell on the rock."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "It is well; yet will I tell thee the truth,
|
||
that a little sojourn in that fair house had liked me better.
|
||
Fain had I been to see thee sitting in thine ivory chair
|
||
in thy chamber of dais with the walls hung round with thee
|
||
woven in pictures--wilt thou not tell me in words the story
|
||
of those pictures? and also concerning the book which I read,
|
||
which was also of thee?"
|
||
|
||
"Ah," she said, "thou hast read in the book--well, I will tell
|
||
thee the story very soon, and that the more since there are
|
||
matters written wrong in the book." Therewith she hurried him on,
|
||
and her feet seemed never tired, though now, to say sooth,
|
||
he began to go somewhat heavily.
|
||
|
||
Then she stayed him, and laughed sweetly in his face, and said:
|
||
"It is a long while now since the beginning of the June day,
|
||
and meseems I know thy lack, and the slaking of it lieth somewhat
|
||
nearer than Hampton under Scaur, which we shall not reach these two
|
||
days if we go afoot all the way."
|
||
|
||
"My lack?" said he; "I lack nought now, that I may not have when I will."
|
||
And he put his arms about her shoulders and strained her to his bosom.
|
||
But she strove with him, and freed herself and laughed outright,
|
||
and said: "Thou art a bold man, and rash, my knight, even unto me.
|
||
Yet must I see to it that thou die not of hunger." He said merrily:
|
||
"Yea, by St. Nicholas, true it is: a while ago I felt no hunger,
|
||
and had forgotten that men eat; for I was troubled with much longing,
|
||
and in doubt concerning my life; but now am I free and happy,
|
||
and hungry therewithal."
|
||
|
||
"Look," she said, pointing up to the heavens, "it is now
|
||
past two hours after noon; that is nigh two hours since we
|
||
left the lawn amidst the hazels, and thou longest to eat,
|
||
as is but right, so lovely as thou art and young; and I withal
|
||
long to tell thee something of that whereof thou hast asked me;
|
||
and lastly, it is the hottest of the day, yea, so hot,
|
||
that even Diana, the Wood-wife of yore agone, might have
|
||
fainted somewhat, if she had been going afoot as we twain
|
||
have been, and little is the risk of our resting awhile.
|
||
And hereby is a place where rest is good as regards the place,
|
||
whatever the resters may be; it is a little aside the straightest way,
|
||
but meseems we may borrow an hour or so of our journey,
|
||
and hope to pay it back ere nightfall. Come, champion!"
|
||
|
||
Therewith she led north through a thicket of mingled trees
|
||
till Ralph heard water running, and anon they came to a little
|
||
space about a brook, grassy and clear of trees save a few big
|
||
thorn-bushes, with a green ridge or bank on the other side.
|
||
There she stayed him and said: "Do off thy war-gear, knight.
|
||
There is naught to fear here, less than there was amidst the hazels."
|
||
So did he, and she kneeled down and drank of the clear water,
|
||
and washed her face and hands therein, and then came and kissed
|
||
him and said: "Lovely imp of Upmeads, I have some bread
|
||
of last night's meal in my scrip here, and under the bank
|
||
I shall find some woodland meat withal; abide a little
|
||
and the tale and the food shall come back to thee together."
|
||
Therewith she stepped lightly into the stream, and stood
|
||
therein a minute to let her naked feet feel the cold ripple
|
||
(for she had stripped off her foot-gear as she first came
|
||
to the water), and then went hither and thither gathering
|
||
strawberries about the bank, while he watched her, blessing her,
|
||
till he well nigh wept at the thought of his happiness.
|
||
|
||
Back she came in a little while with good store of strawberries in
|
||
the lap of her gown, and they sat down on the green lip of the brook,
|
||
and she drew the bread from her scrip and they ate together,
|
||
and she made him drink from the hollow of her hands, and kissed
|
||
him and wept over him for joy, and the eagerness of her love.
|
||
So at last she sat down quietly beside him, and fell to speaking to him,
|
||
as a tale is told in the ingle nook on an even of Yule-tide.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 3
|
||
|
||
The Lady Telleth Ralph of the Past Days of Her Life
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Now shalt thou hear of me somewhat more than the arras and the book
|
||
could tell thee; and yet not all, for time would fail us therefor--
|
||
and moreover my heart would fail me. I cannot tell where I was
|
||
born nor of what lineage, nor of who were my father and mother;
|
||
for this I have known not of myself, nor has any told me.
|
||
But when I first remember anything, I was playing about a garden,
|
||
wherein was a little house built of timber and thatched with reed,
|
||
and the great trees of the forest were all about the garden save
|
||
for a little croft which was grown over with high grass and another
|
||
somewhat bigger, wherein were goats. There was a woman at the door
|
||
of the house and she spinning, yet clad in glittering raiment,
|
||
and with jewels on her neck and fingers; this was the first thing
|
||
that I remember, but all as it were a matter of every day,
|
||
and use and wont, as it goes with the memories of children.
|
||
Of such matters I will not tell thee at large, for thou
|
||
knowest how it will be. Now the woman, who as l came to know
|
||
was neither old nor young in those days, but of middle age,
|
||
I called mother; but now I know that she was not my mother.
|
||
She was hard and stern with me, but never beat me in those days,
|
||
save to make me do what I would not have done unbeaten; and as to
|
||
meat I ate and drank what I could get, as she did, and indeed was
|
||
well-fed with simple meats as thou mayest suppose from the aspect
|
||
of me to-day. But as she was not fierce but rather sour to me
|
||
in her daily wont in my youngest days so also she was never tender,
|
||
or ever kissed me or caressed me, for as little as I was.
|
||
And I loved her naught, nor did it ever come into my mind that I
|
||
should love her, though I loved a white goat of ours and deemed
|
||
it dear and lovely; and afterwards other things also that came
|
||
to me from time to time, as a squirrel that I saved from a weasel,
|
||
and a jackdaw that fell from a tall ash-tree nigh our house
|
||
before he had learned how to fly, and a house-mouse that would
|
||
run up and down my hand and arm, and other such-like things;
|
||
and shortly I may say that the wild things, even to the conies
|
||
and fawns loved me, and had but little fear of me, and made me happy,
|
||
and I loved them.
|
||
|
||
"Further, as I grew up, the woman set me to do such work as I
|
||
had strength for as needs was; for there was no man dwelt anigh
|
||
us and seldom did I ever see man or woman there, and held
|
||
no converse with any, save as I shall tell thee presently:
|
||
though now and again a man or a woman passed by; what they were I
|
||
knew not, nor their whence and whither, but by seeing them I came
|
||
to know that there were other folk in the world besides us two.
|
||
Nought else I knew save how to spin, and to tend our goats
|
||
and milk them, and to set snares for birds and small deer:
|
||
though when I had caught them, it irked me sore to kill them,
|
||
and I had let them go again had I not feared the carline.
|
||
Every day early I was put forth from the house and garth,
|
||
and forbidden to go back thither till dusk. While the days were
|
||
long and the grass was growing, I had to lead our goats to pasture
|
||
in the wood-lawns, and must take with me rock and spindle,
|
||
and spin so much of flax or hair as the woman gave me, or be beaten.
|
||
But when the winter came and the snow was on the ground,
|
||
then that watching and snaring of wild things was my business.
|
||
|
||
"At last one day of late summer when I, now of some fifteen summers,
|
||
was pasturing the goats not far from the house, the sky darkened,
|
||
and there came up so great a storm of thunder and lightning, and huge
|
||
drift of rain, that I was afraid, and being so near to the house,
|
||
I hastened thither, driving the goats, and when I had tethered them
|
||
in the shed of the croft, I crept trembling up to the house, and when I
|
||
was at the door, heard the clack of the loom in the weaving-chamber,
|
||
and deemed that the woman was weaving there, but when I looked,
|
||
behold there was no one on the bench, though the shuttle was flying
|
||
from side to side, and the shed opening and changing, and the sley
|
||
coming home in due order. Therewithal I heard a sound as of one
|
||
singing a song in a low voice, but the words I could not understand:
|
||
then terror seized on my heart, but I stepped over the threshold,
|
||
and as the door of the chamber was open, I looked aside and saw
|
||
therein the woman sitting stark naked on the floor with a great open
|
||
book before her, and it was from her mouth that the song was coming:
|
||
grim she looked, and awful, for she was a big woman, black-haired and stern
|
||
of aspect in her daily wont, speaking to me as few words as might be,
|
||
and those harsh enough, yea harsher than when I was but little.
|
||
I stood for one moment afraid beyond measure, though the woman did not look
|
||
at me, and I hoped she had not seen me; then I ran back into the storm,
|
||
though it was now wilder than ever, and ran and hid myself in the thicket
|
||
of the wood, half-dead with fear, and wondering what would become of me.
|
||
But finding that no one followed after me, I grew calmer, and the storm
|
||
also drew off, and the sun shone out a little before his setting:
|
||
so I sat and spun, with fear in my heart, till I had finished my
|
||
tale of thread, and when dusk came, stole back again to the house,
|
||
though my legs would scarce bear me over the threshold into the chamber.
|
||
|
||
"There sat the woman in her rich attire no otherwise than her wont,
|
||
nor did she say aught to me; but looked at the yarn that I had spun,
|
||
to see that I had done my task, and nodded sternly to me as her wont was,
|
||
and l went to bed amongst my goats as I was used to do, but slept not till
|
||
towards morning, and then images of dreadful things, and of miseries
|
||
that I may not tell thee of, mingled with my sleep for long.
|
||
|
||
"So I awoke and ate my meat and drank of the goats' milk with a heavy heart,
|
||
and then went into the house; and when I came into the chamber
|
||
the woman looked at me, and contrary to her wont spoke to me, and I
|
||
shook with terror at her voice; though she said naught but this:
|
||
'Go fetch thy white goat and come back to me therewith.'
|
||
I did so, and followed after her, sick with fear; and she led me
|
||
through the wood into a lawn which I knew well, round which was a wall,
|
||
as it were, of great yew trees, and amidst, a table of stone,
|
||
made of four uprights and a great stone plank on the top of them;
|
||
and this was the only thing in all the wood wherein I was used
|
||
to wander which was of man's handiwork, save and except our house,
|
||
and the sheds and fences about it.
|
||
|
||
"The woman stayed and leaned against this stonework and said to me:
|
||
'Go about now and gather dry sticks for a fire.' I durst do
|
||
naught else, and said to myself that I should be whipped if I
|
||
were tardy, though, forsooth, I thought she was going to kill me;
|
||
and I brought her a bundle, and she said, 'Fetch more.'
|
||
And when I had brought her seven bundles, she said: 'It is enough:
|
||
stand over against me and hearken.' So I stood there quaking;
|
||
for my fear, which had somewhat abated while I went to and fro
|
||
after the wood, now came back upon me tenfold.
|
||
|
||
"She said: 'It were thy due that I should slay thee here and now,
|
||
as thou slayest the partridges which thou takest in thy springes:
|
||
but for certain causes I will not slay thee. Again, it were
|
||
no more than thy earnings were I to torment thee till thou
|
||
shouldst cry out for death to deliver thee from the anguish;
|
||
and if thou wert a woman grown, even so would I deal with thee.
|
||
But thou art yet but a child, therefore I will keep thee to see
|
||
what shall befall betwixt us. Yet must I do somewhat to grieve thee,
|
||
and moreover something must be slain and offered up here on this altar,
|
||
lest all come to naught, both thou and I, and that which we have to do.
|
||
Hold thy white goat now, which thou lovest more than aught else,
|
||
that I may redden thee and me and this altar with the blood thereof.'
|
||
|
||
"I durst do naught but obey her, and I held the poor beast,
|
||
that licked my hands and bleated for love of me:
|
||
and now since my terror and the fear of death was lessened
|
||
at her words, I wept sore for my dear friend.
|
||
|
||
"But the woman drew a strong sharp knife from her girdle
|
||
and cut the beast's throat, and dipped her fingers in the blood
|
||
and reddened both herself and me on the breast, and the hands,
|
||
and the feet; and then she turned to the altar and smote
|
||
blood upon the uprights, and the face of the stone plank.
|
||
Then she bade me help her, and we laid the seven faggots
|
||
on the alter, and laid the carcase of the goat upon them:
|
||
and she made fire, but I saw not how, and set it to the wood,
|
||
and when it began to blaze she stood before it with her
|
||
arms outspread, and sang loud and hoarse to a strange tune;
|
||
and though I knew not the words of her song, it filled me
|
||
with dread, so that I cast myself down on the ground and hid
|
||
my face in the grass.
|
||
|
||
"So she went on till the beast was all burned up and the fire
|
||
became naught but red embers, and then she ceased her song and sank
|
||
down upon the grass, and laid her head back and so fell asleep;
|
||
but I durst not move from the place, but cowered in the grass there,
|
||
I know not how long, till she arose and came to me, and smote me
|
||
with her foot and cried: 'Rise up, fool! what harm hast thou?
|
||
Go milk thy goats and lead them to pasture.' And therewith she
|
||
strode away home, not heeding me.
|
||
|
||
"As for me, I arose and dealt with my goats as she bade me;
|
||
and presently I was glad that I had not been slain, yet thenceforth
|
||
was the joy of my life that I had had amongst my goats marred
|
||
with fear, and the sounds of the woodland came to me mingled
|
||
with terror; and I was sore afraid when I entered the house
|
||
in the morning and the evening, and when I looked on the face
|
||
of the woman; though she was no harder to me than heretofore,
|
||
but maybe somewhat softer.
|
||
|
||
"So wore the autumn, and winter came, and I fared as I
|
||
was wont, setting springes for fowl and small-deer. And
|
||
for all the roughness of the season, at that time it pleased
|
||
me better than the leafy days, because I had less memory
|
||
then of the sharpness of my fear on that day of the altar.
|
||
Now one day as I went under the snow-laden trees, I saw something
|
||
bright and big lying on the ground, and drawing nearer I saw
|
||
that it was some child of man: so I stopped and cried out,
|
||
'Awake and arise, lest death come on thee in this bitter cold,'
|
||
But it stirred not; so I plucked up heart and came up to it,
|
||
and lo! a woman clad in fair raiment of scarlet and fur,
|
||
and I knelt down by her to see if I might help her;
|
||
but when I touched her I found her cold and stiff, and dead,
|
||
though she had not been dead long, for no snow had fallen on her.
|
||
It still wanted more than an hour of twilight, and I by no
|
||
means durst go home till nightfall; so I sat on there and
|
||
watched her, and put the hood from her face and the gloves
|
||
from her hands, and I deemed her a goodly and lovely thing,
|
||
and was sorry that she was not alive, and I wept for her,
|
||
and for myself also, that I had lost her fellowship.
|
||
So when I came back to the house at dark with the venison,
|
||
I knew not whether to tell my mistress and tyrant concerning
|
||
this matter; but she looked on me and said at once:
|
||
'Wert thou going to tell me of something that thou hast seen?'
|
||
So I told her all, even as it was, and she said to me:
|
||
'Hast thou taken aught from the corpse?' 'Nay,' said I. 'Then
|
||
must I hasten,' she said, 'and be before the wolves.'
|
||
Therewith she took a brand from the fire, and bade me bear one
|
||
also and lead her: so did I easily enough, for the moon was up,
|
||
and what with moon and snow, it was well nigh as bright as the day.
|
||
So when we came to the dead woman, my mistress kneeled down by
|
||
her and undid the collar of her cloak, which I had not touched,
|
||
and took something from her neck swiftly, and yet I,
|
||
who was holding the torch, saw that it was a necklace of blue
|
||
stones and green, with gold between--Yea, dear Champion,
|
||
like unto thine as one peascod is to another," quoth she.
|
||
|
||
And therewith the distressfulness of her face which had worn Ralph's
|
||
heart while she had been telling her tale changed, and she came,
|
||
as it were, into her new life and the love of him again, and she
|
||
kissed him and laid her cheek to his and he kissed her mouth.
|
||
And then she fetched a sigh, and began with her story again.
|
||
|
||
"My mistress took the necklace and put it in her pouch,
|
||
and said as to herself: 'Here, then, is another seeker
|
||
who hath not found, unless one should dig a pit for her here
|
||
when the thaw comes, and call it the Well at the World's End:
|
||
belike it will be for her as helpful as the real one.'
|
||
Then she turned to me and said: 'Do thou with the rest what
|
||
thou wilt,' and therewith she went back hastily to the house.
|
||
But as for me, I went back also, and found a pick and a mattock
|
||
in the goat-house, and came back in the moonlight and scraped
|
||
the snow away, and dug a pit, and buried the poor damsel there
|
||
with all her gear.
|
||
|
||
"Wore the winter thence with naught that I need tell of,
|
||
only I thought much of the words that my mistress had spoken.
|
||
Spring came and went, and summer also, well nigh tidingless.
|
||
But one day as I drave the goats from our house there came
|
||
from the wood four men, a-horseback and weaponed, but so covered
|
||
with their armour that I might see little of their faces.
|
||
They rode past me to our house, and spake not to me, though they
|
||
looked hard at me; but as they went past I heard one say:
|
||
'If she might but be our guide to the Well at the World's End!'
|
||
I durst not tarry to speak with them, but as I looked over
|
||
my shoulder I saw them talking to my mistress in the door;
|
||
but meseemed she was clad but in poor homespun cloth instead of her
|
||
rich apparel, and I am far-sighted and clear-sighted. After this
|
||
the autumn and winter that followed it passed away tidingless.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 4
|
||
|
||
The Lady Tells of Her Deliverance
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Now I had outgrown my old fear, and not much befell to quicken it:
|
||
and ever I was as much out of the house as I could be.
|
||
But about this time my mistress, from being kinder to me than before,
|
||
began to grow harder, and ofttimes used me cruelly: but of her deeds
|
||
to me, my friend, thou shalt ask me no more than I tell thee.
|
||
On a day of May-tide I fared abroad with my goats, and went
|
||
far with them, further from the house than I had been as yet.
|
||
The day was the fairest of the year, and I rejoiced in it,
|
||
and felt as if some exceeding great good were about to befall me;
|
||
and the burden of fears seemed to have fallen from me.
|
||
So I went till I came to a little flowery dell, beset with
|
||
blossoming whitethorns and with a fair stream running through it;
|
||
a place somewhat like to this, save that the stream there was bigger.
|
||
And the sun was hot about noontide, so I did off my raiment,
|
||
which was rough and poor, and more meet for winter than May-tide,
|
||
and I entered a pool of the clear water, and bathed me and
|
||
sported therein, smelling the sweet scent of the whitethorns
|
||
and hearkening to the song of the many birds; and when I came
|
||
forth from the water, the air was so soft and sweet to me,
|
||
and the flowery grass so kind to my feet, and the May-blooms fell
|
||
upon my shoulders, that I was loth to do on my rough raiment hastily,
|
||
and withal I looked to see no child of man in that wilderness:
|
||
so I sported myself there a long while, and milked a goat and drank
|
||
of the milk, and crowned myself with white-thorn and hare-bells;
|
||
and held the blossoms in my hand, and felt that I also had some might
|
||
in me, and that I should not be a thrall of that sorceress for ever.
|
||
And that day, my friend, belike was the spring-tide of the life
|
||
and the love that thou holdest in thy kind arms.
|
||
|
||
"But as I abode thus in that fair place, and had just taken my
|
||
rock and spindle in hand that I might go on with my task and give
|
||
as little occasion as I might for my mistress to chastise me,
|
||
I looked up and saw a child of man coming down the side of the little
|
||
dale towards me, so I sprang up, and ran to my raiment and cast them
|
||
on me hastily, for I was ashamed; and when I saw that it was a woman,
|
||
I thought at first that it was my mistress coming to seek me;
|
||
and I thought within myself that if she smote me I would bear it
|
||
no more, but let it be seen which of the twain was the mightier.
|
||
But I looked again and saw that it was not she but a woman
|
||
smaller and older. So I stood where I was and abode her coming,
|
||
smiling and unafraid, and half-clad.
|
||
|
||
"She drew near and I saw that it was an old woman grey haired,
|
||
uncomely of raiment, but with shining bright eyes in her wrinkled face.
|
||
And she made an obeisance to me and said: 'I was passing through this
|
||
lonely wilderness and I looked down into the little valley and saw
|
||
these goats there and the lovely lady lying naked amongst them,
|
||
and I said I am too old to be afraid of aught; for if she be a goddess
|
||
come back again from yore agone, she can but make an end of a poor
|
||
old carline, a gangrel body, who hath no joy of her life now.
|
||
And if she be of the daughters of men, she will belike methink her
|
||
of her mother, and be kind to me for her sake, and give me a piece
|
||
of bread and a draught of her goats' milk.'
|
||
|
||
"I spake hastily, for I was ashamed of her words, though I only half
|
||
understood them: 'I hear thee and deem that thou mockest me:
|
||
I have never known a mother; I am but a poor thrall,
|
||
a goatherd dwelling with a mistress in a nook of this wildwood:
|
||
I have never a piece of bread; but as to the goats' milk, that thou
|
||
shalt have at once.' So I called one of my goats to me,
|
||
for I knew them all, and milked her into a wooden bowl that I
|
||
carried slung about me, and gave the old woman to drink:
|
||
and she kissed my hand and drank and spake again, but no longer
|
||
in a whining voice, like a beggar bidding alms in the street,
|
||
but frank and free.
|
||
|
||
"'Damsel,' she said, 'now I see that thy soul goes with thy body,
|
||
and that thou art kind and proud at once. And whatever thou art,
|
||
it is no mock to say of thee, that thou art as fair as the fairest;
|
||
and I think that this will follow thee, that henceforth no man who
|
||
seeth thee once will forget thee ever, or cease to long for thee:
|
||
of a surety this is they weird. Now I see that thou knowest no more
|
||
of the world and its ways than one of the hinds that run in these woods.
|
||
So if thou wilt, I will sit down by thee and tell thee much that shall
|
||
avail thee; and thou in thy turn shalt tell me all the tale concerning
|
||
thy dwelling and thy service, and the like.'
|
||
|
||
"I said, I may not, I durst not; I serve a mighty mistress,
|
||
and she would slay me if she knew that I had spoken to thee;
|
||
and woe's me! I fear that even now she will not fail to know it.
|
||
Depart in peace."
|
||
|
||
"'Nay,' she said, 'thou needest not tell me, for I have an inkling of her
|
||
and her ways: but I will give thee wisdom, and not sell it thee at a price.
|
||
Sit down then, fair child, on this flowery grass, and I will sit
|
||
beside thee and tell thee of many things worth thine heeding.'
|
||
So there we sat awhile, and in good sooth she told me much of the
|
||
world which I had not yet seen, of its fairness and its foulness;
|
||
of life and death, and desire and disappointment, and despair;
|
||
so that when she had done, if I were wiser than erst, I was perchance
|
||
little more joyous; and yet I said to myself that come what would I
|
||
would be a part of all that.
|
||
|
||
"But at last she said: 'Lo the day is waning, and thou hast two
|
||
things to do; either to go home to thy mistress at once, or flee
|
||
away from her by the way that I shall show thee; and if thou wilt
|
||
be ruled by me, and canst bear thy thralldom yet a little while thou
|
||
wilt not flee at once, but abide till thou hast seen me again.
|
||
And since it is here that thou hast met me, here mayst thou meet me again;
|
||
for the days are long now, and thou mayst easily win thy way hither
|
||
before noon on any day.'
|
||
|
||
"So I tied my goatskin shoes to my feet, and drave my
|
||
goats together, and we went up together out of the dale, and were
|
||
in the wide-spreading plain of the waste; and the carline said:
|
||
'Dost thou know the quarters of the heaven by the sun?'
|
||
'Yea,' said I. 'Then,' quoth she, 'whenso thou desirest to depart
|
||
and come into the world of folk that I have told thee of,
|
||
set thy face a little north of west, and thou shalt fall
|
||
in with something or somebody before long; but be speedy
|
||
on that day as thou art light-footed, and make all the way
|
||
thou canst before thy mistress comes to know of thy departure;
|
||
for not lightly will any one let loose such a thrall as thou.'
|
||
|
||
"I thanked her, and she went her ways over the waste, I wotted not whither,
|
||
and I drave my goats home as speedily as I might; the mistress meddled
|
||
not with me by word or deed, though I was short of my due tale of yarn.
|
||
The next day I longed sore to go to the dale and meet the carline but
|
||
durst not, and the next day I fared in likeways; but the third day I longed
|
||
so to go, that my feet must needs take me there, whatsoever might befall.
|
||
And when I had been in the dale a little, thither came the carline, and sat
|
||
down by me and fell to teaching me wisdom, and showed me letters and told me
|
||
what they were, and I learned like a little lad in the chorister's school.
|
||
|
||
"Thereafter I mastered my fear of my mistress and went
|
||
to that dale day by day, and learned of the carline;
|
||
though at whiles I wondered when my mistress would let loose
|
||
her fury upon me; for I called to mind the threat she had
|
||
made to me on the day when she offered up my white goat.
|
||
And I made up my mind to this, that if she fell upon me with deadly
|
||
intent I would do my best to slay her before she should slay me.
|
||
But so it was, that now again she held her hand from my body,
|
||
and scarce cast a word at me ever, but gloomed at me,
|
||
and fared as if hatred of me had grown great in her heart.
|
||
|
||
"So the days went by, and my feet had worn a path through
|
||
the wilderness to the Dale of Lore, and May had melted into June,
|
||
and the latter days of June were come. And on Midsummer Day I went
|
||
my ways to the dale according to my wont, when, as I as driving
|
||
on my goats hastily I saw a bright thing coming over the heath
|
||
toward me, and I went on my way to meet it, for I had no fear now,
|
||
except what fear of my mistress lingered in my heart; nay, I looked
|
||
that everything I saw of new should add some joy to my heart.
|
||
So presently I saw that it was a weaponed man riding a white horse,
|
||
and anon he had come up to me and drawn rein before me.
|
||
I wondered exceedingly at beholding him and the heart leaped within me
|
||
at his beauty; for though the carline had told me of the loveliness
|
||
of the sons of men, that was but words and I knew not what they meant;
|
||
and the others that I had seen were not young men or goodly,
|
||
and those last, as I told thee, I could scarce see their faces.
|
||
|
||
"And this one was even fairer than the dead woman that I had buried,
|
||
whose face was worn with toil and trouble, as now I called to mind.
|
||
He was clad in bright shining armour with a gay surcoat of green,
|
||
embroidered with flowers over it; he had a light sallet on his head,
|
||
and the yellow locks of his hair flowed down from under, and fell
|
||
on his shoulders: his face was as beardless as thine, dear friend,
|
||
but not clear brown like to thine but white and red like a blossom."
|
||
|
||
Ralph spake and said: "Belike it was a woman;" and his voice
|
||
sounded loud in the quiet place. She smiled on him and kissed
|
||
his cheek, and said: "Nay, nay, dear Champion, it is not so.
|
||
God rest his soul! many a year he has been dead."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Many a year! what meanest thou?" "Ah!" she said,
|
||
"fear not! as I am now, so shall I be for thee many a year.
|
||
Was not thy fear that I should vanish away or change into something
|
||
unsightly and gruesome? Fear not, I say; am I not a woman, and thine own?"
|
||
And again she flushed bright red, and her grey eyes lightened,
|
||
and she looked at him all confused and shamefaced.
|
||
|
||
He took her face between his hands and kissed her over
|
||
and over; then he let her go, and said: "I have no fear:
|
||
go on with thy tale, for the words thereof are as thy kisses
|
||
to me, and the embracing of thine hands and thy body:
|
||
tell on, I pray thee." She took his hand in hers and spake,
|
||
telling her tale as before.
|
||
|
||
"Friend, well-beloved for ever! This fair young knight looked on me,
|
||
and as he looked, his face flushed as red as mine did even now.
|
||
And I tell thee that my heart danced with joy as I looked on him,
|
||
and he spake not for a little while, and then he said:
|
||
'Fair maiden, canst thou tell me of any who will tell me a word
|
||
of the way to the Well at the World's End?' I said to him,
|
||
'Nay, I have heard the word once and no more, I know not the way:
|
||
and I am sorry that I cannot do for thee that which thou wouldest.'
|
||
And then I spake again, and told him that he should by no means stop
|
||
at our house, and l told him what it was like, so that he might
|
||
give it the go by. I said, 'Even if thou hast to turn back again,
|
||
and fail to find the thing thou seekest, yet I beseech thee ride
|
||
not into that trap.'
|
||
|
||
"He sat still on his saddle a while, staring at me and I at him;
|
||
and then he thanked me, but with so bad a grace, that I wondered
|
||
of him if he were angry; and then he shook his rein, and rode
|
||
off briskly, and I looked after him a while, and then went on my way;
|
||
but I had gone but a short while, when I heard horse-hoofs behind me,
|
||
and I turned and looked, and lo! it was the knight coming back again.
|
||
So I stayed and abided him; and when he came up to me, he leapt
|
||
from his horse and stood before me and said: 'I must needs see
|
||
thee once again.'
|
||
|
||
"I stood and trembled before him, and longed to touch him.
|
||
And again he spake, breathlessly, as one who has been running:
|
||
'I must depart, for I have a thing to do that I must do;
|
||
but I long sorely to touch thee, and kiss thee; yet unless
|
||
thou freely willest it, I will refrain me.' Then I looked
|
||
at him and said, 'I will it freely.' Then he came close up
|
||
to me, and put his hand on my shoulder and kissed my cheek;
|
||
but I kissed his lips, and then he took me in his arms,
|
||
and kissed me and embraced me; and there in that place,
|
||
and in a little while, we loved each other sorely.
|
||
|
||
"But in a while he said to me: 'I must depart, for I am as one whom
|
||
the Avenger of Blood followeth; and now I will give thee this,
|
||
not so much as a gift, but as a token that we have met in the wilderness,
|
||
thou and I.' Therewith he put his hand to his neck, and took
|
||
from it this necklace which thou seest here, and I saw that it was
|
||
like that which my mistress took from the neck of the dead woman.
|
||
And no less is it like to the one that thou wearest, Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"I took it in my hand and wept that I might not help him.
|
||
And he said: 'It is little likely that we shall meet again;
|
||
but by the token of this collar thou mayest wot that I ever
|
||
long for thee till I die: for though I am a king's son,
|
||
this is the dearest of my possessions.' I said:
|
||
'Thou art young, and I am young; mayhappen we shall meet again:
|
||
but thou shalt know that I am but a thrall, a goatherd.'
|
||
For I knew by what the old woman told me of somewhat of
|
||
the mightiness of the kings of the world. 'Yea,' he said,
|
||
and smiled most sweetly, 'that is easy to be seen:
|
||
yet if I live, as I think not to do, thou shalt sit where
|
||
great men shall kneel to thee; not as I kneel now for love,
|
||
and that I may kiss thy knees and thy feet, but because they
|
||
needs must worship thee.'
|
||
|
||
"Therewith he arose to his feet and leapt on his horse, and rode
|
||
his ways speedily: and I went upon my way with my goats, and came
|
||
down into the Dale of Lore, and found the old woman abiding me;
|
||
and she came to me, and took me by the hands, and touched the collar
|
||
(for I had done it about my neck), and said:
|
||
|
||
"'Dear child, thou needest not to tell me thy tale, for I have seen him.
|
||
But if thou must needs wear this necklace, I must give thee a gift to go
|
||
with it. But first sit down by the old carline awhile and talk with her;
|
||
for meseemeth it will be but a few days ere thou shalt depart from this
|
||
uttermost wilderness, and the woods before the mountains.
|
||
|
||
"So I sat down by her, and in spite of her word I told her all that had
|
||
befallen betwixt me and the king's son: for my heart was too full that I
|
||
might refrain me. She nodded her head from time to time, but said naught,
|
||
till I had made an end: and then fell to telling me of many matters
|
||
for my avail; but yet arose earlier than her wont was; and when we were
|
||
about sundering on the path which I had trodden above the Dale, she said:
|
||
'Now must I give thee that gift to go along with the gift of the lover,
|
||
the King's son; and I think thou wilt find it of avail before many days
|
||
are gone by.' Therewith she took from her pouch a strong sharp knife,
|
||
and drew it from the sheath, and flashed it in the afternoon sun,
|
||
and gave it to me; and I took it and laid it in my bosom and thanked her;
|
||
for I thought that I understood her meaning, and how it would avail me.
|
||
Then I went driving my goats home speedily, so that the sun was barely
|
||
set when I came to the garth; and a great horror rather than a fear of my
|
||
mistress was on me; and lo! she stood in the door of the house gazing down
|
||
the garth and the woodland beyond, as though she were looking for my coming:
|
||
and when her eyes lighted on me, she scowled, and drew her lips back from
|
||
her teeth and clenched her hands with fury, though there was nought in them;
|
||
and she was a tall and strong woman, though now growing somewhat old:
|
||
but as for me, I had unsheathed the carline's gift before I came to the garth,
|
||
and now I held it behind my back in my left hand.
|
||
|
||
"I had stayed my feet some six paces from the threshold, and my
|
||
heart beat quick, but the sick fear and cowering had left me,
|
||
though the horror of her grew in my heart. My goats had all gone off
|
||
quietly to their house, and there was nothing betwixt me and her.
|
||
In clearing from my sleeve the arm of me which held the knife,
|
||
the rough clasp which fastened my raiment together at the shoulder
|
||
had given way, and the cloth had fallen and left my bosom bare,
|
||
so that I knew that the collar was clearly to be seen. So we stood
|
||
a moment, and I had no words, but she spake at last in a hard,
|
||
snarling voice, such as she oftenest used to me, but worse.
|
||
|
||
"'Now at last the time has come when thou art of no more use
|
||
to me; for I can see thee what thou hast got for thyself.
|
||
But know now that thou hast not yet drunk of the Well at
|
||
the World's End, and that it will not avail thee to flee
|
||
out of this wood; for as long as I live thou wilt not be able
|
||
to get out of reach of my hand; and I shall live long:
|
||
I shall live long. Come, then, and give thyself up to me,
|
||
that I may deal with thee as I threatened when I slew thy
|
||
friend the white goat; for, indeed, I knew then that it would
|
||
come to this.'
|
||
|
||
"She had but twice or thrice spoken to me so many words together as this;
|
||
but l answered never a word, but stood watching her warily.
|
||
And of a sudden she gave forth a dreadful screaming roar,
|
||
wherewith all the wood rang again, and rushed at me;
|
||
but my hand came from behind my back, and how it was I know not,
|
||
but she touched me not till the blade had sunk into her breast,
|
||
and she fell across my feet, her right hand clutching my raiment.
|
||
So I loosed her fingers from the cloth, shuddering with horror
|
||
the while, and drew myself away from her and stood a little aloof,
|
||
wondering what should happen next. And indeed I scarce believed
|
||
but she would presently rise up from the ground and clutch me
|
||
in her hands, and begin the tormenting of me. But she moved
|
||
no more, and the grass all about her was reddened with her blood;
|
||
and at last I gathered heart to kneel down beside her, and found
|
||
that she no more breathed than one of those conies or partridges
|
||
which I had been used to slay for her.
|
||
|
||
"Then I stood and considered what I should do, and indeed I
|
||
had been pondering this all the way from the Dale thereto,
|
||
in case I should escape my mistress. So I soon made up my
|
||
mind that I would not dwell in that house even for one night;
|
||
lest my mistress should come to me though dead, and torment me.
|
||
I went into the house while it was yet light, and looked about
|
||
the chamber, and saw three great books there laid on the lectern,
|
||
but durst not have taken them even had I been able to carry them;
|
||
nor durst I even to look into them, for fear that some spell
|
||
might get to work in them if they were opened; but I found
|
||
a rye loaf whereof I had eaten somewhat in the morning,
|
||
and another untouched, and hanging to a horn of the lectern I found
|
||
the necklace which my mistress had taken from the dead woman.
|
||
These I put into my scrip, and as to the necklace, l will tell
|
||
thee how I bestowed it later on. Then I stepped out into the
|
||
twilight which was fair and golden, and full fain I was of it.
|
||
Then I drove the goats out of their house and went my way towards
|
||
the Dale of Lore, and said to myself that the carline would
|
||
teach me what further to do, and I came there before the summer
|
||
dark had quite prevailed, and slept sweetly and softly amongst
|
||
my goats after I had tethered them in the best of the pasture.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 5
|
||
|
||
Yet More of the Lady's Story
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Lo thou, beloved," she said, "thou hast seen me in the wildwood
|
||
with little good quickened in me: doth not thine heart
|
||
sink at the thought of thy love and thy life given over to
|
||
the keeping of such an one?" He smiled in her face, and said:
|
||
"Belike thou hast done worse than all thou hast told me:
|
||
and these days past I have wondered often what there was
|
||
in the stories which they of the Burg had against thee:
|
||
yet sooth to say, they told little of what thou hast done:
|
||
no more belike than being their foe." She sighed and said:
|
||
"Well, hearken; yet shall I not tell thee every deed that I
|
||
have been partaker in.
|
||
|
||
"I sat in the Dale that next day and was happy, though I longed
|
||
to see that fair man again: sooth to say, since my mistress
|
||
was dead, everything seemed fairer to me, yea even mine own face,
|
||
as I saw it in the pools of the stream, though whiles I wondered
|
||
when I should have another mistress, and how she would deal with me;
|
||
and ever I said I would ask the carline when she came again to me.
|
||
But all that day she came not: nor did I marvel thereat.
|
||
But when seven days passed and still she came not, I fell
|
||
to wondering what I should do: for my bread was all gone,
|
||
and I durst not go back to the house to fetch meal; though there
|
||
was store of it there. Howbeit, I drank of the milk of the goats,
|
||
and made curds thereof with the woodland roots, and ate
|
||
of the wood-berries like as thou hast done, friend, e'en now.
|
||
And it was easier for me to find a livelihood in the woods
|
||
than it had been for most folk, so well as I knew them.
|
||
So wore the days, and she came not, and I began to think that I
|
||
should see the wise carline no more, as indeed fell out at that time;
|
||
and the days began to hang heavy on my hands, and I fell
|
||
to thinking of that way to the west and the peopled parts,
|
||
whereof the carline had told me; and whiles I went out of
|
||
the Dale and went away hither and thither through the woods,
|
||
and so far, that thrice I slept away out of the Dale:
|
||
but I knew that the peopled parts would be strange to me and I
|
||
feared to face them all alone.
|
||
|
||
"Thus wore the days till July was on the wane, and on a morning
|
||
early I awoke with unwonted sounds in mine ears; and when my eyes
|
||
were fairly open I saw a man standing over me and a white horse
|
||
cropping the grass hard by. And my heart was full and fain,
|
||
and I sprang to my feet and showed him a smiling happy face,
|
||
for I saw at once that it was that fair man come back again.
|
||
But lo! his face was pale and worn, though he looked kindly
|
||
on me, and he said: 'O my beloved, I have found thee,
|
||
but I am faint with hunger and can speak but little.'
|
||
And even therewith he sank down on the grass. But I bestirred
|
||
myself, and gave him milk of my goats, and curds and berries,
|
||
and the life came into him again, and I sat down by him and laid
|
||
his head in my lap, and he slept a long while; and when he awoke
|
||
(and it was towards sunset) he kissed my hands and my arms,
|
||
and said to me: 'Fair child, perhaps thou wilt come with me now;
|
||
and even if thou art a thrall thou mayest flee with me;
|
||
for my horse is strong and fat, though I am weak, for he can
|
||
make his dinner on the grass.'
|
||
|
||
"Then he laughed and I no less; but I fed him with my poor victual again,
|
||
and as he ate I said: 'I am no mistress's thrall now; for the evening
|
||
of the day whereon I saw thee I slew her, else had she slain me.'
|
||
'The saints be praised,' said he: 'Thou wilt come with me, then?'
|
||
'O yea,' said I. Then I felt shamefaced and I reddened; but I said:
|
||
'I have abided here many days for a wise woman who hath taught me many things;
|
||
but withal l hoped that thou wouldst come also.'
|
||
|
||
"Then he put his arms about my shoulders and loved me much;
|
||
but at last he said: "Yet is it now another thing than that
|
||
which I looked for, when I talked of setting thee by me on
|
||
the golden throne. For now am I a beaten man; I have failed
|
||
of that I sought, and suffered shame and hunger and many ills.
|
||
Yet ever I thought that I might find thee here or hereby.'
|
||
Then a thought came into my mind, and I said: 'Else maybe thou
|
||
hadst found what thou soughtest, and overcome the evil things.'
|
||
'Maybe,' he said; 'it is now but a little matter.'"
|
||
|
||
"As for me, I could have no guess at what were the better things
|
||
he had meant for me, and my heart was full of joy, and all seemed
|
||
better than well. And we talked together long till the day was gone.
|
||
Then we kissed and embraced each other in the Dale of Lore,
|
||
and the darkness of summer seemed but short for our delight."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 6
|
||
|
||
The Lady Tells Somewhat of Her Doings After She Left the Wilderness
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph stayed her speech now, and said: "When I asked
|
||
of thee in the Land of Abundance, there were some who seemed
|
||
to say that thou hast let more men love thee than one:
|
||
and it was a torment to me to think that even so it might be.
|
||
But now when thine own mouth telleth me of one of them it irks
|
||
me little. Dost thou think it little-hearted in me?"
|
||
|
||
"O friend," she said, "I see that so it is with thee that thou wouldst
|
||
find due cause for loving me, whatever thou foundest true of me.
|
||
Or dost thou deem that I was another woman in those days? Nay, I was not:
|
||
I can see myself still myself all along the way I have gone."
|
||
She was silent a little, and then she said: "Fear not, I will give
|
||
thee much cause to love me. But now I know thy mind the better,
|
||
I shall tell thee less of what befell me after I left the wilderness;
|
||
for whatever I did and whatever I endured, still it was always I myself
|
||
that was there, and it is me that thou lovest. Moreover, my life
|
||
in the wilderness is a stranger thing to tell thee of than my
|
||
dealings with the folk, and with Kings and Barons and Knights.
|
||
But thereafter thou shalt hear of me what tales thou wilt of these matters,
|
||
as the days and the years pass over our heads.
|
||
|
||
"Now on the morrow we would not depart at once, because there we
|
||
had some victual, and the king's son was not yet so well fed as
|
||
he should be; so we abode in that fair place another day, and then
|
||
we went our ways westward, according to the rede of the carline;
|
||
and it was many days before we gat us out of the wilderness,
|
||
and we were often hard put to it for victual; whiles I sat behind
|
||
my knight a-horseback, whiles he led the beast while I rode alone,
|
||
and not seldom I went afoot, and that nowise slowly, while he rode
|
||
the white horse, for I was as light-foot then as now.
|
||
|
||
"And of the way we went I will tell thee nought as now,
|
||
because sure it is that if we both live, thou and I shall tread
|
||
that road together, but with our faces turned the other way;
|
||
for it is the road from the Well at the World's End, where I
|
||
myself have been, or else never had thine eyes fallen on me."
|
||
|
||
Ralph said, "Even so much I deemed by reading in the book;
|
||
yet it was not told clearly that thou hadst been there."
|
||
"Yea," she said, because the said book was made not by my
|
||
friends but my foes, and they would have men deem that my
|
||
length of days and the endurance of my beauty and never-dying
|
||
youth of my heart came from evil and devilish sources;
|
||
and if thou wilt trust my word it is not so, for in the Well
|
||
at the World's End is no evil, but only the Quenching
|
||
of Sorrow, and Clearing of the Eyes that they may behold.
|
||
And how good it is that they look on thee now. And moreover,
|
||
the history of that book is partly false of intention and
|
||
ill-will, and partly a confused medley of true and false,
|
||
which has come of mere chance-hap.
|
||
|
||
"Hearken now," she said, "till I tell thee in few word
|
||
what befell me before I came to drink the Water of the Well.
|
||
After we had passed long deserts of wood and heath, and gone
|
||
through lands exceeding evil and perilous, and despaired of life
|
||
for the horror of those places, and seen no men, we came at last
|
||
amongst a simple folk who dealt kindly with us, yea, and more.
|
||
These folk seemed to me happy and of good wealth,
|
||
though to my lord they seemed poor and lacking of the goods
|
||
of the world. Forsooth, by that time we lacked more than they,
|
||
for we were worn with cold and hunger, and hard life:
|
||
though for me, indeed, happy had been the days of my wayfaring,
|
||
but my lord remembered the days of his riches and the kingdom
|
||
of his father, and the worship of mighty men, and all that
|
||
he had promised me on the happy day when I first beheld him:
|
||
so belike he was scarce so happy as I was.
|
||
|
||
"It was springtime when we came to that folk; for we had worn
|
||
through the autumn and winter in getting clear of the wilderness.
|
||
Not that the way was long, as I found out afterwards, but that we went
|
||
astray in the woodland, and at last came out of it into a dreadful
|
||
stony waste which we strove to cross thrice, and thrice were driven
|
||
back into the greenwood by thirst and hunger; but the fourth time,
|
||
having gotten us store of victual by my woodcraft, we overpassed it
|
||
and reached the peopled country.
|
||
|
||
"Yea, spring was on the earth, as we, my lord and I, came down from
|
||
the desolate stony heaths, and went hand and hand across the plain,
|
||
where men and women of that folk were feasting round about the simple
|
||
roofs and woodland halls which they had raised there. Then they
|
||
left their games and sports and ran to us, and we walked on quietly,
|
||
though we knew not whether the meeting was to be for death or life.
|
||
But that kind folk gathered round us, and asked us no story till
|
||
they had fed us, and bathed us, and clad us after their fashion.
|
||
And then, despite the nakedness and poverty wherein they had first seen us,
|
||
they would have it that we were gods sent down to them from the world
|
||
beyond the mountains by their fathers of old time; for of Holy Church,
|
||
and the Blessed Trinity, and the Mother of God they knew no more than
|
||
did I at that time, but were heathen, as the Gentiles of yore agone.
|
||
And even when we put all that Godhood from us, and told them as we
|
||
might and could what we were (for we had no heart to lie to such simple
|
||
folk), their kindness abated nothing, and they bade us abide there,
|
||
and were our loving friends and brethren.
|
||
|
||
"There in sooth had I been content to abide till eld came upon me,
|
||
but my lord would not have it so, but longed for greater things
|
||
for me. Though in sooth to me it seemed as if his promise
|
||
of worship of me by the folk had been already fulfilled;
|
||
for when we had abided there some while, and our beauty,
|
||
which had been marred by the travail of our way-faring,
|
||
had come back to us in full, or it maybe increased somewhat,
|
||
they did indeed deal with us with more love than would most men
|
||
with the saints, were they to come back on the earth again;
|
||
and their children would gather round about me and make me
|
||
a partaker of their sports, and be loth to leave me; and the faces
|
||
of their old folk would quicken and gladden when I drew nigh:
|
||
and as for their young men, it seemed of them that they loved
|
||
the very ground that my feet trod on, though it grieved me that I
|
||
could not pleasure some of them in such wise as they desired.
|
||
And all this was soft and full of delight for my soul:
|
||
and I, whose body a little while ago had been driven to daily
|
||
toil with evil words and stripes, and who had known not what
|
||
words of thanks and praise might mean!
|
||
|
||
"But so it must be that we should depart, and the kind folk
|
||
showed us how sore their hearts were of our departure, but they
|
||
gainsaid us in nowise, but rather furthered us all they might,
|
||
and we went our ways from them riding on horned neat (for they knew
|
||
not of horses), and driving one for a sumpter beast before us;
|
||
and they had given us bows and arrows for our defence, and that we
|
||
might get us venison.
|
||
|
||
"It is not to be said that we did not encounter perils;
|
||
but thereof I will tell thee naught as now. We came to other peoples,
|
||
richer and mightier than these, and I saw castles, and abbies,
|
||
and churches, and walled towns, and wondered at them exceedingly.
|
||
And in these places folk knew of the kingdom of my lord and his father,
|
||
and whereas they were not of his foes (who lay for the more part
|
||
on the other side of his land), and my lord could give sure tokens
|
||
of what he was, we were treated with honour and worship, and my
|
||
lord began to be himself again, and to bear him as a mighty man.
|
||
And here to me was some gain in that poverty and nakedness wherewith
|
||
we came out of the mountains and the raiment of the simple folk;
|
||
for had I been clad in my poor cloth and goat-skins of the House
|
||
of the Sorcerer, and he in his brave attire and bright armour,
|
||
they would have said, it is a thrall that he is assotted of,
|
||
and would have made some story and pretence of taking me from him;
|
||
but they deemed me a great lady indeed, and a king's daughter,
|
||
according to the tale that he told them. Forsooth many men that saw
|
||
me desired me beyond measure, and assuredly some great proud man
|
||
or other would have taken me from my lord, but that they feared
|
||
the wrath of his father, who was a mighty man indeed.
|
||
|
||
"Yea, one while as we sojourned by a certain town but a little outside
|
||
the walls, a certain young man, a great champion and exceeding masterful,
|
||
came upon me with his squires as I was walking in the meadows,
|
||
and bore me off, and would have taken me to his castle, but that my lord
|
||
followed with a few of the burghers, and there was a battle fought,
|
||
wherein my lord was hurt; but the young champion he slew; and I cannot
|
||
say but l was sorry of his death, though glad of my deliverance.
|
||
|
||
"Again, on a time we guested in a great baron's house, who dealt so foully
|
||
by us that he gave my lord a sleeping potion in his good-night cup,
|
||
and came to me in the dead night and required me of my love;
|
||
and I would not, and he threatened me sorely, and called me
|
||
a thrall and a castaway that my lord had picked up off the road:
|
||
but I gat a knife in my hand and was for warding myself when I saw
|
||
that my lord might not wake: so the felon went away for that time.
|
||
But on the morrow came two evil men into the hall whom he had suborned,
|
||
and bore false witness that I was a thrall and a runaway.
|
||
So that the baron would have held me there (being a mighty man)
|
||
despite my lord and his wrath and his grief, had not a young
|
||
knight of his house been, who swore that he would slay him unless
|
||
he let us go; and whereas there were other knights and squires
|
||
there present who murmured, the baron was in a way compelled.
|
||
So we departed, and divers of the said knights and squires went
|
||
with us to see us safe on the way.
|
||
|
||
"But this was nigh to the kingdom of my lord's father,
|
||
and that felon baron I came across again, and he was ever
|
||
after one of my worst foes.
|
||
|
||
"Moreover, that young champion who had first stood up in the hall rode
|
||
with us still, when the others had turned back; and I soon saw of him
|
||
that he found it hard to keep his eyes off me; and that also saw my lord,
|
||
and it was a near thing that they did not draw sword thereover:
|
||
yet was that knight no evil man, but good and true, and I was exceedingly
|
||
sorry for him; but I could not help him in the only way he would take
|
||
help of me.
|
||
|
||
"Lo you, my friend, the beginnings of evil in those long past days,
|
||
and the seeds of ill-hap sown in the field of my new life even before
|
||
the furrow was turned.
|
||
|
||
"Well, we came soon into my lord's country, and fair and rich
|
||
and lovely was it in those days; free from trouble and unpeace,
|
||
a happy abode for the tillers of the soil, and the fashioners of wares.
|
||
The tidings had gone to the king that my lord was come back,
|
||
and he came to meet him with a great company of knights and barons,
|
||
arrayed in the noblest fashion that such folk use; so that I
|
||
was bewildered with their glory, and besought my lord to let me
|
||
fall back out of the way, and perchance he might find me again.
|
||
But he bade me ride on his right hand, for that I was the half
|
||
of his life and his soul, and that my friends were his friends
|
||
and my foes his foes.
|
||
|
||
"Then there came to me an inkling of the things that should befall,
|
||
and I saw that the sweet and clean happiness of my new days was marred,
|
||
and had grown into something else, and I began to know the pain of strife
|
||
and the grief of confusion: but whereas I had not been bred delicately,
|
||
but had endured woes and griefs from my youngest days, I was not abashed,
|
||
but hardened my heart to face all things, even as my lord strove to harden
|
||
his heart: for, indeed, I said to myself that if I was to him as the half
|
||
of his life, he was to me little less than the whole of my life.
|
||
|
||
"It is as if it had befallen yesterday, my friend, that I call to mind
|
||
how we stood beside our horses in the midst of the ring of great men
|
||
clad in gold and gleaming with steel, in the meadow without the gates,
|
||
the peace and lowly goodliness whereof with its flocks and herds feeding,
|
||
and husbandmen tending the earth and its increase, that great and noble
|
||
array had changed so utterly. There we stood, and I knew that the eyes
|
||
of all those lords and warriors were set upon me wondering. But the love
|
||
of my lord and the late-learned knowledge of my beauty sustained me.
|
||
Then the ring of men opened, and the king came forth towards us;
|
||
a tall man and big, of fifty-five winters, goodly of body and like to
|
||
my lord to look upon. He cast his arms about my lord, and kissed him
|
||
and embraced him, and then stood a little aloof from him and said:
|
||
'Well, son, hast thou found it, the Well at the World's End?'
|
||
|
||
"'Yea,' said my lord, and therewith lifted my hand to his lips and kissed it,
|
||
and I looked the king in his face, and his eyes were turned to me, but it
|
||
was as if he were looking through me at something behind me.
|
||
|
||
"Then he said: 'It is good, son: come home now to thy mother
|
||
and thy kindred.' Then my lord turned to me while the king took
|
||
no heed, and no man in the ring of knights moved from his place,
|
||
and he set me in the saddle, and turned about to mount,
|
||
and there came a lord from the ring of men gloriously bedight,
|
||
and he bowed lowly before my lord, and held his stirrup for him:
|
||
but lightly he leapt up into the saddle, and took my reins
|
||
and led me along with him, so that he and the king and I went
|
||
on together, and all the baronage and their folk shouted
|
||
and tossed sword and spear aloft and followed after us.
|
||
And we left the meadow quiet and simple again, and rode through
|
||
the gate of the king's chief city, wherein was his high house
|
||
and his castle, the dwelling-place of his kindred from of old.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 7
|
||
|
||
The Lady Tells of the Strife and Trouble That Befell After Her
|
||
Coming to the Country of the King's Son
|
||
|
||
|
||
"When we came to the King's House, my lord followed his father
|
||
into the hall, where sat his mother amongst her damsels:
|
||
she was a fair woman, and looked rather meek than high-hearted;
|
||
my lord led me up to her, and she embraced and kissed him and caressed
|
||
him long; then she turned about to me and would have spoken to me,
|
||
but the king, who stood behind us, scowled on her, and she forebore;
|
||
but she looked me on somewhat kindly, and yet as one who is afeard.
|
||
|
||
"Thus it went for the rest of the day, and my lord had me to sit
|
||
beside him in the great hall when the banquet was holden, and I
|
||
ate and drank with him and beheld all the pageants by his side,
|
||
and none meddled with me either to help or to hinder, because they
|
||
feared the king. Yet many eyes I saw that desired my beauty.
|
||
And so when night came, he took me to his chamber and his bed,
|
||
as if I were his bride new wedded, even as it had been with us
|
||
on the grass of the wilderness and the bracken of the wildwood.
|
||
And then, at last, he spake to me of our case, and bade me fear not,
|
||
for that a band of his friends, all-armed, was keeping watch
|
||
and ward in the cloister without. And when I left the chamber
|
||
on the morrow's morn, there were they yet, all in bright armour,
|
||
and amongst them the young knight who had delivered me from
|
||
the felon baron, and he looked mournfully at me, so that I was
|
||
sorry for his sorrow.
|
||
|
||
"And I knew now that the king was minded to slay me, else had he bidden
|
||
thrust me from my lord's side.
|
||
|
||
"So wore certain days; and on the seventh night, when we were come
|
||
into our chamber, which was a fair as any house outside of heaven,
|
||
my lord spake to me in a soft voice, and bade me not do off my raiment.
|
||
'For,' said he, 'this night we must flee the town, or we shall be taken
|
||
and cast into prison to-morrow; for thus hath my father determined.'
|
||
I kissed him and clung to him, and he no less was good to me.
|
||
And when it was the dead of night we escaped out of our window by a
|
||
knotted rope which he had made ready, and beneath was the city wall;
|
||
and that company of knights, amongst whom was the young knight abovesaid,
|
||
had taken a postern thereby, and were abiding us armed and with
|
||
good horses. So we came into the open country, and rode our ways
|
||
with the mind to reach a hill-castle of one of those young barons,
|
||
and to hold ourselves there in despite of the king. But the king
|
||
had been as wary as we were privy, and no less speedy than we;
|
||
and he was a mighty and deft warrior, and he himself followed us
|
||
on the spur with certain of his best men-at-arms. And they came upon
|
||
us as we rested in a woodside not far from our house of refuge:
|
||
and the king stood by to see the battle with his sword in his sheath,
|
||
but soon was it at an end, for though our friends fought valiantly,
|
||
they were everyone slain or hurt, and but few escaped with bare life;
|
||
but that young man who loved me so sorely crept up to me grievously hurt,
|
||
and I did not forbear to kiss him once on the face, for I deemed I
|
||
should soon die also, and his blood stained my sleeve and my wrist,
|
||
but he died not as then, but lived to be a dear friend to me for long.
|
||
|
||
"So we, my lord and I, were led back to the city, and he was held
|
||
in ward and I was cast into prison with chains and hunger and stripes.
|
||
And the king would have had me lie there till I perished,
|
||
that I might be forgotten utterly; but there were many of the
|
||
king's knights who murmured at this, and would not forget me;
|
||
so the king being constrained, had me brought forth to be judged
|
||
by his bishops of sorcery for the beguiling of my lord.
|
||
Long was the tale to me then, but I will not make it long for thee;
|
||
as was like to be, I was brought in guilty of sorcery, and doomed
|
||
to be burned in the Great Square in three days time.
|
||
|
||
"Nay, my friend, thou hast no need to look so troubled;
|
||
for thou seest that I was not burned. This is the selfsame body
|
||
that was tied to the stake in the market place of the king's
|
||
city many a year ago.
|
||
|
||
"For the friends of my lord, young men for the most part, and many
|
||
who had been fain to be my friends also, put on their armour,
|
||
and took my lord out of the courteous prison wherein he was,
|
||
and came to the Great Square whenas I stood naked in my smock
|
||
bound amid the faggots; and I saw the sheriffs' men give back,
|
||
and great noise and rumour rise up around me: and then all about me
|
||
was a clear space for a moment and I heard the tramp of the many
|
||
horse-hoofs, and the space was full of weaponed men shouting,
|
||
and crying out, 'Life for our Lord's Lady!' Then a minute,
|
||
and I was loose and in my lord's arms, and they brought me a horse
|
||
and I mounted, lest the worst should come and we might have to flee.
|
||
So I could see much of what went on; and I saw that all the unarmed
|
||
folk and lookers-on were gone, but at our backs was a great crowd
|
||
of folk with staves and bows who cried out, 'Life for the Lady!'
|
||
But before us was naught but the sheriffs' sergeants and a company
|
||
of knights and men-at-arms, about as many as we were, and the king
|
||
in front of them, fully armed, his face hidden by his helm,
|
||
and a royal surcoat over his hauberk beaten with his bearing,
|
||
to wit, a silver tower on a blue sky bestarred with gold.
|
||
|
||
"And now I could see that despite the bills and bows behind us the king was
|
||
going to fall on with his folk; and to say sooth I feared but little and my
|
||
heart rose high within me, and I wished I had a sword in my hand to strike
|
||
once for life and love. But lo! just as the king was raising his sword,
|
||
and his trumpet was lifting the brass to his lips, came a sound of singing,
|
||
and there was come the Bishop and the Abbot of St. Peter's and his monks
|
||
with him, and cross bearers and readers and others of the religious:
|
||
and the Bishop bore in his hand the Blessed Host (as now I know it was)
|
||
under a golden canopy, and he stood between the two companies and faced
|
||
the king, while his folk sang loud and sweet about him.
|
||
|
||
"Then the spears went up and from the rest, and swords
|
||
were sheathed, and there went forth three ancient knights from
|
||
out of the king's host and came up to him and spake with him.
|
||
Then he gat him away unto his High House; and the three old
|
||
knights came to our folk, and spake with the chiefs;
|
||
but not with my lord, and I heard not what they said.
|
||
But my lord came to me in all loving-kindness and brought
|
||
me into the house of one of the Lineage, and into a fair
|
||
chamber there, and kissed me, and made much of me;
|
||
and brought me fair raiment and did it on me with his own hands,
|
||
even as his wont was to be for my tire-maiden.
|
||
|
||
"Then in a little while came those chiefs of ours and said that truce had been
|
||
hanselled them for this time, but on these terms, that my lord and I and all
|
||
those who had been in arms, and whosoever would, that feared the king's wrath,
|
||
should have leave to depart from his city so that they went and abode no
|
||
nearer than fifty miles thereof till they should know his further pleasure.
|
||
Albeit that whosoever would go home peaceably might abide in the city
|
||
still and need not fear the king's wrath if he stirred no further:
|
||
but that in any case the Sorceress should get her gone from those walls.
|
||
|
||
"So we rode out of the gates that very day before sunset; for it was now
|
||
midsummer again, and it was three hours before noon that I was to have
|
||
been burned; and we were a gallant company of men-at-arms and knights;
|
||
yet did I be-think me of those who were slain on that other day when we
|
||
were taken, and fain had I been that they were riding with us; but at least
|
||
that fair young man was in our company, though still weak with his hurts:
|
||
for the prison and the process had worn away wellnigh two months.
|
||
True it is that I rejoiced to see him, for I had deemed him dead.
|
||
|
||
"Dear friend, I pray thy pardon if I weary thee with making
|
||
so long a tale of my friends of the past days; but needs must I
|
||
tell thee somewhat of them, lest thou love that which is not.
|
||
Since truly it is myself that I would have thee to love,
|
||
and none other.
|
||
|
||
"Many folk gathered to us as we rode our ways to a town
|
||
which was my lord's own, and where all men were his friends,
|
||
so that we came there with a great host and sat down
|
||
there in no fear of what the king might do against us.
|
||
There was I duly wedded to my lord by a Bishop of Holy Church,
|
||
and made his Lady and Queen; for even so he would have it.
|
||
|
||
"And now began the sore troubles of that land, which had been once
|
||
so peaceful and happy; the tale whereof I may one day tell thee;
|
||
or rather many tales of what befell me therein; but not now;
|
||
for the day weareth; and I still have certain things that I must
|
||
needs tell thee.
|
||
|
||
"We waged war against each other, my lord and the king,
|
||
and whiles one, and whiles the other overcame. Either side
|
||
belike deemed that one battle or two would end the strife;
|
||
but so it was not, but it endured year after year, till fighting
|
||
became the chief business of all in the land.
|
||
|
||
"As for me, I had many tribulations. Thrice I fled from the stricken
|
||
field with my lord to hide in some stronghold of the mountains.
|
||
Once was I taken of the foemen in the town where I abode when my
|
||
lord was away from me, and a huge slaughter of innocent folk
|
||
was made, and I was cast into prison and chains, after I had seen
|
||
my son that I had borne to my lord slain before mine eyes.
|
||
At last we were driven clean out of the Kingdom of the Tower,
|
||
and abode a long while, some two years, in the wilderness,
|
||
living like outlaws and wolves' heads, and lifting the spoil
|
||
for our livelihood. Forsooth of all the years that I
|
||
abode about the Land of Tower those were the happiest.
|
||
For we robbed no poor folk and needy, but rewarded them rather,
|
||
and drave the spoil from rich men and lords, and hard-hearted
|
||
chapmen-folk: we ravished no maid of the tillers, we burned no cot,
|
||
and taxed no husbandman's croft or acre, but defended them
|
||
from their tyrants. Nevertheless we gat an ill name wide about
|
||
through the kingdoms and cities; and were devils and witches
|
||
to the boot of thieves and robbers in the mouths of these men;
|
||
for when the rich man is hurt his wail goeth heavens high,
|
||
and none may say he heareth not.
|
||
|
||
"Now it was at this time that I first fell in with the Champions of the
|
||
Dry Tree; for they became our fellows and brothers in arms in the wildwood:
|
||
for they had not as yet builded their stronghold of the Scaur,
|
||
whereas thou and I shall be in two days time. Many a wild deed did
|
||
our folk in their company, and many that had been better undone.
|
||
Whiles indeed they went on journeys wherein we were not partakers,
|
||
as when they went to the North and harried the lands of the Abbot
|
||
of Higham, and rode as far even as over the Downs to Bear
|
||
Castle and fought a battle there with the Captain of Higham:
|
||
whereas we went never out of the Wood Perilous to the northward;
|
||
and lifted little save in the lands of our own proper foemen,
|
||
the friends of the king.
|
||
|
||
"Now I say not of the men of the Dry Tree that they were good
|
||
and peaceable men, nor would mercy hold their hands every
|
||
while that they were hard bestead and thrust into a corner.
|
||
Yet I say now and once for all that their fierceness was and is
|
||
but kindness and pity when set against the cruelty of the Burg
|
||
of the Four Friths; men who have no friend to love, no broken
|
||
foe to forgive, and can scarce be kind even to themselves:
|
||
though forsooth they be wise men and cautelous and well living
|
||
before the world, and wealthy and holy."
|
||
|
||
She stayed her speech a while, and her eyes glittered in her flushed face
|
||
and she set her teeth; and she was as one beside herself till Ralph kissed
|
||
her feet, and caressed her, and she went on again.
|
||
|
||
"Dear friend, when thou knowest what these men are and have been thou
|
||
wilt bless thy friend Roger for leading thee forth from the Burg by night
|
||
and cloud, whatever else may happen to thee.
|
||
|
||
"Well, we abode in the wildwood, friends and good fellows from the first;
|
||
and that young man, though he loved me ever, was somewhat healed
|
||
of the fever of love, and was my faithful friend, in such wise
|
||
that neither I nor my lord had aught to find fault with in him.
|
||
Meanwhile we began to grow strong, for many joined us therein
|
||
who had fled from their tyrants of the good towns and the manors
|
||
of the baronage, and at last in the third year naught would
|
||
please my lord but we must enter into the Kingdom of the Tower,
|
||
and raise his banner in the wealthy land, and the fair cities.
|
||
|
||
"Moreover, his father, the King of the Tower, died in his bed in these days,
|
||
and no word of love or peace had passed between them since that morning when I
|
||
was led out to be burned in the Great Square.
|
||
|
||
"So we came forth from the forest, we, and the Champions
|
||
of the Dry Tree; and made the tale a short one.
|
||
For the king, the mighty warrior and wise man, was dead:
|
||
and his captains of war, some of them were dead, and some
|
||
weary of strife; and those who had been eager in debate
|
||
were falling to ask themselves wherefore they had fought
|
||
and what was to do that they should still be fighting;
|
||
and lo! when it came to be looked into, it was all a matter
|
||
of the life and death of one woman, to wit me myself, and why
|
||
should she not live, why should she not sit upon the throne
|
||
with the man who loved her?
|
||
|
||
"Therefore when at last we came out from the twilight of the woods
|
||
into the sunny fields of the Land of the Tower, there was no
|
||
man to naysay us; nay, the gates of the strong places flew
|
||
open before the wind of our banners, and the glittering of our
|
||
spears drew the folk together toward the places of rejoicing.
|
||
We entered the master City in triumph, with the houses hung
|
||
with green boughs and the maidens casting flowers before our feet,
|
||
and I sat a crowned Queen upon the throne high raised on the very
|
||
place where erst I stood awaiting the coming of the torch
|
||
to the faggots which were to consume me.
|
||
|
||
"There then began the reign of the Woman of the Waste; for so it was,
|
||
that my lord left to my hands the real ruling of the kingdom,
|
||
though he wore the crown and set the seal to parchments.
|
||
As to them of the Dry Tree, though some few of them abode
|
||
in the kingdom, and became great there, the more part of them
|
||
went back to the wildwood and lived the old life of the Wood,
|
||
as we had found them living it aforetime. But or ever they went,
|
||
the leaders of them came before me, and kissed my feet,
|
||
and with tears and prayers besought me, and bade me that if aught
|
||
fell amiss to me there, I should come back to them and be their
|
||
Lady and Queen; and whereas these wild men loved me well,
|
||
and I deemed that I owed much to their love and their helping,
|
||
I promised them and swore to them by the Water of the Well at
|
||
the World's End that I would do no less than they prayed me:
|
||
albeit I set no term or year for the day that I would come to them.
|
||
|
||
"And now my lord and I, we set ourselves to heal the wounds which war
|
||
had made in the land: and hard was the work, and late the harvest;
|
||
so used had men become to turmoil and trouble. Moreover, there were many,
|
||
and chiefly the women who had lost husband, lover, son or brother,
|
||
who laid all their griefs on my back; though forsooth how was I guilty
|
||
of the old king's wrath against me, which was the cause of all?
|
||
About this time my lord had the Castle of Abundance built up very fairly
|
||
for me and him to dwell in at whiles; and indeed we had before that
|
||
dwelt at a little manor house that was there, when we durst withdraw
|
||
a little from the strife; but now he had it done as fair as ye saw it,
|
||
and had those arras cloths made with the story of my sojourn in
|
||
the wilderness, even as ye saw them. But the days and the years wore,
|
||
and wealth came back to the mighty of the land, and fields flourished
|
||
and the acres bore increase, and fair houses were builded in the towns;
|
||
and the land was called happy again.
|
||
|
||
"But for me I was not so happy: and l looked back fondly
|
||
to the days of the greenwood and the fellowship of the Dry Tree,
|
||
and the days before that, of my flight with my lord.
|
||
And moreover with the wearing of the years those murmurs against me
|
||
and the blind causeless hatred began to grow again, and chiefly
|
||
methinks because I was the king, and my lord the king's cloak:
|
||
but therewith tales concerning me began to spring up,
|
||
how that I was not only a sorceress, but even one foredoomed
|
||
from of old and sent by the lords of hell to wreck that fair
|
||
Land of the Tower and make it unhappy and desolate.
|
||
And the tale grew and gathered form, till now, when the bloom
|
||
of my beauty was gone, I heard hard and fierce words cried after
|
||
me in the streets when I fared abroad, and that still chiefly
|
||
by the women: for yet most men looked on me with pleasure.
|
||
Also my counsellors and lords warned me often that I must be
|
||
wary and of great forbearance if trouble were to be kept back.
|
||
|
||
"Now amidst these things as I was walking pensively in my garden
|
||
one summer day, it was told me that a woman desired to see me,
|
||
so I bade them bring her. And when she came I looked on her,
|
||
and deemed that I had seen her aforetime: she was not old,
|
||
but of middle age, of dark red hair, and brown eyes somewhat small:
|
||
not a big woman, but well fashioned of body, and looking as if she
|
||
had once been exceeding dainty and trim. She spake, and again I
|
||
seemed to have heard her voice before: 'Hail, Queen,' she said,
|
||
'it does my heart good to see thee thus in thy glorious estate.'
|
||
So I took her greeting; but those tales of my being but a sending
|
||
of the Devil for the ruin of that land came into my mind, and I
|
||
sent away the folk who were thereby before I said more to her.
|
||
Then she spake again: 'Even so I guessed it would be that thou
|
||
wouldst grow great amongst women.'
|
||
|
||
"But I said, 'What is this? and when have I known thee before-time?'
|
||
She smiled and said naught; and my mind went back to those old days,
|
||
and I trembled, and the flesh crept upon my bones, lest this should
|
||
be the coming back in a new shape of my mistress whom I had slain.
|
||
But the woman laughed, and said, as if she knew my thoughts:
|
||
'Nay, it is not so: the dead are dead; fear not: but hast thou
|
||
forgotten the Dale of Lore?'
|
||
|
||
"'Nay,' said I, 'never; and art thou then the carline that learned me lore?
|
||
But if the dead come not back, how do the old grow young again? for 'tis
|
||
a score of years since we two sat in the Dale, and I longed for many things.'
|
||
|
||
"Said the woman: 'The dead may not drink of the Well at the World's End;
|
||
yet the living may, even if they be old; and that blessed water
|
||
giveth them new might and changeth their blood, and they are
|
||
as young folk for a long while again after they have drunken.'
|
||
'And hast thou drunken?' said I.
|
||
|
||
"'Yea,' she said; 'but I am minded for another draught.' I said:
|
||
'And wherefore hast thou come to me, and what shall I give to thee?'
|
||
She said, 'I will take no gift of thee as now, for I need it not,
|
||
though hereafter I may ask a gift of thee. But I am to ask this
|
||
of thee, if thou wilt be my fellow-farer on the road thither?'
|
||
'Yea?' said I, 'and leave my love and my lord, and my kingship which
|
||
he hath given me? for this I will tell thee, that all that here is done,
|
||
is done by me.'
|
||
|
||
"'Great is thy Kingship, Lady,' said the woman, and smiled withal.
|
||
Then she sat silent a little, and said: 'When six months are worn,
|
||
it will be springtide; I will come to thee in the spring days,
|
||
and know what thy mind is then. But now I must depart.'
|
||
Quoth I: 'Glad shall I be to talk with thee again;
|
||
for though thou hast learned me much of wisdom, yet much more
|
||
I need; yea, as much as the folk here deem I have already.'
|
||
'Thou shalt have no less,' said the woman. Then she kissed my
|
||
hands and went her ways, and I sat musing still for a long while:
|
||
because for all my gains, and my love that I had been loved withal,
|
||
and the greatness that I had gotten, there was as it were a veil
|
||
of unhappiness wrapped round about my heart.
|
||
|
||
"So wore the months, and ere the winter had come befell an evil thing,
|
||
for my lord, who had loved me so, and taken me out of the wilderness,
|
||
died, and was gathered to the fathers, and there was I left alone;
|
||
for there was no fruit of my womb by him alive. My first-born had
|
||
been slain by those wretches, and a second son that I bore had died
|
||
of a pestilence that war and famine had brought upon the land.
|
||
I will not wear thy soul with words about my grief and sorrow:
|
||
but it is to be told that I sat now in a perilous place, and yet I
|
||
might not step down from it and abide in that land, for then it was a
|
||
sure thing, that some of my foes would have laid hand on me and brought
|
||
me to judgment for being but myself, and I should have ended miserably.
|
||
So I gat to me all the strength that I might, and whereas there were many
|
||
who loved me still, some for my own sake, and some for the sake of my
|
||
lord that was, I endured in good hope that all my days were not done.
|
||
Yet I longed for the coming of the Teacher of Lore; for now I made up
|
||
my mind that I would go with her, and seek to the Well at the World's
|
||
End for weal and woe.
|
||
|
||
"She came while April was yet young: and I need make no long tale
|
||
of how we gat us away: for whereas she was wise in hidden lore,
|
||
it was no hard matter for her to give me another semblance
|
||
than mine own, so that I might have walked about the streets
|
||
of our city from end to end, and none had known me.
|
||
So I vanished away from my throne and my kingdom, and that
|
||
name and fame of a witch-wife clove to me once and for all,
|
||
and spread wide about the cities of folk and the kingdoms,
|
||
and many are the tales that have arisen concerning me,
|
||
and belike some of these thou hast heard told."
|
||
|
||
Ralph reddened and said: "My soul has been vexed by some inkling of them;
|
||
but now it is at rest from them for ever."
|
||
|
||
"May it be so!" she said: "and now my tale is wearing thin
|
||
for the present time.
|
||
|
||
"Back again went my feet over the ways they had trodden before,
|
||
though the Teacher shortened the road much for us by her wisdom.
|
||
Once again what need to tell thee of these ways when thine
|
||
own eyes shall behold them as thou wendest them beside me?
|
||
Be it enough to say that once again I came to that little house
|
||
in the uttermost wilderness, and there once more was the garth
|
||
and the goat-house, and the trees of the forest beyond it,
|
||
and the wood-lawns and the streams and all the places and things
|
||
that erst I deemed I must dwell amongst for ever."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "And did the carline keep troth with thee?
|
||
Was she not but luring thee thither to be her thrall?
|
||
Or did the book that I read in the Castle of Abundance but
|
||
lie concerning thee?"
|
||
|
||
"She held her troth to me in all wise," said the Lady, "and I was no
|
||
thrall of hers, but as a sister, or it may be even as a daughter;
|
||
for ever to my eyes was she the old carline who learned me lore
|
||
in the Dale of the wildwood.
|
||
|
||
"But now a long while, years long, we abode in that House of the
|
||
Sorceress ere we durst seek further to the Well at the World's End.
|
||
And yet meseems though the years wore, they wore me no older;
|
||
nay, in the first days at least I waxed stronger of body and fairer than I
|
||
had been in the King's Palace in the Land of the Tower, as though some
|
||
foretaste of the Well was there for us in the loneliness of the desert;
|
||
although forsooth the abiding there amidst the scantiness of livelihood,
|
||
and the nakedness, and the toil, and the torment of wind and weather
|
||
were as a penance for the days and deeds of our past lives.
|
||
What more is to say concerning our lives here, saving this,
|
||
that in those days I learned yet more wisdom of the Teacher of Lore,
|
||
and amidst that wisdom was much of that which ye call sorcery:
|
||
as the foreseeing of things to come, and the sending of dreams or visions,
|
||
and certain other matters. And I may tell thee that the holy man who
|
||
came to us last even, I sent him the dream which came to him drowsing,
|
||
and bade him come to the helping of Walter the Black: for I knew that I
|
||
should take thy hand and flee with thee this morning e'en as I have done:
|
||
and I would fain have a good leech to Walter lest he should die,
|
||
although I owe him hatred rather than love. Now, my friend, tell me,
|
||
is this an evil deed, and dost thou shrink from the Sorceress?"
|
||
|
||
He strained her to his bosom and kissed her mouth,
|
||
and then he said: "Yet thou hast never sent a dream to me."
|
||
She laughed and said: "What! hast thou never dreamed
|
||
of me since we met at the want-way of the Wood Perilous?"
|
||
"Never," said he. She stroked his cheek fondly, and said:
|
||
"Young art thou, sweet friend, and sleepest well a-nights. It
|
||
was enough that thou thoughtest of me in thy waking hours."
|
||
Then she went on with her tale.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 8
|
||
|
||
The Lady Maketh an End of Her Tale
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Well, my friend, after we had lived thus a long time,
|
||
we set out one day to seek to the Well at the World's End,
|
||
each of us signed and marked out for the quest by bearing
|
||
such-like beads as thou and I both bear upon our necks today.
|
||
Once again of all that befell us on that quest I will tell thee
|
||
naught as now: because to that Well have I to bring thee:
|
||
though myself, belike, I need not its waters again."
|
||
|
||
Quoth Ralph: "And must thou lead me thy very self, mayest thou
|
||
not abide in some safe place my going and returning?
|
||
So many and sore as the toils and perils of the way may be."
|
||
"What!" she said, "and how shall I be sundered from thee now I
|
||
have found thee? Yea, and who shall lead thee, thou lovely boy?
|
||
Shall it be a man to bewray thee, or a woman to bewray me?
|
||
Yet need we not go tomorrow, my beloved, nor for many days:
|
||
so sweet as we are to each other.
|
||
|
||
"But in those past days it was needs must we begin our
|
||
quest before the burden of years was over heavy upon us.
|
||
Shortly to say it, we found the Well, and drank of its waters
|
||
after abundant toil and peril, as thou mayst well deem.
|
||
Then the life and the soul came back to us, and the past
|
||
years were as naught to us, and my youth was renewed in me,
|
||
and I became as thou seest me to-day. But my fellow was as a
|
||
woman of forty summers again, strong and fair as I had seen
|
||
her when she came into the garden in the days of my Queenhood,
|
||
and thus we returned to the House of the Sorceress, and rested
|
||
there for a little from our travel and our joy.
|
||
|
||
"At last, and that was but some five years ago, the Teacher said to me:
|
||
'Sister, I have learned thee all that thine heart can take of me,
|
||
and thou art strong in wisdom, and moreover again shall it be with thee,
|
||
as I told of thee long ago, that no man shall look on thee that shall
|
||
not love thee. Now I will not seek to see thy life that is coming,
|
||
nor what thine end shall be, for that should belike be grievous
|
||
to both of us; but this I see of thee, that thou wilt now guide thy
|
||
life not as I will, but as thou wilt; and since my way is not thy way,
|
||
and that I see thou shalt not long abide alone, now shall we sunder;
|
||
for I am minded to go to the most ancient parts of the world,
|
||
and seek all the innermost of wisdom whiles I yet live; but with kings
|
||
and champions and the cities of folk will I have no more to do:
|
||
while thou shalt not be able to refrain from these. So now I
|
||
bid thee farewell.'
|
||
|
||
"I wept at her words, but gainsaid them naught, for I wotted
|
||
that she spake but the truth; so I kissed her, and we parted;
|
||
she went her ways through the wildwood, and I abode at the House
|
||
of the Sorceress, and waited on the wearing of the days.
|
||
|
||
"But scarce a month after her departure, as I stood by the threshold one
|
||
morning amidst of the goats, I saw men come riding from out the wood; so I
|
||
abode them, and they came to the gate of the garth and there lighted down from
|
||
their horses, and they were three in company; and no one of them was young,
|
||
and one was old, with white locks flowing down from under his helm:
|
||
for they were all armed in knightly fashion, but they had naught but white
|
||
gaberdines over their hauberks, with no coat-armour or token upon them.
|
||
So they came through the garth-gate and I greeted them and asked them what
|
||
they would; then the old man knelt down on the grass before me and said:
|
||
'If I were as young as I am old my heart would fail me in beholding
|
||
thy beauty: but now I will ask thee somewhat: far away beyond
|
||
the forest we heard rumours of a woman dwelling in the uttermost desert,
|
||
who had drunk of the Well at the World's End, and was wise beyond measure.
|
||
Now we have set ourselves to seek that woman, and if thou be she,
|
||
we would ask a question of thy wisdom.'
|
||
|
||
"I answered that I was even such as they had heard of,
|
||
and bade them ask.
|
||
|
||
"Said the old man:
|
||
|
||
"'Fifty years ago, when I was yet but a young man, there was
|
||
a fair woman who was Queen of the Land of the Tower and whom
|
||
we loved sorely because we had dwelt together with her amidst
|
||
tribulation in the desert and the wildwood: and we are not
|
||
of her people, but a fellowship of free men and champions
|
||
hight the Men of the Dry Tree: and we hoped that she would
|
||
one day come back and dwell with us and be our Lady and Queen:
|
||
and indeed trouble seemed drawing anigh her, so that we might
|
||
help her and she might become our fellow again, when lo! she
|
||
vanished away from the folk and none knew where she was gone.
|
||
Therefore a band of us of the Dry Tree swore an oath together
|
||
to seek her till we found her, that we might live and die together:
|
||
but of that band of one score and one, am I the last one left
|
||
that seeketh; for the rest are dead, or sick, or departed:
|
||
and indeed I was the youngest of them. But for these two men,
|
||
they are my sons whom I have bred in the knowledge of these things
|
||
and in the hope of finding tidings of our Lady and Queen,
|
||
if it were but the place where her body lieth. Thou art wise:
|
||
knowest thou the resting place of her bones?"
|
||
|
||
"When I had heard the tale of the old man I was moved to my
|
||
inmost heart, and I scarce knew what to say. But now this long
|
||
while fear was dead in me, so I thought I would tell the very sooth:
|
||
but I said first: 'Sir, what I will tell, I will tell without
|
||
beseeching, so I pray thee stand up.' So did he, and I said:
|
||
'Geoffrey, what became of the white hind after the banners
|
||
had left the wildwood"? He stared wild at me, and I deemed
|
||
that tears began to come into his eyes; but I said again:
|
||
'What betid to dame Joyce's youngest born, the fair little
|
||
maiden that we left sick of a fever when we rode to Up-castle?'
|
||
Still he said naught but looked at me wondering: and said:
|
||
'Hast thou ever again seen that great old oak nigh the clearing
|
||
by the water, the half of which fell away in the summer-storm
|
||
of that last July?'
|
||
|
||
"Then verily the tears gushed out of his eyes, and he wept, for as old
|
||
as he was; and when he could master himself he said: 'Who art thou?
|
||
Who art thou? Art thou the daughter of my Lady, even as these are my sons?'
|
||
But I said: 'Now will I answer thy first question, and tell thee that
|
||
the Lady thou seekest is verily alive; and she has thriven, for she has drunk
|
||
of the Well at the World's End, and has put from her the burden of the years.
|
||
O Geoffrey, and dost thou not know me?' And I held out my hand to him,
|
||
and I also was weeping, because of my thought of the years gone by;
|
||
for this old man had been that swain who had nigh died for me when I fled
|
||
with my husband from the old king; and he became one of the Dry Tree,
|
||
and had followed me with kind service about the woods in the days when I
|
||
was at my happiest.
|
||
|
||
"But now he fell on his knees before me not like a vassal but like
|
||
a lover, and kissed my feet, and was beside himself for joy.
|
||
And his sons, who were men of some forty summers, tall and warrior-like,
|
||
kissed my hands and made obeisance before me.
|
||
|
||
"Now when we had come to ourselves again, old Geoffrey,
|
||
who was now naught but glad, spake and said: 'It is told amongst
|
||
us that when our host departed from the Land of the Tower,
|
||
after thou hadst taken thy due seat upon the throne, that thou
|
||
didst promise our chieftains how thou wouldst one day come
|
||
back to the fellowship of the Dry Tree and dwell amongst us.
|
||
Wilt thou now hold to thy promise?' I said: 'O Geoffrey,
|
||
if thou art the last of those seekers, and thou wert but a boy
|
||
when I dwelt with you of old, who of the Dry Tree is left
|
||
to remember me?' He hung his head awhile then, and spake:
|
||
'Old are we grown, yet art thou fittest to be amongst young folk:
|
||
unless mine eyes are beguiled by some semblance which will
|
||
pass away presently.' 'Nay,' quoth I, 'it is not so;
|
||
as I am now, so shall I be for many and many a day.'
|
||
'Well,' said Geoffrey, 'wherever thou mayst be, thou shalt
|
||
be Queen of men.'
|
||
|
||
"'I list not to be Queen again,' said I. He laughed and said:
|
||
'I wot not how thou mayst help it.'
|
||
|
||
"I said: 'Tell me of the Dry Tree, how the champions
|
||
have sped, and have they grown greater or less.' Said he:
|
||
'They are warriors and champions from father to son;
|
||
therefore have they thriven not over well; yet they have left
|
||
the thick of the wood, and built them a great castle above the little
|
||
town hight Hampton; so that is now called Hampton under Scaur,
|
||
for upon the height of the said Scaur is our castle builded:
|
||
and there we hold us against the Burg of the Four Friths
|
||
which hath thriven greatly; there is none so great as the Burg
|
||
in all the lands about.'
|
||
|
||
"I said: 'And the Land of the Tower, thriveth the folk thereof at all?'
|
||
'Nay,' he said, 'they have been rent to pieces by folly and war
|
||
and greediness: in the Great City are but few people, grass grows
|
||
in its streets; the merchants wend not the ways that lead thither.
|
||
Naught thriveth there since thou stolest thyself away from them.'
|
||
|
||
"'Nay,' I said, 'I fled from their malice, lest I should have been brought
|
||
out to be burned once more; and there would have been none to rescue then.'
|
||
'Was it so?' said old Geoffrey; 'well it is all one now; their day is done.'
|
||
|
||
"'Well,' I said, 'come into my house, and eat and drink therein and sleep
|
||
here to-night, and to-morrow I shall tell thee what I will do.'
|
||
|
||
"Even so they did; and on the morrow early I spake to Geoffrey and said:
|
||
'What hath befallen the Land of Abundance, and the castle my lord built
|
||
for me there; which we held as our refuge all through the War of the Tower,
|
||
both before we joined us to you in the wildwood, and afterwards?' He said:
|
||
'It is at peace still; no one hath laid hand on it; there is a simple folk
|
||
dwelling there in the clearing of the wood, which forgetteth thee not;
|
||
though forsooth strange tales are told of thee there; and the old men
|
||
deem that it is but a little since thou hast ceased to come and go there;
|
||
and they are ready to worship thee as somewhat more than the Blessed Saints,
|
||
were it not for the Fathers of the Thorn who are their masters.'
|
||
|
||
"I pondered this a while, and then said: 'Geoffrey, ye shall bring me
|
||
hence away to the peopled parts, and on the way, or when we are come
|
||
amongst the cities and the kingdoms, we will settle it whither I shall go.
|
||
See thou! I were fain to be of the brotherhood of the Dry Tree;
|
||
yet I deem it will scarce be that I shall go and dwell there straightway.'
|
||
|
||
"Therewith the old man seemed content; and indeed now that the first joy
|
||
of our meeting, when his youth sprang up in him once more, was over,
|
||
he found it hard to talk freely with me, and was downcast and shy before me,
|
||
as if something had come betwixt us, which had made our lives cold
|
||
to each other.
|
||
|
||
"So that day we left the House of the Sorceress, which I shall
|
||
not see again, till I come there hand in hand with thee, beloved.
|
||
When we came to the peopled parts, Geoffrey and his sons brought me
|
||
to the Land of Abundance, and I found it all as he had said to me:
|
||
and I took up my dwelling in the castle, and despised not those few folk
|
||
of the land, but was kind to them: but though they praised my gifts,
|
||
and honoured me as the saints are honoured, and though they loved me,
|
||
yet it was with fear, so that I had little part with them.
|
||
There I dwelt then; and the book which thou didst read there,
|
||
part true and part false, and altogether of malice against me,
|
||
I bought of a monk who came our way, and who at first was sore afeared
|
||
when he found that he had come to my castle. As to the halling
|
||
of the Chamber of Dais, I have told thee before how my lord,
|
||
the King's Son, did do make it in memory of the wilderness wherein
|
||
he found me, and the life of thralldom from which he brought me.
|
||
There I dwelt till nigh upon these days in peace and quiet:
|
||
not did I go to the Dry Tree for a long while, though many of them
|
||
sought to me there at the Castle of Abundance; and, woe worth the while!
|
||
there was oftenest but one end to their guesting, that of all gifts,
|
||
they besought me but of one, which, alack! I might not give them:
|
||
and that is the love that I have given to thee, beloved.--And, oh! my fear,
|
||
that it will weigh too light with thee, to win me pardon of thee for all
|
||
that thou must needs pardon me, ere thou canst give me all thy love,
|
||
that I long for so sorely."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 9
|
||
|
||
They Go On Their Way Once More
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Look now," she said, "I have held thee so long in talk, that the
|
||
afternoon is waning; now is it time for us to be on the way again;
|
||
not because I misdoubt me of thy foeman, but because I would take thee
|
||
to a fairer dwelling of the desert, and one where I have erst abided;
|
||
and moreover, there thou shalt not altogether die of hunger.
|
||
See, is it not as if I had thought to meet thee here?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, in good sooth," said he, "I wot that thou canst see the story
|
||
of things before they fall."
|
||
|
||
She laughed and said: "But all this that hath befallen since I
|
||
set out to meet thee at the Castle of Abundance I foresaw not,
|
||
any more than I can foresee to-morrow. Only I knew that we
|
||
must needs pass by the place whereto I shall now lead thee,
|
||
and I made provision there. Lo! now the marvel slain:
|
||
and in such wise shall perish other marvels which have been
|
||
told of me; yet not all. Come now, let us to the way."
|
||
|
||
So they joined hands and left the pleasant place, and were
|
||
again going speedily amidst the close pine woods awhile,
|
||
where it was smooth underfoot and silent of noises withal.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph said: "Beloved, thou hast told me of many things,
|
||
but naught concerning how thou camest to be wedded to the Knight
|
||
of the Sun, and of thy dealings with him."
|
||
|
||
Said she, reddening withal: "I will tell thee no more than this,
|
||
unless thou compel me: that he would have me wed him, as it
|
||
were against my will, till I ceased striving against him, and I
|
||
went with him to Sunway, which is no great way from the Castle
|
||
of Abundance, and there befell that treason of Walter the Black,
|
||
who loved me and prayed for my love, and when I gainsaid him,
|
||
swore by all that was holy, before my lord, that it was I who sought
|
||
his love, and how I had told and taught him ways of witchcraft,
|
||
whereby we might fulfill our love, so that the Baron should keep
|
||
a wife for another man. And the Knight of the Sun, whose heart
|
||
had been filled with many tales of my wisdom, true and false,
|
||
believed his friend whom he loved, and still believeth him,
|
||
though he burneth for the love of me now; whereas in those first
|
||
days of the treason, he burned with love turned to hatred.
|
||
So of this came that shaming and casting-forth of me.
|
||
Whereof I will tell thee but this, that the brother of my lord,
|
||
even the tall champion whom thou hast seen, came upon me presently,
|
||
when I was cast forth; because he was coming to see the Knight
|
||
of the Sun at his home; and he loved me, but not after
|
||
the fashion of his brother, but was kind and mild with me.
|
||
So then I went with him to Hampton and the Dry Tree, and great
|
||
joy made the folk thereof of my coming, whereas they remembered
|
||
their asking of aforetime that I would come to be a Queen
|
||
over them, and there have I dwelt ever since betwixt Hampton
|
||
and the Castle of Abundance; and that tall champion has been
|
||
ever as a brother unto me."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph, "And thou art their Queen there?" "Yea," she said, "in a fashion;
|
||
yet have they another who is mightier than I, and might, if she durst,
|
||
hang me over the battlements of the Scaur, for she is a fierce and hard woman,
|
||
and now no longer young in years."
|
||
|
||
"Is it not so then," said Ralph, "that some of the ill deeds
|
||
that are told of thee are of her doing?"
|
||
|
||
"It is even so," she said, "and whiles when she has spoken the word
|
||
I may not be against her openly, therefore I use my wisdom which I
|
||
have learned, to set free luckless wights from her anger and malice.
|
||
More by token the last time I did thus was the very night of the day
|
||
we parted, after thou hadst escaped from the Burg."
|
||
|
||
"In what wise was that?" said Ralph. She said: "When I rode
|
||
away from thee on that happy day of my deliverance by thee,
|
||
my heart laughed for joy of the life thou hadst given me,
|
||
and of thee the giver, and I swore to myself that I would
|
||
set free the first captive or death-doomed creature that I
|
||
came across, in honour of my pleasure and delight:
|
||
now speedily I came to Hampton and the Scaur;
|
||
for it is not very far from the want-ways of the wood:
|
||
and there I heard how four of our folk had been led away by
|
||
the men of the Burg, therefore it was clear to me that I must
|
||
set these men free if I could; besides, it pleased me to think
|
||
that I could walk about the streets of the foemen safely,
|
||
who had been but just led thitherward to the slaughter.
|
||
Thou knowest how I sped therein. But when I came back again
|
||
to our people, after thou hadst ridden away from us with Roger,
|
||
I heard these tidings, that there was one new-come into
|
||
our prison, a woman to wit, who had been haled before our old
|
||
Queen for a spy and doomed by her, and should be taken forth
|
||
and slain, belike, in a day or two. So I said to myself that I
|
||
was not free of my vow as yet, because those friends of mine,
|
||
I should in any case have done my best to deliver them:
|
||
therefore I deemed my oath bound me to set that woman free.
|
||
So in the night-tide when all was quiet I went to the prison
|
||
and brought her forth, and led her past all the gates and wards,
|
||
which was an easy thing to me, so much as I had learned,
|
||
and came with her into the fields betwixt the thorp of
|
||
Hampton and the wood, when it was more daylight than dawn,
|
||
so that I could see her clearly, and no word as yet
|
||
had we spoken to each other. But then she said to me:
|
||
'Am I to be slain here or led to a crueller prison?' And I said:
|
||
'Neither one thing nor the other: for lo! I have set thee free,
|
||
and I shall look to it that there shall be no pursuit of thee
|
||
till thou hast had time to get clear away.' But she said:
|
||
'What thanks wilt thou have for this? Wherefore hast thou done it?'
|
||
And I said, 'It is because of the gladness I have gotten.'
|
||
Said she, 'And would that I might get gladness!'
|
||
So I asked her what was amiss now that she was free. She said:
|
||
'I have lost one thing that I loved, and found another and lost
|
||
it also.' So I said: 'Mightest thou not seek for the lost?'
|
||
She said, 'It is in this wood, but when I shall find it I
|
||
shall not have it.' 'It is love that thou art seeking,'
|
||
said I. 'In what semblance is he?'
|
||
|
||
"What wilt thou, my friend? Straightway she fell to making
|
||
a picture of thee in words; so that I knew that she had met thee,
|
||
and belike after I had departed from thee, and my heart
|
||
was sore thereat; for now I will tell thee the very truth,
|
||
that she was a young woman and exceeding fair, as if she were
|
||
of pearl all over, and as sweet as eglantine; and I feared
|
||
her lest she should meet thee again in these wildwoods.
|
||
And so I asked her what would she, and she said that she had a mind
|
||
to seek to the Well at the World's End, which quencheth all sorrow;
|
||
and I rejoiced thereat, thinking that she would be far away from thee,
|
||
not thinking that thou and I must even meet to seek to it also.
|
||
So I gave her the chaplet which my witch-mistress took from
|
||
the dead woman's neck; and went with her into the wildwood,
|
||
and taught her wisdom of the way and what she was to do.
|
||
And again I say to thee that she was so sweet and yet with a kind
|
||
of pity in her both of soul and body, and wise withal and quiet,
|
||
that I feared her, though I loved her; yea and still do:
|
||
for I deem her better than me, and meeter for thee and thy love
|
||
than I be.--Dost thou know her?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and fair and lovely she is in sooth.
|
||
Yet hast thou naught to do to fear her. And true it is that I
|
||
saw her and spake with her after thou hadst ridden away.
|
||
For she came by the want-ways of the Wood Perilous in the dawn
|
||
of the day after I had delivered thee; and in sooth she told
|
||
me that she looked either for Death, or the Water of the Well
|
||
to end her sorrow."
|
||
|
||
Then he smiled and said; "As for that which thou sayest,
|
||
that she had been meeter for me than thou, I know not this word.
|
||
For look you, beloved, she came, and passed, and is gone,
|
||
but thou art there and shalt endure."
|
||
|
||
She stayed, and turned and faced him at that word;
|
||
and love so consumed her, that all sportive words failed her;
|
||
yea and it was as if mirth and light-heartedness were swallowed up
|
||
in the fire of her love; and all thought of other folk departed
|
||
from him as he felt her tears of love and joy upon his face,
|
||
and she kissed and embraced him there in the wilderness.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 10
|
||
|
||
Of the Desert-House and the Chamber of Love in the Wilderness
|
||
|
||
|
||
Then in a while they grew sober and went on their ways,
|
||
and the sun was westering behind them, and casting long shadows.
|
||
And in a little while they were come out of the thick woods and were
|
||
in a country of steep little valleys, grassy, besprinkled with
|
||
trees and bushes, with hills of sandstone going up from them,
|
||
which were often broken into cliffs rising sheer from the
|
||
tree-beset bottoms: and they saw plenteous deer both great
|
||
and small, and the wild things seemed to fear them but little.
|
||
To Ralph it seemed an exceeding fair land, and he was as joyous
|
||
as it was fair; but the Lady was pensive, and at last she said:
|
||
"Thou deemest it fair, and so it is; yet is it the lonesomest
|
||
of deserts. I deem indeed that it was once one of the fairest
|
||
of lands, with castles and cots and homesteads all about,
|
||
and fair people no few, busy with many matters amongst them.
|
||
But now it is all passed away, and there is no token of a dwelling
|
||
of man, save it might be that those mounds we see, as yonder,
|
||
and yonder again, are tofts of house-walls long ago sunken
|
||
into the earth of the valley. And now few even are the hunters
|
||
or way-farers that wend through it."
|
||
|
||
Quoth Ralph: "Thou speakest as if there had been once histories
|
||
and tales of this pleasant wilderness: tell me, has it anything
|
||
to do with that land about the wide river which we went through,
|
||
Roger and I, as we rode to the Castle of Abundance the other day?
|
||
For he spoke of tales of deeds and mishaps concerning it."
|
||
"Yea," she said, "so it is, and the little stream that runs
|
||
yonder beneath those cliffs, is making its way towards that
|
||
big river aforesaid, which is called the Swelling Flood.
|
||
Now true it is also that there are many tales about of the wars
|
||
and miseries that turned this land into a desert, and these may
|
||
be true enough, and belike are true. But these said tales have
|
||
become blended with the story of those aforesaid wars of the Land
|
||
of the Tower; of which indeed this desert is verily a part,
|
||
but was desert still in the days when I was Queen of the Land;
|
||
so thou mayst well think that they who hold me to be the cause
|
||
of all this loneliness (and belike Roger thought it was so)
|
||
have scarce got hold of the very sooth of the matter."
|
||
|
||
"Even so I deemed," said Ralph: "and to-morrow we shall cross the big river,
|
||
thou and I. Is there a ferry or a ford there whereas we shall come,
|
||
or how shall we win over it?"
|
||
|
||
She was growing merrier again now, and laughed at this and said:
|
||
"O fair boy! the crossing will be to-morrow and not to-day;
|
||
let to-morrow cross its own rivers; for surely to-day is
|
||
fair enough, and fairer shall it be when thou hast been fed
|
||
and art sitting by me in rest and peace till to-morrow morning.
|
||
So now hasten yet a little more; and we will keep the said
|
||
little stream in sight as well as we may for the bushes."
|
||
|
||
So they sped on, till Ralph said: "Will thy feet never tire, beloved?"
|
||
"O child," she said, "thou hast heard my story, and mayst well
|
||
deem that they have wrought many a harder day's work than this
|
||
day's. And moreover they shall soon rest; for look! yonder
|
||
is our house for this even, and till to-morrow's sun is high:
|
||
the house for me and thee and none else with us." And therewith
|
||
she pointed to a place where the stream ran in a chain of pools
|
||
and stickles, and a sheer cliff rose up some fifty paces beyond it,
|
||
but betwixt the stream and the cliff was a smooth table of greensward,
|
||
with three fair thorn bushes thereon, and it went down at each end
|
||
to the level of the river's lip by a green slope, but amidmost,
|
||
the little green plain was some ten feet above the stream, and was
|
||
broken by a little undercliff, which went down sheer into the water.
|
||
And Ralph saw in the face of the high cliff the mouth of a cave,
|
||
however deep it might be.
|
||
|
||
"Come," said the Lady, "tarry not, for I know that hunger
|
||
hath hold of thee, and look, how low the sun is growing!"
|
||
Then she caught him by the hand, and fell to running with him
|
||
to the edge of the stream, where at the end of the further
|
||
slope it ran wide and shallow before it entered into a deep
|
||
pool overhung with boughs of alder and thorn. She stepped
|
||
daintily over a row of big stones laid in the rippling shallow;
|
||
and staying herself in mid-stream on the biggest of them,
|
||
and gathering up her gown, looked up stream with a happy face,
|
||
and then looked over her shoulder to Ralph and said:
|
||
"The year has been good to me these seasons, so that when I
|
||
stayed here on my way to the Castle of Abundance, I found
|
||
but few stones washed away, and crossed wellnigh dry-shod,
|
||
but this stone my feet are standing on now, I brought
|
||
down from under the cliff, and set it amid-most, and I said
|
||
that when I brought thee hither I would stay thereon and talk
|
||
with thee while I stood above the freshness of the water,
|
||
as I am doing now."
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked on her and strove to answer her, but no words would come
|
||
to his lips, because of the greatness of his longing; she looked
|
||
on him fondly, and then stooped to look at the ripples that bubbled
|
||
up about her shoes, and touched them at whiles; then she said:
|
||
"See how they long for the water, these feet that have worn the waste
|
||
so long, and know how kind it will run over them and lap about them:
|
||
but ye must abide a little, waste-wearers, till we have done a thing
|
||
or two. Come, love!" And she reached her hand out behind her to Ralph,
|
||
not looking back, but when she felt his hand touch it, she stepped
|
||
lightly over the other stones, and on to the grass with him, and led
|
||
him quietly up the slope that went up to the table of greensward
|
||
before the cave. But when they came on to the level grass she
|
||
kissed him, and then turned toward the valley and spake solemnly:
|
||
"May all blessings light on this House of the wilderness and this
|
||
Hall of the Summer-tide, and the Chamber of Love that here is!"
|
||
|
||
Then was she silent a while, and Ralph brake not the silence.
|
||
Then she turned to him with a face grown merry and smiling, and said:
|
||
"Lo! how the poor lad yearneth for meat, as well he may, so long
|
||
as the day hath been. Ah, beloved, thou must be patient a little.
|
||
For belike our servants have not yet heard of the wedding of us.
|
||
So we twain must feed each the other. Is that so much amiss?"
|
||
|
||
He laughed in her face for love, and took her by the wrist,
|
||
but she drew her hand away and went into the cave, and came forth
|
||
anon holding a copper kettle with an iron bow, and a bag of meal,
|
||
which she laid at his feet; then she went into the cave again,
|
||
and brought forth a flask of wine and a beaker; then she caught up
|
||
the little cauldron, which was well-beaten, and thin and light,
|
||
and ran down to the stream therewith, and came up thence presently,
|
||
bearing it full of water on her head, going as straight and
|
||
stately as the spear is seen on a day of tourney, moving over
|
||
the barriers that hide the knight, before he lays it in the rest.
|
||
She came up to him and set the water-kettle before him, and put
|
||
her hands on his shoulders, and kissed his cheek, and then
|
||
stepped back from him and smote her palms together, and said:
|
||
"Yea, it is well! But there are yet more things to do before we rest.
|
||
There is the dighting of the chamber, and the gathering of wood
|
||
for the fire, and the mixing of the meal, and the kneading
|
||
and the baking of cakes; and all that is my work, and there is
|
||
the bringing of the quarry for the roast, and that is thine."
|
||
|
||
Then she ran into the cave and brought forth a bow and a quiver
|
||
of arrows, and said: "Art thou somewhat of an archer?"
|
||
Quoth he: "I shoot not ill." "And I," she said, "shoot well,
|
||
all woodcraft comes handy to me. But this eve I must trust
|
||
to thy skill for my supper. Go swiftly and come back speedily.
|
||
Do off thine hauberk, and beat the bushes down in the valley,
|
||
and bring me some small deer, as roe or hare or coney.
|
||
And wash thee in the pool below the stepping-stones, as I
|
||
shall do whiles thou art away, and by then thou comest back,
|
||
all shall be ready, save the roasting of the venison."
|
||
|
||
So he did off his wargear, but thereafter tarried a little, looking at her,
|
||
and she said: "What aileth thee not to go? the hunt's up." He said:
|
||
"I would first go see the rock-hall that is for our chamber to-night;
|
||
wilt thou not bring me in thither?" "Nay," she said, "for I must be busy
|
||
about many matters; but thou mayst go by thyself, if thou wilt."
|
||
|
||
So he went and stooped down and entered the cave, and found it
|
||
high and wide within, and clean and fresh and well-smelling,
|
||
and the floor of fine white sand without a stain.
|
||
|
||
So he knelt down and kissed the floor, and said aloud:
|
||
"God bless this floor of the rock-hall whereon my love shall
|
||
lie to-night!" Then he arose and went out of the cave,
|
||
and found the Lady at the entry stooping down to see what
|
||
he would do; and she looked on him fondly and anxiously;
|
||
but he turned a merry face to her, and caught her round
|
||
the middle and strained her to his bosom, and then took
|
||
the bow and arrows and ran down the slope and over the stream,
|
||
into the thicket of the valley.
|
||
|
||
He went further than he had looked for, ere he found a prey
|
||
to his mind, and then he smote a roe with a shaft and slew her,
|
||
and broke up the carcase and dight it duly, and so went his ways back.
|
||
When he came to the stream he looked up and saw a little fire
|
||
glittering not far from the cave, but had no clear sight of the Lady,
|
||
though he thought he saw her gown fluttering nigh one of the thorn-bushes.
|
||
Then he did off his raiment and entered that pool of the stream,
|
||
and was glad to bathe him in the same place where her body had been
|
||
but of late; for he had noted that the stones of the little shore
|
||
were still wet with her feet where she had gone up from the water.
|
||
|
||
But now, as he swam and sported in the sun-warmed pool
|
||
he deemed he heard the whinnying of a horse, but was not sure,
|
||
so he held himself still to listen, and heard no more.
|
||
Then he laughed and bethought him of Falcon his own steed,
|
||
and dived down under the water; but as he came up, laughing still
|
||
and gasping, he heard a noise of the clatter of horse hoofs,
|
||
as if some one were riding swiftly up the further side
|
||
of the grassy table, where it was stony, as he had noted
|
||
when they passed by.
|
||
|
||
A deadly fear fell upon his heart as he thought of his love left all alone;
|
||
so he gat him at once out of the water and cast his shirt over his head;
|
||
but while his arms were yet entangled in the sleeves thereof, came to his
|
||
ears a great and awful sound of a man's voice roaring out, though there were
|
||
no shapen words in the roar. Then were his arms free through the sleeves,
|
||
and he took up the bow and fell to bending it, and even therewith he heard
|
||
a great wailing of a woman's voice, and she cried out, piteously: "Help me,
|
||
O help, lovely creature of God!"
|
||
|
||
Yet must he needs finish bending the bow howsoever his heart died
|
||
within him; or what help would there be of a naked and unarmed man?
|
||
At last it was bent and an arrow nocked on the string, as he leapt
|
||
over the river and up the slope.
|
||
|
||
But even as he came up to that pleasant place he saw all in a moment of time;
|
||
that there stood Silverfax anigh the Cave's mouth, and the Lady lying on
|
||
the earth anigh the horse; and betwixt her and him the Knight of the Sun
|
||
stood up stark, his shining helm on his head, the last rays of the setting
|
||
sun flashing in the broidered image of his armouries.
|
||
|
||
He turned at once upon Ralph, shaking his sword in the air
|
||
(and there was blood upon the blade) and he cried out in
|
||
terrible voice: "The witch is dead, the whore is dead!
|
||
And thou, thief, who hast stolen her from me, and lain by her
|
||
in the wilderness, now shalt thou die, thou!"
|
||
|
||
Scarce had he spoken than Ralph drew his bow to the arrow-head and loosed;
|
||
there was but some twenty paces betwixt them, and the shaft, sped by
|
||
that fell archer, smote the huge man through the eye into the brain,
|
||
and he fell down along clattering, dead without a word more.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph gave forth a great wail of woe, and ran forward
|
||
and knelt by the Lady, who lay all huddled up face down upon
|
||
the grass, and he lifted her up and laid her gently on her back.
|
||
The blood was flowing fast from a great wound in her breast,
|
||
and he tore off a piece of his shirt to staunch it, but she
|
||
without knowledge of him breathed forth her last breath
|
||
ere he could touch the hurt, and he still knelt by her,
|
||
staring on her as if he knew not what was toward.
|
||
|
||
She had dight her what she could to welcome his return from the hunting,
|
||
and had set a wreath of meadow-sweet on her red hair, and a garland
|
||
of eglantine about her girdlestead, and left her feet naked after the pool
|
||
of the stream, and had turned the bezels of her finger-rings outward,
|
||
for joy of that meeting.
|
||
|
||
After a while he rose up with a most bitter cry, and ran down
|
||
the green slope and over the water, and hither and thither amongst
|
||
the bushes like one mad, till he became so weary that he might
|
||
scarce go or stand for weariness. Then he crept back again
|
||
to that Chamber of Love, and sat down beside his new-won mate,
|
||
calling to mind all the wasted words of the day gone by;
|
||
for the summer night was come now, most fair and fragrant.
|
||
But he withheld the sobbing passion of his heart and put
|
||
forth his hand, and touched her, and she was still,
|
||
and his hand felt her flesh that it was cold as marble.
|
||
And he cried out aloud in the night and the wilderness,
|
||
where there was none to hear him, and arose and went away
|
||
from her, passing by Silverfax who was standing nearby,
|
||
stretching out his head, and whinnying at whiles.
|
||
And he sat on the edge of the green table, and there came
|
||
into his mind despite himself thoughts of the pleasant fields
|
||
of Upmeads, and his sports and pleasures there, and the even-song
|
||
of the High House, and the folk of his fellowship and his love.
|
||
And therewith his breast arose and his face was wryed, and he wept
|
||
loud and long, and as if he should never make an end of it.
|
||
But so weary was he, that at last he lay back and fell asleep,
|
||
and woke not till the sun was high in the heavens.
|
||
And so it was, that his slumber had been so heavy, that he knew
|
||
not at first what had befallen; and one moment he felt glad,
|
||
and the next as if he should never be glad again, though why
|
||
he wotted not. Then he turned about and saw Silverfax cropping
|
||
the grass nearby, and the Lady lying there like an image
|
||
that could move no whit, though the world awoke about her.
|
||
Then he remembered, yet scarce all, so that wild hopes swelled
|
||
his heart, and he rose to his knees and turned to her,
|
||
and called to mind that he should never see her alive again,
|
||
and sobbing and wailing broke out from him, for he was young
|
||
and strong, and sorrow dealt hardly with him.
|
||
|
||
But presently he arose to his feet and went hither and thither,
|
||
and came upon the quenched coals of the cooking-fire: she
|
||
had baked cakes for his eating, and he saw them lying thereby,
|
||
and hunger constrained him, so he took and ate of them while
|
||
the tears ran down his face and mingled with the bread he ate.
|
||
And when he had eaten, he felt stronger and therefore was life
|
||
more grievous to him, and when he thought what he should do,
|
||
still one thing seemed more irksome than the other.
|
||
|
||
He went down to the water to drink, and passed by the body
|
||
of the Knight of the Sun, and wrath was fierce in his
|
||
heart against him who had overthrown his happiness.
|
||
But when he had drunk and washed hands and face he came
|
||
back again, and hardened his heart to do what he must needs do.
|
||
He took up the body of the Lady and with grief that may not
|
||
be told of, he drew it into the cave, and cut boughs of trees
|
||
and laid them over her face and all her body, and then took
|
||
great stones from the scree at that other end of the little plain,
|
||
and heaped them upon her till she was utterly hidden by them.
|
||
Then he came out on to the green place and looked on the body
|
||
of his foe, and said to himself that all must be decent
|
||
and in order about the place whereas lay his love.
|
||
And he came and stood over the body and said:
|
||
"I have naught to do to hate him now: if he hated me,
|
||
it was but for a little while, and he knew naught of me.
|
||
So let his bones be covered up from the wolf and the kite.
|
||
Yet shall they not lie alongside of her. I will raise a cairn above
|
||
him here on this fair little plain which he spoilt of all joy."
|
||
Therewith he fell to, and straightened his body, and laid
|
||
his huge limbs together and closed his eyes and folded his
|
||
arms over his breast; and then he piled the stones above him,
|
||
and went on casting them on the heap a long while after there
|
||
was need thereof.
|
||
|
||
Ralph had taken his raiment from the stream-side and done them on before this,
|
||
and now he did on helm and hauberk, and girt his sword to his side.
|
||
Then as he was about leaving the sorrowful place, he looked on Silverfax,
|
||
who had not strayed from the little plain, and came up to him and did
|
||
off saddle and bridle, and laid them within the cave, and bade the beast
|
||
go whither he would. He yet lingered about the place, and looked all
|
||
around him and found naught to help him, and could frame in his mind no
|
||
intent of a deed then, nor any tale of a deed he should do thereafter.
|
||
Yet belike in his mind were two thoughts, and though neither softened his
|
||
grief save a little, he did not shrink from them as he did from all others;
|
||
and these two were of his home at Upmeads, which was so familiar to him,
|
||
and of the Well at the World's End, which was but a word.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 11
|
||
|
||
Ralph Cometh Out of the Wilderness
|
||
|
||
|
||
Long he stood letting these thoughts run through his mind, but at last when it
|
||
was now midmorning, he stirred and gat him slowly down the green slope,
|
||
and for very pity of himself the tears brake out from him as he crossed
|
||
the stream and came into the bushy valley. There he stayed his feet
|
||
a little, and said to himself: "And whither then am I going?"
|
||
He thought of the Castle of Abundance and the Champions of the Dry Tree,
|
||
of Higham, and the noble warriors who sat at the Lord Abbot's board,
|
||
and of Upmeads and his own folk: but all seemed naught to him,
|
||
and he thought: "And how can I go back and bear folk asking me curiously
|
||
of my wayfarings, and whether I will do this, that, or the other thing."
|
||
Withal he thought of that fair damsel and her sweet mouth in the hostelry
|
||
at Bourton Abbas, and groaned when he thought of love and its ending,
|
||
and he said within himself: "and now she is a wanderer about the earth
|
||
as I am;" and he thought of her quest, and the chaplet of dame Katherine,
|
||
his gossip, which he yet bore on his neck, and he deemed that he had
|
||
naught to choose but to go forward and seek that he was doomed to;
|
||
and now it seemed to him that there was that one thing to do and no other.
|
||
And though this also seemed to him but weariness and grief, yet whereas
|
||
he had ever lightly turned him to doing what work lay ready to hand;
|
||
so now he knew that he must first of all get him out of that wilderness,
|
||
that he might hear the talk of folk concerning the Well at the World's End,
|
||
which he doubted not to hear again when he came into the parts inhabited.
|
||
|
||
So now, with his will or without it, his feet bore him on,
|
||
and he followed up the stream which the Lady had said ran into
|
||
the broad river called the Swelling Flood; "for," thought he,
|
||
"when I come thereabout I shall presently find some castle or
|
||
good town, and it is like that either I shall have some tidings
|
||
of the folk thereof, or else they will compel me to do something,
|
||
and that will irk me less than doing deeds of mine own will."
|
||
|
||
He went his ways till he came to where the wood and the trees ended,
|
||
and the hills were lower and longer, well grassed with short grass,
|
||
a down country fit for the feeding of sheep; and indeed some sheep he saw,
|
||
and a shepherd or two, but far off. At last, after he had left the
|
||
stream awhile, because it seemed to him to turn and wind round over much
|
||
to the northward, he came upon a road running athwart the down country,
|
||
so that he deemed that it must lead one way down to the Swelling Flood;
|
||
so he followed it up, and after a while began to fall in with folk;
|
||
and first two Companions armed and bearing long swords over their shoulders:
|
||
he stopped as they met, and stared at them in the face, but answered
|
||
not their greeting; and they had no will to meddle with him,
|
||
seeing his inches and that he was well armed, and looked no craven:
|
||
so they went on.
|
||
|
||
Next he came on two women who had with them an ass between two panniers,
|
||
laden with country stuff; and they were sitting by the wayside, one old
|
||
and the other young. He made no stay for them, and though he turned
|
||
his face their way, took no heed of them more than if they were trees;
|
||
though the damsel, who was well-liking and somewhat gaily clad,
|
||
stood up when she saw his face anigh, and drew her gown skirt about
|
||
her and moved daintily, and sighed and looked after him as he went on,
|
||
for she longed for him.
|
||
|
||
Yet again came two men a-horseback, merchants clad goodly,
|
||
with three carles, their servants, riding behind them; and all
|
||
these had weapons and gave little more heed to him than he to them.
|
||
But a little after they were gone, he stopped and said within himself:
|
||
"Maybe I had better have gone their way, and this road doubtless
|
||
leadeth to some place of resort."
|
||
|
||
But even therewith he heard horsehoofs behind him, and anon came up a man
|
||
a-horseback, armed with jack and sallet, a long spear in his hand, and budgets
|
||
at his saddle-bow, who looked like some lord's man going a message.
|
||
He nodded to Ralph, who gave him good-day; for seeing these folk and
|
||
their ways had by now somewhat amended his mind; and now he turned not,
|
||
but went on as before.
|
||
|
||
At last the way clomb a hill longer and higher than any he had
|
||
yet crossed, and when he had come to the brow and looked down,
|
||
he saw the big river close below running through the wide
|
||
valley which he had crossed with Roger on that other day.
|
||
Then he sat down on the green bank above the way, so heavy
|
||
of heart that not one of the things he saw gave him any joy,
|
||
and the world was naught to him. But within a while he came
|
||
somewhat to himself, and, looking down toward the river, he saw
|
||
that where the road met it, it was very wide, and shallow withal,
|
||
for the waves rippled merrily and glittered in the afternoon sun,
|
||
though there was no wind; moreover the road went up white
|
||
from the water on the other side, so he saw clearly that this
|
||
was the ford of a highway. The valley was peopled withal:
|
||
on the other side of the river was a little thorp, and there
|
||
were carts and sheds scattered about the hither side,
|
||
and sheep and neat feeding in the meadows, and in short it
|
||
was another world from the desert.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 12
|
||
|
||
Ralph Falleth in With Friends and Rideth to Whitwall
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph looks on to the ford and sees folk riding through the thorp
|
||
aforesaid and down to the river, and they take the water and are
|
||
many in company, some two score by his deeming, and he sees the sun
|
||
glittering on their weapons.
|
||
|
||
Now he thought that he would abide their coming and see if he might join
|
||
their company, since if he crossed the water he would be on the backward way:
|
||
and it was but a little while ere the head of them came up over the hill,
|
||
and were presently going past Ralph, who rose up to look on them,
|
||
and be seen of them, but they took little heed of him. So he sees
|
||
that though they all bore weapons, they were not all men-at-arms, nay,
|
||
not more than a half score, but those proper men enough. Of the others,
|
||
some half-dozen seemed by their attire to be merchants, and the rest
|
||
their lads; and withal they had many sumpter horses and mules with them.
|
||
They greeted him not, nor he them, nor did he heed them much till they
|
||
were all gone by save three, and then he leapt into the road with a cry,
|
||
for who should be riding there but Blaise, his eldest brother,
|
||
and Richard the Red with him, both in good case by seeming; for Blaise
|
||
was clad in a black coat welted with gold, and rode a good grey palfrey,
|
||
and Richard was armed well and knightly.
|
||
|
||
They knew him at once, and drew rein, and Blaise lighted
|
||
down from his horse and cast his arms about Ralph, and said:
|
||
"O happy day! when two of the Upmeads kindred meet thus
|
||
in an alien land! But what maketh thee here, Ralph?
|
||
I thought of thee as merry and safe in Upmeads?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph said smiling, for his heart leapt up at the sight of his kindred:
|
||
"Nay, must I not seek adventures like the rest? So I stole myself
|
||
away from father and mother." "Ill done, little lord!" said Blaise,
|
||
stroking Ralph's cheek.
|
||
|
||
Then up came Richard, and if Blaise were glad, Richard was twice glad,
|
||
and quoth he: "Said I not, Lord Blaise, that this chick would be the hardest
|
||
of all to keep under the coop? Welcome to the Highways, Lord Ralph!
|
||
But where is thine horse? and whence and whither is it now?
|
||
Hast thou met with some foil and been held to ransom?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph found it hard and grievous and dull work to answer;
|
||
for now again his sorrow had taken hold of him: so he said:
|
||
"Yea, Richard, I have had adventures, and have lost rather than won;
|
||
but at least I am a free man, and have spent but little gold
|
||
on my loss."
|
||
|
||
"That is well," said Richard, "but whence gat ye any gold for spending?"
|
||
Ralph smiled, but sadly, for he called to mind the glad setting
|
||
forth and the kind face of dame Katherine his gossip, and he said:
|
||
"Clement Chapman deemed it not unmeet to stake somewhat on my luck,
|
||
therefore I am no pauper."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Blaise, "if thou hast no great errand elsewhere,
|
||
thou mightest ride with us, brother. I have had good
|
||
hap in these days, though scarce kingly or knightly,
|
||
for I have been buying and selling: what matter? few know
|
||
Upmeads and its kings to wite me with fouling a fair name.
|
||
Richard, go fetch a horse hither for Lord Ralph's riding,
|
||
and we will tarry no longer." So Richard trotted on,
|
||
and while they abode him, Ralph asked after his brethren,
|
||
and Blaise told him that he had seen or heard naught of them.
|
||
Then Ralph asked of whither away, and Blaise told him to Whitwall,
|
||
where was much recourse of merchants from many lands,
|
||
and a noble market.
|
||
|
||
Back then cometh Richard leading a good horse while Ralph was pondering
|
||
his matter, and thinking that at such a town he might well hear tidings
|
||
concerning the Well at the World's End.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph mounts, and they all ride away together. On the way,
|
||
partly for brotherhood's sake, partly that he might not be questioned
|
||
overmuch himself, Ralph asked Blaise to tell him more of his farings;
|
||
and Blaise said, that when he had left Upmeads he had ridden with Richard
|
||
up and down and round about, till he came to a rich town which had
|
||
just been taken in war, and that the Companions who had conquered
|
||
it were looking for chapmen to cheapen their booty, and that he was
|
||
the first or nearly the first to come who had will and money to buy,
|
||
and the Companions, who were eager to depart, had sold him thieves'
|
||
penny-worths, so that his share of the Upmeads' treasure had gone far;
|
||
and thence he had gone to another good town where he had the best
|
||
of markets for his newly cheapened wares, and had brought more there,
|
||
such as he deemed handy to sell, and so had gone on from town to town,
|
||
and had ever thriven, and had got much wealth: and so at last having
|
||
heard tell of Whitwall as better for chaffer than all he had yet seen,
|
||
he and other chapmen had armed them, and waged men-at-arms to defend them,
|
||
and so tried the adventure of the wildwoods, and come safe through.
|
||
|
||
Then at last came the question to Ralph concerning his adventures,
|
||
and he enforced himself to speak, and told all as truly as he might,
|
||
without telling of the Lady and her woeful ending.
|
||
|
||
Thus they gave and took in talk, and Ralph did what he might to seem
|
||
like other folk, that he might nurse his grief in his own heart as far
|
||
asunder from other men as might be.
|
||
|
||
So they rode on till it was even, and came to Whitwall before
|
||
the shutting of the gates and rode into the street, and found it
|
||
a fair and great town, well defensible, with high and new walls,
|
||
and men-at-arms good store to garnish them.
|
||
|
||
Ralph rode with his brother to the hostel of the chapmen,
|
||
and there they were well lodged.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 13
|
||
|
||
Richard Talketh With Ralph Concerning the Well at the World's End.
|
||
Concerning Swevenham
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow Blaise went to his chaffer and to visit the men of the Port
|
||
at the Guildhall: he bade Ralph come with him, but he would not,
|
||
but abode in the hall of the hostel and sat pondering sadly while men came
|
||
and went; but he heard no word spoken of the Well at the World's End.
|
||
In like wise passed the next day and the next, save that Richard was among
|
||
those who came into the hall, and he talked long with Ralph at whiles;
|
||
that is to say that he spake, and Ralph made semblance of listening.
|
||
|
||
Now as is aforesaid Richard was old and wise, and he loved
|
||
Ralph much, more belike than Lord Blaise his proper master,
|
||
whereas he had no mind for chaffer, or aught pertaining to it:
|
||
so he took heed of Ralph and saw that he was sad and weary-hearted;
|
||
so on the sixth day of their abiding at Whitwall, in the morning
|
||
when all the chapmen were gone about their business, and he and
|
||
Ralph were left alone in the Hall, he spake to Ralph and said:
|
||
"This is no prison, lord." "Even so," quoth Ralph.
|
||
"Nay, if thou doubtest it," said Richard, "let us go
|
||
to the door and try if they have turned the key and shot
|
||
the bolt on us." Ralph smiled faintly and stood up, and said:
|
||
"I will go with thee if thou willest it, but sooth to say I
|
||
shall be but a dull fellow of thine to-day." Said Richard:
|
||
"Wouldst thou have been better yesterday, lord, or the day before?"
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph. "Wilt thou be better to-morrow?" said Richard.
|
||
Ralph shook his head. Said Richard: "Yea, but thou wilt be,
|
||
or thou mayst call me a fool else." "Thou art kind, Richard,"
|
||
said Ralph; "and I will come with thee, and do what thou
|
||
biddest me; but I must needs tell thee that my heart is sick."
|
||
"Yea," quoth Richard, "and thou needest not tell me so much,
|
||
dear youngling; he who runs might read that in thee.
|
||
But come forth."
|
||
|
||
So into the street they went, and Richard brought Ralph into
|
||
the market-place, and showed him where was Blaise's booth
|
||
(for he was thriving greatly) but Ralph would not go anigh it
|
||
lest his brother should entangle him in talk; and they went
|
||
into the Guildhall which was both great and fair, and the smell
|
||
of the new-shaven oak (for the roof was not yet painted) brought back
|
||
to Ralph's mind the days of his childhood when he was hanging
|
||
about the building of the water-reeve's new house at Upmeads.
|
||
Then they went into the Great Church and heard a Mass at the altar
|
||
of St. Nicholas, Ralph's very friend; and the said church was
|
||
great to the letter, and very goodly, and somewhat new also,
|
||
since the blossom-tide of Whitwall was not many years old:
|
||
and the altars of its chapels were beyond any thing for fairness
|
||
that Ralph had seen save at Higham on the Way.
|
||
|
||
But when they came forth from the church, Ralph looked on Richard with a face
|
||
that was both blank and weary, as who should say: "What is to do now?"
|
||
And forsooth so woe-begone he looked, that Richard, despite his sorrow
|
||
and trouble for him, could scarce withhold his laughter. But he said:
|
||
"Well, foster son (for thou art pretty much that to me), since the good town
|
||
pleasureth thee little, go we further afield."
|
||
|
||
So he led him out of the market-place, and brought him
|
||
to the east gate of the town which hight Petergate Bar,
|
||
and forth they went and out into the meadows under the walls,
|
||
and stayed him at a little bridge over one of the streams,
|
||
for it was a land of many waters; there they sat down in a nook,
|
||
and spake Richard to Ralph, saying:
|
||
|
||
"Lord Ralph, ill it were if the Upmeads kindred came to naught,
|
||
or even to little. Now as for my own master Blaise, he hath,
|
||
so please you, the makings of a noble chapman, but not of a
|
||
noble knight; though he sayeth that when he is right rich
|
||
he will cast aside all chaffer; naught of which he will do.
|
||
As for the others, my lord Gregory is no better, or indeed worse,
|
||
save that he shall not be rich ever, having no mastery ver himself;
|
||
while lord Hugh is like to be slain in some empty brawl,
|
||
unless he come back speedily to Upmeads."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, yea," said Ralph, "what then? I came not hither
|
||
to hear thee missay my mother's sons." But Richard went on:
|
||
"As for thee, lord Ralph, of thee I looked for something;
|
||
but now I cannot tell; for the heart in thee seemeth to be dead;
|
||
and thou must look to it lest the body die also."
|
||
"So be it!" said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Said Richard: "I am old now, but I have been young, and many
|
||
things have I seen and suffered, ere I came to Upmeads.
|
||
Old am I, and I cannot feel certain hopes and griefs as a young
|
||
man can; yet have I bought the knowledge of them dear enough,
|
||
and have not forgotten. Whereby I wot well that my drearihead
|
||
is concerning a woman. Is it not so?" "Yea," quoth Ralph.
|
||
Said Richard: "Now shalt thou tell me thereof, and so
|
||
lighten thine heart a little." "I will not tell thee,"
|
||
said Ralph; "or, rather, to speak more truly, I cannot."
|
||
"Yea," said Richard, "and though it were now an easier thing
|
||
for me to tell thee of the griefs of my life than for thee
|
||
to hearken to the tale, yet I believe thee. But mayhappen thou
|
||
mayst tell me of one thing that thou desirest more than another."
|
||
Said Ralph: "I desire to die." And the tears started in his
|
||
eyes therewith. But Richard spake, smiling on him kindly:
|
||
"That way is open for thee on any day of the week.
|
||
Why hast thou not taken it already?" But Ralph answered naught.
|
||
Richard said: "Is it not because thou hopest to desire something;
|
||
if not to-day, then to-morrow, or the next day or the next?"
|
||
Still Ralph spake no word; but he wept. Quoth Richard: "Maybe I
|
||
may help thee to a hope, though thou mayest think my words wild.
|
||
In the land and the thorp where I was born and bred there was talk
|
||
now and again of a thing to be sought, which should cure sorrow,
|
||
and make life blossom in the old, and uphold life in the young."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, looking up from his tears, "and what was
|
||
that? and why hast thou never told me thereof before?"
|
||
"Nay," said Richard, "and why should I tell it to the merry
|
||
lad I knew in Upmeads? but now thou art a man, and hast seen
|
||
the face of sorrow, it is meet that thou shouldest hear of THE
|
||
WELL AT THE WORLD'S END."
|
||
|
||
Ralph sprang to his feet as he said the word, and cried out eagerly:
|
||
"Old friend, and where then wert thou bred and born?" Richard laughed
|
||
and said: "See, then, there is yet a deed and a day betwixt thee and death!
|
||
But turn about and look straight over the meadows in a line with
|
||
yonder willow-tree, and tell me what thou seest." Said Ralph:
|
||
"The fair plain spreading wide, and a river running through it,
|
||
and little hills beyond the water, and blue mountains beyond them,
|
||
and snow yet lying on the tops of them, though the year is in young July."
|
||
"Yea," quoth Richard; "and seest thou on the first of the little hills
|
||
beyond the river, a great grey tower rising up and houses anigh it?"
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "the tower I see, and the houses, for I am far-sighted;
|
||
but the houses are small." "So it is," said Richard; "now yonder tower
|
||
is of the Church of Swevenham, which is under the invocation of the Seven
|
||
Sleepers of Ephesus; and the houses are the houses of the little town.
|
||
And what has that to do with me? sayest thou: why this, that I was born
|
||
and bred at Swevenham. And indeed I it was who brought my lord Blaise
|
||
here to Whitwall, with tales of how good a place it was for chaffer,
|
||
that I might see the little town and the great grey tower once more.
|
||
Forsooth I lied not, for thy brother is happy here, whereas he is piling up
|
||
the coins one upon the other. Forsooth thou shouldest go into his booth,
|
||
fair lord; it is a goodly sight."
|
||
|
||
But Ralph was walking to and fro hastily, and he turned to Richard and said:
|
||
"Well, well! but why dost thou not tell me more of the Well at
|
||
the World's End?"
|
||
|
||
Said Richard: "I was going to tell thee somewhat which might be
|
||
worth thy noting; or might not be worth it: hearken! When I
|
||
dwelt at Swevenham over yonder, and was but of eighteen winters,
|
||
who am now of three score and eight, three folk of our township,
|
||
two young men and one young woman, set out thence to seek the said Well:
|
||
and much lore they had concerning it, which they had learned of an old man,
|
||
a nigh kinsman of one of them. This ancient carle I had never seen,
|
||
for he dwelt in the mountains a way off, and these men were some five
|
||
years older than I, so that I was a boy when they were men grown;
|
||
and such things I heeded not, but rather sport and play; and above all,
|
||
I longed for the play of war and battle. God wot I have had my bellyful
|
||
of it since those days! Howbeit I mind me the setting forth of these three.
|
||
They had a sumpter-ass with them for their livelihood on the waste;
|
||
but they went afoot crowned with flowers, and the pipe and tabour
|
||
playing before them, and much people brought them on the way.
|
||
By St. Christopher! I can see it all as if it were yesterday.
|
||
I was sorry of the departure of the damsel; for though I was a boy I
|
||
had loved her, and she had suffered me to kiss her and toy with her;
|
||
but it was soon over. Now I call to mind that they had prayed our priest,
|
||
Sir Cyprian, to bless them on their departure, but he naysaid them;
|
||
for he held that such a quest came of the inspiration of the devils,
|
||
and was but a memory of the customs of the ancient gentiles and heathen.
|
||
But as to me, I deemed it naught, and was sorry that my white-bosomed,
|
||
sweet-breathed friend should walk away from me thus into the clouds."
|
||
|
||
"What came of it?" said Ralph, "did they come back, or any of them?"
|
||
"I wot not," said Richard, "for I was weary of Swevenham after that,
|
||
so I girt myself to a sword and laid a spear upon my shoulder
|
||
and went my ways to the Castle of the Waste March, sixty miles
|
||
from Swevenham town, and the Baron took me in and made me his man:
|
||
and almost as little profit were in my telling thee again of my
|
||
deeds there, as there was in my doing them: but the grey tower
|
||
of Swevenham I have never seen again till this hour."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Now then it behoveth me to go to Swevenham straightway:
|
||
wilt thou come with me? it seemeth to be but some four miles hence."
|
||
|
||
Richard held his peace and knit his brows as if pondering
|
||
the matter, and Ralph abided till he spake: so he said:
|
||
"Foster-son, so to call thee, thou knowest the manner
|
||
of up-country carles, that tales flow forth from them
|
||
the better if they come without over much digging
|
||
and hoeing of the ground; that is, without questioning;
|
||
so meseems better it will be if I go to Swevenham alone,
|
||
and better if I be asked to go, than if I go of myself.
|
||
Now to-morrow is Saturday, and high market in Whitwall;
|
||
and I am not so old but that it is likeliest that there will
|
||
be some of my fellows alive and on their legs in Swevenham:
|
||
and if such there be, there will be one at the least in
|
||
the market to-morrow, and I will be there to find him out:
|
||
and then it will go hard if he bring me not to Swevenham as a
|
||
well-beloved guest; and when I am there, and telling my tidings,
|
||
and asking them of theirs, if there be any tales concerning
|
||
the Well at the World's End working in their bellies, then shall
|
||
I be the midwife to bring them to birth. Ha? Will it do?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "but how long wilt thou be?" Said Richard:
|
||
"I shall come back speedily if I find the land barren;
|
||
but if the field be in ear I shall tarry to harvest it.
|
||
So keep thou thy soul in patience." "And what shall I do now?"
|
||
said Ralph. "Wear away the hours," said Richard.
|
||
And to begin with, come back within the gates with me and let
|
||
us go look at thy brother's booth in the market-place: it is
|
||
the nethermost of a goodly house which he is minded to dwell in;
|
||
and he will marry a wife and sit down in Whitwall, so well
|
||
he seemeth like to thrive; for they have already bidden him to
|
||
the freedom of the city, and to a brother of the Faring-Knights,
|
||
whereas he is not only a stirring man, but of good lineage also:
|
||
for now he hideth not that he is of the Upmeads kindred."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 14
|
||
|
||
Ralph Falleth in With Another Old Friend
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph went with Richard now without more words, and they came
|
||
into the market-place and unto Blaise's booth and house,
|
||
which was no worse than the best in the place; and the painters
|
||
and stainers were at work on the upper part of it to make it as
|
||
bright and goodly as might be with red and blue and green and gold,
|
||
and all fair colours, and already was there a sign hung out of
|
||
the fruitful tree by the water-side. As for the booth, it was full
|
||
within of many wares and far-fetched and dear-bought things;
|
||
as pieces of good and fine cloth plumbed with the seal of
|
||
the greatest of the cities; and silk of Babylon, and spices
|
||
of the hot burning islands, and wonders of the silversmith's
|
||
and the goldsmith's fashioning, and fair-wrought weapons and armour
|
||
of the best, and every thing that a rich chapman may deal in.
|
||
And amidst of it all stood Blaise clad in fine black cloth
|
||
welted with needle work, and a gold chain about his neck.
|
||
He was talking with three honourable men of the Port, and they
|
||
were doing him honour with kind words and the bidding of help.
|
||
When he saw Ralph and Richard come in, he nodded to them,
|
||
as to men whom he loved, but were beneath him in dignity,
|
||
and left not talking with the great men. Richard grinned
|
||
a little thereat, as also did Ralph in his heart; for he thought:
|
||
"Here then is one of the Upmeads kin provided for, so that soon
|
||
he may buy with his money two domains as big as Upmeads and call
|
||
them his manors."
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph looks about him, and presently he sees a man come
|
||
forward to meet him from the innermost of the booth, and lo! there
|
||
was come Clement Chapman. His heart rose at the sight of him,
|
||
and he thought of his kind gossip till he could scarce withhold
|
||
his tears. But Clement came to him and cast his arms about him,
|
||
and kissed him, and said: "Thou shalt pardon me for this, lord,
|
||
for it is the kiss of the gossip which she bade me give thee,
|
||
if I fell in with thee, as now I have, praised be the Saints!
|
||
Yet it irks me that I shall see little more of thee at this time,
|
||
for to-morrow early I must needs join myself to my company;
|
||
for we are going south awhile to a good town some fifty
|
||
miles hence. Nevertheless, if thou dwellest here some eight
|
||
days I shall see thee again belike, since thereafter I get
|
||
me eastward on a hard and long journey not without peril.
|
||
How sayest thou?"
|
||
|
||
"I wot not," quoth Ralph looking at Richard. Said Richard:
|
||
"Thou mayst wot well, master Clement, that my lord is anhungered
|
||
of the praise of the folks, and is not like to abide in a mere
|
||
merchant-town till the mould grow on his back." "Well, well,"
|
||
said Clement, "however that may be, I have now done my matters
|
||
with this cloth-lord, Blaise, and he has my florins in his pouch:
|
||
so will not ye twain come with me and drink a cup till he hath
|
||
done his talk with these magnates?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph was nothing loth, for besides that he loved master Clement,
|
||
and that his being in company was like having a piece of his home anigh him,
|
||
he hoped to hear some tidings concerning the Well at the World's End.
|
||
|
||
So he and Richard went with master Clement to the Christopher, a fair
|
||
ale-house over against the Great Church, and sat down to good wine;
|
||
and Ralph asked of Clement many things concerning dame Katherine his gossip,
|
||
and Clement told him all, and that she was well, and had been to Upmeads,
|
||
and had seen King Peter and the mother of Ralph; and how she had assuaged
|
||
his mother's grief at his departure by forecasting fair days for her son.
|
||
All this Ralph heard gladly, though he was somewhat shamefaced withal, and sat
|
||
silent and thinking of many matters. But Richard took up the word and said:
|
||
"Which way camest thou from Wulstead, master Clement?" "The nighest way
|
||
I came," said Clement, "through the Woods Perilous." Said Richard:
|
||
"And they of the Dry Tree, heardest thou aught of them?" "Yea, certes,"
|
||
quoth Clement, "for I fell in with their Bailiff, and paid him due scot
|
||
for the passage of the Wood; he knoweth me withal, and we talked together."
|
||
"And had he any tidings to tell thee of the champions?" said Richard.
|
||
Said Clement, "Great tidings maybe, how that there was a rumour that they
|
||
had lost their young Queen and Lady; and if that be true, it will go nigh
|
||
to break their hearts, so sore as they loved her. And that will make them
|
||
bitter and fierce, till their grief has been slaked by the blood of men.
|
||
And that the more as their old Queen abideth still, and she herself is ever
|
||
of that mind."
|
||
|
||
Ralph hearkened, and his heart was wounded that other men should speak
|
||
of his beloved: but he heard how Richard said: "Hast thou ever known why
|
||
that company of champions took the name of the Dry Tree?" "Why, who should
|
||
know that, if thou knowest it not, Richard of Swevenham?" said Clement:
|
||
"Is it not by the token of the Dry Tree that standeth in the lands on
|
||
the hither side of the Wall of the World?" Richard nodded his head; but Ralph
|
||
cried out: "O Master Clement, and hast thou seen it, the Wall of the World?"
|
||
"Yea, afar off, my son," said he; "or what the folk with me called so;
|
||
as to the Dry Tree, I have told thee at Wulstead that I have seen it not,
|
||
though I have known men who have told me that they have seen it."
|
||
"And must they who find the Well at the World's End come by the Dry Tree?"
|
||
"Yea, surely," said Clement. Quoth Richard: "And thus have some heard,
|
||
who have gone on that quest, and they have heard of the Champions of Hampton,
|
||
and have gone thither, being deceived by that name of the Dry Tree, and whiles
|
||
have been slain by the champions, whiles have entered their company."
|
||
"Yea," said Clement, "so it is that their first error hath ended their quest.
|
||
But now, lord Ralph, I will tell thee one thing; to wit, that when I return
|
||
hither after eight days wearing, I shall be wending east, as I said e'en now,
|
||
and what will that mean save going somewhat nigher to the Wall of the World;
|
||
for my way lieth beyond the mountains that ye see from hence, and beyond
|
||
the mountains that lie the other side of those; and I bid thee come
|
||
with us, and I will be thy warrant that so far thou shalt have no harm:
|
||
but when thou hast come so far, and hast seen three very fair cities,
|
||
besides towns and castles and thorps and strange men, and fair merchandize,
|
||
God forbid that thou shouldest wend further, and so cast away thy young
|
||
life for a gay-coloured cloud. Then will be the time to come back with me,
|
||
that I may bring thee through the perils of the way to Wulstead, and Upmeads
|
||
at the last, and the folk that love thee."
|
||
|
||
Richard held his peace at this word, but Ralph said:
|
||
"I thank thee, Master Clement, for thy love and thy helping hand;
|
||
and will promise thee to abide thee here eight days at the least;
|
||
and meanwhile I will ponder the matter well."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 15
|
||
|
||
Ralph Dreams a Dream Or Sees a Vision
|
||
|
||
|
||
Therewithall they parted after more talk concerning small matters,
|
||
and Ralph wore through the day, but Richard again did him to wit, that on
|
||
the morrow he would find his old friends of Swevenham in the Market.
|
||
And Ralph was come to life again more than he had been since that evil
|
||
hour in the desert; though hard and hard he deemed it that he should
|
||
never see his love again.
|
||
|
||
Now as befalleth young men, he was a good sleeper, and dreamed but seldom,
|
||
save such light and empty dreams as he might laugh at, if perchance
|
||
he remembered them by then his raiment was on him in the morning.
|
||
But that night him-seemed that he awoke in his chamber at Whitwall,
|
||
and was lying on his bed, as he verily was, and the door of the
|
||
chamber opened, and there entered quietly the Lady of the Woodland,
|
||
dight even as he had seen her as she lay dead beside their cooking fire
|
||
on that table of greensward in the wilderness, barefoot and garlanded
|
||
about her brow and her girdlestead, but fair and fresh coloured
|
||
as she was before the sword had pierced her side; and he thought
|
||
that he rejoiced to see her, but no wild hope rose in his heart,
|
||
and no sobbing passion blinded his eyes, nor did he stretch
|
||
out hand to touch her, because he remembered that she was dead.
|
||
But he thought she spake to him and said: "I know that thou wouldst
|
||
have me speak, therefore I say that I am come to bid thee farewell,
|
||
since there was no farewell between us in the wilderness, and I know
|
||
that thou are about going on a long and hard and perilous journey:
|
||
and I would that I could kiss thee and embrace thee, but I may not,
|
||
for this is but the image of me as thou hast known me. Furthermore, as I
|
||
loved thee when I saw thee first, for thy youth, and thy fairness,
|
||
and thy kindness and thy valiancy, so now I rejoice that all this
|
||
shall endure so long in thee, as it surely shall."
|
||
|
||
Then the voice ceased, but still the image stood before him awhile,
|
||
and he wondered if she would speak again, and tell him aught
|
||
of the way to the Well at the World's End; and she spake again:
|
||
"Nay," she said, "I cannot, since we may not tread the way together
|
||
hand in hand; and this is part of the loss that thou hast had of me;
|
||
and oh! but it is hard and hard." And her face became sad and distressful,
|
||
and she turned and departed as she had come.
|
||
|
||
Then he knew not if he awoke, or if it were a change in his dream;
|
||
but the chamber became dark about him, and he lay there thinking
|
||
of her, till, as it seemed, day began to dawn, and there was some little
|
||
stir in the world without, and the new wind moved the casement.
|
||
And again the door opened, and someone entered as before; and this
|
||
also was a woman: green-clad she was and barefoot, yet he knew at once
|
||
that it was not his love that was dead, but the damsel of the ale-house
|
||
of Bourton, whom he had last seen by the wantways of the Wood Perilous,
|
||
and he thought her wondrous fair, fairer than he had deemed.
|
||
And the word came from her: "I am a sending of the woman whom thou
|
||
hast loved, and I should not have been here save she had sent me."
|
||
Then the words ended, while he looked at her and wondered if she
|
||
also had died on the way to the Well at the World's End. And it
|
||
came into his mind that he had never known her name upon the earth.
|
||
Then again came the word: "So it is that I am not dead but alive
|
||
in the world, though I am far away from this land; and it is good
|
||
that thou shouldst go seek the Well at the World's End not all alone:
|
||
and the seeker may find me: and whereas thou wouldst know my name,
|
||
I hight Dorothea."
|
||
|
||
So fell the words again: and this image stood awhile as the other had done,
|
||
and as the other had done, departed, and once more the chamber became dark,
|
||
so that Ralph could not so much as see where was the window, and he knew
|
||
no more till he woke in the early morn, and there was stir in the street
|
||
and the voice of men, and the scent of fresh herbs and worts, and fruits;
|
||
for it was market-day, and the country folk were early afoot, that they
|
||
might array their wares timely in the market-place.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 16
|
||
|
||
Of the Tales of Swevenham
|
||
|
||
|
||
Old Richard was no worse than his word, and failed not to find
|
||
old acquaintance of Swevenham in the Saturday's market:
|
||
and Ralph saw naught of him till midweek afterwards. And he was
|
||
sitting in the chamber of the hostel when Richard came in to him.
|
||
Forsooth Blaise had bidden him come dwell in his fair house,
|
||
but Ralph would not, deeming that he might be hindered in his quest
|
||
and be less free to go whereso he would, if he were dwelling
|
||
with one who was so great with the magnates as was Blaise.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph was reading in a book when Richard came in,
|
||
but he stood up and greeted him; and Richard said smiling:
|
||
"What have ye found in the book, lord?" Said Ralph:
|
||
"It telleth of the deeds of Alexander." "Is there aught
|
||
concerning the Well at the World's End therein?" said Richard.
|
||
"I have not found aught thereof as yet," said Ralph;
|
||
"but the book tells concerning the Dry Tree, and of kings
|
||
sitting in their chairs in the mountains nearby."
|
||
|
||
"Well then," said Richard, "maybe thou wilt think me the better tale-teller."
|
||
"Tell on then," quoth Richard. So they went and sat them down in a window,
|
||
and Richard said:
|
||
|
||
"When I came to Swevenham with two old men that I had known young, the folk
|
||
made much of me, and made me good cheer, whereof were over long to tell thee;
|
||
but to speak shortly, I drew the talk round to the matter that we would
|
||
wot of: for we spake of the Men of the Dry Tree, and an old man began to say,
|
||
as master Clement the other day, that this name of theirs was but a token
|
||
and an armoury which those champions have taken from the Tree itself,
|
||
which Alexander the Champion saw in his wayfarings; and he said that this
|
||
tree was on the hither side of the mountains called the Wall of the World,
|
||
and no great way from the last of the towns whereto Clement will wend;
|
||
for Clement told me the name thereof, to wit, Goldburg. Then another
|
||
and an older man, one that I remember a stout carle ere I left Swevenham,
|
||
said that this was not so, but that the Tree was on the further side
|
||
of the Wall of the World, and that he who could lay his hand on the bole
|
||
thereof was like enough to drink of the Well at the World's End.
|
||
Thereafter another spake, and told a tale of how the champions at Hampton
|
||
first took the Dry Tree for a token; and he said that the rumour ran,
|
||
that a woman had brought the tidings thereof to those valiant men,
|
||
and had fixed the name upon them, though wherefore none knew.
|
||
So the talk went on.
|
||
|
||
"But there was a carline sitting in the ingle, and she knew me and I her.
|
||
And indeed in days past, when I was restless and longing to depart, she might
|
||
have held me at Swevenham, for she was one of the friends that I loved there:
|
||
a word and a kiss had done it, or maybe the kiss without the word:
|
||
but if I had the word, I had not the kiss of her. Well, when the talk began
|
||
to fall, she spake and said to me:
|
||
|
||
"'Now it is somewhat strange that the talk must needs fall on this seeking
|
||
of that which shall not be found, whereas it was but the month before thou
|
||
wert last at Swevenham, that Wat Miller and Simon Bowyer set off to seek
|
||
the Well at the World's End, and took with them Alice of Queenhough,
|
||
whom Simon loved as well as might be, and Wat somewhat more than well.
|
||
Mindest thou not? There are more than I alive that remember it.'
|
||
|
||
"'Yea,' said I, 'I remember it well.'
|
||
|
||
"For indeed, foster-son, these were the very three of whom I told thee,
|
||
though I told thee not their names.
|
||
|
||
"'Well,' said I; 'how sped they? Came they back, or any of them?'
|
||
'Nay,' she said, 'that were scarce to be looked for.' Said I:
|
||
'Have any other to thy knowledge gone on this said quest?'
|
||
|
||
"'Yea,' she said, 'I will tell thee all about it, and then there will be
|
||
an end of the story, for none knoweth better thereof than I. First there
|
||
was that old man, the wizard, to whom folk from Swevenham and other places
|
||
about were used to seek for his lore in hidden matters; and some months
|
||
after those three had departed, folk who went to his abode amongst
|
||
the mountains found him not; and soon the word was about that he also,
|
||
for as feeble as he was, had gone to seek the Well at the World's End;
|
||
though may-happen it was not so. Then the next spring after thy departure,
|
||
Richard, comes home Arnold Wright from the wars, and asks after Alice;
|
||
and when he heard what had befallen, he takes a scrip with a little meat
|
||
for the road, lays his spear on his shoulder, and is gone seeking the lost,
|
||
and the thing which they found not--that, I deem, was the end of him.
|
||
Again the year after that, as I deem, three of our carles fell in with two
|
||
knights riding east from Whitwall, and were questioned of them concerning
|
||
the road to the said Well, and doubted not but that they were on that quest.
|
||
Furthermore (and some of you wot this well enough, and more belike know
|
||
it not) two of our young men were faring by night and cloud on some errand,
|
||
good or bad, it matters not, on the highway thirty miles east of Whitwall:
|
||
it was after harvest, and the stubble-fields lay on either side of the way,
|
||
and the moon was behind thin clouds, so that it was light on the way,
|
||
as they told me; and they saw a woman wending before them afoot, and as they
|
||
came up with her, the moon ran out, and they saw that the woman was fair,
|
||
and that about her neck was a chaplet of gems that shone in the moon,
|
||
and they had a longing both for the jewel and the woman: but before they
|
||
laid hand on her they asked her of whence and whither, and she said:
|
||
From ruin and wrack to the Well at the World's End, and therewith turned
|
||
on them with a naked sword in her hand; so that they shrank from before her.
|
||
|
||
"'Hearken once more: the next year came a knight to Swevenham,
|
||
and guested in this same house, and he sat just where sitteth now yon
|
||
yellow-headed swain, and the talk went on the same road as it hath
|
||
gone to-night; and I told him all the tale as I have said it e'en now;
|
||
and he asked many questions, but most of the Lady with the pair of beads.
|
||
And on the morrow he departed and we saw him not again.
|
||
|
||
"Then she was silent, but the young man at whom she had pointed
|
||
Hushed red and stared at her wide-eyed, but said no word.
|
||
But I spake: 'Well dame, but have none else gone from Swevenham,
|
||
or what hath befallen them?'
|
||
|
||
"She said: 'Hearken yet! Twenty years agone a great sickness lay
|
||
heavy upon us and the folk of Whitwall, and when it was at its worst,
|
||
five of our young men, calling to mind all the tales concerning
|
||
the Well at the World's End, went their ways to seek it, and swore
|
||
that back would they never, save they found it and could bear its
|
||
water to the folk of Swevenham; and I suppose they kept their oath;
|
||
for we saw naught either of the water or of them. Well, I deem that this
|
||
is the last that I have to tell thee, Richard, concerning this matter:
|
||
and now is come the time for thee to tell tales of thyself.'
|
||
|
||
"Thus for that time dropped the talk of the Well at the World's End,
|
||
Lord Ralph, and of the way thither. But I hung about the township
|
||
yet a while, and yesterday as I stood on their stone bridge,
|
||
and looked on the water, up comes that long lad with the
|
||
yellow hair that the dame had pointed at, and says to me:
|
||
'Master Richard, saving thine age and thy dignity and mastery,
|
||
I can join an end to the tale which the carline began on
|
||
Sunday night.' 'Yea, forsooth?' said I, and how, my lad?'
|
||
Said he: 'Thou hast a goodly knife there in thy girdle,
|
||
give it to me, and I will tell thee.' 'Yea,' quoth I,
|
||
'if thy tale be knife-worthy.'
|
||
|
||
"Well, the end of it was that he told me thus:
|
||
That by night and moon he came on one riding the highway,
|
||
just about where the other woman had been seen, whose tale
|
||
he had heard of. He deemed at first this rider to be a man,
|
||
or a lad rather for smallness and slenderness, but coming close
|
||
up he found it was a woman, and saw on her neck a chaplet
|
||
of gems, and deemed it no great feat to take it of her:
|
||
but he asked her of whence and whither, and she answered:
|
||
|
||
"'From unrest to the Well at the World's End.'
|
||
|
||
"Then when he put out his hand to her, he saw a great anlace gleaming
|
||
in her hand, wherefore he forbore her; and this was but five days ago.
|
||
|
||
"So I gave the lad my knife, and deemed there would be little else
|
||
to hear in Swevenham for this bout; and at least I heard no more tales
|
||
to tell till I came away this morning; so there is my poke turned
|
||
inside out for thee. But this word further would I say to thee,
|
||
that I have seen on thy neck also a pair of beads exceeding goodly.
|
||
Tell me now whence came they."
|
||
|
||
"From my gossip, dame Katherine," said Ralph; "and it seems
|
||
to me now, though at the time I heeded the gift little save for
|
||
its kindness, that she thought something great might go with it;
|
||
and there was a monk at Higham on the Way, who sorely longed
|
||
to have it of me." "Well," said Richard, "that may well come
|
||
to pass, that it shall lead thee to the Well at the World's End.
|
||
But as to the tales of Swevenham, what deemest thou of them?"
|
||
Said Ralph: "What are they, save a token that folk
|
||
believe that there is such a thing on earth as the Well?
|
||
Yet I have made up my mind already that I would so do
|
||
as if I trowed in it. So I am no nearer to it than erst.
|
||
Now is there naught for it save to abide Master Clement's coming;
|
||
and when he hath brought me to Goldburg, then shall I see
|
||
how the quest looks by the daylight of that same city."
|
||
He spake so cheerfully that Richard looked at him askance,
|
||
wondering what was toward with him, and if mayhappen anything
|
||
lay underneath those words of his.
|
||
|
||
But in his heart Ralph was thinking of that last tale of the woman
|
||
whom the young man had met such a little while ago; and it seemed
|
||
to him that she must have been in Whitwall when he first came there;
|
||
and he scarce knew whether he were sorry or not that he had missed her:
|
||
for though it seemed to him that it would be little more than mere grief
|
||
and pain, nay, that it would be wicked and evil to be led to the Well at
|
||
the World's End by any other than her who was to have brought him there;
|
||
yet he longed, or thought he longed to speak with her concerning
|
||
that love of his heart, so early rewarded, so speedily beggared.
|
||
For indeed he doubted not that the said woman was the damsel of Bourton Abbas,
|
||
whose image had named herself Dorothea to him in that dream.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 17
|
||
|
||
Richard Bringeth Tidings of Departing
|
||
|
||
|
||
Fell the talk between them at that time, and three days wore, and on
|
||
the morning of the fourth day came Richard to Ralph, and said to him:
|
||
"Foster-son, I am sorry for the word I must say, but Clement Chapman
|
||
came within the gates this morning early, and the company with which
|
||
he is riding are alboun for the road, and will depart at noon to-day,
|
||
so that there are but four hours wherein we twain may be together;
|
||
and thereafter whatso may betide thee, it may well be, that I shall see
|
||
thy face no more; so what thou wilt tell me must be told straightway.
|
||
And now I will say this to thee, that of all things I were fain to ride
|
||
with thee, but I may not, because it is Blaise whom I am bound to serve
|
||
in all ways. And I deem, moreover, that troublous times may be at
|
||
hand here in Whitwall. For there is an Earl hight Walter the Black,
|
||
a fair young man outwardly, but false at heart and a tyrant, and he had
|
||
some occasion against the good town, and it was looked for that he should
|
||
send his herald here to defy the Port more than a half moon ago;
|
||
but about that time he was hurt in a fray as we hear, and may not back
|
||
a horse in battle yet. Albeit, fristed is not forgotten, as saith
|
||
the saw; and when he is whole again, we may look for him at our gates;
|
||
and whereas Blaise knows me for a deft man-at-arms or something more,
|
||
it is not to be looked for that he will give me to thee for this quest.
|
||
Nay, of thee also it will be looked for that thou shouldest do knightly
|
||
service to the Port, and even so Blaise means it to be; therefore have I
|
||
lied to him on thy behalf, and bidden Clement also to lie (which forsooth
|
||
he may do better than I, since he wotteth not wholly whither thou art
|
||
minded), and I have said thou wouldst go with Clement no further than
|
||
Cheaping Knowe, which lieth close to the further side of these mountains,
|
||
and will be back again in somewhat more than a half-moon's wearing.
|
||
So now thou art warned hereof."
|
||
|
||
Ralph was moved by these words of Richard, and he spake:
|
||
"Forsooth, old friend, I am sorry to depart from thee;
|
||
yet though I shall presently be all alone amongst aliens,
|
||
yet now is manhood rising again in me. So for that cause
|
||
at least shall I be glad to be on the way; and as a token
|
||
that I am more whole than I was, I will now tell thee the tale
|
||
of my grief, if thou wilt hearken to it, which the other day
|
||
I might not tell thee."
|
||
|
||
"I will hearken it gladly," said Richard. And therewith they sat
|
||
down in a window, for they were within doors in the hostel, and Ralph
|
||
told all that had befallen him as plainly and shortly as he might;
|
||
and when he had done, Richard said:
|
||
|
||
"Thou has had much adventure in a short space, lord, and if thou mightest
|
||
now refrain thy longing for that which is gone, and set it on that which is
|
||
to come, thou mayest yet harden into a famous knight and a happy man."
|
||
Said Ralph: "Yea? now tell me all thy thought."
|
||
|
||
Said Richard: "My thought is that this lady who was slain,
|
||
was scarce wholly of the race of Adam; but that at the least
|
||
there was some blending in her of the blood of the fays.
|
||
Or how deemest thou?"
|
||
|
||
"I wot not," said Ralph sadly; "to me she seemed but a woman,
|
||
though she were fairer and wiser than other women." Said Richard:
|
||
"Well, furthermore, if I heard thee aright, there is another woman
|
||
in the tale who is also fairer and wiser than other women?"
|
||
|
||
"I would she were my sister!" said Ralph. "Yea," quoth Richard, "and dost
|
||
thou bear in mind what she was like? I mean the fashion of her body."
|
||
"Yea, verily," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Again said Richard: "Doth it seem to thee as if the Lady of the Dry
|
||
Tree had some inkling that thou shouldst happen upon this other woman:
|
||
whereas she showed her of the road to the Well at the World's End, and gave
|
||
her that pair of beads, and meant that thou also shouldest go thither?
|
||
And thou sayest that she praised her,--her beauty and wisdom.
|
||
In what wise did she praise her? how came the words forth from her?
|
||
was it sweetly?"
|
||
|
||
"Like honey and roses for sweetness," said Ralph.
|
||
"Yea," said Richard, "and she might have praised her in such
|
||
wise that the words had came forth like gall and vinegar.
|
||
Now I will tell thee of my thought, since we be at point
|
||
of sundering, though thou take it amiss and be wroth with me:
|
||
to wit, that thou wouldst have lost the love of this lady as time wore,
|
||
even had she not been slain: and she being, if no fay, yet wiser
|
||
than other women, and foreseeing, knew that so it would be."
|
||
Ralph brake in: "Nay, nay, it is not so, it is not so!"
|
||
"Hearken, youngling!" quoth Richard; "I deem that it was thus.
|
||
Her love for thee was so kind that she would have thee happy
|
||
after the sundering: therefore she was minded that thou shouldest
|
||
find the damsel, who as I deem loveth thee, and that thou
|
||
shouldest love her truly."
|
||
|
||
"O nay, nay!" said Ralph, "all this guess of thine is naught, saying that she
|
||
was kind indeed. Even as heaven is kind to them who have died martyrs,
|
||
and enter into its bliss after many torments."
|
||
|
||
And therewith he fell a-weeping at the very thought of her great kindness:
|
||
for indeed to this young man she had seemed great, and exalted far above him.
|
||
|
||
Richard looked at him a while; and then said: "Now, I pray
|
||
thee be not wroth with me for the word I have spoken.
|
||
But something more shall I say, which shall like thee better.
|
||
To wit, when I came back from Swevenham on Wednesday I deemed
|
||
it most like that the Well at the World's End was a tale,
|
||
a coloured cloud only; or that at most if it were indeed
|
||
on the earth, that thou shouldest never find it.
|
||
But now is my mind changed by the hearing of thy tale,
|
||
and I deem both that the Well verily is, and that thou thyself
|
||
shalt find it; and that the wise Lady knew this, and set
|
||
the greater store by thy youth and goodliness, as a richer
|
||
and more glorious gift than it had been, were it as fleeting
|
||
as such things mostly be. Now of this matter will I say no more;
|
||
but I think that the words that I have said, and which now seem
|
||
so vain to thee, shall come into thy mind on some later day,
|
||
and avail thee somewhat; and that is why I have spoken them.
|
||
But this again is another word, that I have got a right
|
||
good horse for thee, and other gear, such as thou mayest
|
||
need for the road, and that Clement's fellowship will meet
|
||
in Petergate hard by the church, and I will be thy squire
|
||
till thou comest thither, and ridest thence out a-gates.
|
||
Now I suppose that thou will want to bid Blaise farewell:
|
||
yet thou must look to it that he will not deem thy farewell
|
||
of great moment, since he swimmeth in florins and goodly wares;
|
||
and moreover deemeth that thou wilt soon be back here."
|
||
|
||
"Nevertheless," said Ralph, "I must needs cast my arms about my own
|
||
mother's son before I depart: so go we now, as all this talk hath
|
||
worn away more than an hour of those four that were left me."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 18
|
||
|
||
Ralph Departeth From Whitwall With the Fellowship of Clement Chapman
|
||
|
||
|
||
Therewithal they went together to Blaise's house, and when Blaise
|
||
saw them, he said: "Well, Ralph, so thou must needs work
|
||
at a little more idling before thou fallest to in earnest.
|
||
Forsooth I deem that when thou comest back thou wilt find that we
|
||
have cut thee out a goodly piece of work for thy sewing.
|
||
For the good town is gathering a gallant host of men; and we shall
|
||
look to thee to do well in the hard hand-play, whenso that befalleth.
|
||
But now come and look at my house within, how fair it is,
|
||
and thou wilt see that thou wilt have somewhat to fight for,
|
||
whereas I am."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he led them up a stair into the great chamber, which was
|
||
all newly dight and hung with rich arras of the Story of Hercules;
|
||
and there was a goodly cupboard of silver vessel, and some gold,
|
||
and the cupboard was of five shelves as was but meet for a king's son.
|
||
So Ralph praised all, but was wishful to depart, for his heart was sore,
|
||
and he blamed himself in a manner that he must needs lie to his brother.
|
||
|
||
But Blaise brought them to the upper chamber, and showed them the goodly
|
||
beds with their cloths, and hangings, and all was as fair as might be.
|
||
Then Blaise bade bring wine and made them drink; and he gave Ralph
|
||
a purse of gold, and an anlace very fair of fashion, and brought
|
||
him to the door thereafter; and Ralph cast his arms about him,
|
||
and kissed him and strained him to his breast. But Blaise was somewhat
|
||
moved thereat, and said to him: "Why lad, thou art sorry to depart
|
||
from me for a little while, and what would it be, were it for long?
|
||
But ever wert thou a kind and tender-hearted youngling, and we twain
|
||
are alone in an alien land. Forsooth, I wot that thou hast, as it were,
|
||
embraced the Upmeads kindred, father, mother and all; and good is that!
|
||
So now God and the Saints keep thee, and bear in mind the hosting of the
|
||
good town, and the raising of the banner, that shall be no great while.
|
||
Fare thee well, lad!"
|
||
|
||
So they parted, and Ralph went back to the hostel, and gathered
|
||
his stuff together, and laid it on a sumpter horse, and armed him,
|
||
and so went into Petergate to join himself to that company.
|
||
There he found the chapmen, five of them in all, and their lads,
|
||
and a score of men-at-arms, with whom was Clement, not clad
|
||
like a merchant, but weaponed, and bearing a coat of proof
|
||
and a bright sallet on his head.
|
||
|
||
They greeted each the other, and Ralph said: "Yea, master Clement,
|
||
and be we riding to battle?" "Maybe," quoth Clement;
|
||
"the way is long, and our goods worth the lifting, and there
|
||
are some rough places that we must needs pass through.
|
||
But if ye like not the journey, abide here in this town
|
||
the onset of Walter the Black."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he laughed, and Ralph understanding the jape, laughed also;
|
||
and said: "Well, master Clement, but tell me who be these that we
|
||
shall meet." "Yea, and I will tell thee the whole tale of them,"
|
||
said Clement, "but abide till we are without the gates; I am busy
|
||
man e'en now, for all is ready for the road, save what I must do.
|
||
So now bid thy Upmeads squire farewell, and then to horse with thee!"
|
||
|
||
So Ralph cast his arms about Richard, and kissed him and said:
|
||
"This is also a farewell to the House where I was born and bred."
|
||
And as he spake the thought of the House and the garden, and the
|
||
pleasant fields of Upmeads came into his heart so bitter-sweet,
|
||
that it mingled with his sorrow, and well-nigh made him weep.
|
||
But as for Richard he forebore words, for he was sad at heart
|
||
for the sundering.
|
||
|
||
Then he gat to horse, and the whole company of them bestirred them,
|
||
and they rode out a-gates. And master Clement it was that ordered them,
|
||
riding up and down along the array.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph fell to speech with the chapmen and men-at-arms;
|
||
and both of these were very courteous with him; for they rejoiced
|
||
in his company, and especially the chapmen, who were somewhat
|
||
timorous of the perils of the road.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 19
|
||
|
||
Master Clement Tells Ralph Concerning the Lands Whereunto They Were Riding
|
||
|
||
|
||
When they were gotten a mile or two from Whitwall,
|
||
and all was going smoothly, Clement came up to Ralph and rode
|
||
at his left hand, and fell to speech with him, and said:
|
||
"Now, lord, will I tell thee more concerning our journey,
|
||
and the folk that we are like to meet upon the road.
|
||
And of the perils, whatso they may be, I told thee not before,
|
||
because I knew thee desirous of seeking adventures east-away,
|
||
and knew that my tales would not hinder thee."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and had not this goodly fellowship been, I had gone alone,
|
||
or with any carle that I could have lightly hired."
|
||
|
||
Clement laughed and said: "Fair sir, thou wouldst have failed
|
||
of hiring any one man to go with thee east-ward a many miles.
|
||
For with less than a score of men well-armed the danger of death
|
||
or captivity is over great, if ye ride the mountain ways unto
|
||
Cheaping Knowe. Yea, and even if a poor man who hath nothing,
|
||
wend that way alone, he may well fall among thieves, and be stolen
|
||
himself body and bones, for lack of anything better to steal."
|
||
|
||
Hereat Ralph felt his heart rise, when he thought of battle and strife,
|
||
and he made his horse to spring somewhat, and then he said:
|
||
"It liketh me well, dear friend, that I ride not with thee for naught,
|
||
but that I may earn my daily bread like another."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Clement, looking on him kindly, "I deem of all thy
|
||
brethren thou hast the biggest share of the blood of Red Robert,
|
||
who first won Upmeads. And now thou shalt know that this good town
|
||
of Whitwall that lieth behind us is the last of the lands we shall
|
||
come to wherein folk can any courtesy, or are ruled by the customs of
|
||
the manor, or by due lawful Earls and Kings, or the laws of the Lineage
|
||
or the Port, or have any Guilds for their guiding, and helping.
|
||
And though these folks whereunto we shall come, are, some of them,
|
||
Christian men by name, and have amongst them priests and religious;
|
||
yet are they wild men of manners, and many heathen customs abide
|
||
amongst them; as swearing on the altars of devils, and eating
|
||
horse-flesh at the High-tides, and spell-raising more than enough,
|
||
and such like things, even to the reddening of the doom-rings with
|
||
the blood of men and of women, yea, and of babes: from such things
|
||
their priests cannot withhold them. As for their towns that we
|
||
shall come to, I say not but we shall find crafts amongst them,
|
||
and worthy good men therein, but they have little might against
|
||
the tyrants who reign over the towns, and who are of no great kindred,
|
||
nor of blood better than other folk, but merely masterful and wise
|
||
men who have gained their place by cunning and the high hand.
|
||
Thou shalt see castles and fair strong-houses about the country-side,
|
||
but the great men who dwell therein are not the natural kindly
|
||
lords of the land yielding service to Earls, Dukes, and Kings,
|
||
and having under them vavassors and villeins, men of the manor;
|
||
but their tillers and shepherds and workmen and servants be mere thralls,
|
||
whom they may sell at any market, like their horses or oxen.
|
||
Forsooth these great men have with them for the more part free men
|
||
waged for their service, who will not hold their hands from aught that
|
||
their master biddeth, not staying to ask if it be lawful or unlawful.
|
||
And that the more because whoso is a free man there, house and head
|
||
must he hold on the tenure of bow and sword, and his life is like to
|
||
be short if he hath not sworn himself to the service of some tyrant
|
||
of a castle or a town."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, master Clement," said Ralph, "these be no peaceful lands
|
||
whereto thou art bringing us, or very pleasant to dwell in."
|
||
|
||
"Little for peace, but much for profit," said Clement;
|
||
"for these lands be fruitful of wine and oil and wheat, and neat
|
||
and sheep; withal metals and gems are dug up out of the mountains;
|
||
and on the other hand, they make but little by craftsmanship,
|
||
wherefore are they the eagerer for chaffer with us merchants;
|
||
whereas also there are many of them well able to pay for what
|
||
they lack, if not in money, then in kind, which in a way is better.
|
||
Yea, it is a goodly land for merchants."
|
||
|
||
"But I am no merchant," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"So it is," said Clement, "yet thou desireth something;
|
||
and whither we are wending thou mayst hear tidings that shall
|
||
please thee, or tidings that shall please me. To say sooth,
|
||
these two may well be adverse to each other, for I would not have
|
||
thee hear so much of tidings as shall lead thee on, but rather I
|
||
would have thee return with me, and not throw thy young life away:
|
||
for indeed I have an inkling of what thou seekest, and meseems
|
||
that Death and the Devil shall be thy faring-fellows."
|
||
|
||
Ralph held his peace, and Clement said in a cheerfuller voice:
|
||
"Moreover, there shall be strange and goodly things to see;
|
||
and the men of these parts be mostly goodly of body, and the women
|
||
goodlier yet, as we carles deem."
|
||
|
||
Ralph sighed, and answered not at once, but presently he said:
|
||
"Master Clement, canst thou give me the order of our goings
|
||
for these next days?" "Yea, certes," said Clement.
|
||
"In three days' time we shall come to the entry of the mountains:
|
||
two days thence we shall go without coming under any roof
|
||
save the naked heavens; the day thereafter shall we come
|
||
to the Mid-Mountain House, which is as it were an hostelry;
|
||
but it was built and is upheld by the folks that dwell anigh,
|
||
amongst whom be the folk of Cheaping Knowe; and that house
|
||
is hallowed unto truce, and no man smiteth another therein;
|
||
so that we oft come on the mountain strong-thieves there, and there
|
||
we be blithe together and feast together in good fellowship.
|
||
But when there be foemen in that house together, each man or each
|
||
fellowship departing, hath grace of an hour before his foeman follow.
|
||
Such are the customs of that house, and no man breaketh them ever.
|
||
But when we depart thence we shall ride all day and sleep
|
||
amidst the mountains, and if we be not beset that night or
|
||
the morrow's morn thereof, safe and unfoughten shall we come
|
||
to Cheaping Knowe. Doth that suffice thee as at this time?"
|
||
"Yea master," quoth Ralph.
|
||
|
||
So therewith their talk dropped, for the moment; but Clement
|
||
talked much with Ralph that day, and honoured him much,
|
||
as did all that company.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 20
|
||
|
||
They Come to the Mid-Mountain Guest-House
|
||
|
||
|
||
On that night they slept in their tents which they had pitched
|
||
on the field of a little thorp beside a water; and there
|
||
they had meat and drink and all things as they needed them.
|
||
And in likewise it befell them the next day; but the third
|
||
evening they set up their tents on a little hillside by a road
|
||
which led into a deep pass, even the entry of the mountains,
|
||
a road which went betwixt exceeding high walls of rock.
|
||
For the mountain sides went up steep from the plain.
|
||
There they kept good watch and ward, and naught befell them
|
||
to tell of.
|
||
|
||
The next morning they entered the pass, and rode through it up to the heaths,
|
||
and rode all day by wild and stony ways and came at even to a grassy valley
|
||
watered by a little stream, where they guested, watching their camp well;
|
||
and again none meddled with them.
|
||
|
||
As they were departing the next morn Ralph asked of Clement
|
||
if he yet looked for onset from the waylayers. Said Clement:
|
||
"It is most like, lord; for we be a rich prey, and it is but seldom
|
||
that such a company rideth this road. And albeit that the wild
|
||
men know not to a day when we shall pass through their country,
|
||
yet they know the time within a four and twenty hours or so.
|
||
For we may not hide our journey from all men's hearing;
|
||
and when the ear heareth, the tongue waggeth. But art thou
|
||
yet anxious concerning this matter, son?" "Yea," said Ralph,
|
||
"for I would fain look on these miscreants."
|
||
|
||
"It is like that ye shall see them," said Clement; "but I
|
||
shall look on it as a token that they are about waylaying us
|
||
if we come on none of them in the Mountain House. For they
|
||
will be fearful lest their purpose leak out from unwary lips."
|
||
Ralph wondered how it would be, and what might come of it,
|
||
and rode on, pondering much.
|
||
|
||
The road was rough that day, and they went not above a foot-pace
|
||
the more part of the time; and daylong they were going up and up,
|
||
and it grew cold as the sun got low; though it was yet summer.
|
||
At last at the top of a long stony ridge, which lay beneath a great
|
||
spreading mountain, on the crest whereof the snow lay in plenty, Ralph saw
|
||
a house, long and low, builded of great stones, both walls and roof:
|
||
at sight thereof the men of the fellowship shouted for joy,
|
||
and hastened on, and Clement spurred up the stony slopes all he might.
|
||
But Ralph rode slowly, since he had naught to see to, save himself,
|
||
so that he was presently left alone. Now he looks aside, and sees
|
||
something bright-hued lying under a big stone where the last rays
|
||
of the sun just caught some corner of it. So he goes thither,
|
||
deeming that mayhappen one of the company had dropped something,
|
||
pouch or clout, or what not, in his haste and hurry. He got off
|
||
his horse to pick it up, and when he had laid hand on it found it
|
||
to be a hands-breadth of fine green cloth embroidered with flowers.
|
||
He held it in his hand a while wondering where he could have seen
|
||
such like stuff before, that it should smite a pang into his heart,
|
||
and suddenly called to mind the little hall at Bourton Abbas
|
||
with the oaken benches and the rush-strewn floor, and this same
|
||
flower-broidered green cloth dancing about the naked feet of a fair damsel,
|
||
as she moved nimbly hither and thither dighting him his bever.
|
||
But his thought stayed not there, but carried him into the days
|
||
when he was abiding in desire of the love that he won at last,
|
||
and lost so speedily. But as he stood pondering he heard
|
||
Clement shouting to him from the garth-gate of that house.
|
||
So he leapt on his horse and rode up the slope into the garth and lighted
|
||
down by Clement; who fell to chiding him for tarrying, and said:
|
||
"There is peril in loitering outside this garth alone; for those Sons
|
||
of the Rope often lurk hard by for what they may easily pick up,
|
||
and they be brisk and nimble lads." "What ailed thee?" said Ralph.
|
||
"I stayed to look at a flower which called Upmeads to my mind."
|
||
|
||
"Yea lad, yea," quoth Clement, "and art thou so soft as that?
|
||
But come thou into the House; it is as I deemed it might be;
|
||
besides the House-warden and his wife there is no soul therein.
|
||
Thou shalt yet look on Mick Hangman's sons, as thou desirest."
|
||
|
||
So they went into the House, and men had all that they might need.
|
||
The warden was an old hoar man, and his wife well-stricken in years;
|
||
and after supper was talk of this and that, and it fell much,
|
||
as was like to be, on those strong-thieves, and Clement asked
|
||
the warden what he had seen of them of late.
|
||
|
||
The old carle answered: "Nay, master Clement, much according to wont:
|
||
a few beeves driven into our garth; a pack or two brought into the hall;
|
||
and whiles one or two of them come in hither with empty hands for a sleep
|
||
and a bellyful; and again a captive led in on the road to the market.
|
||
Forsooth it is now a good few days ago three of them brought in a woman
|
||
as goodly as mine eyes have ever seen; and she sat on the bench yonder,
|
||
and seemed to heed little that she was a captive and had shackles on her
|
||
feet after the custom of these men, though indeed her hands were unbound,
|
||
so that she might eat her meat; and the carle thief told me that he took
|
||
her but a little way from the garth, and that she made a stout defence
|
||
with a sword before they might take her, but being taken, she made
|
||
but little of it."
|
||
|
||
"Would he do her any hurt?" said Ralph. "Nay, surely," said the carle;
|
||
"doth a man make a hole in a piece of cloth which he is taking to market?
|
||
Nay, he was courteous to her after his fashion, and bade us give her the best
|
||
of all we had."
|
||
|
||
"What like was she?" said Ralph. Said the carle:
|
||
"She was somewhat tall, if I am to note such matters,
|
||
grey-eyed and brown haired, and great abundance of it.
|
||
Her lips very red; her cheeks tanned with the sun, but in such
|
||
wise that her own white and red shone through the sun's painting,
|
||
so that her face was as sweet as the best wheat-ear in a ten-acre
|
||
field when the season hath been good. Her hands were not like
|
||
those of a demoiselle who sitteth in a chamber to be looked at,
|
||
but brown as of one who hath borne the sickle in the sun.
|
||
But when she stretched out her hand so that the wrist of her
|
||
came forth from her sleeve it was as white as milk."
|
||
|
||
"Well, my man," said the carline, "thou hast a good memory for an old
|
||
and outworn carle. Why dost thou not tell the young knight what she
|
||
was clad withal; since save for their raiment all women of an age
|
||
are much alike?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay, do thou do it," said the carle; "she was even as fair as I have said;
|
||
so that there be few like her."
|
||
|
||
Said the dame: "Well, there is naught so much to be said for her raiment:
|
||
her gown was green, of fine cloth enough; but not very new:
|
||
welts of needle-work it had on it, and a wreath of needle-work flowers
|
||
round the hem of the skirt; but a cantle was torn off from it;
|
||
in the scuffle when she was taken, I suppose, so that it was somewhat
|
||
ragged in one place. Furthermore--"
|
||
|
||
She had been looking at Ralph as she spoke, and now she
|
||
broke off suddenly, and said, still looking at him hard;
|
||
"Well, it is strange!" "What is strange?" said Clement.
|
||
"O naught, naught," said the dame, "save that folk should make
|
||
so much to do about this matter, when there are so many coming
|
||
and going about the Midhouse of the Mountains."
|
||
|
||
But Ralph noted that she was still staring at him even after she
|
||
had let the talk drop.
|
||
|
||
Waned the even, and folk began to go bedward, so that the hall
|
||
grew thin of guests. Then came up the carline to Ralph and
|
||
took him aside into a nook, and said to him: "Young knight,
|
||
now will I tell thee what seemed to me strange e'en now;
|
||
to wit, that the captive damsel should be bearing a necklace
|
||
about her neck as like to thine as one lamb is to another:
|
||
but I thought thou mightest be liever that I spake it not openly
|
||
before all the other folk. So I held my peace."
|
||
|
||
"Dame," said he, "I thank thee: forsooth I fear sorely that this
|
||
damsel is my sister; for ever we have worn the samelike pair of beads.
|
||
And as for me I have come hither to find her, and evil will it be if I
|
||
find her enthralled, and it may be past redemption."
|
||
|
||
And therewith he gave her a piece of the gold money of Upmeads.
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said she, "poor youth; that will be sooth indeed,
|
||
for thou art somewhat like unto her, yet far goodlier.
|
||
But I grieve for thee, and know not what thou wilt do;
|
||
whereas by this time most like she has been sold and bought
|
||
and is dwelling in some lord's strong-house; some tyrant that
|
||
needeth not money, and will not let his prey go for a prayer.
|
||
Here, take thou thy gold again, for thou mayst well need it,
|
||
and let me shear a lock of thy golden hair, and I shall
|
||
be well apaid for my keeping silence concerning thy love.
|
||
For I deem that it is even so, and that she is not thy sister,
|
||
else hadst thou stayed at home, and prayed for her with book
|
||
and priest and altar, and not gone seeking her a weary way."
|
||
|
||
Ralph reddened but said naught, and let her put scizzors
|
||
amongst his curly locks, and take what of them she would.
|
||
And then he went to his bed, and pondered these matters somewhat,
|
||
and said to himself that it was by this damsel's means
|
||
that he should find the Well at the World's End.
|
||
Yet he said also, that, whether it were so or not,
|
||
he was bound to seek her, and deliver her from thralldom,
|
||
since he had kissed her so sweet and friendly, like a brother,
|
||
for the sweetness and kindness of her, before he had fallen
|
||
into the love that had brought him such joy and such grief.
|
||
And therewith he took out that piece of her gown from his pouch,
|
||
and it seemed dear to him. But it made him think sadly
|
||
of what grief or pain she might even then be bearing, so that
|
||
he longed to deliver her, and that longing was sweet to him.
|
||
In such thoughts he fell asleep.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 21
|
||
|
||
A Battle in the Mountains
|
||
|
||
|
||
When it was morning they arose early and ate a morsel; and Clement gave
|
||
freely to the Warden and his helpmate on behalf of the fellowship;
|
||
and then they saddled their nags, and did on the loads and departed;
|
||
and the way was evil otherwise, but it was down hill, and all
|
||
waters ran east.
|
||
|
||
All day they rode, and at even when the sun had not quite set,
|
||
they pitched their camp at the foot of a round knoll amidst
|
||
a valley where was water and grass; and looking down thence,
|
||
they had a sight of the fruitful plain, wherein lay Cheaping
|
||
Knowe all goodly blue in the distance.
|
||
|
||
This was a fair place and a lovely, and great ease would they
|
||
have had there, were it not that they must keep watch and ward
|
||
with more pains than theretofore; for Clement deemed it as good
|
||
as certain that the wild men would fall upon them that night.
|
||
|
||
But all was peaceful the night through, and in the morning they gat
|
||
to the way speedily, riding with their armour on, and their bows bent:
|
||
and three of the men-at-arms rode ahead to espy the way.
|
||
|
||
So it befell that they had not ridden two hours ere back came
|
||
the fore-riders with the tidings that the pass next below them
|
||
was thick with the Strong-thieves.
|
||
|
||
The fellowship were as then in such a place, that they were riding a high
|
||
bare ridge, and could not be assailed to the advantage of the thieves if they
|
||
abode where they were; whereas if they went forward, they must needs go
|
||
down with the road into the dale that was beset by the wild men. Now they
|
||
were three-score and two all told, but of these but a score of men-at-arms
|
||
besides Ralph, and Clement, who was a stout fighter when need was.
|
||
Of the others, some were but lads, and of the Chapmen were three old men,
|
||
and more than one blencher besides. However, all men were armed, and they
|
||
had many bows, and some of the chapmen's knaves were fell archers.
|
||
|
||
So they took counsel together, and to some it seemed
|
||
better to abide the onset on their vantage ground.
|
||
But to Clement and the older men-at-arms this seemed of no avail.
|
||
For though they could see the plain country down below,
|
||
they would have no succour of it; and Clement bade them think
|
||
how the night would come at last, and that the longer they abode,
|
||
the greater would be the gathering of the Strong-thieves;
|
||
so that, all things considered, it were better to fall
|
||
on at once and to try the adventure of the valley.
|
||
And this after some talk they yea-said all, save a few who held
|
||
their skins so dear that their wits wandered somewhat.
|
||
|
||
So these timorous ones they bade guard the sumpter beasts and their loads;
|
||
and even so they did, and abode a little, while the men-at-arms and the bowmen
|
||
went forward without more ado; and Ralph rode betwixt Clement and the captain
|
||
of the men-at-arms.
|
||
|
||
Presently they were come close to the place where the way went
|
||
down into the valley, cleaving through a clayey bent, so that
|
||
the slippery sides of the cleft went up high to right and left;
|
||
wherefore by goodhap there were no big stones anigh to roll
|
||
down upon them. Moreover the way was short, and they rode six
|
||
abreast down the pass and were soon through the hollow way.
|
||
As he rode Ralph saw a few of the Strong-thieves at
|
||
the nether end where the pass widened out, and they let fly
|
||
some arrows at the chapmen which did no hurt, though some
|
||
of the shafts rattled on the armour of the companions.
|
||
But when Clement saw that folk, and heard the noise of their
|
||
shouting he lifted up a great axe that he bore and cried,
|
||
"St. Agnes for the Mercers!" and set spurs to his horse.
|
||
So did they all, and came clattering and shouting down the steep
|
||
road like a stone out of a sling, and drave right into
|
||
the valley one and all, the wouldbe laggards following after;
|
||
for they were afraid to be left behind.
|
||
|
||
The wild men, who, save for wide shields which they bore,
|
||
were but evilly armed, mostly in skins of beasts, made no
|
||
countenance of defence, but fled all they might towards the steep
|
||
slopes of the valley, and then turned and fell to shooting;
|
||
for the companions durst not pursue in haste lest they should
|
||
be scattered, and overwhelmed by the multitude of foemen;
|
||
but they drew up along the south side of the valley,
|
||
and had the mastery of the road, so that this first bout
|
||
was without blood-shedding. Albeit the thieves still shot
|
||
in their weak bows from the hill-side, but scarce hurt a man.
|
||
Then the bowmen of the fellowship fell to shooting at
|
||
the wild men, while the men-at-arms breathed their horses,
|
||
and the sumpter-beasts were gathered together behind them;
|
||
for they had no dread of abiding there a while, whereas behind
|
||
them the ground was broken into a steep shaly cliff, bushed here
|
||
and there with tough bushes, so that no man could come up it
|
||
save by climbing with hand and knee, and that not easily.
|
||
|
||
Now when the archers had shot a good while, and some of the thieves had
|
||
fallen before them, and men were in good heart because of the flight of the
|
||
wild men, Ralph, seeing that these still hung about the slopes, cried out:
|
||
"Master Clement, and thou Captain, sure it will be ill-done to leave these
|
||
men unbroken behind us, lest they follow us and hang about our hindermost,
|
||
slaying us both men and horses."
|
||
|
||
"Even so," quoth the captain, who was a man of few words, "let us go.
|
||
But do thou, Clement, abide by the stuff with the lads and bowmen."
|
||
|
||
Then he cried out aloud: "St. Christopher to aid!" and shook his rein,
|
||
and all they who were clad in armour and well mounted spurred
|
||
on with him against the strong-thieves. But these, when they saw
|
||
the onset of the horsemen, but drew a little up the hill-side
|
||
and stood fast, and some of the horses were hurt by their shot.
|
||
So the captain bade draw rein and off horse, while Clement led his
|
||
bowmen nigher, and they shot well together, and hindered the thieves
|
||
from closing round the men-at-arms, or falling on the horses.
|
||
So then the companions went forward stoutly on foot, and entered
|
||
into the battle of the thieves, and there was the thrusting
|
||
and the hewing great: for the foemen bore axes, and malls,
|
||
and spears, and were little afraid, having the vantage-ground;
|
||
and they were lithe and strong men, though not tall.
|
||
|
||
Ralph played manfully, and was hurt by a spear above the knee,
|
||
but not grievously; so he heeded it not, but cleared a space all about
|
||
him with great strokes of the Upmeads' blade; then as the wild men
|
||
gave back there was one of them who stood his ground and let drive
|
||
a stroke of a long-handled hammer at him, but Ralph ran in under
|
||
the stroke and caught him by the throat and drew him out of the press.
|
||
And even therewith the wild men broke up before the onset of
|
||
the all-armed carles, and fled up the hill, and the men-at-arms
|
||
followed them but a little, for their armour made them unspeedy;
|
||
so that they took no more of those men, though they slew some,
|
||
but turned about and gathered round Ralph and made merry over
|
||
his catch, for they were joyous with the happy end of battle;
|
||
and Clement, who had left his bowmen when the Companions were
|
||
mingled with the wild-men, was there amidst the nighest.
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph to him: "Well, have I got me a servant and thrall good cheap?"
|
||
"Yea," said Clement, "if thou deem a polecat a likely hound."
|
||
Said the Captain: "Put thy sword through him, knight." Quoth another:
|
||
"Let him run up hill, and our bowmen shall shoot a match at him."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "they have done well with their shooting, let them rest.
|
||
As to my thrusting my sword through the man, Captain, I had done that before,
|
||
had I been so minded. At any rate, I will ask him if he will serve me truly.
|
||
Otherwise he seemeth a strong carle and a handy. How sayest thou, lad, did I
|
||
take thee fairly?" "Yea," said the man, "thou art a strong lad."
|
||
|
||
He seemed to fear the swords about him but little, and forsooth he was
|
||
a warrior-like man, and not ill-looking. He was of middle height,
|
||
strong and well-knit, with black hair like a beast's mane for shagginess,
|
||
and bright blue eyes. He was clad in a short coat of grey homespun,
|
||
with an ox-skin habergeon laced up over it; he had neither helm nor hat,
|
||
nor shoes, but hosen made of a woollen clout tied about his legs;
|
||
his shield of wood and ox-hide lay on the ground a few paces off,
|
||
and his hammer beside it, which he had dropped when Ralph first handled him,
|
||
but a great ugly knife was still girt to him.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph saith to him: "Which wilt thou--be slain, or serve me?"
|
||
Said the carle, grinning, yet not foully: "Guess if I would
|
||
not rather serve thee!" "Wilt thou serve me truly?" said Ralph.
|
||
"Why not?" quoth the carle: "yet I warn thee that if thou beat me,
|
||
save in hot blood, I shall put a knife into thee when I may."
|
||
|
||
"O," said one, "thrust him through now at once, lord Ralph."
|
||
"Nay, I will not," said Ralph; "he hath warned me fairly.
|
||
Maybe he will serve me truly. Master Clement, wilt thou
|
||
lend me a horse for my man to ride?" "Yea," said Clement;
|
||
"yet I misdoubt me of thy new squire." Then he turned
|
||
to the men-at-arms and said: "No tarrying, my masters!
|
||
To horse and away before they gather gain!"
|
||
|
||
So they mounted and rode away from that valley of the pass, and Ralph
|
||
made his man ride beside him. But the man said to him, as soon as they
|
||
were riding: "Take note that I will not fight against my kindred."
|
||
"None biddeth thee so," said Ralph; "but do thou take heed that if
|
||
thou fight against us I will slay thee outright." Said the man:
|
||
"A fair bargain!" "Well," said Ralph, "I will have thy knife of thee,
|
||
lest it tempt thee, as is the wont of cold iron, and a maiden's body."
|
||
"Nay, master," quoth the man, "leave me my knife, as thou art a good fellow.
|
||
In two hours time we shall be past all peril of my people, and when we
|
||
come down below I will slay thee as many as thou wilt, so it be out
|
||
of the kindred. Forsooth down there evil they be, and unkinsome."
|
||
|
||
"So be it, lad," said Ralph, laughing, "keep thy knife; but hang
|
||
this word of mine thereon, that if thou slay any man of this
|
||
fellowship save me, I will rather flay thee alive than slay thee."
|
||
Quoth the carle: "That is the bargain, then, and I yeasay it."
|
||
"Good," said Ralph; "now tell me thy name." "Bull Shockhead,"
|
||
said the carle.
|
||
|
||
But now the fellowship took to riding so fast down the slopes of the
|
||
mountains on a far better road, that talking together was not easy.
|
||
They kept good watch, both behind and ahead, nor were they set upon again,
|
||
though whiles they saw clumps of men on the hill-sides.
|
||
|
||
So after a while, when it was a little past noon, they came adown to the lower
|
||
slopes of the mountains and the foot-hills, which were green and unstony;
|
||
and thereon were to be seen cattle and neatherds and shepherds, and here
|
||
and there the garth of a homestead, and fenced acres about it.
|
||
|
||
So now that they were come down into the peopled parts,
|
||
they displayed the banners of their fellowships, to wit, the Agnes,
|
||
the White Fleece, the Christopher, and the Ship and Nicholas,
|
||
which last was the banner of the Faring-knights of Whitwall;
|
||
but Ralph was glad to ride under the banner of St. Nicholas,
|
||
his friend, and deemed that luck might the rather come to him thereby.
|
||
But they displayed their banners now, because they knew that no man
|
||
of the peopled parts would be so hardy as to fall upon the Chapmen,
|
||
of whom they looked to have many matters for their use and pleasure.
|
||
|
||
So now that they felt themselves safe, they stayed them, and sat
|
||
down by a fair little stream, and ate their dinner of such meat
|
||
and drink as they had; and Ralph departed his share with his thrall,
|
||
and the man was hungry and ate well; so that Clement said mockingly:
|
||
"Thou feedest thy thrall over well, lord, even for a king's son:
|
||
is it so that thou art minded to fatten him and eat him?"
|
||
Then some of the others took up the jest, and bade the carle refrain him
|
||
of the meat, so that he might not fatten, and might live the longer.
|
||
He hearkened to them, and knit his brows and looked fiercely from
|
||
one to the other. But Ralph laughed aloud, and shook his finger
|
||
at him and refrained him, and his wrath ran off him and he laughed,
|
||
and shoved the victual into him doughtily, and sighed for pleasure
|
||
when he had made an end and drunk a draught of wine.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 22
|
||
|
||
Ralph Talks With Bull Shockhead
|
||
|
||
|
||
When they rode on again, Ralph rode beside Bull,
|
||
who was merry and blithe now he was full of meat and drink;
|
||
and he spake anon: "So thou art a king's son, master?
|
||
I deemed from the first that thou wert of lineage.
|
||
For as for these churls of chapmen, and the sworders whom
|
||
they wage, they know not the name of their mother's mother,
|
||
nor have heard one word of the beginner of their kindred;
|
||
and their deeds are like unto their kinlessness."
|
||
|
||
"And are thy deeds so good?" said Ralph. "Are they ill,"
|
||
said Bull, "when they are done against the foemen?" Said Ralph:
|
||
"And are all men your foemen who pass through these mountains?"
|
||
"All," said Bull, "but they be of the kindred or their known friends."
|
||
|
||
"Well, Bull," said Ralph, "I like thy deeds little, that thou
|
||
shouldest ravish men and women from their good life, and sell
|
||
them for a price into toil and weariness and stripes."
|
||
|
||
Said Bull: "How much worse do we than the chapmen by his debtor,
|
||
and the lord of the manor by his villein?" Said Ralph:
|
||
"Far worse, if ye did but know it, poor men!" Quoth Bull:
|
||
"But I neither know it, nor can know it, nay, not when thou
|
||
sayest it; for it is not so. And look you, master, this life
|
||
of a bought thrall is not such an exceeding evil life;
|
||
for oft they be dealt with softly and friendly, and have other
|
||
thralls to work for them under their whips."
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed: "Which shall I make thee, friend Bull, the upper
|
||
or the under?" Bull reddened, but said naught. Said Ralph:
|
||
"Or where shall I sell thee, that I may make the best penny
|
||
out of my good luck and valiancy?" Bull looked chopfallen:
|
||
"Nay," said he in a wheedling voice, "thou wilt not sell me, thou?
|
||
For I deem that thou wilt be a good master to me: and," he broke
|
||
into sudden heat hereat, "if I have another master I shall surely
|
||
slay him whate'er betide."
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed again, and said: "Seest thou what an evil craft ye follow,
|
||
when thou deemest it better to be slain with bitter torments (as thou
|
||
shouldest be if thou slewest thy master) than to be sold to any master
|
||
save one exceeding good?"
|
||
|
||
Bull held his peace hereat, but presently he said:
|
||
"Well, be our craft good or evil, it is gainful; and whiles there
|
||
is prey taken right good, which, for my part, I would not sell,
|
||
once I had my hand thereon." "Yea, women?" said Ralph.
|
||
"Even so," said Bull, "such an one was taken by my kinsman Bull
|
||
Nosy but a little while agone, whom he took down to the market at
|
||
Cheaping Knowe, as I had not done if I had once my arms about her.
|
||
For she was as fair as a flower; and yet so well built, that she
|
||
could bear as much as a strong man in some ways; and, saith Nosy,
|
||
when she was taken, there was no weeping or screeching in her,
|
||
but patience rather and quietness, and intent to bear all and
|
||
live....Master, may I ask thee a question?" "Ask on," said Ralph.
|
||
Said Bull: "The pair of beads about thy neck, whence came they?"
|
||
"They were the gift of a dear friend," said Ralph. "A woman?"
|
||
quoth Bull. "Yea," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"Now is this strange," said Bull, "and I wot not what it may betoken,
|
||
but this same woman had about her neck a pair of beads as like to thine
|
||
as if they had been the very same: did this woman give thee the beads?
|
||
For I will say this of thee, master, that thou art well nigh as likely
|
||
a man as she is a woman."
|
||
|
||
Ralph sighed, for this talk of the woman and the beads brought all
|
||
the story into his mind, so that it was as if he saw it adoing again:
|
||
the Lady of the Wildwood led along to death before he delivered her,
|
||
and their flight together from the Water of the Oak, and that murder
|
||
of her in the desert. And betwixt the diverse deeds of the day
|
||
this had of late become somewhat dim to him. Yet after his grief
|
||
came joy that this man also had seen the damsel, whom his dream
|
||
of the night had called Dorothea, and that he knew of her captors;
|
||
wherefore by his means he might come on her and deliver her.
|
||
|
||
Now he spake aloud: "Nay, it was not she that gave them to me,
|
||
but yet were I fain to find this woman that thou sawest;
|
||
for I look to meet a friend whenas I meet her. So tell me,
|
||
dost thou think that I may cheapen her of thy kinsman?"
|
||
|
||
Bull shook his head, and said: "It may be: or it may be that he hath
|
||
already sold her to one who heedeth not treasure so much as fair flesh;
|
||
and fair is hers beyond most. But, lord, I will do my best to find
|
||
her for thee; as thou art a king's son and no ill master, I deem."
|
||
|
||
"Do that," quoth Ralph, "and I in turn will do what more I may for thee
|
||
besides making thee free." And therewith he rode forward that he might
|
||
get out of earshot, for Bull's tongue seemed like to be long.
|
||
And presently he heard laughter behind him, as the carle began jesting
|
||
and talking with the chapman lads.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 23
|
||
|
||
Of the Town of Cheaping Knowe
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now when it was evening they pitched their camp down in the plain
|
||
fields amidst tall elmtrees, and had their banners still
|
||
flying over the tents to warn all comers of what they were.
|
||
But the next morning the chapmen and their folk were up betimes
|
||
to rummage their loads, and to array their wares for the market;
|
||
and they gat not to the road before mid-morning. Meantime
|
||
of their riding Ralph had more talk with Bull, who said to him:
|
||
"Fair lord, I rede thee when thou art in the market of Cheaping Knowe,
|
||
bid master Clement bring thee to the thrall-merchant, and trust me
|
||
that if such a fair image as that we were speaking of hath passed
|
||
through his hands within these three months, he will remember it;
|
||
and then thou shalt have at least some tale of what hath befallen
|
||
her but a little while ago."
|
||
|
||
That seemed good rede to Ralph, and when they went on their way
|
||
he rode beside Clement, and asked him many things concerning
|
||
Cheaping Knowe; and at last about the thrall-market therein.
|
||
And Clement said that, though he dealt not in such wares,
|
||
he had often seen them sold, and knew the master of that market.
|
||
And when Ralph asked if the said master would answer questions
|
||
concerning the selling of men and of women, Clement smiled and said:
|
||
"Yea, yea, he will answer; for as he lives by selling thralls,
|
||
and every time a thrall is sold by him he maketh some gain by it,
|
||
it is to his profit that they change masters as often as may be;
|
||
and when thou askest of the woman whom thou art seeking,
|
||
he will be deeming that there will be some new chaffer ahead.
|
||
I will bring thee to him, and thou shalt ask him of what thou wilt,
|
||
and belike he will tell thee quietly over the wine-cup."
|
||
|
||
Therewith was Ralph well content, and he grew eager to enter
|
||
into the town.
|
||
|
||
They came to the gates a little before sunset, after they had passed
|
||
through much fair country; but nigh to the walls it was bare of trees
|
||
and thickets, whereas, said Clement, they had been cut down lest they
|
||
should serve as cover to strong-thieves or folk assailing the town.
|
||
The walls were strong and tall, and a great castle stood high up
|
||
on a hill, about which the town was builded; so that if the town were
|
||
taken there would yet be another town within it to be taken also.
|
||
But the town within, save for the said castle, was scarce so fairly
|
||
builded as the worst of the towns which Ralph had seen erst,
|
||
though there were a many houses therein.
|
||
|
||
Much people was gathered about the gate to see the merchants enter
|
||
with banners displayed; and Ralph deemed many of the folk fair,
|
||
such as were goodly clad; for many had but foul clouts to cover
|
||
their nakedness, and seemed needy and hunger-pinched. Withal there
|
||
were many warriors amongst the throng, and most of these bore
|
||
a token on their sleeves, to wit, a sword reddened with blood.
|
||
And Clement, speaking softly in Ralph's ear, did him to wit that this
|
||
was the token of the lord who had gotten the castle in those days,
|
||
and was tyrant of the town; and how that he had so many men-at-arms
|
||
ready to do his bidding that none in the town was safe from him
|
||
if he deemed it more for his pleasure and profit to rob or maim,
|
||
or torment or slay, than to suffer them to live peaceably.
|
||
"But with us chapmen," said Clement, "he will not meddle, lest there
|
||
be an end of chaffer in the town; and verily the market is good."
|
||
|
||
Thus they rode through the streets into the market place,
|
||
which was wide and great, and the best houses of the town
|
||
were therein, and so came to the hostel of the Merchants,
|
||
called the Fleece, which was a big house, and goodly enough.
|
||
|
||
The next morning Clement and the other chapmen went up into the Castle,
|
||
bearing with them gifts out of their wares for the lord, and Clement
|
||
bade Ralph keep close till he came back, and especially to keep his
|
||
war-caught thrall, Bull Shockhead, safe at home, lest he be taken from him,
|
||
and to clothe him in the guise of the chapman lads, and to dock his hair;
|
||
and even so Ralph did, though Bull were loath thereto.
|
||
|
||
About noon the chapmen came back again well pleased; and Clement
|
||
gave Ralph a parchment from the lord, which bade all men help
|
||
and let pass Ralph of Upmeads, as a sergeant of the chapmen's guard,
|
||
and said withal that now he was free to go about the town if he listed,
|
||
so that he were back at the hostel of the Fleece by nightfall.
|
||
|
||
So Ralph went in company with some of the sergeants and others, and looked
|
||
at this and that about the town without hindrance, save that the guard
|
||
would not suffer them to pass further than the bailey of the Castle.
|
||
And for the said bailey, forsooth, they had but little stomach; for they
|
||
saw thence, on the slopes of the Castle-hill, tokens of the cruel justice
|
||
of the said lord; for there were men and women there, yea, and babes also,
|
||
hanging on gibbets and thrust through with sharp pales, and when they asked
|
||
of folk why these had suffered, they but looked at them as if astonished,
|
||
and passed on without a word.
|
||
|
||
So they went thence, and found the master-church, and deemed
|
||
it not much fairer than it was great; and it was nowise great,
|
||
albeit it was strange and uncouth of fashion.
|
||
|
||
Then they came to great gardens within the town, and they were
|
||
exceeding goodly, and had trees and flowers and fruits in them
|
||
which Ralph had not seen hitherto, as lemons, and oranges,
|
||
and pomegranates; and the waters were running through them
|
||
in runnels of ashlar; and the weather was fair and hot;
|
||
so they rested in those gardens till it was evening, and then
|
||
gat them home to Fleece, where they had good entertainment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 24
|
||
|
||
Ralph Heareth More Tidings of the Damsel
|
||
|
||
|
||
The second day, while the merchants saw to their chaffer,
|
||
most of the men-at-arms, and Ralph with them, spent their time
|
||
again in those goodly gardens; where, indeed, some of them made
|
||
friends of fair women of the place; in which there was less risk
|
||
than had been for aliens in some towns, whereas at Cheaping
|
||
Knowe such women as were wedded according to law, or damsels
|
||
in the care of their kindred, or slaves who were concubines,
|
||
had not dared so much as to look on a man.
|
||
|
||
The third day time hung somewhat heavy on Ralph's hands,
|
||
not but that the Companions were well at ease, but rather
|
||
because himseemed that he was not stirring in the quest.
|
||
|
||
But the next day Clement bade him come see that thrall-merchant aforesaid,
|
||
and brought him to a corner of the market-place, where was a throng looking
|
||
on at the cheaping. They went through the throng, and beside a stone
|
||
like a leaping-on stone saw a tall man, goodly of presence, black bearded,
|
||
clad in scarlet; and this was the merchant; and by him were two of his knaves
|
||
and certain weaponed men who had brought their wares to the cheaping.
|
||
And some of these were arrayed like those foemen of the mountains.
|
||
There was a half score and three of these chattels to be sold, who stood up
|
||
one after other on the stone, that folk might cheapen them. The cheaping was
|
||
long about, because they that had a mind to buy were careful to know what they
|
||
were buying, like as if they had been cheapening a horse, and most of them
|
||
before they bid their highest had the chattels away into the merchant's booth
|
||
to strip them, lest they should buy damaged or unhandsome bodies; and this
|
||
more especially if it were a woman, for the men were already well nigh naked.
|
||
Of women four of them were young and goodly, and Ralph looked at them closely;
|
||
but they were naught like to the woman of his quest.
|
||
|
||
Now this cheaping irked Ralph sorely, as was like to be, whereas,
|
||
as hath been told, he came from a land where were no thralls,
|
||
none but vavassors and good yeomen: yet he abode till all was done,
|
||
hansel paid, and the thralls led off by their new masters.
|
||
Then Clement led him up to the merchant, to whom he gave the sele
|
||
of the day, and said: "Master, this is the young knight of whom
|
||
I told thee, who deemeth that a woman who is his friend hath
|
||
been brought to this market and sold there, and if he might,
|
||
he would ransom her."
|
||
|
||
The merchant greeted Ralph courteously, and bade him and Clement
|
||
come into his house, where they might speak more privily.
|
||
So did they, and he treated them with honour, and set wine and
|
||
spices before them, and bade Ralph say whatlike the woman was.
|
||
Ralph did so, and wondered at himself how well and closely he could
|
||
tell of her, like as a picture painted. And, moreover, he drew forth
|
||
that piece of her gown which he had come on by the Mid-Mountain House
|
||
|
||
So when he had done, the merchant, who was a man sober of aspect and somewhat
|
||
slow of speech, said: "Sir, I believe surely that I have seen this damsel,
|
||
but she is not with me now, nor have I sold her ever; but hither was she
|
||
brought to be sold by a man of the mountain folk not very many days ago.
|
||
And the man's name was Bull Nosy, or the longnosed man of the kindred
|
||
of the Bull, for in such wise are named the men of that unhappy folk.
|
||
Now this was the cause why I might not sell her, that she was so proud
|
||
and stout that men feared her, what she might do if they had her away.
|
||
And when some spake to see her body naked, she denied it utterly,
|
||
saying that she would do a mischief to whomsoever tried it.
|
||
So I spake to him who owned her, and asked him if he thought it
|
||
good to take her a while and quell her with such pains as would spoil
|
||
her but little, and then bring her to market when she was meeker.
|
||
But he heeded my words little, and led her away, she riding on a horse
|
||
and he going afoot beside her; for the mountain-men be no horsemen."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Dost thou know at all whither he will have led her?"
|
||
Said the merchant: "By my deeming, he will have gone first of all to
|
||
the town of Whiteness, whither thy Fellowship will betake them ere long:
|
||
for he will be minded to meet there the Lord of Utterbol, who is for such
|
||
like wares; and he will either give her to him as a gift, for which
|
||
he will have a gift in return, or he will sell her to my lord at a price
|
||
if he dare to chaffer with him. At least so will he do if he be wise.
|
||
Now if the said lord hath her, it will be somewhat more than hard
|
||
for thee to get her again, till he have altogether done with her;
|
||
for money and goods are naught to him beside the doing of his will.
|
||
But there is this for thy comfort, that whereas she is so fair a woman,
|
||
she will be well with my lord. For I warrant me that she will not dare
|
||
to be proud with him, as she was with the folk here."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and what is this lord of Utterbol that
|
||
all folk, men and women, fear him so?" Said the merchant:
|
||
"Fair sir, thou must pardon me if I say no more of him.
|
||
Belike thou mayst fall in with him; and if thou dost,
|
||
take heed that thou make not thyself great with him."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph thanked the merchant and departed with Clement, of whom presently
|
||
he asked if he knew aught of this lord of Utterbol. Said Clement:
|
||
"God forbid that I should ever meet him, save where I were many and he few.
|
||
I have never seen him; but he is deemed by all men as the worst of the tyrants
|
||
who vex these lands, and, maybe, the mightiest."
|
||
|
||
So was Ralph sore at heart for the damsel, and anon he spake
|
||
to Bull again of her, who deemed somewhat, that his kinsman had
|
||
been minded at the first to sell her to the lord of Utterbol.
|
||
And Ralph thinks his game a hard one, yet deems that if he could
|
||
but find out where the damsel was, he might deliver her,
|
||
what by sleight, what by boldness.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 25
|
||
|
||
The Fellowship Comes to Whiteness
|
||
|
||
|
||
Two days thereafter the chapmen having done with their matters
|
||
in Cheaping Knowe, whereas they must needs keep some of
|
||
their wares for other places, and especially for Goldburg,
|
||
they dight them to be gone and rode out a-gates of a mid-morning
|
||
with banners displayed.
|
||
|
||
It was some fifty miles thence to Whiteness, which lay close
|
||
underneath the mountains, and was, as it were, the door of the passes
|
||
whereby men rode to Goldburg. The land which they passed through
|
||
was fair, both of tillage and pasture, with much cattle therein.
|
||
Everywhere they saw men and women working afield, but no houses
|
||
of worthy yeomen or vavassors, or cots of good husbandmen.
|
||
Here and there was a castle or strong-house, and here and there
|
||
long rows of ugly hovels, or whiles houses, big tall and long,
|
||
but exceeding foul and ill-favoured, such as Ralph had not yet seen
|
||
the like of. And when he asked of Clement concerning all this,
|
||
he said: "It is as I have told thee, that here be no freemen
|
||
who work afield, nay, nor villeins either. All those whom ye
|
||
have seen working have been bought and sold like to those whom
|
||
we saw standing on the Stone in the market of Cheaping Knowe,
|
||
or else were born of such cattle, and each one of them can be
|
||
bought and sold again, and they work not save under the whip.
|
||
And as for those hovels and the long and foul houses, they are
|
||
the stables wherein this kind of cattle is harboured."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph's heart sank, and he said: "Master Clement,
|
||
I prithee tell me; were it possible that the damsel whom
|
||
I seek may be come to such a pass as one of these?"
|
||
"Nay," quoth Clement, "that is little like to be; such goodly
|
||
wares are kept for the adornment of great men's houses.
|
||
True it is that whiles the house-thralls be sent into the fields
|
||
for their punishment; yet not such as she, unless the master
|
||
be wholly wearied of them, or if their wrath outrun their wits;
|
||
for it is more to the master's profit to chastise them at home;
|
||
so keep a good heart I bid thee, and maybe we shall have
|
||
tidings at Whiteness."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph refrained his anxious heart, though forsooth his thought
|
||
was much upon the damsel and of how she was faring.
|
||
|
||
It was not till the third day at sunset that they came to Whiteness;
|
||
for on the last day of their riding they came amongst the confused
|
||
hills that lay before the great mountains, which were now often
|
||
hidden from their sight; but whenever they appeared through
|
||
the openings of the near hills, they seemed very great and terrible;
|
||
dark and bare and stony; and Clement said that they were little
|
||
better than they looked from afar. As to Whiteness, they saw it
|
||
a long way off, as it lay on a long ridge at the end of a valley:
|
||
and so long was the ridge, that behind it was nothing green;
|
||
naught but the huge and bare mountains. The westering sun fell
|
||
upon its walls and its houses, so that it looked white indeed
|
||
against those great cliffs and crags; though, said Clement,
|
||
that these were yet a good way off. Now when, after a long ride
|
||
from the hither end of the valley, they drew nigh to the town,
|
||
Ralph saw that the walls and towers were not very high or strong,
|
||
for so steep was the hill whereon the town stood, that it needed not.
|
||
Here also was no great castle within the town as at Cheaping Knowe,
|
||
and the town itself nothing so big, but long and straggling along
|
||
the top of the ridge. Cheaping Knowe was all builded of stone;
|
||
but the houses here were of timber for the most part, done over
|
||
with pargeting and whitened well. Yet was the town more cheerful
|
||
of aspect than Cheaping Knowe, and the folk who came thronging
|
||
about the chapmen at the gates not so woe-begone, and goodly enough.
|
||
|
||
Of the lord of Whiteness, Clement told that he paid tribute to him
|
||
of Cheaping Knowe, rather for love of peace than for fear of him;
|
||
for he was no ill lord, and free men lived well under him.
|
||
|
||
So the chapmen lodged in the market-place; and in two days time
|
||
Ralph got speech of the Deacon of the Chapmen of the Town;
|
||
who told him two matters; first that the lord of Utterbol had not
|
||
been in Whiteness these six months; and next that the wild man
|
||
had verily brought the damsel into the market; but he had turned
|
||
away thence suddenly with her, without bringing her to the stone,
|
||
and that it was most like that he would have the lord of Utterbol
|
||
buy her; who, since he would be deeming that he might easily
|
||
bend her to his will, would give him the better penny for her.
|
||
"At the last," quoth the Deacon, "the wild man led her away toward
|
||
the mountain pass that goeth to Goldburg, the damsel and he alone,
|
||
and she with her hands unbound and riding a little horse."
|
||
Of these tidings Ralph deemed it good that all traces of her were
|
||
not lost; but his heart misgave him when he thought that by this
|
||
time she must surely be in the hands of the lord of Utterbol.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 26
|
||
|
||
They Ride the Mountains Toward Goldburg
|
||
|
||
|
||
Five days the Fellowship abode at Whiteness, and or ever they
|
||
departed Clement waged men-at-arms of the lord of the town,
|
||
besides servants to look to the beasts amongst the mountains,
|
||
so that what with one, what with another, they entered the gates
|
||
of the mountains a goodly company of four score and ten.
|
||
|
||
Ralph asked of Bull if any of those whom he might meet in these mountains
|
||
were of his kindred; and he answered, nay, unless perchance there might
|
||
be some one or two going their peaceful errands there like Bull Nosy.
|
||
So Ralph armed him with a good sword and a shield, and would have given
|
||
him a steel hood also, but he would not bear it, saying that if sword
|
||
and shield could not keep his head he had well earned a split skull.
|
||
|
||
Seven days they rode the mountains, and the way was toilsome and weary enough,
|
||
for it was naught but a stony maze of the rocks where nothing living dwelt,
|
||
and nothing grew, save now and again a little dwarf willow. Yet was there
|
||
naught worse to meet save toil, because they were over strong for the wild
|
||
men to meddle with them, whereas the kindreds thereabout were but feeble.
|
||
|
||
But as it drew towards evening on the seventh day Ralph had ridden
|
||
a little ahead with Bull alone, if he might perchance have a sight
|
||
of the ending of this grievous wilderness, as Clement said might be,
|
||
since now the way was down-hill, and all waters ran east.
|
||
So as they rode, and it was about sunset, they saw something
|
||
lying by a big stone under a cliff; so they drew nigh,
|
||
and saw a man lying on his back, and they deemed he was dead.
|
||
So Bull went up to him, and leapt off his horse close by him
|
||
and bent over him, but straightway cast up his arms and set
|
||
up a long wailing whoop, and then another and another,
|
||
so that they that were behind heard it and came up upon the spur.
|
||
But Ralph leapt from his horse, and ran up to Bull and said:
|
||
"What aileth thee to whoop and wail? Who is it?" But Bull
|
||
turned about and shook his head at him, and said: "It is a man
|
||
of my kindred, even he that was leading away thy she-friend;
|
||
and belike she it was that slew him, or why is she not here:
|
||
Ochone! ahoo! ahoo!" Therewith fire ran through Ralph's heart,
|
||
and he bethought him of that other murder in the wilderness,
|
||
and he fell to wringing his hands, and cried out: "Ah, and where
|
||
is she, where is she? Is she also taken away from me for ever?
|
||
O me unhappy!"
|
||
|
||
And he drew his sword therewith, and ran about amongst the rocks
|
||
and the bushes seeking her body.
|
||
|
||
And therewith came up Clement, and others of the company, and wondered
|
||
to see Bull kneeling down by the corpse, and to hear him crying out
|
||
and wailing, and Ralph running about like one mad, and crying out now:
|
||
"Oh! that I might find her! Mayhappen she is alive yet, and anigh
|
||
here in some cleft of the rocks in this miserable wilderness. O my love
|
||
that hast lain in mine arms, wouldst thou not have me find her alive?
|
||
But if she be dead, then will I slay myself, for as young as I am,
|
||
that I may find thee and her out of the world, since from the world
|
||
both ye are gone."
|
||
|
||
Then Clement went up to Ralph, and would have a true tale out of him,
|
||
and asked him what was amiss; but Ralph stared wild at him and answered not.
|
||
But Bull cried out from where he knelt: "He is seeking the woman, and I would
|
||
that he could find her; for then would I slay her on the howe of my kinsman:
|
||
for she hath slain him; she hath slain him."
|
||
|
||
That word heard Ralph, and he ran at Bull with uplifted sword to slay him;
|
||
but Clement tripped him and he fell, and his sword flew out of his hand.
|
||
Then Clement and two of the others bound his hands with their girdles,
|
||
till they might know what had befallen; for they deemed that a devil
|
||
had entered into him, and feared that he would do a mischief to himself
|
||
or some other.
|
||
|
||
And now was the whole Fellowship assembled, and stood
|
||
in a ring round about Ralph and Bull, and the dead man;
|
||
as for him, he had been dead some time, many days belike;
|
||
but in that high and clear cold air, his carcase, whistled by
|
||
the wind, had dried rather than rotted, and his face was clear
|
||
to be seen with its great hooked nose and long black hair:
|
||
and his skull was cloven.
|
||
|
||
Now Bull had done his wailing for his kinsman, and he seemed
|
||
to wake up as from a dream, and looked about the ring
|
||
of men and spake: "Here is a great to do, my masters!
|
||
What will ye with me? Have ye heard, or is it your custom,
|
||
that when a man cometh on the dead corpse of his brother,
|
||
his own mother's son, he turneth it over with his foot,
|
||
as if it were the carcase of a dog, and so goeth on his way?
|
||
This I ask, that albeit I be but a war-taken thrall, I be
|
||
suffered to lay my brother in earth and heap a howe over him
|
||
in these mountains."
|
||
|
||
They all murmured a yeasay to this save Ralph. He had been sobered
|
||
by his fall, and was standing up now betwixt Clement and the captain,
|
||
who had unbound his hands, now that the others had come up;
|
||
he hung his head, and was ashamed of his fury by seeming.
|
||
But when Bull had spoken, and the others had answered,
|
||
Ralph said to Bull, wrathfully still, but like a man in his wits:
|
||
"Why didst thou say that thou wouldest slay her?" "Hast thou
|
||
found her?" said Bull. "Nay," quoth Ralph, sullenly. "Well, then,"
|
||
said Bull, "when thou dost find her, we will speak of it."
|
||
Said Ralph: "Why didst thou say that she hath slain him?"
|
||
"I was put out of my wits by the sight of him dead," said Bull;
|
||
"But now I say mayhappen she hath slain him."
|
||
|
||
"And mayhappen not," said Clement; "look here to the cleaving of his skull
|
||
right through this iron headpiece, which he will have bought at Cheaping Knowe
|
||
(for I have seen suchlike in the armourers' booth there): it must have taken
|
||
a strong man to do this."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," quoth the captain, "and a big sword to boot:
|
||
this is the stroke of a strong man wielding a good weapon."
|
||
|
||
Said Bull: "Well, and will my master bid me forego vengeance
|
||
for my brother's slaying, or that I bear him to purse?
|
||
Then let him slay me now, for I am his thrall." Said Ralph:
|
||
"Thou shalt do as thou wilt herein, and I also will do as I will.
|
||
For if she slew him, the taking of her captive should be set
|
||
against the slaying." "That is but right," said the captain;
|
||
"but Sir Ralph, I bid thee take the word of an old man-at-arms
|
||
for it, that she slew him not; neither she, nor any other woman."
|
||
|
||
Said Clement: "Well, let all this be. But tell me, lord Ralph,
|
||
what thou wouldst do, since now thou art come to thyself again?"
|
||
Said Ralph: "I would seek the wilderness hereabout, if perchance
|
||
the damsel be thrust into some cleft or cavern, alive or dead."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Clement, "this is my rede. Since Bull Shockhead would bury
|
||
his brother, and lord Ralph would seek the damsel, and whereas there
|
||
is water anigh, and the sun is well nigh set, let us pitch our tents
|
||
and abide here till morning, and let night bring counsel unto some of us.
|
||
How say ye, fellows?"
|
||
|
||
None naysaid it, and they fell to pitching the tents, and lighting
|
||
the cooking-fires; but Bull at once betook him to digging a grave
|
||
for his brother, whilst Ralph with the captain and four others
|
||
went and sought all about the place, and looked into all clefts
|
||
of rocks, and found not the maiden, nor any token of her.
|
||
They were long about it, and when they were come back again,
|
||
and it was night, though the moon shone out, there was Bull
|
||
Shockhead standing by the howe of his brother Bull Nosy,
|
||
which was heaped up high over the place where they had found him.
|
||
|
||
So when Bull saw him, he turned to him and said:
|
||
"King's son, I have done what needs was for this present.
|
||
Now, wilt thou slay me for my fault, or shall I be thy man again,
|
||
and serve thee truly unless the blood feud come between us?"
|
||
Said Ralph: "Thou shalt serve me truly, and help me
|
||
to find him who hath slain thy brother, and carried off
|
||
the damsel; for even thus it hath been done meseemeth,
|
||
since about here we have seen no signs of her alive or dead.
|
||
But to-morrow we shall seek wider ere I ride on my way."
|
||
"Yea," said Bull, "and I will be one in the search."
|
||
|
||
So then they gat them to their sleeping-berths, and Ralph,
|
||
contrary to his wont, lay long awake, pondering these things;
|
||
till at last he said to himself that this woman, whom he called Dorothea,
|
||
was certainly alive, and wotted that he was seeking her.
|
||
And then it seemed to him that he could behold her through
|
||
the darkness of night, clad in the green flowered gown as he had
|
||
first seen her, and she bewailing her captivity and the long
|
||
tarrying of the deliverer as she went to and fro in a great chamber
|
||
builded of marble and done about with gold and bright colours:
|
||
and or ever he slept, he deemed this to be a vision of what then was,
|
||
rather than a memory of what had been; and it was sweet to
|
||
his very soul.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 27
|
||
|
||
Clement Tells of Goldburg
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now when it was morning he rose early and roused Bull and the captain,
|
||
and they searched in divers places where they had not been the night before,
|
||
and even a good way back about the road they had ridden yesterday,
|
||
but found no tidings. And Ralph said to himself that this was naught
|
||
but what he had looked for after that vision of the night.
|
||
|
||
So he rode with his fellows somewhat shamefaced that they had seen
|
||
that sudden madness in him; but was presently of better cheer than
|
||
he had been yet. He rode beside Clement; they went downhill speedily,
|
||
and the wilderness began to better, and there was grass at whiles,
|
||
and bushes here and there. A little after noon they came out of a pass
|
||
cleft deep through the rocks by a swift stream which had once been far
|
||
greater than then, and climbed up a steep ridge that lay across the road,
|
||
and looking down from the top of it, beheld the open country again.
|
||
But this was otherwise from what they had beheld from the mountain's
|
||
brow above Cheaping Knowe. For thence the mountains beyond Whiteness,
|
||
even those that they had just ridden, were clear to be seen like the wall
|
||
of the plain country. But here, looking adown, the land below them
|
||
seemed but a great spreading plain with no hills rising from it,
|
||
save that far away they could see a certain break in it, and amidst that,
|
||
something that was brighter than the face of the land elsewhere.
|
||
Clement told Ralph that this was Goldburg and that it was built on
|
||
a gathering of hills, not great, but going up steep from the plain.
|
||
And the plain, said he, was not so wholly flat and even as it looked
|
||
from up there, but swelled at whiles into downs and low hills.
|
||
He told him that Goldburg was an exceeding fair town to behold;
|
||
that the lord who had built it had brought from over the mountains masons
|
||
and wood-wrights and artificers of all kinds, that they might make it as fair
|
||
as might be, and that he spared on it neither wealth nor toil nor pains.
|
||
For in sooth he deemed that he should find the Well at the World's End,
|
||
and drink thereof, and live long and young and fair past all record;
|
||
therefore had he builded this city, to be the house and home of
|
||
his long-enduring joyance.
|
||
|
||
Now some said that he had found the Well, and drank thereof;
|
||
others naysaid that; but all deemed that they knew how that Goldburg
|
||
was not done building ere that lord was slain in a tumult,
|
||
and that what was then undone was cobbled up after the uncomely
|
||
fashion of the towns thereabout.
|
||
|
||
Clement said moreover that, this happy lord dead, things had not
|
||
gone so well there as had been looked for. Forsooth it had been
|
||
that lord's will and meaning that all folks in Goldburg should thrive,
|
||
both those who wrought and those for whom they wrought.
|
||
But it went not so, but there were many poor folk there,
|
||
and few wealthy.
|
||
|
||
Again said Clement that though the tillers and toilers of
|
||
Goldburg were not for the most part mere thralls and chattels,
|
||
as in the lands beyond the mountains behind them, yet were they
|
||
little more thriving for that cause; whereas they belonged
|
||
not to a master, who must at worst feed them, and to no manor,
|
||
whose acres they might till for their livelihood, and on whose
|
||
pastures they might feed their cattle; nor had they any to help
|
||
or sustain them against the oppressor and the violent man;
|
||
so that they toiled and swinked and died with none heeding them,
|
||
save they that had the work of their hands good cheap; and they
|
||
forsooth heeded them less than their draught beasts whom they must
|
||
needs buy with money, and whose bellies they must needs fill;
|
||
whereas these poor wretches were slaves without a price,
|
||
and if one died another took his place on the chance that thereby
|
||
he might escape present death by hunger, for there was a great
|
||
many of them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 28
|
||
|
||
Now They Come to Goldburg
|
||
|
||
|
||
That night they slept yet amongst the mountains, or rather in
|
||
the first of the hill country at their feet; but on the morrow they
|
||
rode down into the lowlands, and thereby lost all sight of Goldburg,
|
||
and it was yet afar off, so that they rode four days through
|
||
lands well-tilled, but for the most part ill-housed, a country
|
||
of little hills and hollows and rising grounds, before they came
|
||
in sight of it again heaving up huge and bright under the sun.
|
||
It was built partly on three hills, the buttresses of a long ridge
|
||
which turned a wide river, and on the ridge itself, and partly on
|
||
the flat shore of the river, on either side, hillward and plainward:
|
||
but a great white wall girt it all about, which went right over
|
||
the river as a bridge, and on the plain side it was exceeding high,
|
||
so that its battlements might be somewhat evened with those of
|
||
the hill-wall above. So that as they came up to the place they
|
||
saw little of the town because of the enormity of the wall;
|
||
scarce aught save a spire or a tall towering roof here and there.
|
||
|
||
So when they were come anigh the gate, they displayed their banners and
|
||
rode right up to it; and people thronged the walls to see their riding.
|
||
One by one they passed through the wicket of the gate: which gate itself
|
||
was verily huge beyond measure, all built of great ashlar-stones; and when
|
||
they were within, it was like a hall somewhat long and exceeding high,
|
||
most fairly vaulted; midmost of the said hall they rode through a noble
|
||
arch on their right hand, and lo another hall exceeding long, but lower
|
||
than the first, with many glazen windows set in its townward wall;
|
||
and when they looked through these, they saw the river running underneath;
|
||
for this was naught but the lower bridge of the city and they learned
|
||
afterwards and saw, that above the vault of this long bridge rose up
|
||
the castle, chamber on chamber, till its battlements were level with
|
||
the highest towers of the wall on the hill top.
|
||
|
||
Thus they passed the bridge, and turning to the left at its ending,
|
||
came into the Water-Street of Goldburg, where the river,
|
||
with wide quays on either side thereof, ran betwixt the houses.
|
||
As for these, beneath the dwellings went a fair arched passage
|
||
like to the ambulatory of an abbey; and every house all along this
|
||
street was a palace for its goodliness. The houses were built of
|
||
white stones and red and grey; with shapely pillars to the cloister,
|
||
and all about carvings of imagery and knots of flowers;
|
||
goodly were the windows and all glazed, as fair as might be.
|
||
On the river were great barges, and other craft such as were not
|
||
sea-goers, river-ships that might get them through the bridges
|
||
and furnished with masts that might be lowered and shipped.
|
||
|
||
Much people was gathered to see the chapmen enter,
|
||
yet scarce so many as might be looked for in so goodly
|
||
a town; yea, and many of the folk were clad foully, and were
|
||
haggard of countenance, and cried on the chapmen for alms.
|
||
Howbeit some were clad gaily and richly enough, and were fair
|
||
of favour as any that Ralph had seen since he left Upmeads:
|
||
and amongst these goodly folk were women not a few, whose gear
|
||
and bearing called to Ralph's mind the women of the Wheatwearers
|
||
whom he had seen erst in the Burg of the Four Friths, whereas they
|
||
were somewhat wantonly clad in scanty and thin raiment.
|
||
And of these, though they were not all thralls, were many
|
||
who were in servitude: for, as Clement did Ralph to wit,
|
||
though the tillers of the soil, and the herdsmen, in short
|
||
the hewers of wood and drawers of water, were men masterless,
|
||
yet rich men might and did buy both men and women for servants
|
||
in their houses, and for their pleasure and profit in divers wise.
|
||
|
||
So they rode to their hostel in the market place, which lay a little
|
||
back from the river in an ingle of the ridge and one of its buttresses;
|
||
and all round the said market were houses as fair as the first they had seen:
|
||
but above, on the hill-sides, save for the castle and palace of the Queen
|
||
(for a woman ruled in Goldburg), were the houses but low, poorly built
|
||
of post and pan, and thatched with straw, or reed, or shingle.
|
||
But the great church was all along one side of the market place;
|
||
and albeit this folk was somewhat wild and strange of faith for Christian men,
|
||
yet was it dainty and delicate as might be, and its steeples and bell-towers
|
||
were high and well builded, and adorned exceeding richly.
|
||
|
||
So they lighted down at their hostel, and never had Ralph seen such another,
|
||
for the court within was very great and with a fair garden filled with
|
||
flowers and orchard-trees, and amidst it was a fountain of fresh water,
|
||
built in the goodliest fashion of many-coloured marble-stones. And
|
||
the arched and pillared way about the said court was as fair as the cloister
|
||
of a mitred abbey; and the hall for the guests was of like fashion,
|
||
vaulted with marvellous cunning, and with a row of pillars amidmost.
|
||
|
||
There they abode in good entertainment; yet this noted Ralph, that as goodly
|
||
as was the fashion of the building of that house, yet the hangings and beds,
|
||
and stools, and chairs, and other plenishing were no richer or better than
|
||
might be seen in the hostelry of any good town.
|
||
|
||
So they went bedward, and Ralph slept dreamlessly, as was mostly his wont.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 29
|
||
|
||
Of Goldburg and the Queen Thereof
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow, when Ralph and Clement met in the hall,
|
||
Clement spake and said: "Lord Ralph, as I told thee in Whitwall,
|
||
we chapmen are now at the end of our outward journey, and in
|
||
about twenty days time we shall turn back to the mountains;
|
||
but, as I deem, thou wilt be minded to follow up thy quest
|
||
of the damsel, and whatsoever else thou mayst be seeking.
|
||
Now this thou mayst well do whiles we are here in Goldburg,
|
||
and yet come back hither in time to fare back with us:
|
||
and also, if thou wilt, thou mayst have fellows in thy quest,
|
||
to wit some of those our men-at-arms, who love thee well.
|
||
But now, when thou hast done thy best these days during, if thou
|
||
hast then found naught, I counsel thee and beseech thee to come
|
||
thy ways back with us, that we twain may wend to Upmeads together,
|
||
where thou shalt live well, and better all the deeds of thy father.
|
||
Meseemeth this will be more meet for thee than the casting away
|
||
of thy life in seeking a woman, who maybe will be naught to thee
|
||
when thou hast found her; or in chasing some castle in the clouds,
|
||
that shall be never the nigher to thee, how far soever thou farest.
|
||
For now I tell thee that I have known this while how thou art
|
||
seeking the Well at the World's End; and who knoweth that there
|
||
is any such thing on the earth? Come, then, thou art fair,
|
||
and young, and strong; and if ye seek wealth thou shalt have it,
|
||
and my furtherance to the utmost, if that be aught worth.
|
||
Bethink thee, child, there are they that love thee in Upmeads
|
||
and thereabout, were it but thy gossip, my wife, dame Katherine."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Master Clement, I thank thee for all
|
||
that thou hast said, and thy behest, and thy deeds.
|
||
Thy rede is good, and in all ways will I follow it save one;
|
||
to wit, that if I have not found the damsel ere ye turn back,
|
||
I must needs abide in this land searching for her.
|
||
And I pray the pardon both of thee and of thy gossip, if I
|
||
answer not your love as ye would, and perchance as I should.
|
||
Yea, and of Upmeads also I crave pardon. But in doing as I do,
|
||
my deed shall be but according to the duty bounden on me
|
||
by mine oath, when Duke Osmond made me knight last year,
|
||
in the church of St. Laurence of Upmeads."
|
||
|
||
Said Clement: "I see that there is something else in it than that;
|
||
I see thee to be young, and that love and desire bind thee in closer bonds
|
||
than thy knightly oath. Well, so it must be, and till thou hast her,
|
||
there is but one woman in the world for thee."
|
||
|
||
"Nay, it is not so, Master Clement," said Ralph, "and I will tell
|
||
thee this, so that thou mayst trow my naysay; since I departed
|
||
from Upmeads, I have been taken in the toils of love, and desired
|
||
a fair woman, and I have won her and death hath taken her.
|
||
Trowest thou my word?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Clement, "but to one of thy years love is not plucked up
|
||
by the root, and it soon groweth again." Then said Ralph, sadly:
|
||
"Now tell my gossip of this when thou comest home."
|
||
Clement nodded yeasay, and Ralph spake again in a moment:
|
||
"And now will I begin my search in Goldburg by praying thee
|
||
to bring me to speech of merchants and others who may have seen
|
||
or heard tidings of my damsel."
|
||
|
||
He looked at Clement anxiously as he spoke; and Clement smiled,
|
||
for he said to himself that looking into Ralph's heart on this
|
||
matter was like looking into a chamber through an open window.
|
||
But he said: "Fear not but I will look to it; I am thy friend,
|
||
and not thy schoolmaster."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he departed from Ralph, and within three days he had brought
|
||
him to speech of all those who were like to know anything of the matter;
|
||
and one and all they said that they had seen no such woman, and that as
|
||
for the Lord of Utterbol, he had not been in Goldburg these three months.
|
||
But one of the merchants said: "Master Clement, if this young knight is boun
|
||
for Utterbol, he beareth his life in his hand, as thou knowest full well.
|
||
Now I rede thee bring him to our Queen, who is good and compassionate,
|
||
and if she may not help him otherwise, yet belike she may give him
|
||
in writing to show to that tyrant, which may stand him in stead:
|
||
for it does not do for any man to go against the will of our Lady and Queen;
|
||
who will surely pay him back for his ill-will some day or other."
|
||
Said Clement: "It is well thought of, and I will surely do as thou biddest."
|
||
|
||
So wore four days, and, that time during, Ralph was going to and fro
|
||
asking questions of folk that he came across, as people new come
|
||
to the city and hunters from the mountain-feet and the forests
|
||
of the plain, and mariners and such like, concerning the damsel
|
||
and the Lord of Utterbol; and Bull also went about seeking tidings:
|
||
but whereas Ralph asked downright what he wanted to know, Bull was wary,
|
||
and rather led men on to talk with him concerning those things
|
||
than asked them of them in such wise that they saw the question.
|
||
Albeit it was all one, and no tidings came to them; indeed, the name
|
||
of the Lord of Utterbol (whom forsooth Bull named not) seemed to freeze
|
||
the speech of men's tongues, and they commonly went away at once
|
||
when it was spoken.
|
||
|
||
On the fifth day came Clement to Ralph and said:
|
||
"Now will I bring thee to the Queen, and she is young, and so fair,
|
||
and withal so wise, that it seems to me not all so sure but that
|
||
the sight of her will make an end of thy quest once for all.
|
||
So that meseems thou mayest abide here in a life far better
|
||
than wandering amongst uncouth folk, perilous and cruel.
|
||
Yea, so thou mayst have it if thou wilt, being so exceeding goodly,
|
||
and wise, and well-spoken, and of high lineage."
|
||
|
||
Ralph heard and reddened, but gave him back no answer;
|
||
and they went together to the High House of the Queen,
|
||
which was like a piece of the Kingdom of Heaven for loveliness,
|
||
so many pillars as there were of bright marble stone,
|
||
and gilded, and the chapiters carved most excellently:
|
||
not many hangings on the walls, for the walls themselves were carven,
|
||
and painted with pictures in the most excellent manner;
|
||
the floors withal were so dainty that they seemed as if they
|
||
were made for none but the feet of the fairest of women.
|
||
And all this was set amidst of gardens, the like of which they
|
||
had never seen.
|
||
|
||
But they entered without more ado, and were brought by the pages
|
||
to the Lady's innermost chamber; and if the rest of the house
|
||
were goodly, this was goodlier, and a marvel, so that it seemed wrought
|
||
rather by goldsmiths and jewellers than by masons and carvers.
|
||
Yet indeed many had said with Clement that the Queen who sat there
|
||
was the goodliest part thereof.
|
||
|
||
Now she spake to Clement and said: "Hail, merchant!
|
||
Is this the young knight of whom thou tellest, he who seeketh his
|
||
beloved that hath been borne away into thralldom by evil men?"
|
||
|
||
"Even so," said Clement. But Ralph spake: "Nay, Lady,
|
||
the damsel whom I seek is not my beloved, but my friend.
|
||
My beloved is dead."
|
||
|
||
The Queen looked on him smiling kindly, yet was her face somewhat troubled.
|
||
She said: "Master chapman, thy time here is not over long for all that thou
|
||
hast to do; so we give thee leave to depart with our thanks for bringing
|
||
a friend to see us. But this knight hath no affairs to look to:
|
||
so if he will abide with us for a little, it will be our pleasure."
|
||
|
||
So Clement made his obeisance and went his ways. But the Queen bade
|
||
Ralph sit before her, and tell her of his griefs, and she looked
|
||
so kindly and friendly upon him that the heart melted within him,
|
||
and he might say no word, for the tears that brake out from him,
|
||
and he wept before her; while she looked on him, the colour coming
|
||
and going in her face, and her lips trembling, and let him weep on.
|
||
But he thought not of her, but of himself and how kind she was to him.
|
||
But after a while he mastered his passion and began, and told her
|
||
all he had done and suffered. Long was the tale in the telling,
|
||
for it was sweet to him to lay before her both his grief and his hope.
|
||
She let him talk on, and whiles she listened to him, and whiles, not, but all
|
||
the time she gazed on him, yet sometimes askance, as if she were ashamed.
|
||
As for him, he saw her face how fair and lovely she was, yet was there
|
||
little longing in his heart for her, more than for one of the painted
|
||
women on the wall, for as kind and as dear as he deemed her.
|
||
|
||
When he had done, she kept silence a while, but at last she enforced her,
|
||
and spake: "Sad it is for the mother that bore thee that thou art not
|
||
in her house, wherein all things would be kind and familiar to thee.
|
||
Maybe thou art seeking for what is not. Or maybe thou shalt seek
|
||
and shalt find, and there may be naught in what thou findest, whereof to
|
||
give thee such gifts as are meet for thy faithfulness and valiancy.
|
||
But in thine home shouldst thou have all gifts which thou mayest desire."
|
||
|
||
Then was she silent awhile, and then spake: "Yet must I needs
|
||
say that I would that thine home were in Goldburg."
|
||
|
||
He smiled sadly and looked on her, but with no astonishment,
|
||
and indeed he still scarce thought of her as he said:
|
||
"Lady and Queen, thou art good to me beyond measure.
|
||
Yet, look you! One home I had, and left it; another I
|
||
looked to have, and I lost it; and now I have no home.
|
||
Maybe in days to come I shall go back to mine old home;
|
||
and whiles I wonder with what eyes it will look on me.
|
||
For merry is that land, and dear; and I have become sorrowful."
|
||
|
||
"Fear not," she said; "I say again that in thine home shall all things
|
||
look kindly on thee."
|
||
|
||
Once more she sat silent, and no word did his heart bid him speak.
|
||
Then she sighed and said: "Fair lord, I bid thee come and go in this
|
||
house as thou wilt; but whereas there are many folk who must needs see me,
|
||
and many things are appointed for me to do, therefore I pray thee to come
|
||
hither in three days' space, and meanwhile I will look to the matter
|
||
of thy search, that I may speed thee on the way to Utterness, which is
|
||
no great way from Utterbol, and is the last town whereof we know aught.
|
||
And I will write a letter for thee to give to the lord of Utterbol,
|
||
which he will heed, if he heedeth aught my good-will or enmity.
|
||
I beseech thee come for it in three days wearing."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she arose and took his hand and led him to the door,
|
||
and he departed, blessing her goodness, and wondering at her
|
||
courtesy and gentle speech.
|
||
|
||
For those three days he was still seeking tidings everywhere,
|
||
till folk began to know of him far and wide, and to talk of him.
|
||
And at the time appointed he went to the Queen's House and was
|
||
brought to her chamber as before, and she was alone therein.
|
||
She greeted him and smiled on him exceeding kindly, but he might
|
||
not fail to note of her that she looked sad and her face
|
||
was worn by sorrow. She bade him sit beside her, and said:
|
||
"Hast thou any tidings of the woman whom thou seekest?"
|
||
"Nay, nay," said he, "and now I am minded to carry on the search
|
||
out-a-gates. I have some good friends who will go with me awhile.
|
||
But thou, Lady, hast thou heard aught?"
|
||
|
||
"Naught of the damsel," she said. "But there is something else.
|
||
As Clement told me, thou seekest the Well at the World's End,
|
||
and through Utterness and by Utterbol is a way whereby folk seek thither.
|
||
Mayst thou find it, and may it profit thee more than it did my
|
||
kinsman of old, who first raised up Goldburg in the wilderness.
|
||
Whereas for him was naught but strife and confusion, till he was
|
||
slain in a quarrel, wherein to fail was to fail, and to win the day
|
||
was to win shame and misery."
|
||
|
||
She looked on him sweetly and said: "Thou art nowise such as he;
|
||
and if thou drink of the Well, thou wilt go back to Upmeads,
|
||
and thy father and mother, and thine own folk and thine home.
|
||
But now here is the letter which thou shalt give to the Lord
|
||
of Utterbol if thou meet him; and mayhappen he is naught so evil
|
||
a man as the tale of him runs."
|
||
|
||
She gave him the letter into his hands, and spake again:
|
||
"And now I have this to say to thee, if anything go amiss with thee,
|
||
and thou be nigh enough to seek to me, come hither, and then,
|
||
in whatso plight thou mayst be, or whatsoever deed thou mayst
|
||
have done, here will be the open door for thee and the welcome
|
||
of a friend."
|
||
|
||
Her voice shook a little as she spake, and she was silent again,
|
||
mastering her trouble. Then she said: "At last I must
|
||
say this to thee, that there may no lie be between us.
|
||
That damsel of whom thou spakest that she was but thy friend,
|
||
and not thy love--O that I might be thy friend in
|
||
such-wise! But over clearly I see that it may not be so.
|
||
For thy mind looketh on thy deeds to come, that they shall
|
||
be shared by some other than me. Friend, it seemeth strange
|
||
and strange to me that I have come on thee so suddenly,
|
||
and loved thee so sorely, and that I must needs say farewell
|
||
to thee in so short a while. Farewell, farewell!"
|
||
|
||
Therewith she arose, and once more she took his hand in hers,
|
||
and led him to the door. And he was sorry and all amazed:
|
||
for he had not thought so much of her before, that he might see
|
||
that she loved him; and he thought but that she, being happy
|
||
and great, was kind to him who was hapless and homeless.
|
||
And he was bewildered by her words and sore ashamed that for all
|
||
his grief for her he had no speech, and scarce a look for her;
|
||
he knew not what to do or say.
|
||
|
||
So he left the Queen's House and the court thereof, as though
|
||
the pavement were growing red hot beneath his feet.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 30
|
||
|
||
Ralph Hath Hope of Tidings Concerning the Well at the World's End
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now he goes to Clement, and tells him that he deems he has no need
|
||
to abide their departure from Goldburg to say farewell and follow
|
||
his quest further afield; since it is clear that in Goldburg
|
||
he should have no more tidings. Clement laughed and said:
|
||
"Not so fast, Lord Ralph; thou mayst yet hear a word or two."
|
||
"What!" said Ralph, "hast thou heard of something new?"
|
||
Said Clement: "There has been a man here seeking thee,
|
||
who said that he wotted of a wise man who could tell thee much
|
||
concerning the Well at the World's End. And when I asked him
|
||
of the Damsel and the Lord of Utterbol, if he knew anything of her,
|
||
he said yea, but that he would keep it for thy privy ear.
|
||
So I bade him go and come again when thou shouldst be here.
|
||
And I deem that he will not tarry long."
|
||
|
||
Now they were sitting on a bench outside the hall of the hostel,
|
||
with the court between them and the gate; and Ralph said:
|
||
"Tell me, didst thou deem the man good or bad?" Said Clement:
|
||
"He was hard to look into: but at least he looked not
|
||
a fierce or cruel man; nor indeed did he seem false or sly,
|
||
though I take him for one who hath lost his manhood--
|
||
but lo you! here he comes across the court."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph looked, and saw in sooth a man drawing nigh, who came
|
||
straight up to them and lowted to them, and then stood before
|
||
them waiting for their word: he was fat and somewhat short,
|
||
white-faced and pink-cheeked, with yellow hair long
|
||
and curling, and with a little thin red beard and blue eyes:
|
||
altogether much unlike the fashion of men of those parts.
|
||
He was clad gaily in an orange-tawny coat laced with silver,
|
||
and broidered with colours.
|
||
|
||
Clement spake to him and said: "This is the young knight
|
||
who is minded to seek further east to wot if it be mere lies
|
||
which he hath heard of the Well at the World's End."
|
||
|
||
The new-comer lowted before them again, and said in a small voice,
|
||
and as one who was shy and somewhat afeared: "Lords, I can tell many
|
||
a tale concerning that Well, and them who have gone on the quest thereof.
|
||
And the first thing I have to tell is that the way thereto is
|
||
through Utterness, and that I can be a shower of the way and a leader
|
||
to any worthy knight who listeth to seek thither; and moreover,
|
||
I know of a sage who dwelleth not far from the town of Utterness,
|
||
and who, if he will, can put a seeker of the Well on the right road."
|
||
|
||
He looked askance on Ralph, whose face flushed and whose eyes glittered
|
||
at that word. But Clement said: "Yea, that seemeth fair to look to:
|
||
but hark ye! Is it not so that the way to Utterness is perilous?"
|
||
Said the man: "Thou mayst rather call it deadly, to any who is
|
||
not furnished with a let-pass from the Lord of Utterbol, as I am.
|
||
But with such a scroll a child or a woman may wend the road unharmed."
|
||
"Where hast thou the said let-pass?" said Clement. "Here," quoth
|
||
the new-comer; and therewith he drew a scroll from out of his pouch,
|
||
and opened it before them, and they read it together, and sure enough it
|
||
was a writing charging all men so let pass and aid Morfinn the Minstrel
|
||
(of whose aspect it told closely), under pain of falling into
|
||
the displeasure of Gandolf, Lord of Utterbol; and the date thereon
|
||
was but three months old.
|
||
|
||
Said Clement: "This is good, this let-pass: see thou,
|
||
Ralph, the seal of Utterbol, the Bear upon the Castle Wall.
|
||
None would dare to counterfeit this seal, save one who was weary
|
||
of life, and longed for torments."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph, smiling: "Thou seest, Master Clement, that there must
|
||
be a parting betwixt us, and that this man's coming furthers it:
|
||
but were he or were he not, yet the parting had come. And wert thou
|
||
not liefer that it should come in a way to pleasure and aid me, than that
|
||
thou shouldst but leave me behind at Goldburg when thou departest:
|
||
and I with naught done toward the achieving my quest, but merely
|
||
dragging my deedless body about these streets; and at last, it may be,
|
||
going on a perilous journey without guiding or safe-conduct?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, lad," said Clement, "I wotted well that thou wouldst take
|
||
thine own way, but fain had I been that it had been mine also."
|
||
Then he pondered a while and said afterwards: "I suppose that thou
|
||
wilt take thy servant Bull Shockhead with thee, for he is a stout
|
||
man-at-arms, and I deem him trusty, though he be a wild man.
|
||
But one man is of little avail to a traveller on a perilous road,
|
||
so if thou wilt I will give leave and license to a half score
|
||
of our sergeants to follow thee on the road; for, as thou wottest,
|
||
I may easily wage others in their place. Or else wouldst thou
|
||
ask the Queen of Goldburg to give thee a score of men-at-arms;
|
||
she looked to me the other day as one who would deny thee few
|
||
of thine askings."
|
||
|
||
Ralph blushed red, and said: "Nay, I will not ask her this."
|
||
Then he was silent; the new-comer looked from one to the other,
|
||
and said nothing. At last Ralph spake: "Look you, Clement,
|
||
my friend, I wot well how thou wouldst make my goings safe,
|
||
even if it were to thy loss, and I thank thee for it: but I deem
|
||
I shall do no better than putting myself into this man's hands,
|
||
since he has a let-pass for the lands of him of Utterbol:
|
||
and meseemeth from all that I have heard, that a half score
|
||
or a score, or for the matter of that an hundred men-at-arms would
|
||
not be enough to fight a way to Utterbol, and their gathering
|
||
together would draw folk upon them, who would not meddle
|
||
with two men journeying together, even if they had no let-pass
|
||
of this mighty man." Clement sighed and grunted, and then said:
|
||
"Well, lord, maybe thou art right."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said the guide, "he is as right as may be:
|
||
I have not spoken before lest ye might have deemed me untrusty:
|
||
but now I tell thee this, that never should a small band
|
||
of men unknown win through the lands of the Lord of Utterbol,
|
||
or the land debatable that lieth betwixt them and Goldburg."
|
||
|
||
Ralph nodded friendly at him as he spake; but Clement looked on him sternly;
|
||
and the man beheld his scowling face innocently, and took no heed of it.
|
||
|
||
Then said Ralph: "As to Bull Shockhead, I will speak to him anon;
|
||
but I will not take him with me; for indeed I fear lest his mountain-pride
|
||
grow up over greenly at whiles and entangle me in some thicket of peril
|
||
hard to win out of."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Clement, "and when wilt thou depart?"
|
||
"To-morrow," said Ralph, "if my faring-fellow be ready for me by then."
|
||
"I am all ready," said the man: "if thou wilt ride out by the east
|
||
gate about two hours before noon to-morrow, I will abide thee
|
||
on a good horse with all that we may need for the journey:
|
||
and now I ask leave." "Thou hast it," said Clement.
|
||
|
||
So the man departed, and those two being left alone, Master Clement said:
|
||
"Well, I deemed that nothing else would come of it: and I fear
|
||
that thy gossip will be ill-content with me; for great is the peril."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and great the reward." Clement smiled and sighed,
|
||
and said: "Well, lad, even so hath a many thought before thee, wise men
|
||
as well as fools." Ralph looked at him and reddened, and departed
|
||
from him a little, and went walking in the cloister there to and fro,
|
||
and pondered these matters; and whatever he might do, still would
|
||
that trim figure be before his eyes which he had looked on so gladly
|
||
erewhile in the hostel of Bourton Abbas; and he said aloud to himself:
|
||
"Surely she needeth me, and draweth me to her whether I will or no."
|
||
So wore the day.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 31
|
||
|
||
The Beginning of the Road To Utterbol
|
||
|
||
|
||
Early next morning Ralph arose and called Bull Shockhead to him
|
||
and said: "So it is, Bull, that thou art my war-taken thrall."
|
||
Bull nodded his head, but frowned therewithal. Said Ralph:
|
||
"If I bid thee aught that is not beyond reason thou wilt do it,
|
||
wilt thou not?" "Yea," said Bull, surlily. "Well," quoth Ralph,
|
||
"I am going a journey east-away, and I may not have thee with me,
|
||
therefore I bid thee take this gold and go free with my goodwill."
|
||
Bull's face lighted up, and the eyes glittered in his face; but he said:
|
||
"Yea, king's son, but why wilt thou not take me with thee?"
|
||
Said Ralph: "It is a perilous journey, and thy being with me will
|
||
cast thee into peril and make mine more. Moreover, I have an errand,
|
||
as thou wottest, which is all mine own."
|
||
|
||
Bull pondered a little and then said: "King's son, I was thinking at first
|
||
that our errands lay together, and it is so; but belike thou sayest true
|
||
that there will be less peril to each of us if we sunder at this time.
|
||
But now I will say this to thee, that henceforth thou shalt be as a brother
|
||
to me, if thou wilt have it so, and if ever thou comest amongst our people,
|
||
thou wilt be in no danger of them: nay, they shall do all the good they
|
||
may to thee."
|
||
|
||
Then he took him by the hand and kissed him, and he set his hand
|
||
to his gear and drew forth a little purse of some small beast's
|
||
skin that was broidered in front with a pair of bull's horns:
|
||
then he stooped down and plucked a long and tough bent from
|
||
the grass at his feet (for they were talking in the garden
|
||
of the hostel) and twisted it swiftly into a strange knot
|
||
of many plies, and opening the purse laid it therein and said:
|
||
"King's son, this is the token whereby it shall be known amongst
|
||
our folk that I have made thee my brother: were the flames
|
||
roaring about thee, or the swords clashing over thine head,
|
||
if thou cry out, I am the brother of Bull Shockhead, all those
|
||
of my kindred who are near will be thy friends and thy helpers.
|
||
And now I say to thee farewell: but it is not altogether
|
||
unlike that thou mayst hear of me again in the furthest East."
|
||
So Ralph departed from him, and Clement went with Ralph to the Gate
|
||
of Goldburg, and bade him farewell there; and or they parted he said:
|
||
"Meseems I have with me now some deal of the foreseeing of Katherine
|
||
my wife, and in my mind it is that we shall yet see thee at
|
||
Wulstead and Upmeads, and thou no less famous than now thou art.
|
||
This is my last word to thee." Therewith they parted, and Ralph
|
||
rode his ways.
|
||
|
||
He came on his way-leader about a bowshot from the gate and they greeted
|
||
each other: the said guide was clad no otherwise than yesterday:
|
||
he had saddle-bags on his horse, which was a strong black roadster:
|
||
but he was nowise armed, and bore but a satchel with a case of
|
||
knives done on to it, and on the other side a fiddle in its case.
|
||
So Ralph smiled on him and said: "Thou hast no weapon, then?"
|
||
"What need for weapon?" said he; "since we are not of might for battle.
|
||
This is my weapon," said he, touching his fiddle, "and withal it
|
||
is my field and mine acre that raiseth flesh-meat and bread for me:
|
||
yea, and whiles a little drink."
|
||
|
||
So they rode on together and the man was blithe and merry:
|
||
and Ralph said to him: "Since we are fellows for a good while,
|
||
as I suppose, what shall I call thee?" Said he,
|
||
"Morfinn the Minstrel I hight, to serve thee, fair lord.
|
||
Or some call me Morfinn the Unmanned. Wilt thou not now ask
|
||
me concerning that privy word that I had for thy ears?"
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph reddening, "hath it to do with a woman?"
|
||
"Naught less," said Morfinn. "For I heard of thee asking
|
||
many questions thereof in Goldburg, and I said to myself,
|
||
now may I, who am bound for Utterness, do a good turn to this
|
||
fair young lord, whose face bewrayeth his heart, and telleth
|
||
all men that he is kind and bounteous; so that there is no doubt
|
||
but he will reward me well at once for any help I may give him;
|
||
and also it may be that he will do me a good turn hereafter
|
||
in memory of this that I have done him."
|
||
|
||
"Speak, wilt thou not," said Ralph, "and tell me at once if thou hast seen
|
||
this woman? Be sure that I shall reward thee." "Nay, nay, fair sir,"
|
||
said Morfinn; "a woman I have seen brought captive to the House of Utterbol.
|
||
See thou to it if it be she whom thou seekest."
|
||
|
||
He smiled therewith, but now Ralph deemed him not so debonnaire
|
||
as he had at first, for there was mocking in the smile;
|
||
therefore he was wroth, but he refrained him and said:
|
||
"Sir Minstrel, I wot not why thou hast come with a tale in thy
|
||
mouth and it will not out of it: lo you, will this open
|
||
the doors of speech to thee" (and he reached his hand out
|
||
to him with two pieces of gold lying therein) "or shall this?"
|
||
and therewith he half drew his sword from his sheath.
|
||
|
||
Said Morfinn, grinning again: "Nay, I fear not the bare steel in
|
||
thine hands, Knight; for thou hast not fool written plain in thy face;
|
||
therefore thou wilt not slay thy way-leader, or even anger him over much.
|
||
And as to thy gold, the wages shall be paid at the journey's end.
|
||
I was but seeking about in my mind how best to tell thee my tale
|
||
so that thou mightest believe my word, which is true. Thus it goes:
|
||
As I left Utterbol a month ago, I saw a damsel brought in captive there,
|
||
and she seemed to me so exceeding fair that I looked hard on her,
|
||
and asked one of the men-at-arms who is my friend concerning the market
|
||
whereat she was cheapened; and he told me that she had not been bought,
|
||
but taken out of the hands of the wild men from the further mountains.
|
||
Is that aught like to your story, lord?" "Yea," said Ralph, knitting his
|
||
brows in eagerness. "Well," said Morfinn, "but there are more fair
|
||
women than one in the world, and belike this is not thy friend:
|
||
so now, as well as I may, I will tell thee what-like she was,
|
||
and if thou knowest her not, thou mayst give me those two gold
|
||
pieces and go back again. She was tall rather than short,
|
||
and slim rather than bigly made. But many women are fashioned so:
|
||
and doubtless she was worn by travel, since she has at least come
|
||
from over the mountains: but that is little to tell her by:
|
||
her hands, and her feet also (for she was a horseback and barefoot)
|
||
wrought well beyond most women: yet so might it have been with some:
|
||
yet few, methinks, of women who have worked afield, as I deem her
|
||
to have done, would have hands and feet so shapely: her face tanned
|
||
with the sun, but with fair colour shining through it; her hair brown,
|
||
yet with a fair bright colour shining therein, and very abundant:
|
||
her cheeks smooth, round and well wrought as any imager could do them:
|
||
her chin round and cloven: her lips full and red, but firm-set
|
||
as if she might be both valiant and wroth. Her eyes set wide apart,
|
||
grey and deep: her whole face sweet of aspect, as though she
|
||
might be exceeding kind to one that pleased her; yet high and proud
|
||
of demeanour also, meseemed, as though she were come of great kindred.
|
||
Is this aught like to thy friend?"
|
||
|
||
He spake all this slowly and smoothly and that mocking smile came
|
||
into his face now and again. Ralph grew pale as he spoke and knitted
|
||
his brows as one in great wrath and grief; and he was slow to answer;
|
||
but at last he said "Yea," shortly and sharply.
|
||
|
||
Then said Morfinn: "And yet after all it might not be she:
|
||
for there might be another or two even in these parts of whom
|
||
all this might be said. But now I will tell thee of her raiment,
|
||
though there may be but little help to thee therein, as she may
|
||
have shifted it many times since thou hast seen her. Thus it was:
|
||
she was clad outwardly in a green gown, short of skirt as of one
|
||
wont to go afoot; somewhat straight in the sleeves as of one who
|
||
hath household work to do, and there was broidery many coloured
|
||
on the seams thereof, and a border of flower-work round the hem:
|
||
and this I noted, that a cantle of the skirt had been rent away
|
||
by some hap of the journey. Now what sayest thou, fair lord?
|
||
Have I done well to bring thee this tale?"
|
||
|
||
"O yea, yea," said Ralph, and he might not contain himself; but set
|
||
spurs to his horse and galloped on ahead for some furlong or so:
|
||
and then drew rein and gat off his horse, and made as if he would see
|
||
to his saddle-girths, for he might not refrain from weeping the sweet
|
||
and bitter tears of desire and fear, so stirred the soul within him.
|
||
|
||
Morfinn rode on quietly, and by then he came up, Ralph was
|
||
mounting again, and when he was in the saddle he turned
|
||
away his head from his fellow and said in a husky voice:
|
||
"Morfinn, I command thee, or if thou wilt I beseech thee,
|
||
that thou speak not to me again of this woman whom I am seeking;
|
||
for it moveth me over much." "That is well, lord," said Morfinn,
|
||
"I will do after thy command; and there be many other matters
|
||
to speak of besides one fair woman."
|
||
|
||
Then they rode on soberly a while, and Ralph kept silence,
|
||
as he rode pondering much; but the minstrel hummed snatches
|
||
of rhyme as he rode the way.
|
||
|
||
But at last Ralph turned to him suddenly and said: "Tell me,
|
||
way-leader, in what wise did they seem to be using that woman?"
|
||
The minstrel chuckled: "Fair lord," said he, "if I had a mind
|
||
for mocking I might say of thee that thou blowest both hot
|
||
and cold, since it was but half an hour ago that thou badest me
|
||
speak naught of her: but I deem that I know thy mind herein:
|
||
so I will tell thee that they seemed to be using her courteously;
|
||
as is no marvel; for who would wish to mar so fair an image?
|
||
O, it will be well with her: I noted that the Lord seemed
|
||
to think it good to ride beside her, and eye her all over.
|
||
Yea, she shall have a merry life of it if she but do somewhat
|
||
after the Lord's will."
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked askance at him fiercely, but the other heeded it naught:
|
||
then said Ralph, "And how if she do not his will?" Said Morfinn, grinning:
|
||
"Then hath my Lord a many servants to do his will." Ralph held his peace
|
||
for a long while; at last he turned a cleared brow to Morfinn and said;
|
||
"Dost thou tell of the Lord of Utterbol that he is a good lord and merciful
|
||
to his folk and servants?"
|
||
|
||
"Fair sir," said the minstrel; "thou hast bidden me not speak
|
||
of one woman, now will I pray thee not to speak of one man,
|
||
and that is my Lord of Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
Ralph's heart fell at this word, and he asked no question as to wherefore.
|
||
|
||
So now they rode on both, rather more than soberly for a while:
|
||
but the day was fair; the sun shone, the wind blew, and the sweet
|
||
scents floated about them, and Ralph's heart cast off its burden
|
||
somewhat and he fell to speech again; and the minstrel answered
|
||
him gaily by seeming, noting many things as they rode along,
|
||
as one that took delight in the fashion of the earth.
|
||
|
||
It was a fresh and bright morning of early autumn,
|
||
the sheaves were on the acres, and the grapes were blackening
|
||
to the vintage, and the beasts and birds at least were merry.
|
||
But little merry were the husbandmen whom they met,
|
||
either carles or queans, and they were scantily and foully clad,
|
||
and sullen-faced, if not hunger-pinched.
|
||
|
||
If they came across any somewhat joyous, it was here and there certain
|
||
gangrel folk resting on the wayside grass, or coming out of woods and
|
||
other passes by twos and threes, whiles with a child or two with them.
|
||
These were of aspect like to the gipsies of our time and nation,
|
||
and were armed all of them, and mostly well clad after their fashion.
|
||
Sometimes when there were as many as four or five carles of them together,
|
||
they would draw up amidst of the highway, but presently would turn aside
|
||
at the sight either of Ralph's war-gear or of the minstrel's raiment.
|
||
Forsooth, some of them seemed to know him, and nodded friendly to him
|
||
as they passed by, but he gave them back no good day.
|
||
|
||
They had now ridden out of the lands of Goldburg,
|
||
which were narrow on that side, and the day was wearing fast.
|
||
This way the land was fair and rich, with no hills of any size.
|
||
They crossed a big river twice by bridges, and small streams often,
|
||
mostly by fords.
|
||
|
||
Some two hours before sunset they came upon a place where a byway
|
||
joined the high road, and on the ingle stood a chapel of stone
|
||
(whether of the heathen or Christian men Ralph wotted not,
|
||
for it was uncouth of fashion), and by the door of the said chapel,
|
||
on a tussock of grass, sat a knight all-armed save the head,
|
||
and beside him a squire held his war-horse, and five other men-at-arms
|
||
stood anigh bearing halberds and axes of strange fashion.
|
||
The knight rose to his feet when he saw the wayfarers coming up
|
||
the rising ground, and Ralph had his hand on his sword-hilt;
|
||
but ere they met, the minstrel said,--
|
||
|
||
"Nay, nay, draw thy let-pass, not thy sword. This knight
|
||
shalt bid thee to a courteous joust; but do thou nay-say it,
|
||
for he is a mere felon, and shalt set his men-at-arms on thee,
|
||
and then will rob thee and slay thee after, or cast thee
|
||
into his prison."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph drew out his parchment which Morfinn had given into
|
||
his keeping, and held it open in his hand, and when the knight
|
||
called out on him in a rough voice as they drew anigh, he said:
|
||
"Nay, sir, I may not stay me now, need driveth me on."
|
||
Quoth the knight, smoothing out a knitted brow: "Fair sir,
|
||
since thou art a friend of our lord, wilt thou not come home
|
||
to my house, which is hard by, and rest awhile, and eat a morsel,
|
||
and drink a cup, and sleep in a fair chamber thereafter?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay, sir," said Ralph, "for time presses;" and he passed on withal,
|
||
and the knight made no step to stay him, but laughed a short laugh,
|
||
like a swine snorting, and sat him down on the grass again.
|
||
Ralph heeded him naught, but was glad that his let-pass was shown
|
||
to be good for something; but he could see that the minstrel
|
||
was nigh sick for fear and was shaking like an aspen leaf,
|
||
and it was long ere he found his tongue again.
|
||
|
||
Forth then they rode till dusk, when the minstrel stayed Ralph at a place
|
||
where a sort of hovels lay together about a house somewhat better builded,
|
||
which Ralph took for a hostelry, though it had no sign nor bush.
|
||
They entered the said house, wherein was an old woman to whom the minstrel
|
||
spake a word or two in a tongue that Ralph knew not, and straightway she
|
||
got them victual and drink nowise ill, and showed them to beds thereafter.
|
||
|
||
In spite of both victuals and drink the minstrel fell silent and moody;
|
||
it might be from weariness, Ralph deemed; and he himself had no great lust
|
||
for talk, so he went bedward, and made the bed pay for all.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 32
|
||
|
||
Ralph Happens on Evil Days
|
||
|
||
|
||
Early on the morrow they departed, and now in the morning light
|
||
and the sun the minstrel seemed glad again, and talked abundantly,
|
||
even though at whiles Ralph answered him little.
|
||
|
||
As they rode, the land began to get less fertile and less,
|
||
till at last there was but tillage here and there in patches:
|
||
of houses there were but few, and the rest was but dark heathland
|
||
and bog, with scraggy woods scattered about the country-side.
|
||
|
||
Naught happened to tell of, save that once in the afternoon,
|
||
as they were riding up to the skirts of one of the woods aforesaid,
|
||
weaponed men came forth from it and drew up across the way;
|
||
they were a dozen in all, and four were horsed. Ralph set his hand
|
||
to his sword, but the minstrel cried out, "Nay, no weapons, no weapons!
|
||
Pull out thy let-pass again and show it in thine hand, and then
|
||
let us on."
|
||
|
||
So saying he drew a white kerchief from his hand, and tied it to
|
||
the end of his riding staff, and so rode trembling by Ralph's side:
|
||
therewith they rode on together towards those men, whom as they drew
|
||
nearer they heard laughing and jeering at them, though in a tongue
|
||
that Ralph knew not.
|
||
|
||
They came so close at last that the waylayers could see the parchment clearly,
|
||
with the seal thereon, and then they made obeisance to it, as though it
|
||
were the relic of a saint, and drew off quietly into the wood one by one.
|
||
These were big men, and savage-looking, and their armour was utterly uncouth.
|
||
|
||
The minstrel was loud in his mirth when they were well past these men;
|
||
but Ralph rode on silently, and was somewhat soberly.
|
||
|
||
"Fair sir," quoth the minstrel, "I would wager that I know
|
||
thy thought." "Yea," said Ralph, "what is it them?"
|
||
Said the minstrel: "Thou art thinking what thou shalt do
|
||
when thou meetest suchlike folk on thy way back; but fear not,
|
||
for with that same seal thou shalt pass through the land again."
|
||
Said Ralph: "Yea, something like that, forsooth, was my thought.
|
||
But also I was pondering who should be my guide when I
|
||
leave Utterbol." The minstrel looked at him askance; quoth he:
|
||
"Thou mayst leave thinking of that awhile." Ralph looked
|
||
hard at him, but could make naught of the look of his face;
|
||
so he said: "Why dost thou say that?" Said Morfinn:
|
||
"Because I know whither thou art bound, and have been wondering
|
||
this long while that thou hast asked me not about the way
|
||
to the WELL at the WORLD'S END: since I told thy friend
|
||
the merchant that I could tell thee somewhat concerning it.
|
||
But I suppose thou hast been thinking of something else?"
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Ralph, "tell me what thou hast to say of the Well."
|
||
Said Morfinn: "This will I tell thee first: that if thou hast
|
||
any doubt that such a place there is, thou mayst set that aside;
|
||
for we of Utterness and Utterbol are sure thereof; and of all
|
||
nations and peoples whereof we know, we deem that we are the
|
||
nighest thereto. How sayest thou, is that not already something?"
|
||
"Yea, verily," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"Now," said Morfinn, "the next thing to be said is that we are on
|
||
the road thereto: but the third thing again is this, lord, that though
|
||
few who seek it find it, yet we know that some have failed not of it,
|
||
besides that lord of Goldburg, of whom I know that thou hast heard.
|
||
Furthermore, there dwelleth a sage in the woods not right far from Utterbol,
|
||
a hermit living by himself; and folk seek to him for divers lore,
|
||
to be holpen by him in one way or other, and of him men say that he hath
|
||
so much lore concerning the road to the Well (whether he hath been
|
||
there himself they know not certainly), that if he will, he can put
|
||
anyone on the road so surely that he will not fail to come there,
|
||
but he be slain on the way, as I said to thee in Goldburg.
|
||
True it is that the said sage is chary of his lore, and if he think
|
||
any harm of the seeker, he will show him naught; but, fair sir,
|
||
thou art so valiant and so goodly, and as meseemeth so good a knight
|
||
per amours, that I deem it a certain thing that he will tell thee
|
||
the uttermost of his knowledge."
|
||
|
||
Now again waxed Ralph eager concerning his quest; for true it is
|
||
that since he had had that story of the damsel from the minstrel,
|
||
she had stood in the way before the Well at the World's End.
|
||
But now he said: "And canst thou bring me to the said sage, good minstrel?"
|
||
"Without doubt," quoth Morfinn, "when we are once safe at Utterbol.
|
||
From Utterbol ye may wend any road."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and there are perils yet a few on the way, is it not so?"
|
||
"So it is," said the minstrel; "but to-morrow shall try all." Said Ralph:
|
||
"And is there some special peril ahead to-morrow? And if it be so,
|
||
what is it?" Said his fellow: "It would avail thee naught to know it.
|
||
What then, doth that daunt thee?" "No," said Ralph, "by then it is nigh
|
||
enough to hurt us, we shall be nigh enough to see it." "Well said!"
|
||
quoth the minstrel; "but now we must mend our pace, or dark night shall
|
||
overtake us amid these rough ways."
|
||
|
||
Wild as the land was, they came at even to a place where were
|
||
a few houses of woodmen or hunters; and they got off their horses
|
||
and knocked at the door of one of these, and a great black-haired
|
||
carle opened to them, who, when he saw the knight's armour,
|
||
would have clapped the door to again, had not Ralph by the minstrel's
|
||
rede held out the parchment to him, who when he saw it became
|
||
humble indeed, and gave them such guesting as he might, which was
|
||
scant indeed of victual or drink, save wild-fowl from the heath.
|
||
But they had wine with them from the last guest-house, whereof
|
||
they bade the carle to drink; but he would not, and in all wise
|
||
seemed to be in dread of them.
|
||
|
||
When it was morning early they rode their ways, and the carle
|
||
seemed glad to be rid of them. After they had ridden a few
|
||
miles the land bettered somewhat; there were islands of deep
|
||
green pasture amidst the blackness of the heath, with cattle
|
||
grazing on them, and here and there was a little tillage:
|
||
the land was little better than level, only it swelled a little this
|
||
way and that. It was a bright sunny day and the air very clear,
|
||
and as they rode Ralph said: "Quite clear is the sky, and yet
|
||
one cloud there is in the offing; but this is strange about it,
|
||
though I have been watching it this half hour, and looking to see
|
||
the rack come up from that quarter, yet it changes not at all.
|
||
I never saw the like of this cloud."
|
||
|
||
Said the minstrel: "Yea, fair sir, and of this cloud I must tell thee that it
|
||
will change no more till the bones of the earth are tumbled together.
|
||
Forsooth this is no cloud, but the topmost head of the mountain ridge
|
||
which men call the Wall of the World: and if ever thou come close up
|
||
to the said Wall, that shall fear thee, I deem, however fearless thou be."
|
||
"Is it nigh to Utterness?" said Ralph. "Nay," said the minstrel,
|
||
"not so nigh; for as huge as it seemeth thence."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Do folk tell that the Well at the World's End lieth beyond it?"
|
||
"Surely," said the minstrel.
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph, his face flushing: "Forsooth, that ancient lord
|
||
of Goldburg came through those mountains, and why not I?"
|
||
"Yea," said the minstrel, "why not?" And therewith he looked
|
||
uneasily on Ralph, who heeded his looks naught, for his mind
|
||
was set on high matters.
|
||
|
||
On then they rode, and when trees or some dip in the land hid
|
||
that mountain top from them, the way seemed long to Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Naught befell to tell of for some while; but at last,
|
||
when it was drawing towards evening again, they had been riding
|
||
through a thick pine-wood for a long while, and coming out of it
|
||
they beheld before them a plain country fairly well grassed,
|
||
but lo! on the field not far from the roadside a pavilion
|
||
pitched and a banner on the top thereof, but the banner hung
|
||
down about the staff, so that the bearing was not seen:
|
||
and about this pavilion, which was great and rich of fashion,
|
||
were many tents great and small, and there were horses tethered
|
||
in the field, and men moving about the gleam of armour.
|
||
|
||
At this sight the minstrel drew rein and stared about him wildly;
|
||
but Ralph said: "What is this, is it the peril aforesaid?"
|
||
"Yea," quoth the minstrel, shivering with fear. "What aileth thee?"
|
||
said Ralph; "have we not the let-pass, what then can befall us?
|
||
If this be other than the Lord of Utterbol, he will see
|
||
our let-pass and let us alone; or if it be he indeed,
|
||
what harm shall he do to the bearers of his own pass?
|
||
Come on then, or else (and therewith he half drew his sword)
|
||
is this Lord of Utterbol but another name for the Devil in Hell?"
|
||
|
||
But the minstrel still stared wild and trembled; then he stammered out:
|
||
"I thought I should bring thee to Utterness first, and that some other should
|
||
lead thee thence, I did not look to see him. I dare not, I dare not!
|
||
O look, look!"
|
||
|
||
As he spake the wind arose and ran along the wood-side, and beat back
|
||
from it and stirred the canvas of the tents and raised the folds
|
||
of the banner, and blew it out, so that the bearing was clear to see;
|
||
yet Ralph deemed it naught dreadful, but an armoury fit for a baron,
|
||
to wit, a black bear on a castle-wall on a field of gold.
|
||
|
||
But as Ralph sat on his horse gazing, himseemed that men
|
||
were looking towards him, and a great horn was sounded hard
|
||
by the pavilion; then Ralph looked toward the minstrel fiercely,
|
||
and laughed and said: "I see now that thou art another traitor:
|
||
so get thee gone; I have more to do than the slaying of thee."
|
||
And therewith he turned his horse's head, and smote the spurs
|
||
into the sides of him, and went a great gallop over the field
|
||
on the right side of the road, away from the gay pavilion;
|
||
but even therewith came a half-score of horsemen from the camp,
|
||
as if they were awaiting him, and they spurred after him straightway.
|
||
|
||
The race was no long one, for Ralph's beast was wearied,
|
||
and the other horses were fresh, and Ralph knew naught of
|
||
the country before him, whereas those riders knew it well.
|
||
Therefore it was but a few minutes till they came up with him,
|
||
and he made no show of defence, but suffered them to lead
|
||
him away, and he crossed the highway, where he saw no token
|
||
of the minstrel.
|
||
|
||
So they brought him to the pavilion, and made him dismount and led him in.
|
||
The dusk had fallen by now, but within it was all bright with candles.
|
||
The pavilion was hung with rich silken cloth, and at the further end,
|
||
on a carpet of the hunting, was an ivory chair, whereon sat a man,
|
||
who was the only one sitting. He was clad in a gown of blue silk,
|
||
broidered with roundels beaten with the Bear upon the Castle-wall.
|
||
|
||
Ralph deemed that this must be no other than the Lord of Utterbol,
|
||
yet after all the tales he had heard of that lord, he seemed no such
|
||
terrible man: he was short of stature, but broad across the shoulders,
|
||
his hair long, strait, and dark brown of hue, and his beard scanty:
|
||
he was straight-featured and smooth-faced, and had been no ill-looking man,
|
||
save that his skin was sallow and for his eyes, which were brown, small,
|
||
and somewhat bloodshot.
|
||
|
||
Beside him stood Morfinn bowed down with fear and not daring
|
||
to look either at the Lord or at Ralph. Wherefore he knew
|
||
for certain that when he had called him traitor even now,
|
||
that it was no more than the very sooth, and that he had fallen
|
||
into the trap; though how or why he wotted not clearly.
|
||
Well then might his heart have fallen, but so it was, that when
|
||
he looked into the face of this Lord, the terror of the lands,
|
||
hatred of him so beset his heart that it swallowed up fear in him.
|
||
Albeit he held himself well in hand, for his soul was waxing,
|
||
and he deemed that he should yet do great deeds, therefore he
|
||
desired to live, whatsoever pains or shame of the passing day
|
||
he might suffer.
|
||
|
||
Now this mighty lord spake, and his voice was harsh and squeaking,
|
||
so that the sound of it was worse than the sight of his face;
|
||
and he said: "Bring the man forth, that I may see him."
|
||
So they brought up Ralph, till he was eye to eye with the Lord,
|
||
who turned to Morfinn and said: "Is this thy catch, lucky man?"
|
||
"Yea," quavered Morfinn, not lifting his eyes; "Will he do, lord?"
|
||
|
||
"Do?" said the lord, "How can I see him when he is all muffled up in steel?
|
||
Ye fools! doff his wargear."
|
||
|
||
Speedily then had they stripped Ralph of hauberk, and helm, and arm
|
||
and leg plates, so that he stood up in his jerkin and breeches,
|
||
and the lord leaned forward to look on him as if he were cheapening
|
||
a horse; and then turned to a man somewhat stricken in years,
|
||
clad in scarlet, who stood on his other hand, and said to him:
|
||
"Well, David the Sage, is this the sort of man? Is he goodly enough?"
|
||
|
||
Then the elder put on a pair of spectacles and eyed Ralph curiously
|
||
a while, and then said: "There are no two words to be said about it;
|
||
he is a goodly and well-fashioned a young man as was ever sold."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said the lord, turning towards Morfinn, "the catch is good,
|
||
lucky man: David will give thee gold for it, and thou mayst go back west
|
||
when thou wilt. And thou must be lucky again, moreover; because there
|
||
are women needed for my house; and they must be goodly and meek,
|
||
and not grievously marked with stripes, or branded, so that thou
|
||
hadst best take them, luckily if thou mayst, and not buy them.
|
||
Now go, for there are more than enough men under this woven roof,
|
||
and we need no half-men to boot."
|
||
|
||
Said David, the old man, grinning: "He will hold him well paid if he go
|
||
unscathed from before thee, lord: for he looked not to meet thee here,
|
||
but thought to bring the young man to Utterness, that he might be kept
|
||
there till thou camest."
|
||
|
||
The lord said, grimly: "He is not far wrong to fear me, maybe:
|
||
but he shall go for this time. But if he bring me not those women
|
||
within three months' wearing, and if there be but two uncomely
|
||
ones amongst them, let him look to it. Give him his gold, David.
|
||
Now take ye the new man, and let him rest, and give him meat and drink.
|
||
And look you, David, if he be not in condition when he cometh
|
||
home to Utterbol, thou shalt pay for it in one way or other,
|
||
if not in thine own person, since thou art old, and deft of service,
|
||
then through those that be dear to thee. Go now!"
|
||
|
||
David smiled on Ralph and led him out unto a tent not far off, and there
|
||
he made much of him, and bade bring meat and drink and all he needed.
|
||
Withal he bade him not to try fleeing, lest he be slain; and he showed
|
||
him how nigh the guards were and how many.
|
||
|
||
Glad was the old man when he saw the captive put a good face
|
||
on matters, and that he was not down-hearted. In sooth that hatred
|
||
of the tyrant mingled with hope sustained Ralph's heart.
|
||
He had been minded when he was brought before the lord to
|
||
have shown the letter of the Queen of Goldburg, and to defy
|
||
him if he still held him captive. But when he had beheld
|
||
him and his fellowship a while he thought better of it.
|
||
For though they had abundance of rich plenishing, and gay raiment,
|
||
and good weapons and armour, howbeit of strange and uncouth fashion,
|
||
yet he deemed when he looked on them that they would scarce
|
||
have the souls of men in their bodies, but that they were utterly
|
||
vile through and through, like the shapes of an evil dream.
|
||
Therefore he thought shame of it to show the Queen's letter
|
||
to them, even as if he had shown them the very naked body of her,
|
||
who had been so piteous kind to him. Also he had no mind
|
||
to wear his heart on his sleeve, but would keep his own counsel,
|
||
and let his foemen speak and show what was in their minds.
|
||
For this cause he now made himself sweet, and was of good
|
||
cheer with old David, deeming him to be a great men there;
|
||
as indeed he was, being the chief counsellor of the Lord
|
||
of Utterbol; though forsooth not so much his counsellor
|
||
as that he durst counsel otherwise than as the Lord desired
|
||
to go; unless he thought that it would bring his said Lord,
|
||
and therefore himself, to very present peril and damage.
|
||
In short, though this man had not been bought for money, he was
|
||
little better than a thrall of the higher sort, as forsooth were
|
||
all the Lord's men, saving the best and trustiest of his warriors:
|
||
and these were men whom the Lord somewhat feared himself:
|
||
though, on the other hand, he could not but know that they
|
||
understood how the dread of the Lord of Utterbol was a shield
|
||
to them, and that if it were to die out amongst men, their own
|
||
skins were not worth many days' purchase.
|
||
|
||
So then David spake pleasantly with Ralph, and ate and drank
|
||
with him, and saw that he was well bedded for the night,
|
||
and left him in the first watch. But Ralph lay down in little
|
||
more trouble than the night before, when, though he were being
|
||
led friendly to Utterness, yet he had not been able to think
|
||
what he should do when he came there: whereas now he thought:
|
||
Who knoweth what shall betide? and for me there is nought to do
|
||
save to lay hold of the occasion that another may give me.
|
||
And at the worst I scarce deem that I am being led to the slaughter.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 33
|
||
|
||
Ralph is Brought on the Road Towards Utterbol
|
||
|
||
|
||
But now when it was morning they struck the tents and laded
|
||
them on wains, and went their ways the selfsame road that Ralph
|
||
had been minded for yesterday; to wit the road to Utterness;
|
||
but now must he ride it unarmed and guarded: other shame had he none.
|
||
Indeed David, who stuck close to his side all day, was so sugary
|
||
sweet with him, and praised and encouraged him so diligently,
|
||
that Ralph began to have misgivings that all this kindness was
|
||
but as the flower-garlands wherewith the heathen times men were
|
||
wont to deck the slaughter-beasts for the blood-offering. Yea,
|
||
and into his mind came certain tales of how there were
|
||
heathen men yet in the world, who beguiled men and women,
|
||
and offered them up to their devils, whom they called gods:
|
||
but all this ran off him soon, when he bethought him how little
|
||
wisdom there was in running to meet the evil, which might
|
||
be on the way, and that way a rough and perilous one.
|
||
So he plucked up heart, and spake freely and gaily with David
|
||
and one or two others who rode anigh.
|
||
|
||
They were amidst of the company: the Lord went first after
|
||
his fore-runners in a litter done about with precious cloths;
|
||
and two score horsemen came next, fully armed after their manner.
|
||
Then rode Ralph with David and a half dozen of the magnates:
|
||
then came a sort of cooks and other serving men, but none without
|
||
a weapon, and last another score of men-at-arms: so that he saw
|
||
that fleeing was not to be thought of though he was not bound,
|
||
and save for lack of weapons rode like a free man.
|
||
|
||
The day was clear as yesterday had been, wherefore again
|
||
Ralph saw the distant mountain-top like a cloud; and he gazed
|
||
at it long till David said: "I see that thou art gazing hard
|
||
at the mountains, and perchance art longing to be beyond them,
|
||
were it but to see what like the land is on the further side.
|
||
If all tales be true thou art best this side thereof,
|
||
whatever thy lot may be."
|
||
|
||
"Lieth death on the other side then?" quoth Ralph. "Yea," said David,
|
||
"but that is not all, since he is not asleep elsewhere in the world:
|
||
but men say that over there are things to be seen which might slay
|
||
a strong man for pure fear, without stroke of sword or dint of axe."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "but how was it then with him that builded Goldburg?"
|
||
|
||
"O," said David, "hast thou heard that tale? Well, they say
|
||
of him, who certes went over those mountains, and drank
|
||
of the Well at the World's End, that he was one of the lucky:
|
||
yet for all his luck never had he drunk the draught had he not
|
||
been helped by one who had learned many things, a woman to wit.
|
||
For he was one of them with whom all women are in love;
|
||
and thence indeed was his luck....Moreover, when all is said,
|
||
'tis but a tale."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," quoth Ralph laughing, "even as the tales of the ghosts
|
||
and bugs that abide the wayfarer on the other side of yonder
|
||
white moveless cloud."
|
||
|
||
David laughed in his turn and said: "Thou hast me there;
|
||
and whether or no, these tales are nothing to us, who shall never
|
||
leave Utterbol again while we live, save in such a company as this."
|
||
Then he held his peace, but presently spake again: "Hast thou
|
||
heard anything, then, of those tales of the Well at the World's End?
|
||
I mean others beside that concerning the lord of Goldburg?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, surely I have," said Ralph, nowise changing countenance. Said David:
|
||
"Deemest thou aught of them? deemest thou that it may be true that a man
|
||
may drink of the Well and recover his youth thereby?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed and said: "Master, it is rather for me to ask
|
||
thee hereof, than thou me, since thou dwellest so much nigher
|
||
thereto than I have done heretofore."
|
||
|
||
David drew up close to him, and said softly: "Nigher? Yea, but belike
|
||
not so much nigher."
|
||
|
||
"How meanest thou?" said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Said David: "Is it so nigh that a man may leave home and come
|
||
thereto in his life-time?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "in my tales it is."
|
||
|
||
Said the old man still softlier: "Had I deemed that true I had
|
||
tried the adventure, whatever might lie beyond the mountains, but
|
||
(and he sighed withal) I deem it untrue."
|
||
|
||
Therewith dropped the talk of that matter: and in sooth Ralph was
|
||
loath to make many words thereof, lest his eagerness shine through,
|
||
and all the story of him be known.
|
||
|
||
Anon it was noon, and the lord bade all men stay for meat:
|
||
so his serving men busied them about his dinner, and David went with them.
|
||
Then the men-at-arms bade Ralph sit among them and share their meat.
|
||
So they sat down all by the wayside, and they spake kindly and friendly
|
||
to Ralph, and especially their captain, a man somewhat low of stature,
|
||
but long-armed like the Lord, a man of middle age, beardless and spare
|
||
of body, but wiry and tough-looking, with hair of the hue of the dust
|
||
of the sandstone quarry. This man fell a-talking with Ralph, and asked
|
||
him of the manner of tilting and courteous jousting between knights
|
||
in the countries of knighthood, till that talk dropped between them.
|
||
Then Ralph looked round upon the land, which had now worsened again,
|
||
and was little better than rough moorland, little fed, and not at all tilled,
|
||
and he said: "This is but a sorry land for earth's increase."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said the captain, "I wot not; it beareth plover and
|
||
whimbrel and conies and hares; yea, and men withal, some few.
|
||
And whereas it beareth naught else, that cometh of my lord's will:
|
||
for deemest thou that he should suffer a rich land betwixt
|
||
him and Goldburg, that it might sustain an host big enough
|
||
to deal with him?"
|
||
|
||
"But is not this his land?" said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Said the captain: "Nay, and also yea. None shall dwell in it save
|
||
as he willeth, and they shall pay him tribute, be it never so little.
|
||
Yet some there are of them, who are to him as the hounds be to the hunter,
|
||
and these same he even wageth, so that if aught rare and goodly cometh
|
||
their way they shall bring it to his hands; as thou thyself knowest
|
||
to thy cost."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph smiling, "and is Morfinn the Unmanned one of these curs?"
|
||
"Yea," said the captain, with a grin, "and one of the richest of them,
|
||
in despite of his fiddle and minstrel's gear, and his lack of manhood:
|
||
for he is one of the cunningest of men. But my Lord unmanned him for
|
||
some good reason."
|
||
|
||
Ralph kept silence and while and then said: "Why doth the Goldburg folk
|
||
suffer all this felony, robbery and confusion, so near their borders,
|
||
and the land debateable?"
|
||
|
||
Said the captain, and again he grinned: "Passing for thy hard words,
|
||
sir knight, why dost thou suffer me to lead thee along whither
|
||
thou wouldest not?"
|
||
|
||
"Because I cannot help myself," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Said the captain: "Even so it is with the Goldburg folk:
|
||
if they raise hand against some of these strong-thieves or man-stealers,
|
||
he has but to send the war-arrow round about these deserts,
|
||
as ye deem them, and he will presently have as rough a company
|
||
of carles for his fellows as need be, say ten hundred of them.
|
||
And the Goldburg folk are not very handy at a fray without their walls.
|
||
Forsooth within them it is another matter, and beside not even our
|
||
Lord of Utterbol would see Goldburg broken down, no, not for all
|
||
that he might win there."
|
||
|
||
"Is it deemed a holy place in the land, then?" said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"I wot not the meaning of holy," said the other: "but all we
|
||
deem that when Goldburg shall fall, the world shall change,
|
||
so that living therein shall be hard to them that have not drunk
|
||
of the water of the Well at the World's End."
|
||
|
||
Ralph was silent a while and eyed the captain curiously:
|
||
then he said: "Have the Goldburgers so drunk?" Said the captain:
|
||
"Nay, nay; but the word goes that under each tower of Goldburg
|
||
lieth a youth and a maiden that have drunk of the water,
|
||
and might not die save by point and edge."
|
||
|
||
Then was Ralph silent again, for once more he fell
|
||
pondering the matter if he had been led away to be offered
|
||
as a blood offering to some of evil gods of the land.
|
||
But as he pondered a flourish of trumpets was blown,
|
||
and all men sprang up, and the captain said to Ralph:
|
||
"Now hath our Lord done his dinner and we must to horse."
|
||
Anon they were on the way again, and they rode long and saw little
|
||
change in the aspect of the land, neither did that cloudlike
|
||
token of the distant mountains grow any greater or clearer
|
||
to Ralph's deeming.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 34
|
||
|
||
The Lord of Utterbol Will Wot of Ralph's Might and Minstrelsy
|
||
|
||
|
||
A little before sunset they made halt for the night, and Ralph was shown
|
||
to a tent as erst, and had meat and drink good enough brought to him.
|
||
But somewhat after he had done eating comes David to him and says:
|
||
"Up, young man! and come to my lord, he asketh for thee."
|
||
|
||
"What will he want with me?" said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"Yea, that is a proper question to ask!" quoth David; "as though
|
||
the knife should ask the cutler, what wilt thou cut with me?
|
||
Dost thou deem that I durst ask him of his will with thee?"
|
||
"I am ready to go with thee," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
So they went forth; but Ralph's heart fell and he sickened at the thought
|
||
of seeing that man again. Nevertheless he set his face as brass,
|
||
and thrust back both his fear and his hatred for a fitter occasion.
|
||
|
||
Soon they came into the pavilion of the Lord, who was sitting there
|
||
as yester eve, save that his gown was red, and done about with gold
|
||
and turquoise and emerald. David brought Ralph nigh to his seat,
|
||
but spake not. The mighty lord was sitting with his head drooping,
|
||
and his arm hanging over his knee, with a heavy countenance
|
||
as though he were brooding matters which pleased him naught.
|
||
But in a while he sat up with a start, and turned about and saw David
|
||
standing there with Ralph, and spake at once like a man waking up:
|
||
"He that sold thee to me said that thou wert of avail for many things.
|
||
Now tell me, what canst thou do?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph so hated him, that he was of half a mind to answer naught
|
||
save by smiting him to slay him; but there was no weapon anigh,
|
||
and life was sweet to him with all the tale that was lying ahead.
|
||
So he answered coldly: "It is sooth, lord, that I can do more
|
||
than one deed."
|
||
|
||
"Canst thou back a horse?" said the Lord. Said Ralph: "As well as many."
|
||
Said the Lord: "Canst thou break a wild horse, and shoe him, and physic him?"
|
||
|
||
"Not worse than some," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"Can'st thou play with sword and spear?" said the Lord.
|
||
|
||
"Better than some few," said Ralph. "How shall I know that?" said the Lord.
|
||
Said Ralph: "Try me, lord!" Indeed, he half hoped that if it came to that,
|
||
he might escape in the hurley.
|
||
|
||
The Lord looked on him and said: "Well, it may be tried.
|
||
But here is a cold and proud answerer, David. I misdoubt me
|
||
whether it be worth while bringing him home."
|
||
|
||
David looked timidly on Ralph and said: "Thou hast paid the price
|
||
for him, lord."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, that is true," said the Lord. "Thou! can'st thou play at the chess?"
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph. "Can'st thou music?" said the other. "Yea," said Ralph,
|
||
"when I am merry, or whiles indeed when I am sad."
|
||
|
||
The lord said: "Make thyself merry or sad, which thou wilt;
|
||
but sing, or thou shalt be beaten. Ho! Bring ye the harp."
|
||
Then they brought it as he bade.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph looked to right and left and saw no deliverance,
|
||
and knew this for the first hour of his thralldom.
|
||
Yet, as he thought of it all, he remembered that if he would do,
|
||
he must needs bear and forbear; and his face cleared,
|
||
and he looked round about again and let his eyes rest calmly
|
||
on all eyes that he met till they came on the Lord's face again.
|
||
Then he let his hand fall into the strings and they fell
|
||
a-tinkling sweetly, like unto the song of the winter robin,
|
||
and at last he lifted his voice and sang:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Still now is the stithy this morning unclouded, Nought stirs in the thorp
|
||
save the yellow-haired maid A-peeling the withy last Candlemas shrouded
|
||
From the mere where the moorhen now swims unafraid.
|
||
|
||
For over the Ford now the grass and the clover Fly off from the tines as
|
||
the wind driveth on; And soon round the Sword-howe the swathe shall lie over,
|
||
And to-morrow at even the mead shall be won.
|
||
|
||
But the Hall of the Garden amidst the hot morning, It drew my feet thither;
|
||
I stood at the door, And felt my heart harden 'gainst wisdom and warning As
|
||
the sun and my footsteps came on to the floor.
|
||
|
||
When the sun lay behind me, there scarce in the dimness I say what I
|
||
sought for, yet trembled to find; But it came forth to find me,
|
||
until the sleek slimness Of the summer-clad woman made summer o'er kind.
|
||
|
||
There we the once-sundered together were blended, We strangers, unknown once,
|
||
were hidden by naught. I kissed and I wondered how doubt was all ended,
|
||
How friendly her excellent fairness was wrought.
|
||
|
||
Round the hall of the Garden the hot sun is burning, But no master
|
||
nor minstrel goes there in the shade, It hath never a warden till
|
||
comes the returning, When the moon shall hang high and all winds
|
||
shall be laid.
|
||
|
||
Waned the day and I hied me afield, and thereafter I sat with the mighty when
|
||
daylight was done, But with great men beside me, midst high-hearted laughter,
|
||
I deemed me of all men the gainfullest one.
|
||
|
||
To wisdom I hearkened; for there the wise father Cast the seed
|
||
of his learning abroad o'er the hall,
|
||
|
||
Till men's faces darkened, but mine gladdened rather With the thought
|
||
of the knowledge I knew over all.
|
||
|
||
Sang minstrels the story, and with the song's welling Men looked
|
||
on each other and glad were they grown, But mine was the glory
|
||
of the tale and its telling How the loved and the lover were naught
|
||
but mine own.
|
||
|
||
|
||
When he was done all kept silence till they should know whether
|
||
the lord should praise the song or blame; and he said naught
|
||
for a good while, but sat as if pondering: but at last he spake:
|
||
"Thou art young, and would that we were young also!
|
||
Thy song is sweet, and it pleaseth me, who am a man of war,
|
||
and have seen enough and to spare of rough work, and would
|
||
any day rather see a fair woman than a band of spears.
|
||
But it shall please my lady wife less: for of love, and fair women,
|
||
and their lovers she hath seen enough; but of war nothing save
|
||
its shows and pomps; wherefore she desireth to hear thereof.
|
||
Now sing of battle!"
|
||
|
||
Ralph thought awhile and began to smite the harp while he conned over a song
|
||
which he had learned one yule-tide from a chieftain who had come to Upmeads
|
||
from the far-away Northland, and had abided there till spring was waning
|
||
into summer, and meanwhile he taught Ralph this song and many things else,
|
||
and his name was Sir Karr Wood-neb. This song now Ralph sang loud and sweet,
|
||
though he were now a thrall in an alien land:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leave we the cup! For the moon is up, And bright is the gleam
|
||
Of the rippling stream, That runneth his road To the old abode,
|
||
Where the walls are white In the moon and the night;
|
||
The house of the neighbour that drave us away When strife
|
||
ended labour amidst of the hay, And no road for our riding
|
||
was left us but one Where the hill's brow is hiding that
|
||
earth's ways are done, And the sound of the billows comes up
|
||
at the last Like the wind in the willows ere autumn is past.
|
||
But oft and again Comes the ship from the main, And we came
|
||
once more And no lading we bore But the point and the edge,
|
||
And the ironed ledge, And the bolt and the bow, And the bane
|
||
of the foe. To the House 'neath the mountain we came
|
||
in the morn, Where welleth the fountain up over the corn,
|
||
And the stream is a-running fast on to the House Of the neighbours
|
||
uncunning who quake at the mouse, As their slumber is broken;
|
||
they know not for why; Since yestreen was not token on earth
|
||
or in sky.
|
||
|
||
Come, up, then up! Leave board and cup, And follow the gleam Of
|
||
the glittering stream That leadeth the road To the old abode,
|
||
High-walled and white In the moon and the night; Where low lies
|
||
the neighbour that drave us away Sleep-sunk from his labour
|
||
amidst of the hay. No road for our riding is left us save one,
|
||
Where the hills' brow is hiding the city undone, And the wind
|
||
in the willows is with us at last, And the house of the billows
|
||
is done and o'er-past.
|
||
|
||
Haste! mount and haste Ere the short night waste, For night
|
||
and day, Late turned away, Draw nigh again All kissing-fain;
|
||
And the morn and the moon Shall be married full soon.
|
||
So ride we together with wealth-winning wand, The steel o'er
|
||
the leather, the ash in the hand. Lo! white walls before us,
|
||
and high are they built; But the luck that outwore us now lies
|
||
on their guilt; Lo! the open gate biding the first of the sun,
|
||
And to peace are we riding when slaughter is done.
|
||
|
||
|
||
When Ralph had done singing, all folk fell to praising his song,
|
||
whereas the Lord had praised the other one; but the Lord said,
|
||
looking at Ralph askance meanwhile: "Yea, if that pleaseth
|
||
me not, and I take but little keep of it, it shall please
|
||
my wife to her heart's root; and that is the first thing.
|
||
Hast thou others good store, new-comer?" "Yea, lord,"
|
||
said Ralph. "And canst thou tell tales of yore agone,
|
||
and of the fays and such-like? All that she must have."
|
||
"Some deal I can of that lore," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Then the Lord sat silent, and seemed to be pondering:
|
||
at last he said, as if to himself: "Yet there is one thing:
|
||
many a blencher can sing of battle; and it hath been seen, that a fair
|
||
body of a man is whiles soft amidst the hard hand-play. Thou!
|
||
Morfinn's luck! art thou of any use in the tilt-yard?"
|
||
"Wilt thou try me, lord?" said Ralph, looking somewhat brisker.
|
||
Said the Lord: "I deem that I may find a man or two for thee,
|
||
though it is not much our manner here; but now go thou!
|
||
David, take the lad away to his tent, and get him a flask
|
||
of wine of the best to help out thy maundering with him."
|
||
|
||
Therewith they left the tent, and Ralph walked by David sadly
|
||
and with hanging head at first; but in a while he called
|
||
to mind that, whatever betid, his life was safe as yet;
|
||
that every day he was drawing nigher to the Well at the World's End;
|
||
and that it was most like that he shall fall in with that
|
||
Dorothea of his dream somewhere on the way thereto.
|
||
So he lifted up his head again, and was singing to himself
|
||
as he stooped down to enter into his tent.
|
||
|
||
Next day naught happed to tell of save that they journeyed on;
|
||
the day was cloudy, so that Ralph saw no sign of the distant mountains;
|
||
ever the land was the same, but belike somewhat more beset with pinewoods;
|
||
they saw no folk at all on the road. So at even Ralph slept in his tent,
|
||
and none meddled with him, save that David came to talk with him or he slept,
|
||
and was merry and blithe with him, and he brought with him Otter,
|
||
the captain of the guard, who was good company.
|
||
|
||
Thus wore three days that were hazy and cloudy, and the Lord sent
|
||
no more for Ralph, who on the road spake for the more part with Otter,
|
||
and liked him not ill; howbeit it seemed of him that he would make
|
||
no more of a man's life than of a rabbit's according as his lord
|
||
might bid slay or let live.
|
||
|
||
The three hazy days past, it fell to rain for four days,
|
||
so that Ralph could see little of the face of the land;
|
||
but he noted that they went up at whiles, and never so much
|
||
down as up, so that they were wending up hill on the whole.
|
||
|
||
On the ninth day of his captivity the rain ceased and it
|
||
was sunny and warm but somewhat hazy, so that naught could be
|
||
seen afar, but the land near-hand rose in long, low downs now,
|
||
and was quite treeless, save where was a hollow here and there
|
||
and a stream running through it, where grew a few willows,
|
||
but alders more abundantly.
|
||
|
||
This day he rode by Otter, who said presently:
|
||
"Well, youngling of the North, to-morrow we shall see
|
||
a new game, thou and I, if the weather be fair."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and what like shall it be?" Said Otter,
|
||
"At mid-morn we shall come into a fair dale amidst the downs,
|
||
where be some houses and a tower of the Lord's, so that that
|
||
place is called the Dale of the Tower: there shall we abide
|
||
a while to gather victual, a day or two, or three maybe:
|
||
so my Lord will hold a tourney there: that is to say that I
|
||
myself and some few others shall try thy manhood somewhat."
|
||
"What?" said Ralph, "are the new colt's paces to be proven?
|
||
And how if he fail?"
|
||
|
||
Quoth Otter, laughing: "Fail not, I rede thee, or my lord's
|
||
love for thee shall be something less than nothing."
|
||
"And then will he slay me?" said Ralph. Said Otter:
|
||
"Nay I deem not, at least not at first: he will have thee home
|
||
to Utterbol, to make the most of his bad bargain, and there shalt
|
||
thou be a mere serving-thrall, either in the house or the field:
|
||
where thou shalt be well-fed (save in times of scarcity),
|
||
and belike well beaten withal." Said Ralph, somewhat downcast:
|
||
"Yea, I am a thrall, who was once a knight. But how if thou
|
||
fail before me?" Otter laughed again: "That is another matter;
|
||
whatever I do my Lord will not lose me if he can help it;
|
||
but as for the others who shall stand before thy valiancy,
|
||
there will be some who will curse the day whereon my lord bought thee,
|
||
if thou turnest out a good spear, as ye call it in your lands.
|
||
Howsoever, that is not thy business; and I bid thee fear naught;
|
||
for thou seemest to be a mettle lad."
|
||
|
||
So they talked, and that day wore like the others,
|
||
but the haze did not clear off, and the sun went down red.
|
||
In the evening David talked with Ralph in his tent, and said:
|
||
"If to-morrow be clear, knight, thou shalt see a new sight
|
||
when thou comest out from the canvas." Said Ralph: "I suppose
|
||
thy meaning is that we shall see the mountains from hence?"
|
||
"Yea," said David; "so hold up thine heart when that sight
|
||
first cometh before thine eyes. As for us, we are used to
|
||
the sight, and that from a place much nigher to the mountains:
|
||
yet they who are soft-hearted amongst us are overcome at whiles,
|
||
when there is storm and tempest, and evil tides at hand."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "And how far then are we from Utterbol?" Said David:
|
||
"After we have left Bull-mead in the Dale of the Tower, where to-morrow thou
|
||
art to run with the spear, it is four days' ride to Utterness; and from
|
||
Utterness ye may come (if my lord will) unto Utterbol in twelve hours.
|
||
But tell me, knight, how deemest thou of thy tilting to-morrow?"
|
||
Said Ralph: "Little should I think of it, if little lay upon it."
|
||
"Yea," said David, "but art thou a good tilter?" Ralph laughed:
|
||
quoth he, "That hangs on the goodness of him that tilteth against me:
|
||
I have both overthrown, and been overthrown oft enough. Yet again,
|
||
who shall judge me? for I must tell thee, that were I fairly judged,
|
||
I should be deemed no ill spear, even when I came not uppermost:
|
||
for in all these games are haps which no man may foresee."
|
||
|
||
"Well, then," said David, "all will go well with thee for his time:
|
||
for my lord will judge thee, and if it be seen that thou hast
|
||
spoken truly, and art more than a little deft at the play, he will
|
||
be like to make the best of thee, since thou art already paid for."
|
||
Ralph laughed: yet as though the jest pleased him but little;
|
||
and they fell to talk of other matters. And so David departed,
|
||
and Ralph slept.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 35
|
||
|
||
Ralph Cometh To the Vale of the Tower
|
||
|
||
|
||
But when it was morning Ralph awoke, and saw that the sun was
|
||
shining brightly; so he cast his shirt on him, and went out at once,
|
||
and turned his face eastward, and, scarce awake, said to himself that
|
||
the clouds lay heavy in the eastward heavens after last night's haze:
|
||
but presently his eyes deared, and he saw that what he had taken
|
||
for clouds was a huge wall of mountains, black and terrible,
|
||
that rose up sharp and clear into the morning air; for there was
|
||
neither cloud nor mist in all the heavens.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph, though he were but little used to the sight of great mountains,
|
||
yet felt his heart rather rise than fall at the sight of them; for he said:
|
||
"Surely beyond them lieth some new thing for me, life or death:
|
||
fair fame or the forgetting of all men." And it was long that he could
|
||
not take his eyes off them.
|
||
|
||
As he looked, came up the Captain Otter, and said: "Well, Knight,
|
||
thou hast seen them this morn, even if ye die ere nightfall."
|
||
Said Ralph: "What deemest thou to lie beyond them?"
|
||
|
||
"Of us none knoweth surely," said Otter; "whiles I deem that if
|
||
one were to get to the other side there would be a great plain
|
||
like to this: whiles that there is naught save mountains beyond,
|
||
and yet again mountains, like the waves of a huge stone sea.
|
||
Or whiles I think that one would come to an end of the world,
|
||
to a place where is naught but a ledge, and then below it a gulf filled
|
||
with nothing but the howling of winds, and the depth of darkness.
|
||
Moreover this is my thought, that all we of these parts should be milder
|
||
men and of better conditions, if yonder terrible wall were away.
|
||
It is as if we were thralls of the great mountains."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph, "Is this then the Wall of the World?"
|
||
"It may well be so," said Otter; "but this word is at whiles said
|
||
of something else, which no man alive amongst us has yet seen.
|
||
It is a part of the tale of the seekers for the Well at
|
||
the World's End, whereof we said a word that other day."
|
||
|
||
"And the Dry Tree," said Ralph, "knowest thou thereof?" said Ralph.
|
||
"Such a tree, much beworshipped," said Otter, "we have,
|
||
not very far from Utterbol, on the hither side of the mountains.
|
||
Yet I have heard old men say that it is but a toy, and an image
|
||
of that which is verily anigh the Well at the World's End.
|
||
But now haste thee to do on thy raiment, for we must needs
|
||
get to horse in a little while." "Yet one more word,"
|
||
said Ralph; "thou sayest that none alive amongst you have
|
||
seen the Wall of the World?" "None alive," quoth Otter;
|
||
"forsooth what the dead may see, that is another question."
|
||
Said Ralph: "But have ye not known of any who have sought
|
||
to the Well from this land, which is so nigh thereunto?"
|
||
"Such there have been," said Otter; "but if they found it,
|
||
they found something beyond it, or came west again by some way
|
||
else than by Utterbol; for they never came back again to us."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he turned on his heel, and went his ways, and up came David
|
||
and one with him bringing victual; and David said: "Now, thou lucky one,
|
||
here is come thy breakfast! for we shall presently be on our way.
|
||
Cast on thy raiment, and eat and strengthen thyself for the day's work.
|
||
Hast thou looked well on the mountains?" "Yea," said Ralph,
|
||
"and the sight of them has made me as little downhearted as thou art.
|
||
For thou art joyous of mood this morning." David nodded and smiled,
|
||
and looked so merry that Ralph wondered what was toward.
|
||
Then he went into his tent and clad himself, and ate his breakfast,
|
||
and then gat to horse and rode betwixt two of the men-at-arms,
|
||
he and Otter; for David was ridden forward to speak with the Lord.
|
||
Otter talked ever gaily enough; but Ralph heeded him little a while,
|
||
but had his eyes ever on the mountains, and could see that for all
|
||
they were so dark, and filled up so much of the eastward heaven,
|
||
they were so far away that he could see but little of them save
|
||
that they were dark blue and huge, and one rising up behind the other.
|
||
|
||
Thus they rode the down country, till at last, two hours before noon,
|
||
coming over the brow of a long down, they had before them
|
||
a shallow dale, pleasanter than aught they had yet seen.
|
||
It was well-grassed, and a little river ran through it,
|
||
from which went narrow leats held up by hatches, so that the more
|
||
part of the valley bottom was a water-meadow, wherein as now were
|
||
grazing many kine and sheep. There were willows about the banks
|
||
of the river, and in an ingle of it stood a grange or homestead,
|
||
with many roofs half hidden by clumps of tall old elm trees.
|
||
Other houses there were in the vale; two or three cots,
|
||
to wit, on the slope of the hither down, and some half-dozen
|
||
about the homestead; and above and beyond all these,
|
||
on a mound somewhat away from the river and the grange,
|
||
a great square tower, with barriers and bailey all dight
|
||
ready for war, and with a banner of the Lord's hanging out.
|
||
But between the tower and the river stood as now a great
|
||
pavilion of snow-white cloth striped with gold and purple;
|
||
and round about it were other tents, as though a little army
|
||
were come into the vale.
|
||
|
||
So when they looked into that fair place, Otter the Captain
|
||
rose in the stirrups and cast up his hand for joy, and cried
|
||
out aloud: "Now, young knight, now we are come home:
|
||
how likest thou my Lord's land?"
|
||
|
||
"It is a fair land," said Ralph; "but is there not come some one to bid
|
||
thy Lord battle for it? or what mean the tents down yonder?"
|
||
|
||
Said Otter, laughing: "Nay, nay, it hath not come to that yet.
|
||
Yonder is my Lord's lady-wife, who hath come to meet him,
|
||
but in love, so to say, not in battle--not yet. Though I
|
||
say not that the cup of love betwixt them be brim-full. But
|
||
this it behoveth me not to speak of, though thou art to be my
|
||
brother-in-arms, since we are to tilt together presently:
|
||
for lo! yonder the tilt-yard, my lad."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he pointed to the broad green meadow: but Ralph said:
|
||
"How canst thou, a free man, be brother-in-arms to a thrall?"
|
||
"Nay, lad," quoth Otter, "let not that wasp sting thee:
|
||
for even such was I, time was. Nay, such am I now,
|
||
but that a certain habit of keeping my wits in a fray maketh
|
||
me of avail to my Lord, so that I am well looked to.
|
||
Forsooth in my Lord's land the free men are of little account,
|
||
since they must oftenest do as my Lord and my Lord's thralls
|
||
bid them. Truly, brother, it is we who have the wits and the luck
|
||
to rise above the whipping-post and the shackles that are
|
||
the great men hereabouts. I say we, for I deem that thou wilt
|
||
do no less, whereas thou hast the lucky look in thine eyes.
|
||
So let to-day try it."
|
||
|
||
As he spake came many glittering figures from out of those tents,
|
||
and therewithal arose the sound of horns and clashing of cymbals,
|
||
and their own horns gave back the sound of welcome.
|
||
Then Ralph saw a man in golden armour of strange, outlandish fashion,
|
||
sitting on a great black horse beside the Lord's litter;
|
||
and Otter said: "Lo! my Lord, armed and a-horseback to meet my lady:
|
||
she looketh kinder on him thus; though in thine ear be it said,
|
||
he is no great man of war; nor need he be, since he hath us
|
||
for his shield and his hauberk."
|
||
|
||
Herewith were they come on to the causeway above the green meadows,
|
||
and presently drew rein before the pavilion, and stood about
|
||
in a half-ring facing a two score of gaily clad men-at-arms,
|
||
who had come with the Lady and a rout of folk of the household.
|
||
Then the Lord gat off his horse, and stood in his golden armour,
|
||
and all the horns and other music struck up, and forth from
|
||
the pavilion came the Lady with a half-score of her women clad
|
||
gaily in silken gowns of green, and blue, and yellow, broidered all
|
||
about with gold and silver, but with naked feet, and having iron
|
||
rings on their arms, so that Ralph saw that they were thralls.
|
||
Something told him that his damsel should be amongst these,
|
||
so he gazed hard on them, but though they were goodly enough
|
||
there was none of them like to her.
|
||
|
||
As to the Queen, she was clad all in fine linen and gold, with gold
|
||
shoes on her feet: her arms came bare from out of the linen:
|
||
great they were, and the hands not small; but the arms round
|
||
and fair, and the hands shapely, and all very white and rosy:
|
||
her hair was as yellow as any that can be seen, and it was plenteous,
|
||
and shed all down about her. Her eyes were blue and set wide apart,
|
||
her nose a little snubbed, her mouth wide, full-lipped and smiling.
|
||
She was very tall, a full half-head taller than any of her women:
|
||
yea, as tall as a man who is above the middle height of men.
|
||
|
||
Now she came forward hastily with long strides, and knelt adown before
|
||
the Lord, but even as she kneeled looked round with a laughing face.
|
||
The Lord stooped down to her and took her by both hands, and raised
|
||
her up, and kissed her on the cheek (and he looked but little and
|
||
of no presence beside her:) and he said: "Hail to thee, my Lady;
|
||
thou art come far from thine home to meet me, and I thank thee therefor.
|
||
Is it well with our House?"
|
||
|
||
She spake seeming carelessly and loud; but her voice was somewhat husky:
|
||
"Yea, my Lord, all is well; few have done amiss, and the harvest
|
||
is plenteous." As she spake the Lord looked with knit brows at the damsels
|
||
behind her, as if he were seeking something; and the Lady followed his eyes,
|
||
smiling a little and flushing as if with merriment.
|
||
|
||
But the Lord was silent a while, and then let his brow clear and said:
|
||
"Yea, Lady, thou art thanked for coming to meet us; and timely
|
||
is thy coming, since there is game and glee for thee at hand;
|
||
I have cheapened a likely thrall of Morfinn the Unmanned,
|
||
and he is a gift to thee; and he hath given out that he is no ill
|
||
player with the spear after the fashion of them of the west;
|
||
and we are going to prove his word here in this meadow presently."
|
||
|
||
The Lady's face grew glad, and she said, looking toward
|
||
the ring of new comers: "Yea, Lord, and which of these is he,
|
||
if he be here?"
|
||
|
||
The Lord turned a little to point out Ralph, but even therewith the Lady's
|
||
eyes met Ralph's, who reddened for shame of being so shown to a great lady;
|
||
but as for her she flushed bright red all over her face and even to her bosom,
|
||
and trouble came into her eyes, and she looked adown. But the Lord said:
|
||
"Yonder is the youngling, the swordless one in the green coat; a likely lad,
|
||
if he hath not lied about his prowess; and he can sing thee a song withal,
|
||
and tell a piteous tale of old, and do all that those who be reared in
|
||
the lineages of the westlands deem meet and due for men of knightly blood.
|
||
Dost thou like the looks of him, lady! wilt thou have him?"
|
||
|
||
The Lady still held her head down, and tormented the grass with her foot,
|
||
and murmured somewhat; for she could not come to herself again as yet.
|
||
So the Lord looked sharply on her and said: "Well, when this tilting is over,
|
||
thou shalt tell me thy mind of him; for if he turn out a dastard I would
|
||
not ask thee to take him."
|
||
|
||
Now the lady lifted up her face, and she was grown somewhat pale;
|
||
but she forced her speech to come, and said: "It is well, Lord,
|
||
but now come thou into my pavilion, for thy meat is ready,
|
||
and it lacketh but a minute or so of noon." So he took her hand
|
||
and led her in to the pavilion, and all men got off their horses,
|
||
and fell to pitching the tents and getting their meat ready;
|
||
but Otter drew Ralph apart into a nook of the homestead,
|
||
and there they ate their meat together.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 36
|
||
|
||
The Talk of Two Women Concerning Ralph
|
||
|
||
|
||
But when dinner was done, came David and a man with him bringing Ralph's
|
||
war gear, and bade him do it on, while the folk were fencing the lists,
|
||
which they were doing with such stuff as they had at the Tower; and the Lord
|
||
had been calling for Otter that he might command him what he should
|
||
tell to the marshals of the lists and how all should be duly ordered,
|
||
wherefore he went up unto the Tower whither the Lord had now gone.
|
||
So Ralph did on his armour, which was not right meet for tilting,
|
||
being over light for such work; and his shield in especial was but a target
|
||
for a sergent, which he had brought at Cheaping Knowe; but he deemed
|
||
that his deftness and much use should bear him well through.
|
||
|
||
Now, the Lady had abided in her pavilion when her Lord went abroad;
|
||
anon after she sent all her women away, save one whom she loved,
|
||
and to whom she was wont to tell the innermost of her mind; though forsooth
|
||
she mishandled her at whiles; for she was hot of temper, and over-ready
|
||
with her hands when she was angry; though she was nowise cruel.
|
||
But the woman aforesaid, who was sly and sleek, and somewhat past
|
||
her first youth, took both her caresses and her buffets with patience,
|
||
for the sake of the gifts and largesse wherewith they were bought.
|
||
So now she stood by the board in the pavilion with her head drooping
|
||
humbly, yet smiling to herself and heedful of whatso might betide.
|
||
But the Lady walked up and down the pavilion hastily, as one much moved.
|
||
|
||
At last she spake as she walked and said: "Agatha, didst thou
|
||
see him when my Lord pointed him out?" "Yea," said the woman
|
||
lifting her face a little.
|
||
|
||
"And what seemed he to thee?" said the Lady. "O my Lady,"
|
||
quoth Agatha, "what seemed he to thee?" The lady stood and
|
||
turned and looked at her; she was slender and dark and sleek;
|
||
and though her lips moved not, and her eyes did not change,
|
||
a smile seemed to steal over her face whether she would or not.
|
||
The Lady stamped her foot and lifted her hand and cried out.
|
||
"What! dost thou deem thyself meet for him?"
|
||
And she caught her by the folds over her bosom. But Agatha
|
||
looked up into her face with a simple smile as of a child:
|
||
"Dost thou deem him meet for thee, my Lady--he a thrall,
|
||
and thou so great?" The Lady took her hand from her, but her
|
||
face flamed with anger and she stamped on the ground again:
|
||
"What dost thou mean?" she said; "am I not great enough
|
||
to have what I want when it lieth close to my hand?"
|
||
Agatha looked on her sweetly, and said in a soft voice:
|
||
"Stretch out thine hand for it then." The Lady looked at her grimly,
|
||
and said: "I understand thy jeer; thou meanest that he will not
|
||
be moved by me, he being so fair, and I being but somewhat fair.
|
||
Wilt thou have me beat thee? Nay, I will send thee to the White
|
||
Pillar when we come home to Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
The woman smiled again, and said: "My Lady, when thou hast sent
|
||
me to the White Pillar, or the Red, or the Black, my stripes
|
||
will not mend the matter for thee, or quench the fear of thine
|
||
heart that by this time, since he is a grown man, he loveth
|
||
some other. Yet belike he will obey thee if thou command,
|
||
even to the lying in the same bed with thee; for he is a thrall."
|
||
The Lady hung her head, but Agatha went on in her sweet clear voice:
|
||
"The Lord will think little of it, and say nothing of it unless
|
||
thou anger him otherwise; or unless, indeed, he be minded to pick
|
||
a quarrel with thee, and hath baited a trap with this stripling.
|
||
But that is all unlike: thou knowest why, and how that he loveth
|
||
the little finger of that new-come thrall of his (whom ye left
|
||
at home at Utterbol in his despite), better than all thy body,
|
||
for all thy white skin and lovely limbs. Nay, now I think of it,
|
||
I deem that he meaneth this gift to make an occasion for the staying
|
||
of any quarrel with thee, that he may stop thy mouth from crying
|
||
out at him--well, what wilt thou do? he is a mighty Lord."
|
||
|
||
The Lady looked up (for she had hung her head at first), her face
|
||
all red with shame, yet smiling, though ruefully, and she said:
|
||
"Well, thou art determined that if thou art punished it
|
||
shall not be for naught. But thou knowest not my mind."
|
||
"Yea, Lady," said Agatha, smiling in despite of herself,
|
||
"that may well be."
|
||
|
||
Now the Lady turned from her, and went and sat upon a stool
|
||
that was thereby, and said nothing a while; only covering
|
||
her face with her hands and rocking herself to and fro,
|
||
while Agatha stood looking at her. At last she said:
|
||
"Hearken, Agatha, I must tell thee what lieth in mine heart,
|
||
though thou hast been unkind to me and hast tried to hurt my soul.
|
||
Now, thou art self-willed, and hot-blooded, and not unlovely,
|
||
so that thou mayst have loved and been loved ere now.
|
||
But thou art so wily and subtle that mayhappen thou wilt not understand
|
||
what I mean, when I say that love of this young man hath suddenly
|
||
entered into my heart, so that I long for him more this minute
|
||
than I did the last, and the next minute shall long still more.
|
||
And I long for him to love me, and not alone to pleasure me."
|
||
|
||
"Mayhappen it will so betide without any pushing the matter," said Agatha.
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said the Lady, "Nay; my heart tells me that it will not be so;
|
||
for I have seen him, that he is of higher kind than we be; as if he were
|
||
a god come down to us, who if he might not cast his love upon a goddess,
|
||
would disdain to love an earthly woman, little-minded and in whom
|
||
perfection is not." Therewith the tears began to run from her eyes;
|
||
but Agatha looked on her with a subtle smile and said: "O my Lady!
|
||
and thou hast scarce seen him! And yet I will not say but that I
|
||
understand this. But as to the matter of a goddess, I know not.
|
||
Many would say that thou sitting on thine ivory chair in thy golden raiment,
|
||
with thy fair bosom and white arms and yellow hair, wert not ill done
|
||
for the image of a goddess; and this young man may well think so of thee.
|
||
However that may be, there is something else I will say to thee;
|
||
(and thou knowest that I speak the truth to thee--most often--
|
||
though I be wily). This is the word, that although thou hast time
|
||
and again treated me like the thrall I am, I deem thee no ill woman,
|
||
but rather something overgood for Utterbol and the dark lord thereof."
|
||
|
||
Now sat the Lady shaken with sobs, and weeping without stint; but she
|
||
looked up at that word and said: "Nay, nay, Agatha, it is not so.
|
||
To-day hath this man's eyes been a candle to me, that I may see
|
||
myself truly; and I know that though I am a queen and not uncomely,
|
||
I am but coarse and little-minded. I rage in my household when
|
||
the whim takes me, and I am hot-headed, and masterful, and slothful,
|
||
and should belike be untrue if there were any force to drive me thereto.
|
||
And I suffer my husband to go after other women, and this new thrall
|
||
is especial, so that I may take my pleasure unstayed with other men whom
|
||
I love not greatly. Yes, I am foolish, and empty-headed, and unclean.
|
||
And all this he will see through my queenly state, and my golden gown,
|
||
and my white skin withal."
|
||
|
||
Agatha looked on her curiously, but smiling no more. At last she said:
|
||
"What is to do, then? or must I think of something for thee?"
|
||
|
||
"I know not, I know not," said the Lady between her sobs;
|
||
"yet if I might be in such case that he might pity me; belike it
|
||
might blind his eyes to the ill part of me. Yea," she said,
|
||
rising up and falling walking to and fro swiftly, "if he might
|
||
hurt me and wound me himself, and I so loving him."
|
||
|
||
Said Agatha coldly: "Yes, Lady, I am not wily for naught; and I both deem
|
||
that I know what is in thine heart, and that it is good for something;
|
||
and moreover that I may help thee somewhat therein. So in a few days thou
|
||
shalt see whether I am worth something more than hard words and beating.
|
||
Only thou must promise in all wise to obey me, though I be the thrall,
|
||
and thou the Lady, and to leave all the whole matter in my hands."
|
||
|
||
Quoth the Lady: "That is easy to promise; for what may I do by myself?"
|
||
|
||
Then Agatha fell pondering a while, and said thereafter:
|
||
"First, thou shalt get me speech with my Lord, and cause him
|
||
to swear immunity to me, whatsoever I shall say or do herein."
|
||
Said the Lady: "Easy is this. What more hast thou?"
|
||
|
||
Said Agatha: "It were better for thee not to go forth to see the jousting;
|
||
because thou art not to be trusted that thou show not thy love
|
||
openly when the youngling is in peril; and if thou put thy lord
|
||
to shame openly before the people, he must needs thwart thy will,
|
||
and be fierce and cruel, and then it will go hard with thy darling.
|
||
So thou shalt not go from the pavilion till the night is dark,
|
||
and thou mayst feign thyself sick meantime."
|
||
|
||
"Sick enough shall I be if I may not go forth to see how my love
|
||
is faring in his peril: this at least is hard to me; but so be it!
|
||
At least thou wilt come and tell me how he speedeth."
|
||
"Oh yes," said Agatha, "if thou must have it so; but fear thou not,
|
||
he shall do well enough."
|
||
|
||
Said the Lady: "Ah, but thou wottest how oft it goes with a chance stroke,
|
||
that the point pierceth where it should not; nay, where by likelihead
|
||
it could not."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Agatha, "what chance is there in this, when the youngling
|
||
knoweth the whole manner of the play, and his foemen know naught thereof?
|
||
It is as the chance betwixt Geoffrey the Minstrel and Black Anselm,
|
||
when they play at chess together, that Anselm must needs be mated ere
|
||
he hath time to think of his fourth move. I wot of these matters,
|
||
my Lady. Now, further, I would have thy leave to marshal thy maids
|
||
about the seat where thou shouldest be, and moreover there should be
|
||
someone in thy seat, even if I sat in it myself." Said the Lady:
|
||
"Yea, sit there if thou wilt."
|
||
|
||
"Woe's me!" said Agatha laughing, "why should I sit there?
|
||
I am like to thee, am I not?" "Yea," said the Lady,
|
||
"as the swan is like to the loon." "Yea, my Lady," said Agatha,
|
||
"which is the swan and which the loon? Well, well, fear not;
|
||
I shall set Joyce in thy seat by my Lord's leave;
|
||
she is tall and fair, and forsooth somewhat like to thee."
|
||
"Why wilt thou do this?" quoth the Lady; "Why should thralls
|
||
sit in my seat?" Said Agatha: "O, the tale is long to tell;
|
||
but I would confuse that young man's memory of thee somewhat,
|
||
if his eyes fell on thee at all when ye met e'en now,
|
||
which is to be doubted."
|
||
|
||
The Lady started up in sudden wrath, and cried out:
|
||
"She had best not be too like to me then, and strive to draw his
|
||
eyes to her, or I will have her marked for diversity betwixt us.
|
||
Take heed, take heed!"
|
||
|
||
Agatha looked softly on her and said: "My Lady. Ye fair-skinned,
|
||
open-faced women should look to it not to show yourselves angry
|
||
before men-folk. For open wrath marreth your beauty sorely.
|
||
Leave scowls and fury to the dark-browed, who can use them without
|
||
wrying their faces like a three months' baby with the colic.
|
||
Now that is my last rede as now. For methinks I can hear
|
||
the trumpets blowing for the arraying of the tourney.
|
||
Wherefore I must go to see to matters, while thou hast but to be quiet.
|
||
And to-night make much of my Lord, and bid him see me to-morrow,
|
||
and give heed to what I shall say to him. But if I meet
|
||
him without, now, as is most like, I shall bid him in to thee,
|
||
that thou mayst tell him of Joyce, and her sitting in thy seat.
|
||
Otherwise I will tell him as soon as he is set down in his place.
|
||
Sooth to say, he is little like to quarrel with either thee or me
|
||
for setting a fair woman other than thee by his side."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she lifted the tent lap and went out, stepping daintily,
|
||
and her slender body swaying like a willow branch, and came at once face
|
||
to face with the Lord of Utterbol, and bowed low and humbly before him,
|
||
though her face, unseen of him, smiled mockingly. The Lord looked
|
||
on her greedily, and let his hand and arm go over her shoulder,
|
||
and about her side, and he drew her to him, and kissed her, and said:
|
||
"What, Agatha! and why art thou not bringing forth thy mistress to us?"
|
||
She raised her face to him, and murmured softly, as one afraid,
|
||
but with a wheedling smile on her face and in her eyes:
|
||
"Nay, my Lord, she will abide within to-day, for she is ill at ease;
|
||
if your grace goeth in, she will tell thee what she will have."
|
||
|
||
"Agatha," quoth he, "I will hear her, and I will do her pleasure if thou
|
||
ask me so to do." Then Agatha cast down her eyes, and her speech was
|
||
so low and sweet that it was as the cooing of a dove, as she said:
|
||
"O my Lord, what is this word of thine?"
|
||
|
||
He kissed her again, and said: "Well, well, but dost thou ask it?"
|
||
"O yea, yea, my Lord," said she.
|
||
|
||
"It is done then," said the Lord; and he let her go;
|
||
for he had been stroking her arm and shoulder, and she
|
||
hurried away, laughing inwardly, to the Lady's women.
|
||
But he went into the pavilion after he had cast one look at her.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 37
|
||
|
||
How Ralph Justed With the Aliens
|
||
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile Captain Otter had brought Ralph into the staked-out lists,
|
||
which, being hastily pitched, were but slenderly done, and now
|
||
the Upmeads stripling stood there beside a good horse which they
|
||
had brought to him, and Otter had been speaking to him friendly.
|
||
But Ralph saw the Lord come forth from the pavilion and take
|
||
his seat on an ivory chair set on a turf ridge close to
|
||
the stakes of the lists: for that place was used of custom
|
||
for such games as they exercised in the lands of Utterbol.
|
||
Then presently the Lady's women came out of their tents, and,
|
||
being marshalled by Agatha, went into the Queen's pavilion,
|
||
whence they came forth again presently like a bed of garden
|
||
flowers moving, having in the midst of them a woman so fair,
|
||
and clad so gloriously, that Ralph must needs look on her,
|
||
though he were some way off, and take note of her beauty.
|
||
She went and sat her down beside the Lord, and Ralph
|
||
doubted not that it was the Queen, whom he had but glanced
|
||
at when they first made stay before the pavilion.
|
||
Sooth to say, Joyce being well nigh as tall as the Queen,
|
||
and as white of skin, was otherwise a far fairer woman.
|
||
|
||
Now spake Otter to Ralph: "I must leave thee here, lad, and go
|
||
to the other side, as I am to run against thee." Said Ralph:
|
||
"Art thou to run first?" "Nay, but rather last," said Otter;
|
||
"they will try thee first with one of the sergeants, and if he
|
||
overcome thee, then all is done, and thou art in an evil plight.
|
||
Otherwise will they find another and another, and at last it
|
||
will be my turn. So keep thee well, lad."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he rode away, and there came to Ralph one of
|
||
the sergeants, who brought him a spear, and bade him to horse.
|
||
So Ralph mounted and took the spear in hand; and the sergeant said:
|
||
"Thou art to run at whatsoever meeteth thee when thou hast heard
|
||
the third blast of the horn. Art thou ready?" "Yea, yea,"
|
||
said Ralph; "but I see that the spear-head is not rebated,
|
||
so that we are to play at sharps."
|
||
|
||
"Art thou afraid, youngling?" said the sergeant, who was
|
||
old and crabbed, "if that be so, go and tell the Lord:
|
||
but thou wilt find that he will not have his sport wholly spoiled,
|
||
but will somehow make a bolt or a shaft out of thee."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "I did but jest; I deem myself not so near my
|
||
death to-day as I have been twice this summer or oftener."
|
||
Said the sergeant, "It is ill jesting in matters wherein
|
||
my Lord hath to do. Now thou hast heard my word:
|
||
do after it."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he departed, and Ralph laughed and shook the spear aloft,
|
||
and deemed it not over strong; but he said to himself that the spears
|
||
of the others would be much the same.
|
||
|
||
Now the horn blew up thrice, and at the latest blast Ralph pricked forth,
|
||
as one well used to the tilt, but held his horse well in hand;
|
||
and he saw a man come driving against him with his spear in the rest,
|
||
and deemed him right big; but this withal he saw, that the man
|
||
was ill arrayed, and was pulling on his horse as one not willing
|
||
to trust him to the rush; and indeed he came on so ill that it
|
||
was clear that he would never strike Ralph's shield fairly.
|
||
So he swerved as they met, so that his spear-point was never near
|
||
to Ralph, who turned his horse toward him a little, and caught his
|
||
foeman by the gear about his neck, and spurred on, so that he dragged
|
||
him clean out of his saddle, and let him drop, and rode back
|
||
quietly to his place, and got off his horse to see to his girths;
|
||
and he heard great laughter rising up from the ring of men,
|
||
and from the women also. But the Lord of Utterbol cried out:
|
||
"Bring forth some one who doth not eat my meat for nothing:
|
||
and set that wretch and dastard aside till the tilting be over,
|
||
and then he shall pay a little for his wasted meat and drink."
|
||
|
||
Ralph got into his saddle again, and saw a very big man
|
||
come forth at the other end of the lists, and wondered
|
||
if he should be overthrown of him; but noted that his horse
|
||
seemed not over good. Then the horn blew up and he spurred on,
|
||
and his foeman met him fairly in the midmost of the lists:
|
||
yet he laid his spear but ill, and as one who would thrust
|
||
and foin with it rather than letting it drive all it might,
|
||
so that Ralph turned the point with his shield that it
|
||
glanced off, but he himself smote the other full on
|
||
the shoulder, and the shaft brake, but the point had pierced
|
||
the man's armour, and the truncheon stuck in the wound:
|
||
yet since the spear was broken he kept his saddle.
|
||
The Lord cried out, "Well, Black Anselm, this is better done;
|
||
yet art thou a big man and a well-skilled to be beaten
|
||
by a stripling."
|
||
|
||
So the man was helped away and Ralph went back to his place again.
|
||
|
||
Then another man was gotten to run against Ralph, and it went
|
||
the same-like way: for Ralph smote him amidst of the shield,
|
||
and the spear held, so that he fell floundering off his horse.
|
||
|
||
Six of the stoutest men of Utterbol did Ralph overthrow or hurt
|
||
in this wise; and then he ran three courses with Otter,
|
||
and in the first two each brake his spear fairly on the other;
|
||
but in the third Otter smote not Ralph squarely, but Ralph smote
|
||
full amidst of his shield, and so dight him that he well-nigh fell,
|
||
and could not master his horse, but yet just barely kept his saddle.
|
||
|
||
Then the Lord cried out: "Now make we an end of it!
|
||
We have no might against this youngling, man to man:
|
||
or else would Otter have done it. This comes of learning
|
||
a craft diligently."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph got off his horse, and did off his helm and awaited tidings;
|
||
and anon comes to him the surly sergeant, and brought him a cup of wine,
|
||
and said: "Youngling, thou art to drink this, and then go to my Lord;
|
||
and I deem that thou art in favour with him. So if thou art not
|
||
too great a man, thou mightest put in a word for poor Redhead,
|
||
that first man that did so ill. For my Lord would have him set up,
|
||
and head down and buttocks aloft, as a target for our bowmen.
|
||
And it will be his luck if he be sped with the third shot, and last
|
||
not out to the twentieth."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, certes," said Ralph, "I will do no less, even if it
|
||
anger the Lord." "O thou wilt not anger him," said the man,
|
||
"for I tell thee, thou art in favour. Yea, and for me also thou
|
||
mightest say a word also, when thou becomest right great;
|
||
for have I not brought thee a good bowl of wine?"
|
||
"Doubt it not, man," said Ralph, "if I once get safe to Utterbol:
|
||
weary on it and all its ways!" Said the sergeant:
|
||
"That is an evil wish for one who shall do well at Utterbol.
|
||
But come, tarry not."
|
||
|
||
So he brought Ralph to the Lord, who still sat in his chair
|
||
beside that fair woman, and Ralph did obeysance to him;
|
||
yet he had a sidelong glance also for that fair seeming-queen,
|
||
and deemed her both proud-looking, and so white-skinned,
|
||
that she was a wonder, like the queen of the fays:
|
||
and it was just this that he had noted of the Queen as he stood
|
||
before her earlier in the day when they first came into the vale;
|
||
therefore he had no doubt of this damsel's queenship.
|
||
|
||
Now the Lord spake to him and said: "Well, youngling, thou hast done well,
|
||
and better than thy behest: and since ye have been playing at sharps,
|
||
I deem thou would'st not do ill in battle, if it came to that.
|
||
So now I am like to make something other of thee than I was minded
|
||
to at first: for I deem that thou art good enough to be a man.
|
||
And if thou wilt now ask a boon of me, if it be not over great,
|
||
I will grant it thee."
|
||
|
||
Ralph put one knee to the ground, and said: "Great Lord,
|
||
I thank thee: but whereas I am in an alien land and seeking
|
||
great things, I know of no gift which I may take for myself
|
||
save leave to depart, which I deem thou wilt not grant me.
|
||
Yet one thing thou mayst do for my asking if thou wilt.
|
||
If thou be still angry with the carle whom I first unhorsed,
|
||
I pray thee pardon him his ill-luck."
|
||
|
||
"Ill-luck!" said the Lord, "Why, I saw him that he was downright afraid
|
||
of thee. And if my men are to grow blenchers and soft-hearts what is
|
||
to do then? But tell me, Otter, what is the name of this carle?"
|
||
Said Otter, "Redhead he hight, Lord." Said the Lord: "And what
|
||
like a man is he in a fray?" "Naught so ill, Lord," said Otter.
|
||
"This time, like the rest of us, he knew not this gear.
|
||
It were scarce good to miss him at the next pinch.
|
||
It were enough if he had the thongs over his back a few dozen times;
|
||
it will not be the first day of such cheer to him."
|
||
|
||
"Ha!" said the Lord, "and what for, Otter, what for?"
|
||
"Because he was somewhat rough-handed, Lord," said Otter.
|
||
"Then shall we need him and use him some day. Let him go scot
|
||
free and do better another bout. There is thy boon granted
|
||
for thee, knight; and another day thou mayst ask something more.
|
||
And now shall David have a care of thee. And when we come
|
||
to Utterbol we shall see what is to be done with thee."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph rose up and thanked him, and David came forward,
|
||
and led him to his tent. And he was wheedling in his ways to him,
|
||
as if Ralph were now become one who might do him great good
|
||
if so his will were.
|
||
|
||
But the Lord went back again into the Tower.
|
||
|
||
As to the Lady, she abode in her pavilion amidst many fears and desires,
|
||
till Agatha entered and said: "My Lady, so far all has gone happily."
|
||
Said the Lady: "I deemed from the noise and the cry that he was doing well.
|
||
But tell me, how did he?" "'My Lady," quoth Agatha, "he knocked our folk
|
||
about well-favouredly, and seemed to think little of it."
|
||
|
||
"And Joyce," said the Lady, "how did she?" "She looked a queen,
|
||
every inch of her, and she is tall," said Agatha: "soothly some
|
||
folk stared on her, but not many knew of her, since she is but new
|
||
into our house. Though it is a matter of course that all save
|
||
our new-come knight knew that it was not thou that sat there.
|
||
And my Lord was well-pleased, and now he hath taken her by the hand
|
||
and led her into the Tower."
|
||
|
||
The Lady reddened and scowled, and said: "And he... did he come anigh her?"
|
||
"O yea," said Agatha, "whereas he stood before my Lord a good while,
|
||
and then kneeled to him to pray pardon for one of our men who had
|
||
done ill in the tilting: yea, he was nigh enough to her to touch
|
||
her had he dared, and to smell the fragrance of her raiment.
|
||
And he seemed to think it good to look out of the corners of
|
||
his eyes at her; though I do not say that she smiled on him."
|
||
The Lady sprang up, her cheeks burning, and walked about angrily a while,
|
||
striving for words, till at last she said: "When we come home to Utterbol,
|
||
my lord will see his new thrall again, and will care for Joyce no whit:
|
||
then will I have my will of her; and she shall learn, she, whether I
|
||
am verily the least of women at Utterbol! Ha! what sayest thou?
|
||
Now why wilt thou stand and smile on me?--Yea, I know what is in thy thought;
|
||
and in very sooth it is good that the dear youngling hath not seen
|
||
this new thrall, this Ursula. Forsooth, I tell thee that if I durst
|
||
have her in my hands I would have a true tale out of her as to why
|
||
she weareth ever that pair of beads about her neck."
|
||
|
||
"Now, our Lady," said Agatha, "thou art marring the fairness
|
||
of thy face again. I bid thee be at peace, for all shall be well,
|
||
and other than thou deemest. Tell me, then, didst thou
|
||
get our Lord to swear immunity for me?" Said the Lady:
|
||
"Yea, he swore on the edge of the sword that thou mightest say
|
||
what thou wouldst, and neither he nor any other should lay
|
||
hand on thee."
|
||
|
||
"Good," said Agatha; "then will I go to him to-morrow morning,
|
||
when Joyce has gone from him. But now hold up thine heart, and keep
|
||
close for these two days that we shall yet abide in Tower Dale:
|
||
and trust me this very evening I shall begin to set tidings going
|
||
that shall work and grow, and shall one day rejoice thine heart."
|
||
|
||
So fell the talk betwixt them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 38
|
||
|
||
A Friend Gives Ralph Warning
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow Ralph wandered about the Dale where he would, and none
|
||
meddled with him. And as he walked east along the stream where
|
||
the valley began to narrow, he saw a man sitting on the bank fishing
|
||
with an angle, and when he drew near, the man turned about, and saw him.
|
||
Then he lays down his angling rod and rises to his feet, and stands
|
||
facing Ralph, looking sheepish, with his hands hanging down by his sides;
|
||
and Ralph, who was thinking of other folk, wondered what he would.
|
||
So he said: "Hail, good fellow! What wouldst thou?" Said the man:
|
||
"I would thank thee." "What for?" said Ralph, but as he looked on him
|
||
he saw that it was Redhead, whose pardon he had won of the Lord yesterday;
|
||
so he held out his hand, and took Redhead's, and smiled friendly on him.
|
||
Redhead looked him full in the face, and though he was both big and very
|
||
rough-looking, he had not altogether the look of a rascal.
|
||
|
||
He said: "Fair lord, I would that I might do something for thine avail,
|
||
and perchance I may: but it is hard to do good deeds in Hell,
|
||
especially for one of its devils."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, is it so bad as that?" said Ralph. "For thee not yet," said Redhead,
|
||
"but it may come to it. Hearken, lord, there is none anigh us that I can see,
|
||
so I will say a word to thee at once. Later on it may be over late:
|
||
Go thou not to Utterbol whatever may betide."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "but how if I be taken thither?" Quoth Redhead:
|
||
"I can see this, that thou art so favoured that thou mayst go
|
||
whither thou wilt about the camp with none to hinder thee.
|
||
Therefore it will be easy for thee to depart by night and cloud,
|
||
or in the grey of morning, when thou comest to a good pass,
|
||
whereof I will tell thee. And still I say, go thou not to Utterbol:
|
||
for thou art over good to be made a devil of, like to us,
|
||
and therefore thou shalt be tormented till thy life is spoilt,
|
||
and by that road shalt thou be sent to heaven."
|
||
|
||
"But thou saidst even now," said Ralph, "that I was high in the
|
||
Lord's grace." "Yea," said Redhead, "that may last till thou hast
|
||
command to do some dastard's deed and nay-sayest it, as thou wilt:
|
||
and then farewell to thee; for I know what my Lord meaneth for thee."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and what is that?" Said Redhead; "He hath
|
||
bought thee to give to his wife for a toy and a minion, and if she
|
||
like thee, it will be well for a while: but on the first occasion
|
||
that serveth him, and she wearieth of thee (for she is a woman
|
||
like a weather-cock), he will lay hand on thee and take the manhood
|
||
from thee, and let thee drift about Utterbol a mock for all men.
|
||
For already at heart he hateth thee."
|
||
|
||
Ralph stood pondering this word, for somehow it chimed in with
|
||
the thought already in his heart. Yet how should he not go
|
||
to Utterbol with the Damsel abiding deliverance of him there:
|
||
and yet again, if they met there and were espied on, would not
|
||
that ruin everything for her as well as for him?
|
||
|
||
At last he said: "Good fellow, this may be true, but how shall I know it for
|
||
true before I run the risk of fleeing away, instead of going on to Utterbol,
|
||
whereas folk deem honour awaiteth me."
|
||
|
||
Said Redhead: "There is no honour at Utterbol save for such as are
|
||
unworthy of honour. But thy risk is as I say, and I shall tell thee
|
||
whence I had my tale, since I love thee for thy kindness to me,
|
||
and thy manliness. It was told me yester-eve by a woman who is in the
|
||
very privity of the Lady of Utterbol, and is well with the Lord also:
|
||
and it jumpeth with mine own thought on the matter; so I bid thee beware:
|
||
for what is in me to grieve would be sore grieved wert thou cast away."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Ralph, "let us sit down here on the bank and then tell me more;
|
||
but go on with thine angling the while, lest any should see us."
|
||
|
||
So they sat down, and Redhead did as Ralph bade; and he said:
|
||
"Lord, I have bidden thee to flee; but this is an ill land
|
||
to flee from, and indeed there is but one pass whereby ye
|
||
may well get away from this company betwixt this and Utterbol;
|
||
and we shall encamp hard by it on the second day of our faring hence.
|
||
Yet I must tell thee that it is no road for a dastard; for it leadeth
|
||
through the forest up into the mountains: yet such as it is,
|
||
for a man bold and strong like thee, I bid thee take it:
|
||
and I can see to it that leaving this company shall be easy to thee:
|
||
only thou must make up thy mind speedily, since the time draws
|
||
so nigh, and when thou art come to Utterbol with all this rout,
|
||
and the house full, and some one or other dogging each footstep
|
||
of thine, fleeing will be another matter. Now thus it is:
|
||
on that same second night, not only is the wood at hand to
|
||
cover thee, but I shall be chief warder of the side of the camp
|
||
where thou lodgest, so that I can put thee on the road:
|
||
and if I were better worth, I would say, take me with thee,
|
||
but as it is, I will not burden thee with that prayer."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "I have had one guide in this country-side
|
||
and he bewrayed me. This is a matter of life and death,
|
||
so I will speak out and say how am I to know but that thou
|
||
also art going about to bewray me?"
|
||
|
||
Redhead lept up to his feet, and roared out: "What shall I say?
|
||
what shall I say? By the soul of my father I am not bewraying thee.
|
||
May all the curses of Utterbol be sevenfold heavier on me if I am
|
||
thy traitor and dastard."
|
||
|
||
"Softly lad, softly," said Ralph, "lest some one should hear thee.
|
||
Content thee, I must needs believe thee if thou makest so much
|
||
noise about it."
|
||
|
||
Then Redhead sat him down again, and for all that he was so rough
|
||
and sturdy a carle he fell a-weeping.
|
||
|
||
"Nay, nay," said Ralph, "this is worse in all wise than
|
||
the other noise. I believe thee as well as a man can who is
|
||
dealing with one who is not his close friend, and who therefore
|
||
spareth truth to his friend because of many years use and wont.
|
||
Come to thyself again and let us look at this matter square in the face,
|
||
and speedily too, lest some unfriend or busybody come on us.
|
||
There now! Now, in the first place dost thou know why I am come
|
||
into this perilous and tyrannous land?"
|
||
|
||
Said Redhead: "I have heard it said that thou art on the quest
|
||
of the Well at the World's End."
|
||
|
||
"And that is but the sooth," said Ralph. "Well then," quoth Redhead,
|
||
"there is the greater cause for thy fleeing at the time and in the manner I
|
||
have bidden thee. For there is a certain sage who dwelleth in the wildwood
|
||
betwixt that place and the Great Mountains, and he hath so much lore
|
||
concerning the Mountains, yea, and the Well itself, that if he will tell
|
||
thee what he can tell, thou art in a fair way to end thy quest happily.
|
||
What sayest thou then?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph, "I say that the Sage is good if I may find him.
|
||
But there is another cause why I have come hither from Goldburg.
|
||
"What is that?" said Redhead. "This," said Ralph, "to come to Utterbol."
|
||
"Heaven help us!" quoth Redhead, "and wherefore?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph said: "Belike it is neither prudent nor wise to tell thee,
|
||
but I do verily trust thee; so hearken! I go to Utterbol to deliver
|
||
a friend from Utterbol; and this friend is a woman--hold a minute--
|
||
and this woman, as I believe, hath been of late brought to Utterbol,
|
||
having been taken out of the hands of one of the men of the mountains
|
||
that lie beyond Cheaping Knowe."
|
||
|
||
Redhead stared astonished, and kept silence awhile;
|
||
then he said: "Now all the more I say, flee! flee! flee!
|
||
Doubtless the woman is there, whom thou seekest; for it would
|
||
take none less fair and noble than that new-come thrall to draw
|
||
to her one so fair and noble as thou art. But what availeth it?
|
||
If thou go to Utterbol thou wilt destroy both her and thee.
|
||
For know, that we can all see that the Lord hath set his love on
|
||
this damsel; and what better can betide, if thou come to Utterbol,
|
||
but that the Lord shall at once see that there is love betwixt
|
||
you two, and then there will be an end of the story."
|
||
|
||
"How so?" quoth Ralph. Said Redhead: "At Utterbol all do
|
||
the will of the Lord of Utterbol, and he is so lustful and cruel,
|
||
and so false withal, that his will shall be to torment the damsel
|
||
to death, and to geld and maim thee; so that none hereafter shall
|
||
know how goodly and gallant thou hast been."
|
||
|
||
"Redhead," quoth Ralph much moved, "though thou art in no knightly service,
|
||
thou mayst understand that it is good for a friend to die with a friend."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, forsooth," said Redhead, "If he may do no more to help than that!
|
||
Wouldst thou not help the damsel? Now when thou comest back from the quest
|
||
of the Well at the World's End, thou wilt be too mighty and glorious
|
||
for the Lord of Utterbol to thrust thee aside like to an over eager dog;
|
||
and thou mayst help her then. But now I say to thee, and swear to thee,
|
||
that three days after thou hast met thy beloved in Utterbol she will be dead.
|
||
I would that thou couldst ask someone else nearer to the Lord than I
|
||
have been. The tale would be the same as mine."
|
||
|
||
Now soothly to say it, this was even what Ralph had feared
|
||
would be, and he could scarce doubt Redhead's word. So he sat
|
||
there pondering the matter a good while, and at last he said:
|
||
"My friend, I will trust thee with another thing; I have a mind to flee
|
||
to the wildwood, and yet come to Utterbol for the damsel's deliverance."
|
||
"Yea," said Redhead, "and how wilt thou work in the matter?"
|
||
Said Ralph; "How would it be if I came hither in other guise
|
||
than mine own, so that I should not be known either by the damsel
|
||
or her tyrants?"
|
||
|
||
Said Redhead: "There were peril in that; yet hope also.
|
||
Yea, and in one way thou mightest do it; to wit, if thou wert to find
|
||
that Sage, and tell him thy tale: if he be of good will to thee,
|
||
he might then change not thy gear only, but thy skin also;
|
||
for he hath exceeding great lore."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Ralph, "Thou mayst look upon it as certain that on that aforesaid
|
||
night, I will do my best to shake off this company of tyrant and thralls,
|
||
unless I hear fresh tidings, so that I must needs change my purpose.
|
||
But I will ask thee to give me some token that all holds together
|
||
some little time beforehand." Quoth Redhead: "Even so shall it be;
|
||
thou shalt see me at latest on the eve of the night of thy departure;
|
||
but on the night before that if it be anywise possible."
|
||
|
||
"Now will I go away from thee," said Ralph, "and I thank thee
|
||
heartily for thine help, and deem thee my friend. And if thou
|
||
think better of fleeing with me, thou wilt gladden me the more."
|
||
Redhead shook his head but spake not, and Ralph went his ways
|
||
down the dale.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 39
|
||
|
||
The Lord of Utterbol Makes Ralph a Free Man
|
||
|
||
|
||
He went to and fro that day and the next, and none meddled with him;
|
||
with Redhead he spake not again those days, but had talk with Otter
|
||
and David, who were blithe enough with him. Agatha he saw not at all;
|
||
nor the Lady, and still deemed that the white-skinned woman whom
|
||
he had seen sitting by the Lord after the tilting was the Queen.
|
||
|
||
As for the Lady she abode in her pavilion, and whiles lay
|
||
in a heap on the floor weeping, or dull and blind with grief;
|
||
whiles she walked up and down mad wroth with whomsoever came
|
||
in her way, even to the dealing out of stripes and blows
|
||
to her women.
|
||
|
||
But on the eve before the day of departure Agatha came into her,
|
||
and chid her, and bade her be merry: "I have seen the Lord and told
|
||
him what I would, and found it no hard matter to get him to yeasay
|
||
our plot, which were hard to carry out without his goodwill.
|
||
Withal the seed that I have sowed two days or more ago is bearing fruit;
|
||
so that thou mayst look to it that whatsoever plight we may be in,
|
||
we shall find a deliverer."
|
||
|
||
"I wot not thy meaning," quoth the Lady, "but I deem thou wilt
|
||
now tell me what thou art planning, and give me some hope,
|
||
lest I lay hands on myself."
|
||
|
||
Then Agatha told her without tarrying what she was about doing for her,
|
||
the tale of which will be seen hereafter; and when she had done,
|
||
the Lady mended her cheer, and bade bring meat and drink, and was once
|
||
more like a great and proud Lady.
|
||
|
||
On the morn of departure, when Ralph arose, David came to him and said:
|
||
"My Lord is astir already, and would see thee for thy good."
|
||
So Ralph went with David, who brought him to the Tower, and there
|
||
they found the Lord sitting in a window, and Otter stood before him,
|
||
and some others of his highest folk. But beside him sat Joyce,
|
||
and it seemed that he thought it naught but good to hold her hand
|
||
and play with the fingers thereof, though all those great men were by;
|
||
and Ralph had no thought of her but that she was the Queen.
|
||
|
||
So Ralph made obeisance to the Lord and stood awaiting his word;
|
||
and the Lord said: "We have been thinking of thee, young man,
|
||
and have deemed thy lot to be somewhat of the hardest,
|
||
if thou must needs be a thrall, since thou art both young
|
||
and well-born, and so good a man of thine hands. Now, wilt thou
|
||
be our man at Utterbol?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph delayed his answer a space and looked at Otter, who seemed to him
|
||
to frame a Yea with his lips, as who should say, take it. So he said:
|
||
"Lord, thou art good to me, yet mayst thou be better if thou wilt."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, man!" said the Lord knitting his brows; "What shall it be? say thy say,
|
||
and be done with it."
|
||
|
||
"Lord," said Ralph, "I pray thee to give me my choice,
|
||
whether I shall go with thee to Utterbol or forbear going?"
|
||
|
||
"Why, lo you!" said the Lord testily, and somewhat sourly;
|
||
"thou hast the choice. Have I not told thee that thou art free?"
|
||
Then Ralph knelt before him, and said: "Lord, I thank thee from
|
||
a full heart, in that thou wilt suffer me to depart on mine errand,
|
||
for it is a great one." The scowl deepened on the Lord's face,
|
||
and he turned away from Ralph, and said presently:
|
||
"Otter take the Knight away and let him have all his armour and
|
||
weapons and a right good horse; and then let him do as he will,
|
||
either ride with us, or depart if he will, and whither he will.
|
||
And if he must needs ride into the desert, and cast himself away
|
||
in the mountains, so be it. But whatever he hath a mind to,
|
||
let none hinder him, but further him rather; hearest thou? take
|
||
him with thee."
|
||
|
||
Then was Ralph overflowing with thanks, but the Lord heeded him naught,
|
||
but looked askance at him and sourly. And he rose up withal, and led
|
||
the damsel by the hand into another chamber; and she minced in her gait
|
||
and leaned over to the Lord and spake softly in his ear and laughed,
|
||
and he laughed in his turn and toyed with her neck and shoulders.
|
||
|
||
But the great men turned and went their ways from the Tower,
|
||
and Ralph went with Otter and was full of glee, and as merry
|
||
as a bird. But Otter looked on him, and said gruffly:
|
||
"Yea now, thou art like a song-bird but newly let out of his cage.
|
||
But I can see the string which is tied to thy leg, though thou
|
||
feelest it not."
|
||
|
||
"Why, what now?" quoth Ralph, making as though he were astonished.
|
||
"Hearken," said Otter: "there is none nigh us, so I will speak straight out;
|
||
for I love thee since the justing when we tried our might together.
|
||
If thou deemest that thou art verily free, ride off on the backward
|
||
road when we go forward; I warrant me thou shalt presently meet
|
||
with an adventure, and be brought in a captive for the second time."
|
||
"How then," said Ralph, "hath not the Lord good will toward me?"
|
||
|
||
Said Otter: "I say not that he is now minded to do thee a mischief
|
||
for cruelty's sake; but he is minded to get what he can out of thee.
|
||
If he use thee not for the pleasuring of his wife (so long as her
|
||
pleasure in thee lasteth) he will verily use thee for somewhat else.
|
||
And to speak plainly, I now deem that he will make thee my mate,
|
||
to use with me, or against me as occasion may serve; so thou shalt
|
||
be another captain of his host." He laughed withal, and said again:
|
||
"But if thou be not wary, thou wilt tumble off that giddy height,
|
||
and find thyself a thrall once more, and maybe a gelding to boot."
|
||
Now waxed Ralph angry and forgat his prudence, and said:
|
||
"Yea, but how shall he use me when I am out of reach of his hand?"
|
||
"Oho, young man," said Otter, "whither away then, to be out
|
||
of his reach?"
|
||
|
||
"Why," quoth Ralph still angrily, "is thy Lord master of all
|
||
the world?" "Nay," said the captain, "but of a piece there of.
|
||
In short, betwixt Utterbol and Goldburg, and Utterbol
|
||
and the mountains, and Utterbol and an hundred miles north,
|
||
and an hundred miles south, there is no place where thou canst live,
|
||
no place save the howling wilderness, and scarcely there either,
|
||
where he may not lay hand on thee if he do but whistle. What, man! be
|
||
not downhearted! come with us to Utterbol, since thou needs must.
|
||
Be wise, and then the Lord shall have no occasion against thee;
|
||
above all, beware of crossing him in any matter of a woman.
|
||
Then who knows" (and here he sunk his voice well nigh to a whisper)
|
||
"but thou and I together may rule in Utterbol and make
|
||
better days there."
|
||
|
||
Ralph was waxen master of himself by now, and was gotten wary indeed,
|
||
so he made as if he liked Otter's counsel well, and became exceeding gay;
|
||
for indeed the heart within him was verily glad at the thought of his
|
||
escaping from thralldom; for more than ever now he was fast in his mind
|
||
to flee at the time appointed by Redhead.
|
||
|
||
So Otter said: "Well, youngling, I am glad that thou takest it thus,
|
||
for I deem that if thou wert to seek to depart, the Lord would make it
|
||
an occasion against thee."
|
||
|
||
"Such an occasion shall he not have, fellow in arms," quoth Ralph.
|
||
"But tell me, we ride presently, and I suppose are bound for Utterness
|
||
by the shortest road?" "Yea," said Otter, "and anon we shall come
|
||
to the great forest which lieth along our road all the way to Utterness
|
||
and beyond it; for the town is, as it were, an island in the sea of
|
||
woodland which covers all, right up to the feet of the Great Mountains,
|
||
and does what it may to climb them whereso the great wall or its
|
||
buttresses are anywise broken down toward our country; but the end
|
||
of it lieth along our road, as I said, and we do but skirt it.
|
||
A woeful wood it is, and save for the hunting of the beasts,
|
||
which be there in great plenty, with wolves and bears, yea, and lions
|
||
to boot, which come down from the mountains, there is no gain in it.
|
||
No gain, though forsooth they say that some have found it gainful."
|
||
|
||
"How so?" said Ralph. Said Otter: "That way lieth the way
|
||
to the Well at the World's End, if one might find it.
|
||
If at any time we were clear of Utterbol, I have a mind
|
||
for the adventure along with thee, lad, and so I deem hast
|
||
thou from all the questions thou hast put to me thereabout."
|
||
|
||
Ralph mastered himself so that his face changed not, and he said:
|
||
"Well, Captain, that may come to pass; but tell me, are there any
|
||
tokens known whereby a man shall know that he is on the right path
|
||
to the Well?"
|
||
|
||
"The report of folk goeth," said Otter, "concerning one token,
|
||
where is the road and the pass through the Great Mountains,
|
||
to wit, that on the black rock thereby is carven the image
|
||
of a Fighting Man, or monstrous giant, of the days long gone by.
|
||
Of other signs I can tell thee naught; and few of men are alive
|
||
that can. But there is a Sage dwelleth in the wood under
|
||
the mountains to whom folk seek for his diverse lore; and he,
|
||
if he will, say men, can set forth all the way, and its perils,
|
||
and how to escape them. Well, knight, when the time comes,
|
||
thou and I will go find him together, for he at least is not hard
|
||
to find, and if he be gracious to us, then will we on our quest.
|
||
But as now, see ye, they have struck our tents and the Queen's
|
||
pavilion also; so to horse, is the word."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," quoth Ralph, looking curiously toward the place where the Queen's
|
||
pavilion had stood; "is not yonder the Queen's litter taking the road?"
|
||
"Yea, surely," said Otter.
|
||
|
||
"Then the litter will be empty," said Ralph. "Maybe, or maybe not,"
|
||
said Otter; "but now I must get me gone hastily to my folk;
|
||
doubtless we shall meet upon the road to Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
So he turned and went his ways; and Ralph also ran to his horse,
|
||
whereby was David already in the saddle, and so mounted, and the whole
|
||
rout moved slowly from out of Vale Turris, Ralph going ever by David.
|
||
The company was now a great one, for many wains were joined to them,
|
||
laden with meal, and fleeces, and other household stuff, and withal
|
||
there was a great herd of neat, and of sheep, and of goats, which the
|
||
Lord's men had been gathering in the fruitful country these two days;
|
||
but the Lord was tarrying still in the tower.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 40
|
||
|
||
They Ride Toward Utterness From Out of Vale Turris
|
||
|
||
|
||
So they rode by a good highway, well beaten, past the Tower and over
|
||
the ridge of the valley, and came full upon the terrible sight
|
||
of the Great Mountains, and the sea of woodland lay before them,
|
||
swelling and falling, and swelling again, till it broke grey against
|
||
the dark blue of the mountain wall. They went as the way led,
|
||
down hill, and when they were at the bottom, thence along their
|
||
highway parted the tillage and fenced pastures from the rough
|
||
edges of the woodland like as a ditch sunders field from field.
|
||
They had the wildwood ever on their right hand, and but a little
|
||
way from where they rode the wood thickened for the more part into
|
||
dark and close thicket, the trees whereof were so tall that they
|
||
hid the overshadowing mountains whenso they rode the bottoms,
|
||
though when the way mounted on the ridges, and the trees gave
|
||
back a little, they had sight of the woodland and the mountains.
|
||
On the other hand at whiles the thicket came close up to the roadside.
|
||
|
||
Now David biddeth press on past the wains and the driven beasts,
|
||
which were going very slowly. So did they, and at last were well nigh
|
||
at the head of the Lord's company, but when Ralph would have pressed
|
||
on still, David refrained him, and said that they must by no means outgo
|
||
the Queen's people, or even mingle with them; so they rode on softly.
|
||
But as the afternoon was drawing toward evening they heard great
|
||
noise of horns behind them) and the sound of horses galloping.
|
||
Then David drew Ralph to the side of the way, and everybody about,
|
||
both before and behind them, drew up in wise at the wayside,
|
||
and or ever Ralph could ask any question, came a band of men-at-arms
|
||
at the gallop led by Otter, and after them the Lord on his black steed,
|
||
and beside him on a white palfrey the woman whom Ralph had seen
|
||
in the Tower, and whom he had taken for the Queen, her light
|
||
raiment streaming out from her, and her yellow hair flying loose.
|
||
They passed in a moment of time, and then David and Ralph and the rest
|
||
rode on after them.
|
||
|
||
Then said Ralph: "The Queen rideth well and hardily."
|
||
"Yea," said David, screwing his face into a grin, would he or no.
|
||
Ralph beheld him, and it came into his mind that this was not the Queen
|
||
whom he had looked on when they first came into Vale Turris, and he said:
|
||
"What then! this woman is not the Queen?"
|
||
|
||
David spake not for a while, and then he answered:
|
||
"Sir Knight, there be matters whereof we servants of my Lord
|
||
say little or nothing, and thou wert best to do the like."
|
||
And no more would he say thereon.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 41
|
||
|
||
Redhead Keeps Tryst
|
||
|
||
|
||
They rode not above a dozen miles that day, and pitched their
|
||
tents and pavilions in the fair meadows by the wayside looking
|
||
into the thick of the forest. There this betid to tell of,
|
||
that when Ralph got off his horse, and the horse-lads were gathered
|
||
about the men-at-arms and high folk, who should take Ralph's
|
||
horse but Redhead, who made a sign to him by lifting his eyebrows
|
||
as if he were asking him somewhat; and Ralph took it as a question
|
||
as to whether his purpose held to flee on the morrow night;
|
||
so he nodded a yeasay, just so much as Redhead might note it;
|
||
and naught else befell betwixt them.
|
||
|
||
When it was barely dawn after that night, Ralph awoke with the sound
|
||
of great stir in the camp, and shouting of men and lowing
|
||
and bleating of beasts; so he looked out, and saw that the wains
|
||
and the flocks and herds were being got on to the road, so that they
|
||
might make good way before the company of the camp took the road.
|
||
But he heeded it little and went to sleep again.
|
||
|
||
When it was fully morning he arose, and found that the men were not hastening
|
||
their departure, but were resting by the wood-side and disporting them about
|
||
the meadow; so he wandered about amongst the men-at-arms and serving-men, and
|
||
came across Redhead and hailed him; and there was no man very nigh to them;
|
||
so Redhead looked about him warily, and then spake swiftly and softly:
|
||
"Fail not to-night! fail not! For yesterday again was I told by one
|
||
who wotteth surely, what abideth thee at Utterbol if thou go thither.
|
||
I say if thou fail, thou shalt repent but once--all thy life long to wit."
|
||
|
||
Ralph nodded his head, and said: "Fear not, I will not fail thee."
|
||
And therewith they turned away from each other lest they should be noted.
|
||
|
||
About two hours before noon they got to horse again, and, being no
|
||
more encumbered with the wains and the beasts, rode at a good pace.
|
||
As on the day before the road led them along the edge of
|
||
the wildwood, and whiles it even went close to the very thicket.
|
||
Whiles again they mounted somewhat, and looked down on the thicket,
|
||
leagues and leagues thereof, which yet seemed but a little space
|
||
because of the hugeness of the mountain wall which brooded over it;
|
||
but oftenest the forest hid all but the near trees.
|
||
|
||
Thus they rode some twenty miles, and made stay at sunset in a
|
||
place that seemed rather a clearing of the wood than a meadow;
|
||
for they had trees on their left hand at a furlong's distance,
|
||
as well as on their right at a stone's throw.
|
||
|
||
Ralph saw not Redhead as he got off his horse, and David according to his wont
|
||
went with him to his tent. But after they had supped together, and David had
|
||
made much of Ralph, and had drank many cups to his health, he said to him:
|
||
"The night is yet young, yea, but new-born; yet must I depart from thee,
|
||
if I may, to meet a man who will sell me a noble horse good cheap;
|
||
and I may well leave thee now, seeing that thou hast become a free man;
|
||
so I bid thee goodnight."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he departed, and was scarce gone out ere Redhead cometh in,
|
||
and saith in his wonted rough loud voice: "Here, knight, here is
|
||
the bridle thou badest me get mended; will the cobbling serve?"
|
||
Then seeing no one there, he fell to speaking softer and said:
|
||
"I heard the old pimp call thee a free man e'en now:
|
||
I fear me that thou art not so free as he would have thee think.
|
||
Anyhow, were I thou, I would be freer in two hours space.
|
||
Is it to be so?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, yea," said Ralph. Redhead nodded: "Good is that," said he; "I say in
|
||
two hours' time all will be quiet, and we are as near the thicket as may be;
|
||
there is no moon, but the night is fair and the stars clear; so all that thou
|
||
hast to do is to walk out of this tent, and turn at once to thy right hand:
|
||
come out with me now quietly, and I will show thee."
|
||
|
||
They went out together and Redhead said softly: "Lo thou that doddered
|
||
oak yonder; like a piece of a hay-rick it looks under the stars;
|
||
if thou seest it, come in again at once."
|
||
|
||
Ralph turned and drew Redhead in, and said when they were in the tent again:
|
||
"Yea, I saw it: what then?"
|
||
|
||
Said Redhead: "I shall be behind it abiding thee."
|
||
"Must I go afoot?" said Ralph, "or how shall I get me a horse?"
|
||
"I have a horse for thee," said Redhead, "not thine own,
|
||
but a better one yet, that hath not been backed to-day. Now
|
||
give me a cup of wine, and let me go."
|
||
|
||
Ralph filled for him and took a cup himself, and said:
|
||
"I pledge thee, friend, and wish thee better luck; and I would
|
||
have thee for my fellow in this quest."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Redhead, "it may not be: I will not burden thy luck with my
|
||
ill-luck...and moreover I am seeking something which I may gain at Utterbol,
|
||
and if I have it, I may do my best to say good-night to that evil abode."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and I wish thee well therein."
|
||
Said Redhead, stammering somewhat; "It is even that woman
|
||
of the Queen's whereof I told thee. And now one last word,
|
||
since I must not be over long in thy tent, lest some one
|
||
come upon us. But, fair sir, if thy mind misgive thee
|
||
for this turning aside from Utterbol; though it is not to be
|
||
doubted that the damsel whom thou seekest hath been there,
|
||
it is not all so sure that thou wouldst have found her there.
|
||
For of late, what with my Lord and my Lady being both away,
|
||
the place hath been scant of folk; and not only is the said
|
||
damsel wise and wary, but there be others who have seen her
|
||
besides my Lord, and who so hath seen her is like to love her;
|
||
and such is she, that whoso loveth her is like to do her will.
|
||
So I bid thee in all case be earnest in thy quest; and think
|
||
that if thou die on the road thy damsel would have died for thee;
|
||
and if thou drink of the Well and come back whole and safe,
|
||
I know not why thou shouldest not go straight to Utterbol
|
||
and have the damsel away with thee, whosoever gainsay it.
|
||
For they (if there be any such) who have drunk of the Well
|
||
at the World's End are well looked to in this land.
|
||
Now one more word yet; when I come to Utterbol, if thy damsel
|
||
be there still, fear not but I will have speech of her,
|
||
and tell of thee, and what thou wert looking to, and how thou
|
||
deemedst of her."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he turned and departed hastily.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph left alone was sorely moved with hope and fear, and a longing that
|
||
grew in him to see the damsel. For though he was firmly set on departure,
|
||
and on seeking the sage aforesaid, yet his heart was drawn this way and that:
|
||
and it came into his mind how the damsel would fare when the evil Lord came
|
||
home to Utterbol; and he could not choose but make stories of her meeting of
|
||
the tyrant, and her fear and grief and shame, and the despair of her heart.
|
||
So the minutes went slow to him, till he should be in some new place and
|
||
doing somewhat toward bringing about the deliverance of her from thralldom,
|
||
and the meeting of him and her.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BOOK THREE
|
||
|
||
The Road To The Well At World's End.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 1
|
||
|
||
An Adventure in the Wood Under the Mountains
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now was the night worn to the time appointed, for it was two hours after
|
||
midnight, so he stepped out of his tent clad in all his war gear, and went
|
||
straight to the doddered oak, and found Redhead there with but one horse,
|
||
whereby Ralph knew that he held to his purpose of going his ways to Utterbol:
|
||
so he took him by the shoulders and embraced him, rough carle as he was,
|
||
and Redhead kneeled to him one moment of time and then arose and went off into
|
||
the night. But Ralph got a-horseback without delay and rode his ways warily
|
||
across the highway and into the wood, and there was none to hinder him.
|
||
Though it was dark but for the starlight, there was a path, which the horse,
|
||
and not Ralph, found, so that he made some way even before the first glimmer
|
||
of dawn, all the more as the wood was not very thick after the first mile,
|
||
and there were clearings here and there.
|
||
|
||
So rode Ralph till the sun was at point to rise, and he was about
|
||
the midst of one of those clearings or wood-lawns, on the further side
|
||
whereof there was more thicket, as he deemed, then he had yet come to;
|
||
so he drew rein and looked about him for a minute. Even therewith he deemed
|
||
he heard a sound less harsh than the cry of the jay in the beech-trees,
|
||
and shriller than the moaning of the morning breeze in the wood.
|
||
So he falls to listening with both ears, and this time deems that
|
||
he hears the voice of a woman: and therewith came into his mind
|
||
that old and dear adventure of the Wood Perilous; for he was dreamy
|
||
with the past eagerness of his deeds, and the long and lonely night.
|
||
But yet he doubted somewhat of the voice when it had passed his ears,
|
||
so he shook his rein, for he thought it not good to tarry.
|
||
|
||
Scarce then had his horse stepped out, ere there came a woman running
|
||
out of the thicket before him and made toward him over the lawn.
|
||
So he gat off his horse at once and went to meet her, leading his horse;
|
||
and as he drew nigh he could see that she was in a sorry plight; she had
|
||
gathered up her skirts to run the better, and her legs and feet were naked:
|
||
the coif was gone from her head and her black hair streamed out behind her:
|
||
her gown was rent about the shoulders and bosom, so that one sleeve
|
||
hung tattered, as if by the handling of some one.
|
||
|
||
So she ran up to him crying out: "Help, knight, help us!"
|
||
and sank down therewith at his feet panting and sobbing.
|
||
He stooped down to her, and raised her up, and said in a kind voice:
|
||
"What is amiss, fair damsel, that thou art in such a plight;
|
||
and what may I for thine avail? Doth any pursue thee,
|
||
that thou fleest thus?"
|
||
|
||
She stood sobbing awhile, and then took hold of his two hands and said:
|
||
"O fair lord, come now and help my lady! for as for me, since I am with thee,
|
||
I am safe."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said he, "Shall I get to horse at once?"
|
||
And I therewith he made as if he would move away from her;
|
||
but she still held his hands, and seemed to think it good so to do,
|
||
and she spake not for a while but gazed earnestly into his face.
|
||
She was a fair woman, dark and sleek and lithe...for in good
|
||
sooth she was none other than Agatha, who is afore told of.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph is somewhat abashed by her eagerness, and lets his
|
||
eyes fall before hers; and he cannot but note that despite
|
||
the brambles and briars of the wood that she had run through,
|
||
there were no scratches on her bare legs, and that her arm
|
||
was unbruised where the sleeve had been rent off.
|
||
|
||
At last she spake, but somewhat slowly, as if she were thinking
|
||
of what she had to say: "O knight, by thy knightly oath
|
||
I charge thee come to my lady and help and rescue her:
|
||
she and I have been taken by evil men, and I fear that they
|
||
will put her to shame, and torment her, ere they carry her off;
|
||
for they were about tying her to a tree when I escaped:
|
||
for they heeded not me who am but the maid, when they had the mistress
|
||
in their hands." "Yea," said he, "and who is thy mistress?"
|
||
Said the damsel: "She is the Lady of the Burnt Rock;
|
||
and I fear me that these men are of the Riders of Utterbol;
|
||
and then will it go hard with her; for there is naught but hatred
|
||
betwixt my lord her husband and the tyrant of Utterbol."
|
||
Said Ralph: "And how many were they?" "O but three,
|
||
fair sir, but three," she said; "and thou so fair and strong,
|
||
like the war-god himself."
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed: "Three to one is long odds," quoth he, "but I will come
|
||
with thee when thou hast let go my hands so that I may mount my horse.
|
||
But wilt thou not ride behind me, fair damsel; so wearied and spent
|
||
as thou wilt be by thy night."
|
||
|
||
She looked on him curiously, and laid a hand on his breast,
|
||
and the hauberk rings tinkled beneath the broidered surcoat;
|
||
then she said: "Nay, I had best go afoot before thee,
|
||
so disarrayed as I am."
|
||
|
||
Then she let him go, but followed him still with her eyes as he gat
|
||
him into the saddle. She walked on beside his horse's head;
|
||
and Ralph marvelled of her that for all her haste she had been in,
|
||
she went somewhat leisurely, picking her way daintily so as to tread
|
||
the smooth, and keep her feet from the rough.
|
||
|
||
Thus they went on, into the thicket and through it, and the damsel put
|
||
the thorns and briars aside daintily as she stepped, and went slower still
|
||
till they came to a pleasant place of oak-trees with greensward beneath them;
|
||
and then she stopped, and turning, faced Ralph, and spoke with another
|
||
voice than heretofore, whereas there was naught rueful or whining therein,
|
||
but somewhat both of glee and of mocking as it seemed. "Sir knight,"
|
||
she said, "I have a word or two for thy ears; and this is a pleasant place,
|
||
and good for us to talk together, whereas it is neither too near to her,
|
||
nor too far from her, so that I can easily find my way back to her.
|
||
Now, lord, I pray thee light down and listen to me." And therewith she
|
||
sat down on the grass by the bole of a great oak.
|
||
|
||
"But thy lady," said Ralph, "thy lady?" "O sir," she said;
|
||
"My lady shall do well enough: she is not tied so fast,
|
||
but she might loose herself if the need were pressing.
|
||
Light down, dear lord, light down!"
|
||
|
||
But Ralph sat still on his horse, and knit his brows, and said:
|
||
"What is this, damsel? hast thou been playing a play with me?
|
||
Where is thy lady whom thou wouldst have me deliver?
|
||
If this be but game and play, let me go my ways; for time presses,
|
||
and I have a weighty errand on hand."
|
||
|
||
She rose up and came close to him, and laid a hand on his knee
|
||
and looked wistfully into his face as she said: "Nay then,
|
||
I can tell thee all the tale as thou sittest in thy saddle;
|
||
for meseems short will be thy farewell when I have told it."
|
||
And she sighed withal.
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph was ashamed to gainsay her, and she now become gentle and sweet
|
||
and enticing, and sad withal; so he got off his horse and tied him to a tree,
|
||
and went and stood by the damsel as she lay upon the grass, and said:
|
||
"I prithee tell thy tale and let me depart if there be naught for me to do."
|
||
|
||
Then she said: "This is the first word, that as to the Red Rock,
|
||
I lied; and my lady is the Queen of Utterbol, and I am her thrall,
|
||
and it is I who have drawn thee hither from the camp."
|
||
|
||
The blood mounted to Ralph's brow for anger; when he called to mind how
|
||
he had been led hither and thither on other folk's errands ever since he
|
||
left Upmeads. But he said naught, and Agatha looked on him timidly and said:
|
||
"I say I am her thrall, and I did it to serve her and because she bade me."
|
||
Said Ralph roughly: "And Redhead, him whom I saved from torments and death;
|
||
dost thou know him? didst thou know him?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said, "I had from him what he had learned concerning thee
|
||
from the sergeants and others, and then I put words into his mouth."
|
||
"Yea then," quoth Ralph, "then he also is a traitor!" "Nay, nay,"
|
||
she said, "he is a true man and loveth thee, and whatever he hath said
|
||
to thee he troweth himself. Moreover, I tell thee here and now that all
|
||
that he told thee of the affairs of Utterbol, and thine outlook there,
|
||
is true and overtrue."
|
||
|
||
She sprang to her feet therewith, and stood before him and clasped her hands
|
||
before him and said: "I know that thou seekest the Well at the World's End
|
||
and the deliverance of the damsel whom the Lord ravished from the wild man:
|
||
now I swear it by thy mouth, that if thou go to Utterbol thou art undone
|
||
and shalt come to the foulest pass there, and moreover that so going thou
|
||
shalt bring the uttermost shame and torments on the damsel."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Yea, but what is her case as now? tell me."
|
||
|
||
Quoth Agatha: "She is in no such evil case; for my lady
|
||
hateth her not as yet, or but little; and, which is far more,
|
||
my lord loveth her after his fashion, and withal as I deem
|
||
feareth her; for though she hath utterly gainsaid his desire,
|
||
he hath scarce so much as threatened her. A thing unheard of.
|
||
Had it been another woman she had by this time known
|
||
all the bitterness that leadeth unto death at Utterbol."
|
||
Ralph paled and he scowled on her, then he said:
|
||
"And how knowest thou all the privity of the Lord of Utterbol?
|
||
who telleth thee of all this?" She smiled and spake daintily:
|
||
"Many folk tell me that which I would know; and that is
|
||
because whiles I conquer the tidings with my wits,
|
||
and whiles buy it with my body. Anyhow what I tell thee
|
||
is the very sooth concerning this damsel, and this it is:
|
||
that whereas she is but in peril, she shall be in deadly peril,
|
||
yea and that instant, if thou go to Utterbol, thou, who art
|
||
her lover..." "Nay," said Ralph angrily, "I am not her lover,
|
||
I am but her well-willer." "Well," quoth Agatha looking down
|
||
and knitting her brows, "when thy good will towards her has
|
||
become known, then shall she be thrown at once into the pit
|
||
of my lord's cruelty. Yea, to speak sooth, even as it is,
|
||
for thy sake (for her I heed naught) I would that the lord
|
||
might find her gone when he cometh back to Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, reddening, "and is there any hope
|
||
for her getting clear off?" "So I deem," said Agatha.
|
||
She was silent awhile and then spake in a low voice:
|
||
"It is said that each man that seeth her loveth her; yea, and will
|
||
befriend her, even though she consent not to his desire.
|
||
Maybe she hath fled from Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
Ralph stood silent awhile with a troubled face; and then he said:
|
||
"Yet thou hast not told me the why and wherefore of this play
|
||
of thine, and the beguiling me into fleeing from the camp.
|
||
Tell it me that I may pardon thee and pass on."
|
||
|
||
She said: "By thine eyes I swear that this is sooth, and that
|
||
there is naught else in it than this: My lady set her love,
|
||
when first she set her eyes upon thee--as forsooth all women must:
|
||
as for me, I had not seen thee (though I told my lady that I had)
|
||
till within this hour that we met in the wood."
|
||
|
||
She sighed therewith, and with her right hand played
|
||
with the rent raiment about her bosom. Then she said:
|
||
"She deemed that if thou camest a mere thrall to Utterbol,
|
||
though she might command thy body, yet she would not gain thy love;
|
||
but that if perchance thou mightest see her in hard need,
|
||
and evilly mishandled, and mightest deliver her, there might at least
|
||
grow up pity in thee for her, and that love might come thereof,
|
||
as oft hath happed aforetime; for my lady is a fair woman.
|
||
Therefore I, who am my lady's servant and thrall, and who,
|
||
I bid thee remember, had not seen thee, took upon me to make
|
||
this adventure, like to a minstrel's tale done in the flesh.
|
||
Also I spake to my lord and told him thereof; and though he jeered
|
||
at my lady to me, he was content, because he would have her
|
||
set her heart on thee utterly; since he feared her jealousy,
|
||
and would fain be delivered of it, lest she should play
|
||
some turn to his newly beloved damsel and do her a mischief.
|
||
Therefore did he set thee free (in words) meaning, when he had
|
||
thee safe at Utterbol again (as he nowise doubted to have thee)
|
||
to do as he would with thee, according as occasion might serve.
|
||
For at heart he hateth thee, as I could see well.
|
||
So a little before thou didst leave the camp, we, the Queen and I,
|
||
went privily into a place of the woods but a little way hence.
|
||
There I disarrayed both my lady and myself so far as was needful
|
||
for the playing out the play which was to have seemed to thee
|
||
a real adventure. Then came I to thee as if by chance hap, that I
|
||
might bring thee to her; and if thou hadst come, we had a story
|
||
for thee, whereby thou mightest not for very knighthood forbear
|
||
to succour her and bring her whither she would, which in the long
|
||
run had been Utterbol, but for the present time was to have been
|
||
a certain strong-house appertaining to Utterbol, and nigh unto it.
|
||
This is all the tale, and now if thou wilt, thou mayst pardon me;
|
||
or if thou wilt, thou mayst draw out thy sword and smite off my head.
|
||
And forsooth I deem that were the better deed."
|
||
|
||
She knelt down before him and put her palms together,
|
||
and looked up at him beseechingly. His face darkened
|
||
as he beheld her thus, but it cleared at last, and he said:
|
||
"Damsel, thou wouldst turn out but a sorry maker, and thy
|
||
play is naught. For seest thou not that I should have found
|
||
out all the guile at Utterbol, and owed thy lady hatred rather
|
||
than love thereafter."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said, "but my lady might have had enough of thy love by then,
|
||
and would belike have let thee alone to fall into the hands of the Lord.
|
||
Lo now! I have delivered thee from this, so that thou art quit both of
|
||
the Lord and the lady and me: and again I say that thou couldst scarce
|
||
have missed, both thou and thy damsel, of a miserable ending at Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, softly, and as if speaking to himself, "yet am
|
||
I lonely and unholpen." Then he turned to Agatha and said:
|
||
"The end of all this is that I pardon thee, and must depart forthwith;
|
||
for when ye two come back to the camp, then presently will
|
||
the hunt be up."
|
||
|
||
She rose from her knees, and stood before him humbly and said:
|
||
"Nay, I shall requite thee thy pardon thus far, that I will fashion
|
||
some tale for my lady which will keep us in the woods two days or three;
|
||
for we have provided victual for our adventure."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "I may at least thank thee for that, and will trust in thee
|
||
to do so much." Quoth she: "Then might I ask a reward of thee:
|
||
since forsooth other reward awaiteth me at Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
"Thou shalt have it," said Ralph. She said: "The reward is that thou
|
||
kiss me ere we part."
|
||
|
||
"It must needs be according to my word," said Ralph, "yet I must
|
||
tell thee that my kiss will bear but little love with it."
|
||
|
||
She answered naught but laid her hands on his breast and put
|
||
up her face to him, and he kissed her lips. Then she said:
|
||
"Knight, thou hast kissed a thrall and a guileful woman,
|
||
yet one that shall smart for thee; therefore grudge not the kiss
|
||
nor repent thee of thy kindness."
|
||
|
||
"How shalt thou suffer?" said he. She looked on him steadfastly
|
||
a moment, and said: "Farewell! may all good go with thee."
|
||
Therewith she turned away and walked off slowly through the wood,
|
||
and somewhat he pitied her, and sighed as he got into his saddle;
|
||
but he said to himself: "How might I help her? Yet true it is
|
||
that she may well be in an evil case: I may not help everyone."
|
||
Then he shook his rein and rode his ways.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 2
|
||
|
||
Ralph Rides the Wood Under the Mountains
|
||
|
||
|
||
A long way now rode Ralph, and naught befell him but the fashion of the wood.
|
||
And as he rode, the heart within him was lightened that he had escaped
|
||
from all the confusion and the lying of those aliens, who knew him not,
|
||
nor his kindred, and yet would all use him each for his own ends:
|
||
and withal he was glad that he was riding all alone upon his quest,
|
||
but free, unwounded, and well weaponed.
|
||
|
||
The wood was not very thick whereas he rode, so that he could see
|
||
the whereabouts of the sun, and rode east as far as he could judge it.
|
||
Some little victual he had with him, and he found woodland fruit
|
||
ripening here and there, and eked out his bread therewith; neither did
|
||
water fail him, for he rode a good way up along a woodland stream
|
||
that cleft the thicket, coming down as he deemed from the mountains,
|
||
and thereby he made the more way: but at last he deemed that
|
||
he must needs leave it, as it turned overmuch to the north.
|
||
The light was failing when he came into a woodlawn amidst
|
||
of which was a pool of water, and all that day he had had no
|
||
adventure with beast or man, since he had sundered from Agatha.
|
||
So he lay down and slept there with his naked sword by his side,
|
||
and awoke not till the sun was high in the heavens next morning.
|
||
Then he arose at once and went on his way after he had washed him,
|
||
and eaten a morsel.
|
||
|
||
After a little the thick of the wood gave out, and the land was
|
||
no longer flat, as it had been, but was of dales and of hills,
|
||
not blinded by trees. In this land he saw much deer, as hart
|
||
and wild swine; and he happened also on a bear, who was about
|
||
a honey tree, and had taken much comb from the wild bees.
|
||
On him Ralph drew his sword and drave him exceeding loth from
|
||
his purchase, so that the knight dined off the bear's thieving.
|
||
Another time he came across a bent where on the south
|
||
side grew vines well fruited, and the grapes a-ripening;
|
||
and he ate well thereof before he went on his way.
|
||
|
||
Before nightfall he came on that same stream again, and it was now running
|
||
straight from the east; so he slept that night on the bank thereof.
|
||
On the morrow he rode up along it a great way, till again it seemed
|
||
to be coming overmuch from the north; and then he left it, and made
|
||
on east as near as he could guess it by the sun.
|
||
|
||
Now he passed through thickets at whiles not very great,
|
||
and betwixt them rode hilly land grassed mostly with long
|
||
coarse grass, and with whin and thorn-trees scattered about.
|
||
Thence he saw again from time to time the huge wall of the mountains
|
||
rising up into the air like a great black cloud that would
|
||
swallow up the sky, and though the sight was terrible, yet it
|
||
gladdened him, since he knew that he was on the right way.
|
||
So far he rode, going on the whole up-hill, till at last there
|
||
was a great pine-wood before him, so that he could see no ending
|
||
to it either north or south.
|
||
|
||
It was now late in the afternoon, and Ralph pondered whether he should
|
||
abide the night where he was and sleep the night there, or whether
|
||
he should press on in hope of winning to some clear place before dark.
|
||
So whereas he was in a place both rough and waterless, he deemed it better
|
||
to go on, after he had rested his horse and let him bite the herbage a while.
|
||
Then he rode his ways, and entered the wood and made the most of the way.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 3
|
||
|
||
Ralph Meeteth With Another Adventure in the Wood Under the Mountain
|
||
|
||
|
||
Soon the wood grew very thick of pine-trees, though there
|
||
was no undergrowth, so that when the sun sank it grew dark
|
||
very speedily; but he still rode on in the dusk, and there
|
||
were but few wild things, and those mostly voiceless,
|
||
in the wood, and it was without wind and very still.
|
||
Now he thought he heard the sound of a horse going behind him
|
||
or on one side, and he wondered whether the chace were up,
|
||
and hastened what he might, till at last it grew black night,
|
||
and he was constrained to abide. So he got off his horse,
|
||
and leaned his back against a tree, and had the beast's reins over
|
||
his arm; and now he listened again carefully, and was quite sure
|
||
that he could hear the footsteps of some hard-footed beast going
|
||
nowise far from him. He laughed inwardly, and said to himself:
|
||
"If the chacer were to pass but three feet from my nose
|
||
he should be none the wiser but if he hear me or my horse."
|
||
And therewith he cast a lap of his cloak over the horse's head,
|
||
lest he should whinny if he became aware of the other beast;
|
||
and so there he stood abiding, and the noise grew greater
|
||
till be could hear clearly the horse-hoofs drawing nigh,
|
||
till they came very nigh, and then stopped.
|
||
|
||
Then came a man's voice that said: "Is there a man anigh in the wood?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph held his peace till he should know more; and the voice spake again
|
||
in a little while: "If there be a man anigh let him be sure that I
|
||
will do him no hurt; nay, I may do him good, for I have meat with me."
|
||
Clear was the voice, and as sweet as the April blackbird sings.
|
||
It spake again: "Naught answereth, yet meseemeth I know surely that a man
|
||
is anigh; and I am aweary of the waste, and long for fellowship."
|
||
|
||
Ralph hearkened, and called to mind tales of way-farers
|
||
entrapped by wood-wives and evil things; but he thought:
|
||
"At least this is no sending of the Lord of Utterbol, and,
|
||
St. Nicholas to aid, I have little fear of wood-wights. Withal
|
||
I shall be but a dastard if I answer not one man, for fear of I
|
||
know not what." So he spake in a loud and cheerful voice:
|
||
"Yea, there is a man anigh, and I desire thy fellowship,
|
||
if we might but meet. But how shall we see each other in
|
||
the blackness of the wildwood night?"
|
||
|
||
The other laughed, and the laugh sounded merry and sweet,
|
||
and the voice said: "Hast thou no flint and fire-steel?"
|
||
"No," said Ralph. "But I have," said the voice, "and I am
|
||
fain to see thee, for thy voice soundeth pleasant to me.
|
||
Abide till I grope about for a stick or two."
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed in turn, as he heard the new-comer moving about;
|
||
then he heard the click of the steel on the flint, and saw
|
||
the sparks showering down, so that a little piece of the wood
|
||
grew green again to his eyes. Then a little clear flame
|
||
sprang up, and therewith he saw the tree-stems clearly,
|
||
and some twenty yards from him a horse, and a man stooping
|
||
down over the fire, who sprang up now and cried out:
|
||
"It is a knight-at-arms! Come hither, fellow of the waste;
|
||
it is five days since I have spoken to a child of Adam;
|
||
so come nigh and speak to me, and as a reward of thy speech
|
||
thou shalt have both meat and firelight."
|
||
|
||
"That will be well paid," said Ralph laughing, and he stepped
|
||
forward leading his horse, for now the wood was light all about,
|
||
as the fire waxed and burned clear; so that Ralph could see
|
||
that the new-comer was clad in quaintly-fashioned armour
|
||
after the fashion of that land, with a bright steel sallet
|
||
on the head, and a long green surcoat over the body armour.
|
||
Slender of make was the new-comer, not big nor tall of stature.
|
||
|
||
Ralph went up to him hastily, and merrily put his hand on his shoulder,
|
||
and kissed him, saying: "The kiss of peace in the wilderness to thee!"
|
||
And he found him smooth-faced and sweet-breathed.
|
||
|
||
But the new comer took his hand and led him to where the firelight was
|
||
brightest and looked on him silently a while; and Ralph gave back the look.
|
||
The strange-wrought sallet hid but little of the new comer's face, and as
|
||
Ralph looked thereon a sudden joy came into his heart, and he cried out:
|
||
"O, but I have kissed thy face before! O, my friend, my friend!"
|
||
|
||
Then spake the new-comer and said: "Yea, I am a woman,
|
||
and I was thy friend for a little while at Bourton Abbas,
|
||
and at the want-ways of the Wood Perilous."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph cast his arms about her and kissed her again;
|
||
but she withdrew her from him, and said: "Help me, my friend,
|
||
that we may gather sticks to feed our fire, lest it die
|
||
and the dark come again so that we see not each other's faces,
|
||
and think that we have but met in a dream."
|
||
|
||
Then she busied herself with gathering the kindling; but presently she
|
||
looked up at him, and said: "Let us make the wood shine wide about,
|
||
for this is a feastful night."
|
||
|
||
So they gathered a heap of wood and made the fire great; and then
|
||
Ralph did off his helm and hauberk and the damsel did the like,
|
||
so that he could see the shapeliness of her uncovered head.
|
||
Then they sat down before the fire, and the damsel drew meat
|
||
and drink from her saddle-bags, and gave thereof to Ralph,
|
||
who took it of her and her hand withal, and smiled on her
|
||
and said: "Shall we be friends together as we were at
|
||
Bourton Abbas and the want-ways of the Wood Perilous?"
|
||
She shook her head and said: "If it might be! but it may not be.
|
||
Not many days have worn since then; but they have brought
|
||
about changed days." He looked on her wistfully and said:
|
||
"But thou wert dear to me then."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said, "and thou to me; but other things have befallen,
|
||
and there is change betwixt."
|
||
|
||
"Nay, what change?" said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Even by the firelight he saw that she reddened as she answered:
|
||
"I was a free woman then; now am I but a runaway thrall."
|
||
Then Ralph laughed merrily, and said, "Then are we brought
|
||
the nigher together, for I also am a runaway thrall."
|
||
|
||
She smiled and looked down: then she said: "Wilt thou tell
|
||
me how that befell?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said he, "but I will ask thee first a question or two."
|
||
She nodded a yeasay, and looked on him soberly, as a child waiting
|
||
to say its task.
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "When we parted at the want-ways of the Wood
|
||
Perilous thou saidst that thou wert minded for the Well
|
||
at the World's End, and to try it for life or death.
|
||
But thou hadst not then the necklace, which now I see thee bear,
|
||
and which, seest thou! is like to that about my neck.
|
||
Wilt thou tell me whence thou hadst it?"
|
||
|
||
She said: "Yea; it was given unto me by a lady, mighty as I deem,
|
||
and certainly most lovely, who delivered me from an evil plight,
|
||
and a peril past words, but whereof I will tell thee afterwards.
|
||
And she it was who told me of the way to the Well at the World's End,
|
||
and many matters concerning them that seek it, whereof thou
|
||
shalt wot soon."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "As to how thou wert made a thrall thou needest not to tell me;
|
||
for I have learned that of those that had to do with taking thee
|
||
to Utterbol. But tell me; here are met we two in the pathless wilds,
|
||
as if it were on the deep sea, and we two seeking the same thing.
|
||
Didst thou deem that we should meet, or that I should seek thee?"
|
||
|
||
Now was the fire burning somewhat low, but he saw that she looked on
|
||
him steadily; yet withal her sweet voice trembled a little as she answered:
|
||
"Kind friend, I had a hope that thou wert seeking me and wouldst find me:
|
||
for indeed that fairest of women who gave me the beads spake to me of thee,
|
||
and said that thou also wouldst turn thee to the quest of the Well at
|
||
the World's End; and already had I deemed thine eyes lucky as well as lovely.
|
||
But tell me, my friend, what has befallen that lady that she is not
|
||
with thee? For in such wise she spake of thee, that I deemed that naught
|
||
would sunder you save death."
|
||
|
||
"It is death that hath sundered us," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Then she hung her head, and sat silent a while, neither did
|
||
he speak till she had risen up and cast more wood upon the fire;
|
||
and she stood before it with her back towards him.
|
||
Then he spake to her in a cheerful voice and said: "Belike we
|
||
shall be long together: tell me thy name; is it not Dorothy?"
|
||
She turned about to him with a smiling face, and said:
|
||
"Nay lord, nay: did I not tell thee my name before?
|
||
They that held me at the font bid the priest call me Ursula,
|
||
after the Friend of Maidens. But what is thy name?"
|
||
|
||
"I am Ralph of Upmeads," quoth he; and sat a while silent,
|
||
pondering his dream and how it had betrayed him as to her name,
|
||
when it had told him much that he yet deemed true.
|
||
|
||
She came and sat down by him again, and said to him: "Thy questions I
|
||
have answered; but thou hast not yet told me the tale of thy captivity."
|
||
Her voice sounded exceeding sweet to him, and he looked on her face and spake
|
||
as kindly as he knew how, and said: "A short tale it is to-night at least:
|
||
I came from Whitwall with a Company of Chapmen, and it was thee I was
|
||
seeking and the Well at the World's End. All went well with me, till I
|
||
came to Goldburg, and there I was betrayed by a felon, who had promised
|
||
to lead me safe to Utterness, and tell me concerning the way unto the Well.
|
||
But he sold me to the Lord of Utterbol, who would lead me to his house;
|
||
which irked me not, at first, because I looked to find thee there.
|
||
Thereafter, if for shame I may tell the tale, his lady and wife
|
||
cast her love upon me, and I was entangled in the nets of guile:
|
||
yet since I was told, and believed that it would be ill both for thee
|
||
and for me if I met thee at Utterbol, I took occasion to flee away,
|
||
I will tell thee how another while."
|
||
|
||
She had turned pale as she heard him, and now she said: "It is indeed
|
||
God's mercy that thou camest not to Utterbol nor foundest me there,
|
||
for then had both we been undone amidst the lusts of those two;
|
||
or that thou camest not there to find me fled, else hadst thou been undone.
|
||
My heart is sick to think of it, even as I sit by thy side."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Thy last word maketh me afraid and ashamed to ask thee a thing.
|
||
But tell me first, is that Lord of Utterbol as evil as men's fear would make
|
||
him? for no man is feared so much unless he is deemed evil."
|
||
|
||
She was silent a while, and then she said: "He is so evil that it
|
||
might be deemed that he has been brought up out of hell."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph looked sore troubled, and he said: "Dear friend, this is
|
||
the thing hard for me to say. In what wise did they use thee at Utterbol?
|
||
Did they deal with thee shamefully?" She answered him quietly:
|
||
"Nay," she said, "fear not! no shame befell me, save that I was
|
||
a thrall and not free to depart. Forsooth," she said, smiling,
|
||
"I fled away timely before the tormentors should be ready.
|
||
Forsooth it is an evil house and a mere piece of hell.
|
||
But now we are out of it and free in the wildwood, so let us forget it;
|
||
for indeed it is a grief to remember it. And now once more let us mend
|
||
the fire, for thy face is growing dim to me, and that misliketh me.
|
||
Afterwards before we lie down to sleep we will talk a little of the way,
|
||
whitherward we shall turn our faces to-morrow."
|
||
|
||
So they cast on more wood, and pineapples, and sweet it was to Ralph
|
||
to see her face come clear again from out the mirk of the wood.
|
||
Then they sat down again together and she said: "We two are
|
||
seeking the Well at the World's End; now which of us knows more
|
||
of the way? who is to lead, and who to follow?" Said Ralph:
|
||
"If thou know no more than I, it is little that thou knowest.
|
||
Sooth it is that for many days past I have sought thee that thou
|
||
mightest lead me."
|
||
|
||
She laughed sweetly, and said: "Yea, knight, and was it for
|
||
that cause that thou soughtest me, and not for my deliverance?"
|
||
He said soberly: "Yet in very deed I set myself to deliver thee."
|
||
"Yea," she said, "then since I am delivered, I must needs deem
|
||
of it as if it were through thy deed. And as I suppose thou
|
||
lookest for a reward therefor, so thy reward shall be, that I
|
||
will lead thee to the Well at the World's End. Is it enough?"
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph. They held their peace a minute, then she said:
|
||
"Maybe when we have drunk of that Water and are coming back,
|
||
it will be for thee to lead. For true it is that I shall scarce
|
||
know whither to wend; since amidst of my dreaming of the Well,
|
||
and of...other matters, my home that was is gone like a dream."
|
||
|
||
He looked at her, but scarce as if he were heeding all her words.
|
||
Then he spoke: "Yea, thou shalt lead me. I have been
|
||
led by one or another ever since I have left Upmeads."
|
||
Now she looked on him somewhat ruefully, and said:
|
||
"Thou wert not hearkening e'en now; so I say it again,
|
||
that the time shall come when thou shalt lead me."
|
||
|
||
In Ralph's mind had sprung up again that journey from the Water of
|
||
the Oak-tree; so he strove with himself to put the thought from him,
|
||
and sighed and said: "Dost thou verily know much of the way?"
|
||
She nodded yeasay. "Knowest thou of the Rock of the Fighting Man?"
|
||
"Yea," she said. "And of the Sage that dwelleth in this same wood?"
|
||
"Most surely," she said, "and to-morrow evening or the morrow after
|
||
we shall find him; for I have been taught the way to his dwelling;
|
||
and I wot that he is now called the Sage of Swevenham. Yet I must
|
||
tell thee that there is some peril in seeking to him; whereas his
|
||
dwelling is known of the Utterbol riders, who may follow us thither.
|
||
And yet again I deem that he will find some remedy thereto."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Whence didst thou learn all this, my friend?"
|
||
And his face grew troubled again; but she said simply:
|
||
"She taught it to me who spake to me in the wood by
|
||
Hampton under Scaur."
|
||
|
||
She made as if she noted not the trouble in his face, but said:
|
||
"Put thy trust in this, that here and with me thou art even
|
||
now nigher to the Well at the World's End than any other
|
||
creature on the earth. Yea, even if the Sage of Swevenham
|
||
be dead or gone hence, yet have I tokens to find the Rock
|
||
of the Fighting Man, and the way through the mountains,
|
||
though I say not but that he may make it all clearer.
|
||
But now I see thee drooping with the grief of days bygone;
|
||
and I deem also that thou art weary with the toil of the way.
|
||
So I rede thee lie down here in the wilderness and sleep,
|
||
and forget grief till to-morrow is a new day."
|
||
|
||
"Would it were come," said he, "that I might see thy face the clearer;
|
||
yet I am indeed weary."
|
||
|
||
So he went and fetched his saddle and lay down with his head thereon;
|
||
and was presently asleep. But she, who had again cast wood on the fire,
|
||
sat by his head watching him with a drawn sword beside her,
|
||
till the dawn of the woodland began to glimmer through the trees:
|
||
then she also laid herself down and slept.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 4
|
||
|
||
They Ride the Wood Under the Mountains
|
||
|
||
|
||
When Ralph woke on the morrow it was broad day as far as the trees
|
||
would have it so. He rose at once, and looked about for his fellow,
|
||
but saw her not, and for some moments of time he thought he had
|
||
but dreamed of her; but he saw that the fire had been quickened from
|
||
its embers, and close by lay the hauberk and strange-fashioned helm,
|
||
and the sword of the damsel, and presently he saw her coming
|
||
through the trees barefoot, with the green-sleeved silken surcoat
|
||
hanging below the knees and her hair floating loose about her.
|
||
She stepped lightly up to Ralph with a cheerful smiling countenance
|
||
and a ruddy colour in her cheeks, but her eyes moist as if she
|
||
could scarce keep back the tears for joy of the morning's meeting.
|
||
He thought her fairer than erst, and made as if he would put his arms
|
||
about her, but she held a little aloof from him, blushing yet more.
|
||
Then she said in her sweet clear voice: "Hail fellow-farer! now
|
||
begins the day's work. I have been down yonder, and have found
|
||
a bright woodland pool, to wash the night off me, and if thou wilt do
|
||
in likewise and come back to me, I will dight our breakfast meantime,
|
||
and will we speedily to the road." He did as she bade him,
|
||
thinking of her all the while till he came back to her fresh and gay.
|
||
Then he looked to their horses and gave them fodder gathered from
|
||
the pool-side, and so turned to Ursula and found her with the meat
|
||
ready dight; so they ate and were glad.
|
||
|
||
When they had broken their fast Ralph went to saddle the horses, and coming
|
||
back found Ursula binding up her long hair, and she smiled on him and said:
|
||
"Now we are for the road I must be an armed knight again: forsooth I
|
||
unbound my hair e'en now and let my surcoat hang loose about me in token
|
||
that thou wottest my secret. Soothly, my friend, it irks me that now
|
||
we have met after a long while, I must needs be clad thus graceless.
|
||
But need drave me to it, and withal the occasion that was given to me
|
||
to steal this gay armour from a lad at Utterbol, the nephew of the lord;
|
||
who like his eme was half my lover, half my tyrant. Of all which I will tell
|
||
thee hereafter, and what wise I must needs steer betwixt stripes and kisses
|
||
these last days. But now let us arm and to horse. Yet first lo you,
|
||
here are some tools that in thine hands shall keep us from sheer famine:
|
||
as for me I am no archer; and forsooth no man-at-arms save in seeming."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she showed him a short Turk bow and a quiver of arrows,
|
||
which he took well pleased. So then they armed each the other,
|
||
and as she handled Ralph's wargear she said: "How well-wrought
|
||
and trusty is this hauberk of thine, my friend; my coat is but a toy
|
||
to it, with its gold and silver rings and its gemmed collar:
|
||
and thy plates be thick and wide and well-wrought, whereas mine
|
||
are little more than adornments to my arms and legs."
|
||
|
||
He looked on her lovingly and loved her shapely hands amidst the dark
|
||
grey mail, and said: "That is well, dear friend, for since my
|
||
breast is a shield for thee it behoves it to be well covered."
|
||
She looked at him, and her lips trembled, and she put out her
|
||
hand as if to touch his cheek, but drew it back again and said:
|
||
"Come now, let us to horse, dear fellow in arms."
|
||
|
||
So they mounted and went their ways through a close pine-wood,
|
||
where the ground was covered with the pine-tree needles,
|
||
and all was still and windless. So as they rode said Ursula:
|
||
"I seek tokens of the way to the Sage of Swevenham.
|
||
Hast thou seen a water yesterday?" "Yea," said Ralph,
|
||
"I rode far along it, but left it because I deemed that it
|
||
turned north overmuch." "Thou wert right," she said,
|
||
"besides that thy turning from it hath brought us together;
|
||
for it would have brought thee to Utterbol at last. But now have we
|
||
to hit upon another that runneth straight down from the hills:
|
||
not the Great Mountains, but the high ground whereon is the
|
||
Sage's dwelling. I know not whether the ride be long or short;
|
||
but the stream is to lead us."
|
||
|
||
On they rode through the wood, wherein was little change for hours;
|
||
and as they rested Ursula gave forth a deep breath, as one who has cast
|
||
off a load of care. And Ralph said: "Why sighest thou, fellow-farer?"
|
||
"O," she said, "it is for pleasure, and a thought that I had:
|
||
for a while ago I was a thrall, living amongst fears that sickened the heart;
|
||
and then a little while I was a lonely wanderer, and now...Therefore
|
||
I was thinking that if ever I come back to mine own land and my home,
|
||
the scent of a pine-wood shall make me happy."
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked on her eagerly, but said naught for a while;
|
||
but at last he spoke: "Tell me, friend," said he, "if we
|
||
be met by strong-thieves on the way, what shall we do then?"
|
||
|
||
"It is not like to befall," she said, "for men fear the wood,
|
||
therefore is there little prey for thieves therein: but if we
|
||
chance on them, the token of Utterbol on mine armour shall make
|
||
them meek enough." Then she fell silent a while, and spoke again:
|
||
"True it is that we may be followed by the Utterbol riders;
|
||
for though they also fear the wood, they fear it not so much as they
|
||
fear their Lord. Howbeit, we be well ahead, and it is little
|
||
like that we shall be overtaken before we have met the Sage;
|
||
and then belike he shall provide."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "but what if the chase come up with us:
|
||
shall we suffer us to be taken alive?" She looked on him solemnly,
|
||
laid her hand on the beads about her neck, and answered:
|
||
"By this token we must live as long as we may, whatsoever may befall;
|
||
for at the worst may some road of escape be opened to us.
|
||
Yet O, how far easier it were to die than to be led back to Utterbol!"
|
||
|
||
A while they rode in silence, both of them: but at last spake Ralph,
|
||
but slowly and in a dull and stern voice: "Maybe it were good that
|
||
thou told me somewhat of the horrors and evil days of Utterbol?"
|
||
"Maybe," she said, "but I; will not tell thee of them.
|
||
Forsooth there are some things which a man may not easily tell to a man,
|
||
be he never so much his friend as thou art to me. But bethink thee"
|
||
(and she smiled somewhat) "that this gear belieth me, and that I am
|
||
but a woman; and some things there be which a woman may not tell
|
||
to a man, nay, not even when he hath held her long in his arms."
|
||
And therewith she flushed exceedingly. But he said in a kind voice:
|
||
"I am sorry that I asked thee, and will ask thee no more thereof."
|
||
She smiled on him friendly, and they spake of other matters as
|
||
they rode on.
|
||
|
||
But after a while Ralph said: "If it were no misease to thee to tell
|
||
me how thou didst fall into the hands of the men of Utterbol,
|
||
I were fain to hear the tale."
|
||
|
||
She laughed outright, and said: "Why wilt thou be forever harping on the time
|
||
of my captivity, friend? And thou who knowest the story somewhat already?
|
||
Howbeit, I may tell thee thereof without heart-burning, though it be
|
||
a felon tale."
|
||
|
||
He said, somewhat shame-facedly: "Take it not ill that I am fain to hear
|
||
of thee and thy life-days, since we are become fellow-farers."
|
||
|
||
"Well," she said, "this befell outside Utterbol, so I will tell thee.
|
||
|
||
"After I had stood in the thrall-market at Cheaping Knowe,
|
||
and not been sold, the wild man led me away toward the mountains
|
||
that are above Goldburg; and as we drew near to them on a day,
|
||
he said to me that he was glad to the heart-root that none
|
||
had cheapened me at the said market; and when I asked
|
||
him wherefore, he fell a weeping as he rode beside me, and said:
|
||
'Yet would God that I had never taken thee.' I asked what
|
||
ailed him, though indeed I deemed that I knew. He said:
|
||
'This aileth me, that though thou art not of the blood wherein I
|
||
am bound to wed, I love thee sorely, and would have thee to wife;
|
||
and now I deem that thou wilt not love me again.' I said that
|
||
he guessed aright, but that if he would do friendly with me,
|
||
I would be no less than a friend to him. 'That availeth little,'
|
||
quoth he; 'I would have thee be mine of thine own will.'
|
||
I said that might not be, that I could love but one man alone.
|
||
'Is he alive?' said he. 'Goodsooth, I hope so,' said I,
|
||
'but if he be dead, then is desire of men dead within me.'
|
||
|
||
"So we spake, and he was downcast and heavy of mood;
|
||
but thenceforward was he no worse to me than a brother.
|
||
And he proffered it to lead me back, if I would, and put
|
||
me safely on the way to Whitwall; but, as thou wottest,
|
||
I had need to go forward, and no need to go back.
|
||
|
||
"Thus we entered into the mountains of Goldburg; but one morning,
|
||
when he arose, he was heavier of mood than his wont, and was
|
||
restless withal, and could be steadfast neither in staying nor going,
|
||
nor aught else. So I asked what ailed him, and he said:
|
||
'My end draweth nigh; I have seen my fetch, and am fey.
|
||
My grave abideth me in these mountains.' 'Thou hast been
|
||
dreaming ugly dreams,' said I, 'such things are of no import.'
|
||
And I spoke lightly, and strove to comfort him. He changed not
|
||
his mood for all that; but said: 'This is ill for thee also;
|
||
for thou wilt be worser without me than with me in these lands.'
|
||
Even so I deemed, and withal I was sorry for him,
|
||
for though he were uncouth and ungainly, he was no ill man.
|
||
So against my will I tumbled into the samelike mood as his,
|
||
and we both fared along drearily. But about sunset,
|
||
as we came round a corner of the cliffs of those mountains,
|
||
or ever we were ware we happed upon a half-score of weaponed men,
|
||
who were dighting a camp under a big rock thereby:
|
||
but four there were with them who were still a-horseback;
|
||
so that when Bull Nosy (for that was his name) strove to flee
|
||
away with me, it was of no avail; for the said horsemen took us,
|
||
and brought us before an evil-looking man, who, to speak shortly,
|
||
was he whom thou hast seen, to wit, the Lord of Utterbol:
|
||
he took no heed of Bull Nosy, but looked on me closely,
|
||
and handled me as a man doth with a horse at a cheaping, so that I
|
||
went nigh to smiting him, whereas I had a knife in my bosom,
|
||
but the chaplet refrained me. To make a short tale of it,
|
||
he bade Bull sell me to him, which Bull utterly naysaid,
|
||
standing stiff and stark before the Lord, and scowling on him.
|
||
But the Lord laughed in his face and said: 'So be it, for I will
|
||
take her without a price, and thank thee for sparing my gold.'
|
||
Then said Bull: 'If thou take her as a thrall, thou wert
|
||
best take me also; else shall I follow thee as a free man
|
||
and slay thee when I may. Many are the days of the year,
|
||
and on some one of them will betide the occasion for the knife.'
|
||
|
||
"Thereat the Lord waxed very pale, and spake not, but looked
|
||
at that man of his who stood by Bull with a great sword in
|
||
his fist, and lifted up his hand twice, and let it fall twice,
|
||
whereat that man stepped back one pace, and swung his sword,
|
||
and smote Bull, and clave his skull.
|
||
|
||
"Then the colour came into the Lord's face again, and he said:
|
||
'Now, vassals, let us dine and be merry, for at least we have found
|
||
something in the mountains.' So they fell to and ate and drank,
|
||
and victual was given to me also, but I had no will to eat, for my
|
||
soul was sick and my heart was heavy, foreboding the uttermost evil.
|
||
Withal I was sorry for Bull Nosy, for he was no ill man and had
|
||
become my friend.
|
||
|
||
"So they abode there that night, leaving Bull lying like a dog
|
||
unburied in the wilderness; and on the morrow they took
|
||
the road to Utterbol, and went swiftly, having no baggage,
|
||
and staying but for victual, and for rest every night.
|
||
The Lord had me brought to him on that first evening of our journey,
|
||
and he saw me privily and spake to me, bidding me do shameful things,
|
||
and I would not; wherefore he threatened me grievously; and, I being
|
||
alone with him, bade him beware lest I should slay him or myself.
|
||
Thereat he turned pale, as he had done before Bull Nosy,
|
||
yet sent for none to slay me, but only bade me back to my keepers.
|
||
And so I came to Utterbol unscathed."
|
||
|
||
"And at Utterbol," said Ralph, "what befell thee there?"
|
||
Ursula smiled on him, and held up her finger; yet she answered:
|
||
"Utterbol is a very great house in a fair land, and there
|
||
are sundry roofs and many fair chambers. There was I brought
|
||
to a goodly chamber amidst a garden; and women servants were
|
||
given me who led me to the bath and clad me in dainty raiment,
|
||
and gave me to eat and to drink, and all that I needed.
|
||
That is all my tale for this time."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 5
|
||
|
||
They Come on the Sage of Swevenham
|
||
|
||
|
||
Night was at hand before they came to the stream that they sought.
|
||
They found it cleaving the pine-wood, which held on till the very bank of it,
|
||
and was thick again on the further side in a few yards' space. The stream
|
||
was high-banked and ran deep and strong. Said Ursula as they came up to it:
|
||
"We may not cross it, but it matters not; and it is to-morrow that we must
|
||
ride up along it."
|
||
|
||
So they abode there, and made a fire by the waterside,
|
||
and watched there, turn and turn about, till it was broad day.
|
||
Naught befell to tell of, save that twice in the night Ralph
|
||
deemed that he heard a lion roar.
|
||
|
||
They got to horse speedily when they were both awake, and rode up
|
||
the stream, and began to go up hill, and by noon were come into a rough
|
||
and shaggy upland, whence from time to time they could see the huge
|
||
wall of the mountains, which yet seemed to Ralph scarce nigher,
|
||
if at all, than when he had beheld it ere he had come to Vale Turris.
|
||
The way was rough day-long, and now and again they found it hard
|
||
to keep the stream in sight, as especially when it cleft a hill,
|
||
and ran between sheer cliffs with no low shore on either side.
|
||
|
||
They made way but slowly, so that at last Ralph lost patience somewhat,
|
||
and said that he had but little hope of falling in with the Sage
|
||
that day or any day. But Ursula was of good cheer, and mocked
|
||
him merrily but sweetly, till his heart was lightened again.
|
||
Withal she bade him seek some venison, since they were drawing
|
||
out the time, and she knew not how long it would be ere they came
|
||
to the Sage's dwelling. Therefore he betook him to the Turk bow,
|
||
and shot a leash of heath-fowl, and they supped on the meat merrily
|
||
in the wilderness.
|
||
|
||
But if they were merry, they were soon weary; for they
|
||
journeyed on after sunset that night, since the moon was up,
|
||
and there was no thick wood to turn dusk into dark for them.
|
||
Their resting-place was a smooth piece of greensward betwixt
|
||
the water and a half circle of steep bent that well nigh
|
||
locked it about.
|
||
|
||
There then they abode, and in the stillness of the night heard
|
||
a thundering sound coming down the wind to them, which they
|
||
deemed was the roaring of distant waters; and when they went
|
||
to the lip of the river they saw flocks of foam floating by,
|
||
wherefore they thought themselves to be near some great
|
||
mountain-neck whereover the water was falling from some high place.
|
||
But with no to-do they lay down upon the greensward this second
|
||
night of their fellowship, and waked later than on the day before;
|
||
for so weary had they been, that they had kept but ill watch
|
||
in the dark night, and none at all after dawn began to glimmer.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph sat up and saw Ursula still sleeping; then he rose to his feet and
|
||
looked about him, and saw their two horses cropping the grass under the bent,
|
||
and beside them a man, tall and white bearded, leaning on his staff.
|
||
Ralph caught up his sword and went toward the man, and the sun gleamed
|
||
from the blade just as the hoary-one turned to him; he lifted up his staff
|
||
as if in greeting to Ralph, and came toward him, and even therewith Ursula
|
||
awoke and arose, and saw the greybeard at once; and she cried out:
|
||
"Take heed to thy sword, fellow-farer, for, praised be the saints,
|
||
this is the Sage of Swevenham!"
|
||
|
||
So they stood there together till the Sage came up to them and
|
||
kissed them both, and said: "I am glad that ye are come at last;
|
||
for I looked for you no later than this. So now mount your
|
||
horses and come with me straightway; because life is short
|
||
to them who have not yet drunk of the Well at the World's End.
|
||
Moreover if ye chance to come on the riders of Utterbol,
|
||
it shall go hard with you unless I be at hand."
|
||
|
||
Ralph saw of him that though he was an old hoar man to look on,
|
||
yet he was strong and sturdy, tall, and of goodly presence,
|
||
with ruddy cheeks, and red lips and bright eyes, and that the skin
|
||
of his face and hands was nowise wrinkled: but about his neck
|
||
was a pair of beads like unto his own gossip's gift.
|
||
|
||
So now they mounted at once, and with no more words he led them
|
||
about the bent, and they came in a little while into the wood again,
|
||
but this time it was of beech, with here and there an open place
|
||
sprinkled about with hollies and thorns; and they rode down the wide
|
||
slope of a long hill, and up again on the other side.
|
||
|
||
Thus they went for an hour, and the elder spake not again, though it
|
||
might have been deemed by his eyes that he was eager and fain.
|
||
They also held their peace; for the hope and fear of their hearts
|
||
kept them from words.
|
||
|
||
They came to the hill-top, and found a plain land, though the close
|
||
wood still held on a while; but soon they rode into a clearing
|
||
of some twelve acres, where were fenced crofts with goats therein,
|
||
and three garths of tillage, wherein the wheat-shocks were
|
||
yet standing, and there were coleworts and other pot-herbs also.
|
||
But at the further end, whereas the wood closed in again,
|
||
was a little house builded of timber, strong and goodly,
|
||
and thatched with wheat-straw; and beside it was a bubbling
|
||
spring which ran in a brook athwart the said clearing;
|
||
over the house-door was a carven rood, and a bow and short
|
||
spear were leaned against the wall of the porch.
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked at all closely, and wondered whether this were perchance
|
||
the cot wherein the Lady of Abundance had dwelt with the evil witch.
|
||
But the elder looked on him, and said: "I know thy thought, and it
|
||
is not so; that house is far away hence; yet shalt thou come thereto.
|
||
Now, children, welcome to the house of him who hath found what ye seek,
|
||
but hath put aside the gifts which ye shall gain; and who belike shall
|
||
remember what ye shall forget."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he brought them into the house, and into a chamber,
|
||
the plenishing whereof was both scanty and rude.
|
||
There he bade them sit, and brought them victual, to wit,
|
||
cheese and goats' milk and bread, and they fell to speech concerning
|
||
the woodland ways, and the seasons, and other unweighty matters.
|
||
But as for the old man he spoke but few words, and as one
|
||
unused to speech, albeit he was courteous and debonair.
|
||
But when they had eaten and drunk he spake to them and said:
|
||
|
||
"Ye have sought to me because ye would find the Well at the World's End,
|
||
and would have lore of me concerning the road thereto; but before I tell
|
||
you what ye would, let me know what ye know thereof already."
|
||
|
||
Quoth Ralph: "For me, little enough I know, save that I must
|
||
come to the Rock of the Fighting Man, and that thou knowest
|
||
the way thither."
|
||
|
||
"And thou, damsel," quoth the long-hoary, "what knowest thou?
|
||
Must I tell thee of the way through the mountains and the Wall
|
||
of the World, and the Winter Valley, and the Folk Innocent,
|
||
and the Cot on the Way, and the Forest of Strange Things
|
||
and the Dry Tree?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay," she said, "of all this I wot somewhat, but it may be not enough."
|
||
|
||
Said the Sage: "Even so it was with me, when a many years ago
|
||
I dwelt nigh to Swevenham, and folk sought to me for lore,
|
||
and I told them what I knew; but maybe it was not enough, for they
|
||
never came back; but died belike or ever they had seen the Well.
|
||
And then I myself, when I was gotten very old, fared thither
|
||
a-seeking it, and I found it; for I was one of those who bore
|
||
the chaplet of the seekers. And now I know all, and can teach all.
|
||
But tell me, damsel, whence hadst thou this lore?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ursula: "I had it of a very fair woman who, as it seemeth,
|
||
was Lady and Queen of the Champions of Hampton under the Scaur,
|
||
not far from mine own land."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," quoth the Sage, "and what hath befallen her?...Nay, nay,"
|
||
said he, "I need not ask; for I can see by your faces that she is dead.
|
||
Therefore hath she been slain, or otherwise she had not been dead.
|
||
So I ask you if ye were her friends?"
|
||
|
||
Quoth Ursula; "Surely she was my friend, since she befriended me;
|
||
and this man I deem was altogether her friend."
|
||
|
||
Ralph hung his head, and the Sage gazed on him, but said naught.
|
||
Then he took a hand of each of them in his hands, and held
|
||
them a while silently, and Ralph was still downcast and sad,
|
||
but Ursula looked on him fondly.
|
||
|
||
Then spake the Sage: "So it is, Knight, that now I seem to understand
|
||
what manner of man thou art, and I know what is between you two;
|
||
whereof I will say naught, but will let the tree grow according to its seed.
|
||
Moreover, I wot now that my friend of past years would have me make you
|
||
both wise in the lore of the Well at the World's End; and when I have
|
||
done this, I can do no more, but let your good hap prevail if so it may.
|
||
Abide a little, therefore."
|
||
|
||
Then he went unto an ark, and took thence a book wrapped
|
||
in a piece of precious web of silk and gold, and bound
|
||
in cuir-bouilly wrought in strange devices. Then said he:
|
||
"This book was mine heritage at Swevenham or ever I
|
||
became wise, and it came from my father's grandsire:
|
||
and my father bade me look on it as the dearest of possessions;
|
||
but I heeded it naught till my youth had waned, and my manhood
|
||
was full of weariness and grief. Then I turned to it,
|
||
and read in it, and became wise, and the folk sought to me,
|
||
and afterwards that befell which was foredoomed.
|
||
Now herein amongst other matters is written of that which ye
|
||
desire to know, and I will read the same to you and expound it.
|
||
Yet were it not well to read in this book under a roof,
|
||
nay, though it be as humble and innocent as this.
|
||
Moreover, it is not meet that ye should hearken to this wisdom
|
||
of old times clad as ye are; thou, knight, in the raiment
|
||
of the manslayer, with the rod of wrath hanging at thy side;
|
||
and thou, maiden, attired in the garments of the tyrant,
|
||
which were won of him by lying and guile."
|
||
|
||
Then he went to another ark, and took from it two bundles,
|
||
which he gave, the one to Ralph, the other to Ursula, and said:
|
||
"Thou, maiden, go thou into the inner chamber here and doff
|
||
thy worldly raiment, and don that which thou wilt find wrapped
|
||
in this cloth; and thou, knight, take this other and get thee
|
||
into the thicket which is behind the house, and there do the like,
|
||
and abide there till we come to thee."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph took the bundle, and came out into the thicket and unarmed him,
|
||
and did on the raiment which he found in the cloth, which was but a long gown
|
||
of white linen, much like to an alb, broidered about the wrists and the hems
|
||
and collar with apparels of gold and silk, girt with a red silk girdle.
|
||
There he abode a little, wondering at all these things and all that had
|
||
befallen him since he had left Upmeads.
|
||
|
||
Anon the two others came to him, and Ursula was clad in
|
||
the same-like raiment and the elder had the book in his hand.
|
||
He smiled on Ralph and nodded friendly to him. As to Ursula,
|
||
she flushed as red as a rose when she set eyes on him, for she
|
||
said to herself that he was as one of the angels which she
|
||
had seen painted in the choir of St. Mary's at Higham.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 6
|
||
|
||
Those Two Are Learned Lore by the Sage of Swevenham
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now the Sage led them through the wood till they came to a grassy
|
||
lawn amidst of which was a table of stone, which it seemed
|
||
to Ralph must be like to that whereon the witch-wife had offered
|
||
up the goat to her devils as the Lady of Abundance had told him;
|
||
and he changed countenance as the thought came into his mind.
|
||
But the Sage looked on him and shook his head and spake softly:
|
||
"In these wastes and wilds are many such-like places, where of old
|
||
time the ancient folks did worship to the Gods of the Earth
|
||
as they imagined them: and whereas the lore in this book cometh
|
||
of such folk, this is no ill place for the reading thereof.
|
||
But if ye fear the book and its writers, who are dead long ago,
|
||
there is yet time to go back and seek the Well without
|
||
my helping; and I say not but that ye may find it even thus.
|
||
But if ye fear not, then sit ye down on the grass, and I
|
||
will lay the book on this most ancient table, and read in it,
|
||
and do ye hearken heedfully."
|
||
|
||
So they sat down side by side, and Ralph would have taken Ursula's
|
||
hand to caress it, but she drew it away from him; howbeit she found it
|
||
hard to keep her eyes from off him. The Elder looked on them soberly,
|
||
but nowise in anger, and presently began reading in the book.
|
||
What he read shall be seen hereafter in the process of this tale;
|
||
for the more part thereof had but to do with the way to the Well
|
||
at the World's End, all things concerning which were told out fully,
|
||
both great and small. Long was this a-reading, and when the Sage
|
||
had done, he bade now one, now the other answer him questions
|
||
as to what he had read; and if they answered amiss he read that
|
||
part again, and yet again, as children are taught in the school.
|
||
Until at last when he asked any question Ralph or the maiden answered
|
||
it rightly at once; and by this time the sun was about to set.
|
||
So he bade them home to his house that they might eat and sleep there.
|
||
|
||
"But to-morrow," said he, "I shall give you your last lesson from this book,
|
||
and thereafter ye shall go your ways to the Rock of the Fighting Man,
|
||
and I look not for it that ye shall come to any harm on the way;
|
||
but whereas I seem to-day to have seen the foes of Utterbol seeking you,
|
||
I will lead you forth a little."
|
||
|
||
So they went home to the house, and he made them the most cheer
|
||
that he might, and spake to them in friendly and pleasant mood,
|
||
so that they were merry.
|
||
|
||
When it was morning they went again to the ancient altar,
|
||
and again they learned lore from the Elder, till they were
|
||
waxen wise in the matters of the Well at the World's End,
|
||
and long they sat and hearkened him till it was evening again,
|
||
and once more they slept in the house of the Sage of Swevenham.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 7
|
||
|
||
An Adventure by the Way
|
||
|
||
|
||
When morrow dawned they arose betimes and did on their worldly raiment;
|
||
and when they had eaten a morsel they made them ready for the road,
|
||
and the elder gave them victual for the way in their saddle-bags, saying:
|
||
"This shall suffice for the passing days, and when it is gone ye have
|
||
learned what to do."
|
||
|
||
Therewithall they gat to horse; but Ralph would have the Elder
|
||
ride his nag, while he went afoot by the side of Ursula.
|
||
So the Sage took his bidding, but smiled therewith, and said:
|
||
"Thou art a King's son and a friendly young man, else had I said
|
||
nay to this; for it needeth not, whereas I am stronger than thou,
|
||
so hath my draught of the Well dealt with me."
|
||
|
||
Thus then they went their ways; but Ralph noted of Ursula
|
||
that she was silent and shy with him, and it irked him so much,
|
||
that at last he said to her: "My friend, doth aught ail me
|
||
with thee? Wilt thou not tell me, so that I may amend it?
|
||
For thou are grown of few words with me and turnest thee from me,
|
||
and seemest as if thou heedest me little. Thou art as a fair
|
||
spring morning gone cold and overcast in the afternoon.
|
||
What is it then? we are going a long journey together,
|
||
and belike shall find little help or comfort save in each other;
|
||
and ill will it be if we fall asunder in heart, though we
|
||
be nigh in body."
|
||
|
||
She laughed and reddened therewithal; and then her countenance fell and she
|
||
looked piteously on him and said: "If I seemed to thee as thou sayest,
|
||
I am sorry; for I meant not to be thus with thee as thou deemest.
|
||
But so it is that I was thinking of this long journey, and of thee
|
||
and me together in it, and how we shall be with each other if we come
|
||
back again alive, with all things done that we had to do."
|
||
|
||
She stayed her speech awhile, and seemed to find it hard
|
||
to give forth the word that was in her; but at last she said:
|
||
"Friend, thou must pardon me; but that which thou sawest in me,
|
||
I also seemed to see in thee, that thou wert grown shy and cold with me;
|
||
but now I know it is not so, since thou hast seen me wrongly;
|
||
but that I have seen thee wrongly, as thou hast me."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she reached her hand to him, and he took it and kissed
|
||
it and caressed it while she looked fondly at him, and they fared
|
||
on sweetly and happily together. But as this was a-saying and
|
||
a-doing betwixt them, and a while after, they had heeded the Elder
|
||
little or not at all, though he rode on the right hand of Ralph.
|
||
And for his part the old man said naught to them and made as if
|
||
he heard them not, when they spake thuswise together.
|
||
|
||
Now they rode the wood on somewhat level ground for a while;
|
||
then the trees began to thin, and the ground grew broken;
|
||
and at last it was very rugged, with high hills and
|
||
deep valleys, and all the land populous of wild beasts,
|
||
so that about sunset they heard thrice the roar of a lion.
|
||
But ever the Sage led them by winding ways that he knew,
|
||
round the feet of the hills, along stream-sides for the most part,
|
||
and by passes over the mountain-necks when they needs must,
|
||
which was twice in the day.
|
||
|
||
Dusk fell on them in a little valley, through which ran a stream bushed
|
||
about its edges, and which for the rest was grassy and pleasant,
|
||
with big sweet-chestnut trees scattered about it.
|
||
|
||
"Now," quoth the Elder; "two things we have to beware of in this valley,
|
||
the lions first; which, though belike they will not fall upon
|
||
weaponed men, may well make an onslaught on your horses, if they
|
||
wind them; and the loss of the beasts were sore to you as now.
|
||
But the second thing is the chase from Utterbol. As to the lions,
|
||
if ye build up a big fire, and keep somewhat aloof from the stream
|
||
and its bushes, and tether you horses anigh the fire, ye will have
|
||
no harm of them."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "but if the riders of Utterbol are anigh us,
|
||
shall we light a candle for them to show them the way?" Said the Sage:
|
||
"Were ye by yourselves, I would bid you journey night-long, and
|
||
run all risk rather than the risk of falling into their hands.
|
||
But whereas I am your guide, I bid you kindle your fire under
|
||
yonder big tree, and leave me to deal with the men of Utterbol;
|
||
only whatso I bid you, that do ye straightway."
|
||
|
||
"So be it," said Ralph, "I have been bewrayed so oft of late,
|
||
that I must needs trust thee, or all help shall fail me.
|
||
Let us to work." So they fell to and built up a big bale
|
||
and kindled it, and their horses they tethered to the tree;
|
||
and by then they had done this, dark night had fallen upon them.
|
||
So they cooked their victual at the fire (for Ralph had shot a hare
|
||
by the way) and the Sage went down to the stream and fetched them
|
||
water in a lethern budget: "For," said he, "I know the beasts
|
||
of the wood and they me, and there is peace betwixt us."
|
||
There then they sat to meat unarmed, for the Sage had said to them:
|
||
"Doff your armour; ye shall not come to handystrokes with
|
||
the Utterbol Riders."
|
||
|
||
So they ate their meat in the wilderness, and were nowise ungleeful,
|
||
for to those twain the world seemed fair, and they hoped for great things.
|
||
But though they were glad, they were weary enough, for the way had been
|
||
both rugged and long; so they lay them down to sleep while the night was
|
||
yet young. But or ever Ralph closed his eyes he saw the Sage standing
|
||
up with his cloak wrapped about his head, and making strange signs with
|
||
his right hand; so that he deemed that he would ward them by wizardry.
|
||
So therewith he turned about on the grass and was asleep at once.
|
||
|
||
After a while he started and sat up, half awake at first; for be
|
||
felt some one touch him; and his halfdreams went back to past days,
|
||
and he cried out: "Hah Roger! is it thou? What is toward?"
|
||
But therewith he woke up fully, and knew that it was the Sage
|
||
that had touched him, and withal he saw hard by Ursula.
|
||
sitting up also.
|
||
|
||
There was still a flickering flame playing about the red embers of their fire,
|
||
for they had made it very big; and the moon had arisen and was shining bright
|
||
in a cloudless sky.
|
||
|
||
The Sage spake softly but quickly: "Lie down together, ye two,
|
||
and I shall cast my cloak over you, and look to it that ye stir not from
|
||
out of it, nor speak one word till I bid you, whate'er may befall:
|
||
for the riders of Utterbol are upon us."
|
||
|
||
They did as he bade them, but Ralph got somewhat of an
|
||
eye-shot out of a corner of the cloak, and he could see
|
||
that the Sage went and stood up against the tree-trunk
|
||
holding a horse by the bridle, one on each side of him.
|
||
Even therewith Ralph heard the clatter of horse-hoofs over
|
||
the stones about the stream, and a man's voice cried out:
|
||
"They will have heard us; so spur over the grass to the fire
|
||
and the big tree: for then they cannot escape us."
|
||
Then came the thump of horse-hoofs on the turf, and in half
|
||
a minute they were amidst of a rout of men a-horseback, more than
|
||
a score, whose armour and weapons gleamed in the moonlight:
|
||
yet when these riders were gotten there, they were silent,
|
||
till one said in a quavering voice as if afeard:
|
||
"Otter, Otter! what is this? A minute ago and we could see
|
||
the fire, and the tree, and men and horses about them:
|
||
and now, lo you! there is naught save two great grey stones lying
|
||
on the grass, and a man's bare bones leaning up against the tree,
|
||
and a ruckle of old horse-bones on either side of him.
|
||
Where are we then?"
|
||
|
||
Then spake another; and Ralph knew the voice for Otter's: "I
|
||
wot not, lord; naught else is changed save the fire and the horses
|
||
and the men: yonder are the hills, yonder overhead is the moon,
|
||
with the little light cloud dogging her; even that is scarce changed.
|
||
Belike the fire was an earth-fire, and for the rest we saw wrong
|
||
in the moonlight."
|
||
|
||
Spake the first man again, and his voice quavered yet more:
|
||
"Nay nay, Otter, it is not so. Lo you the skeleton and the bones
|
||
and the grey stones! And the fire, here this minute, there the next.
|
||
O Otter, this is an evil place of an evil deed! Let us go
|
||
seek elsewhere; let us depart, lest a worse thing befall us."
|
||
And so with no more ado he turned his horse and smote his
|
||
spurs into him and galloped off by the way he had come,
|
||
and the others followed, nothing loth; only Otter tarried
|
||
a little, and looked around him and laughed and said:
|
||
"There goes my Lord's nephew; like my Lord he is not over bold,
|
||
save in dealing with a, shackled man. Well, for my part if
|
||
those others have sunk into the earth, or gone up into the air,
|
||
they are welcome to their wizardry, and I am glad of it.
|
||
For I know not how I should have done to have seen my mate
|
||
that out-tilted me made a gelded wretch of; and it would have
|
||
irked me to see that fair woman in the hands of the tormentors,
|
||
though forsooth I have oft seen such sights. Well, it is good;
|
||
but better were it to ride with my mate than serve the Devil
|
||
and his Nephew."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he turned rein and galloped off after the others,
|
||
and in a little while the sound of them had died off utterly
|
||
into the night, and they heard but the voices of the wild things,
|
||
and the wimbrel laughing from the hill-sides. Then came the Sage
|
||
and drew the cloak from those two, and laughed on them and said:
|
||
"Now may ye sleep soundly, when I have mended our fire;
|
||
for ye will see no more of Utterbol for this time, and it yet lacks
|
||
three hours of dawn: sleep ye then and dream of each other."
|
||
Then they arose and thanked the Sage with whole hearts and
|
||
praised his wisdom. But while the old man mended the fire
|
||
Ralph went up to Ursula and took her hand, and said:
|
||
"Welcome to life, fellow-farer!" and he gazed earnestly into
|
||
her eyes, as though he would have her fall into his arms:
|
||
but whereas she rather shrank from him, though she looked
|
||
on him lovingly, if somewhat shyly, he but kissed her hand,
|
||
and laid him down again, when he had seen her lying in her place.
|
||
And therewith they fell asleep and slept sweetly.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 8
|
||
|
||
They Come to the Sea of Molten Rocks
|
||
|
||
|
||
When they woke again the sun was high above their heads, and they saw
|
||
the Sage dighting their breakfast. So they arose and washed the night off
|
||
them in the stream and ate hastily, and got to horse on a fair forenoon;
|
||
then they rode the mountain neck east from that valley; and it was a long
|
||
slope of stony and barren mountain nigh waterless.
|
||
|
||
And on the way Ursula told Ralph how the man who was scared by
|
||
the wizardry last night was verily the nephew of the Lord from whom
|
||
she had stolen her armour by wheedling and a seeming promise.
|
||
"But," said she, "his love lay not so deep but that he would
|
||
have avenged him for my guile on my very body had he taken us."
|
||
Ralph reddened and scowled at her word, and the Sage led them
|
||
into the other talk.
|
||
|
||
So long was that fell, that they were nigh benighted
|
||
ere they gained the topmost, or came to any pass.
|
||
When they had come to a place where there was a little pool
|
||
in a hollow of the rocks they made stay there, and slept safe,
|
||
but ill-lodged, and on the morrow were on their way betimes,
|
||
and went toiling up the neck another four hours, and came to a
|
||
long rocky ridge or crest that ran athwart it; and when they
|
||
had come to the brow thereof, then were they face to face
|
||
with the Great Mountains, which now looked so huge that they
|
||
seemed to fill all the world save the ground whereon they stood.
|
||
Cloudless was the day, and the air clean and sweet, and every
|
||
nook and cranny was clear to behold from where they stood:
|
||
there were great jutting nesses with straight-walled burgs
|
||
at their top-most, and pyramids and pinnacles that no hand
|
||
of man had fashioned, and awful clefts like long streets
|
||
in the city of the giants who wrought the world, and high
|
||
above all the undying snow that looked as if the sky had come
|
||
down on to the mountains and they were upholding it as a roof.
|
||
|
||
But clear as was the fashion of the mountains, they were yet a long
|
||
way off: for betwixt them and the ridge whereon those fellows stood,
|
||
stretched a vast plain, houseless and treeless, and, as they beheld
|
||
it thence grey and ungrassed (though indeed it was not wholly so)
|
||
like a huge river or firth of the sea it seemed, and such indeed
|
||
it had been once, to wit a flood of molten rock in the old days
|
||
when the earth was a-burning.
|
||
|
||
Now as they stood and beheld it, the Sage spake:
|
||
"Lo ye, my children, the castle and its outwork, and its
|
||
dyke that wardeth the land of the Well at the World's End.
|
||
Now from to-morrow, when we enter into the great sea of the rock
|
||
molten in the ancient earth-fires, there is no least peril
|
||
of pursuit for you. Yet amidst that sea should ye perish belike,
|
||
were it not for the wisdom gathered by a few; and they are dead
|
||
now save for the Book, and for me, who read it unto you.
|
||
Now ye would not turn back were I to bid you, and I will not bid you.
|
||
Yet since the journey shall be yet with grievous toil and much peril,
|
||
and shall try the very hearts within you, were ye as wise as
|
||
Solomon and as mighty as Alexander, I will say this much unto you;
|
||
that if ye love not the earth and the world with all your souls,
|
||
and will not strive all ye may to be frank and happy therein,
|
||
your toil and peril aforesaid shall win you no blessing
|
||
but a curse. Therefore I bid you be no tyrants or builders
|
||
of cities for merchants and usurers and warriors and thralls,
|
||
like the fool who builded Goldberg to be for a tomb to him:
|
||
or like the thrall-masters of the Burg of the Four Friths,
|
||
who even now, it may be, are pierced by their own staff or
|
||
overwhelmed by their own wall. But rather I bid you to live
|
||
in peace and patience without fear or hatred, and to succour
|
||
the oppressed and love the lovely, and to be the friends
|
||
of men, so that when ye are dead at last, men may say of you,
|
||
they brought down Heaven to the Earth for a little while.
|
||
What say ye, children?"
|
||
|
||
Then said Ralph: "Father, I will say the sooth about mine intent, though ye
|
||
may deem it little-minded. When I have accomplished this quest, I would get
|
||
me home again to the little land of Upmeads, to see my father and my mother,
|
||
and to guard its meadows from waste and its houses from fire-raising:
|
||
to hold war aloof and walk in free fields, and see my children growing up
|
||
about me, and lie at last beside my fathers in the choir of St. Laurence.
|
||
The dead would I love and remember; the living would I love and cherish;
|
||
and Earth shall be the well beloved house of my Fathers, and Heaven
|
||
the highest hall thereof."
|
||
|
||
"It is well," said the Sage, "all this shalt thou do and be no little-heart,
|
||
though thou do no more. And thou, maiden?"
|
||
|
||
She looked on Ralph and said: "I lost, and then I found,
|
||
and then I lost again. Maybe I shall find the lost once more.
|
||
And for the rest, in all that this man will do, I will help,
|
||
living or dead, for I know naught better to do."
|
||
|
||
"Again it is well," said the Sage, "and the lost which was verily thine
|
||
shalt thou find again, and good days and their ending shall betide thee.
|
||
Ye shall have no shame in your lives and no fear in your deaths.
|
||
Wherefore now lieth the road free before you."
|
||
|
||
Then was he silent a while, neither spake the others aught,
|
||
but stood gazing on the dark grey plain, and the blue wall that rose
|
||
beyond it, till at last the Sage lifted up his hand and said:
|
||
"Look yonder, children, to where I point, and ye shall see
|
||
how there thrusteth out a ness from the mountain-wall,
|
||
and the end of it stands like a bastion above the lava-sea,
|
||
and on its sides and its head are streaks ruddy and tawny,
|
||
where the earth-fires have burnt not so long ago: see ye?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked and said: "Yea, father, I see it, and its rifts and its ridges,
|
||
and its crannies."
|
||
|
||
Quoth the Sage: "Behind that ness shall ye come to the Rock
|
||
of the Fighting Man, which is the very Gate of the Mountains;
|
||
and I will not turn again nor bid you farewell till I have brought
|
||
you thither. And now time presses; for I would have you come
|
||
timely to that cavern, whereof I have taught you, before ye
|
||
fall on the first days of winter, or ye shall be hard bestead.
|
||
So now we will eat a morsel, and then use diligence that we
|
||
may reach the beginning of the rock-sea before nightfall."
|
||
|
||
So did they, and the Sage led them down by a slant-way
|
||
from off the ridge, which was toilsome but nowise perilous.
|
||
So about sunset they came down into the plain, and found a belt
|
||
of greensward, and waters therein betwixt the foot of the ridge
|
||
and the edge of the rock-sea. And as for the said sea,
|
||
though from afar it looked plain and unbroken, now that they
|
||
were close to, and on a level with it, they saw that it rose
|
||
up into cliffs, broken down in some places, and in others
|
||
arising high into the air, an hundred foot, it might be.
|
||
Sometimes it thrust out into the green shore below the fell,
|
||
and otherwhile drew back from it as it had cooled ages ago.
|
||
|
||
So they came to a place where there was a high wall of rock round three sides
|
||
of a grassy place by a stream-side, and there they made their resting-place,
|
||
and the night went calmly and sweetly with them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 9
|
||
|
||
They Come Forth From the Rock-Sea
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow the Sage led them straight into the rock-sea whereas it
|
||
seemed to them at first that he was but bringing them into a blind alley;
|
||
but at the end of the bight the rock-wall was broken down into a long
|
||
scree of black stones. There the Sage bade Ralph and Ursula dismount
|
||
(as for him he had been going afoot ever since that first day)
|
||
and they led the horses up the said scree, which was a hard business,
|
||
as they were no mountain beasts. And when they were atop of the scree
|
||
it was harder yet to get them down, for on that side it was steeper;
|
||
but at last they brought it about, and came down into a little grassy
|
||
plain or isle in the rock sea, which narrowed toward the eastern end,
|
||
and the rocks on either side were smooth and glossy, as if the heat
|
||
had gone out of them suddenly, when the earth-fires had ceased
|
||
in the mountains.
|
||
|
||
Now the Sage showed them on a certain rock a sign cut, whereof they
|
||
had learned in the book aforesaid, to wit, a sword crossed by a
|
||
three-leaved bough; and they knew by the book that they should
|
||
press on through the rock-sea nowhere, either going or returning,
|
||
save where they should see this token.
|
||
|
||
Now when they came to the narrow end of the plain they found still a wide way
|
||
between the rock-walls, that whiles widened out, and whiles drew in again.
|
||
Whiles withal were screes across the path, and little waters that ran
|
||
out of the lava and into it again, and great blocks of fallen stone,
|
||
sometimes as big as a husbandman's cot, that wind and weather had
|
||
rent from the rocks; and all these things stayed them somewhat.
|
||
But they went on merrily, albeit their road winded so much, that the Sage
|
||
told them, when evening was, that for their diligence they had but come
|
||
a few short miles as the crow flies.
|
||
|
||
Many wild things there were, both beast and fowl, in these islands
|
||
and bridges of the rock-sea, hares and conies to wit, a many,
|
||
and heathfowl, and here and there a red fox lurking about the crannies
|
||
of the rock-wall. Ralph shot a brace of conies with his Turk bow,
|
||
and whereas there were bushes growing in the chinks, and no lack
|
||
of whin and ling, they had firing enough, and supped off this venison
|
||
of the rocks.
|
||
|
||
So passed that day and two days more, and naught befell, save that on
|
||
the midnight of the first day of their wending the rock-sea, Ralph awoke
|
||
and saw the sky all ablaze with other light than that of the moon;
|
||
so he arose and went hastily to the Sage, and took him by the shoulder,
|
||
and bid him awake; "For meseems the sky is afire, and perchance the foe
|
||
is upon us."
|
||
|
||
The Sage awoke and opened his eyes, and rose on his elbow and looked
|
||
around sleepily; then he said laughing: "It is naught, fair lord,
|
||
thou mayst lie down and sleep out the remnant of the night,
|
||
and thou also, maiden: this is but an earth-fire breaking
|
||
out on the flank of the mountains; it may be far away hence.
|
||
Now ye see that he may not scale the rocks about us here without toil;
|
||
but to-morrow night we may climb up somewhere and look on
|
||
what is toward."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph lay down and Ursula also, but Ralph lay long awake
|
||
watching the light above him, which grew fiercer and redder
|
||
in the hours betwixt moonset and daybreak, when he fell asleep,
|
||
and woke not again till the sun was high.
|
||
|
||
But on the next day as they went, the aspect of the rock-sea about
|
||
them changed: for the rocks were not so smooth and shining and orderly,
|
||
but rose up in confused heaps all clotted together by the burning, like to
|
||
clinkers out of some monstrous forge of the earth-giants, so that their way
|
||
was naught so clear as it had been, but was rather a maze of jagged stone.
|
||
But the Sage led through it all unfumbling, and moreover now and again
|
||
they came on that carven token of the sword and the bough. Night fell,
|
||
and as it grew dark they saw the glaring of the earth-fires again;
|
||
and when they were rested, and had done their meat, the Sage said:
|
||
"Come now with me, for hard by is there a place as it were a stair that
|
||
goeth to the top of a great rock, let us climb it and look about us."
|
||
|
||
So did they, and the head of the rock was higher than
|
||
the main face of the rock-sea, so that they could see afar.
|
||
Thence they looked north and beheld afar off a very pillar of fire
|
||
rising up from a ness of the mountain wall, and seeming as if it
|
||
bore up a black roof of smoke; and the huge wall gleamed grey,
|
||
because of its light, and it cast a ray of light across
|
||
the rock-sea as the moon doth over the waters of the deep:
|
||
withal there was the noise as of thunder in the air, but afar off:
|
||
which thunder indeed they had heard oft, as they rode through
|
||
the afternoon and evening.
|
||
|
||
Spake the Sage: "It is far away: yet if the wind were not blowing
|
||
from us, we had smelt the smoke, and the sky had been darkened by it.
|
||
Now it is naught so far from Utterbol, and it will be for a token
|
||
to them there. For that ness is called the Candle of the Giants,
|
||
and men deem that the kindling thereof forebodeth ill to the lord
|
||
who sitteth on the throne in the red hall of Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
Ralph laid his hand on Ursula's shoulder and said:
|
||
"May the Sage's saw be sooth!"
|
||
|
||
She put her hand upon the hand and said: "Three months ago
|
||
I lay on my bed at Bourton Abbas, and all the while here
|
||
was this huge manless waste lying under the bare heavens
|
||
and threatened by the storehouse of the fires of the earth:
|
||
and I had not seen it, nor thee either, O friend; and now it
|
||
hath become a part of me for ever."
|
||
|
||
Then was Ralph exceeding glad of her words, and the Sage laughed
|
||
inwardly when he beheld them thus.
|
||
|
||
So they came adown from the rock and lay down presently under
|
||
the fiery heavens: and their souls were comforted by the sound
|
||
of the horses cropping the grass so close to their ears,
|
||
that it broke the voice of the earth-fires' thunder, that ever
|
||
and anon rolled over the grey sea amidst which they lay.
|
||
|
||
On the morrow they still rode the lava like to clinkers,
|
||
and it rose higher about them, till suddenly nigh sunset it
|
||
ended at a turn of their winding road, and naught lay betwixt
|
||
them and that mighty ness of the mountains, save a wide
|
||
grassy plain, here and there swelling into low wide risings
|
||
not to be called hills, and besprinkled with copses of bushes,
|
||
and with trees neither great nor high. Then spake the Sage:
|
||
"Here now will we rest, and by my will to-morrow also, that your beasts
|
||
may graze their fill of the sweet grass of these unwarded meadows.
|
||
which feedeth many a herd unowned of man, albeit they pay
|
||
a quit-rent to wild things that be mightier than they.
|
||
And now, children, we have passed over the mighty river that once
|
||
ran molten betwixt these mountains and the hills yonder to the west,
|
||
which we trod the other day; yet once more, if your hearts fail you,
|
||
there is yet time to turn back; and no harm shall befall you,
|
||
but I will be your fellow all the way home to Swevenham if ye will.
|
||
But if ye still crave the water of the Well at the World's End,
|
||
I will lead you over this green plain, and then go back
|
||
home to mine hermitage, and abide there till ye come to me,
|
||
or I die."
|
||
|
||
Ralph smiled and said: "Master, no such sorry story shall
|
||
I bear back to Upmeads, that after many sorrows borne,
|
||
and perils overcome, I came to the Gates of the Mountains,
|
||
and turned back for fear of that which I had not proved."
|
||
|
||
So spake he; but Ursula laughed and said: "Yea, then should I
|
||
deem thy friendship light if thou leftest me alone and unholpen
|
||
in the uttermost wilderness; and thy manhood light to turn back
|
||
from that which did not make a woman afraid."
|
||
|
||
Then the Sage looked kindly on them and said: "Yea, then is
|
||
the last word spoken, and the world may yet grow merrier to me.
|
||
Look you, some there be who may abuse the gifts of the Well
|
||
for evil errands, and some who may use it for good deeds;
|
||
but I am one who hath not dared to use it lest I should
|
||
abuse it, I being along amongst weaklings and fools:
|
||
but now if ye come back, who knows but that I may fear no longer,
|
||
but use my life, and grow to be a mighty man. Come now, let us
|
||
dight our supper, and kindle as big a fire as we lightly may;
|
||
since there is many a prowling beast about, as bear and lynx and lion;
|
||
for they haunt this edge of the rock-sea whereto the harts
|
||
and the wild bulls and the goats resort for the sweet grass,
|
||
and the water that floweth forth from the lava."
|
||
|
||
So they cut good store of firing, whereas there was a plenty
|
||
of bushes growing in the clefts of the rocks, and they made a big
|
||
fire and tethered their horses anigh it when they lay down to rest;
|
||
and in the night they heard the roaring of wild things round about them,
|
||
and more than once or twice, awakening before day, they saw the shape
|
||
of some terrible creature by the light of the moon mingled with
|
||
the glare of the earth-fires, but none of these meddled with them,
|
||
and naught befell them save the coming of the new day.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 10
|
||
|
||
They Come to the Gate of the Mountains
|
||
|
||
|
||
That day they herded their horses thereabout, and from time to time
|
||
the Sage tried those two if they were perfect in the lore of the road;
|
||
and he found that they had missed nothing.
|
||
|
||
They lay down in the self-same place again that night, and arose betimes
|
||
on the morrow and went their ways over the plain as the Sage led, till it
|
||
was as if the mountains and their terror hung over their very heads, and the
|
||
hugeness and blackness of them were worse than a wall of fire had been.
|
||
It was still a long way to them, so that it was not till noon of the third day
|
||
from the rock-sea that they came to the very feet of that fire-scorched ness,
|
||
and wonderful indeed it seemed to them that anything save the eagles could
|
||
have aught to tell of what lay beyond it.
|
||
|
||
There were no foothills or downs betwixt the plain and the mountains,
|
||
naught save a tumble of rocks that had fallen from the cliffs,
|
||
piled up strangely, and making a maze through which the Sage
|
||
led them surely; and at last they were clear even of this,
|
||
and were underneath the flank of that ness, which was so huge that
|
||
themseemed that there could scarce be any more mountain than that.
|
||
Little of its huge height could they see, now they were close to it,
|
||
for it went up sheer at first and then beetled over them till they
|
||
could see no more of its side; as they wound about its flank, and they
|
||
were long about it, the Sage cried out to those two and stretched
|
||
out his hand, and behold! the side of the black cliff plain and smooth
|
||
and shining as if it had been done by the hand of men or giants,
|
||
and on this smooth space was carven in the living rock the image
|
||
of a warrior in mail and helm of ancient fashion, and holding a sword
|
||
in his right hand. From head to heel he seemed some sixty feet high,
|
||
and the rock was so hard, that he was all clean and clear to see;
|
||
and they deemed of him that his face was keen and stern of aspect.
|
||
|
||
So there they stood in an awful bight of the mountain,
|
||
made by that ness, and the main wall from which it thrust out.
|
||
But after they had gazed awhile and their hearts were
|
||
in their mouths, the Sage turned on those twain and said:
|
||
"Here then is the end of my journey with you; and ye wot all
|
||
that I can tell you, and I can say no word more save to bid you
|
||
cast all fear aside and thrive. Ye have yet for this day's
|
||
journey certain hours of such daylight as the mountain pass
|
||
will give you, which at the best is little better than twilight;
|
||
therefore redeem ye the time."
|
||
|
||
But Ralph got off his horse, and Ursula did in likewise, and they both
|
||
kissed and embraced the old man, for their hearts were full and fain.
|
||
But he drew himself away from them, and turned about with no
|
||
word more, and went his ways, and presently was hidden from their
|
||
eyes by the rocky maze which lay about the mountain's foot.
|
||
Then the twain mounted their horses again and set forth silently
|
||
on the road, as they had been bidden.
|
||
|
||
In a little while the rocks of the pass closed about them,
|
||
leaving but a way so narrow that they could see a glimmer of
|
||
the stars above them as they rode the twilight; no sight they had
|
||
of the measureless stony desert, yet in their hearts they saw it.
|
||
They seemed to be wending a straight-walled prison without an end,
|
||
so that they were glad when the dark night came on them.
|
||
|
||
Ralph found some shelter in the cleft of a rock above a mound
|
||
where was little grass for the horses. He drew Ursula
|
||
into it, and they sat down there on the stones together.
|
||
So long they sat silent that a great gloom settled upon Ralph,
|
||
and he scarce knew whether he were asleep or waking, alive or dead.
|
||
But amidst of it fell a sweet voice on his ears, and familiar words
|
||
asking him of what like were the fields of Upmeads, and the flowers;
|
||
and of the fish of its water, and of the fashion of the building of his
|
||
father's house; and of his brethren, and the mother that bore him.
|
||
Then was it to him at first as if a sweet dream had come across
|
||
the void of his gloom, and then at last the gloom and the dread
|
||
and the deadness left him, and he knew that his friend and fellow
|
||
was talking to him, and that he sat by her knee to knee,
|
||
and the sweetness of her savoured in his nostrils as she leaned
|
||
her face toward him, and he knew himself for what he was;
|
||
and yet for memory of that past horror, and the sweetness of his
|
||
friend and what not else, he fell a-weeping. But Ursula bestirred
|
||
herself and brought out food from her wallet, and sat down beside
|
||
him again, and he wiped the tears from his eyes and laughed,
|
||
and chid himself for being as a child in the dark, and then they
|
||
ate and drank together in that dusk nook of the wilderness.
|
||
And now was he happy and his tongue was loosed, and he fell to telling
|
||
her many things of Upmeads, and of the tale of his forefathers,
|
||
and of his old loves and his friends, till life and death seemed to him
|
||
as they had seemed of time past in the merry land of his birth.
|
||
So there anon they fell asleep for weariness, and no dreams
|
||
of terror beset their slumbers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 11
|
||
|
||
They Come to the Vale of Sweet Chestnuts
|
||
|
||
|
||
When they went on their way next morning they found little change in the pass,
|
||
and they rode the dread highway daylong, and it was still the same:
|
||
so they rested a little before nightfall at a place where there was
|
||
water running out of the rocks, but naught else for their avail.
|
||
Ralph was merry and helpful and filled water from the runnel,
|
||
and wrought what he might to make the lodging meet; and as they ate
|
||
and rested he said to Ursula: "Last night it was thou that beguiled
|
||
me of my gloom, yet thereafter till we slept it was my voice for
|
||
the more part, and not thine, that was heard in the wilderness.
|
||
Now to-night it shall be otherwise, and I will but ask a question of thee,
|
||
and hearken to the sweetness of thy voice."
|
||
|
||
She laughed a little and very sweetly, and she said:
|
||
"Forsooth, dear friend, I spoke to thee that I might hear thy voice
|
||
for the more part, and not mine, that was heard in the desert;
|
||
but when I heard thee, I deemed that the world was yet alive
|
||
for us to come back to."
|
||
|
||
He was silent awhile, for his heart was pierced with the sweetness of
|
||
her speech, and he had fain have spoken back as sweetly as a man might;
|
||
yet he could not because he feared her somewhat, lest she should turn
|
||
cold to him; therefore himseemed that he spoke roughly, as he said:
|
||
"Nevertheless, my friend, I beseech thee to tell me of thine old home,
|
||
even as last night I told thee of mine."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said, "with a good will." And straightway
|
||
she fell to telling him of her ways when she was little,
|
||
and of her father and mother, and of her sister that had died,
|
||
and the brother whom Ralph had seen at Bourton Abbas:
|
||
she told also of bachelors who had wooed her, and jested
|
||
concerning them, yet kindly and without malice, and talked
|
||
so sweetly and plainly, that the wilderness was become a familiar
|
||
place to Ralph, and he took her hand in the dusk and said:
|
||
"But, my friend, how was it with the man for whom thou wert
|
||
weeping when I first fell in with thee at Bourton Abbas?"
|
||
|
||
She said: "I will tell thee plainly, as a friend may to a friend.
|
||
Three hours had not worn from thy departure ere tidings came to me
|
||
concerning him, that neither death nor wounding had befallen him;
|
||
and that his masterless horse and bloodstained saddle were but a device
|
||
to throw dust into our eyes, so that there might be no chase after
|
||
him by the men of the Abbot's bailiff, and that he might lightly
|
||
do as he would, to wit, swear himself into the riders of the Burg
|
||
of the Four Friths; for, in sooth, he was weary of me and mine.
|
||
Yet further, I must needs tell thee that I know now, that when I wept
|
||
before thee it was partly in despite, because I had found out in my heart
|
||
(though I bade it not tell me so much) that I loved him but little."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and when didst thou come to that knowledge
|
||
of thine heart?"
|
||
|
||
"Dear friend," she said, "mayhappen I may tell thee hereafter,
|
||
but as now I will forbear." He laughed for joy of her,
|
||
and in a little that talk fell down between them.
|
||
|
||
Despite the terror of the desert and the lonely ways, when Ralph
|
||
laid him down on his stony bed, happiness wrapped his heart about.
|
||
Albeit all this while he durst not kiss or caress her,
|
||
save very measurely, for he deemed that she would not suffer it;
|
||
nor as yet would he ask her wherefore, though he had it in his
|
||
mind that he would not always forbear to ask her.
|
||
|
||
Many days they rode that pass of the mountains, though it
|
||
was not always so evil and dreadful as at the first beginning;
|
||
for now again the pass opened out into little valleys, wherein was
|
||
foison of grass and sweet waters withal, and a few trees.
|
||
In such places must they needs rest them, to refresh their
|
||
horses as well as themselves, and to gather food, of venison,
|
||
and wild-fruit and nuts. But abiding in such vales was very
|
||
pleasant to them.
|
||
|
||
At last these said valleys came often and oftener, till it
|
||
was so that all was pretty much one valley, whiles broken by a
|
||
mountain neck, whiles straitened by a ness of the mountains that
|
||
jutted into it, but never quite blind: yet was the said valley
|
||
very high up, and as it were a trench of the great mountain.
|
||
So they were glad that they had escaped from that strait
|
||
prison betwixt the rock-walls, and were well at ease:
|
||
and they failed never to find the tokens that led them on the way,
|
||
even as they had learned of the Sage, so that they were not
|
||
beguiled into any straying.
|
||
|
||
And now they had worn away thirty days since they had parted from the Sage,
|
||
and the days began to shorten and the nights to lengthen apace;
|
||
when on the forenoon of a day, after they had ridden a very rugged
|
||
mountain-neck, they came down and down into a much wider valley
|
||
into which a great reef of rocks thrust out from the high mountain,
|
||
so that the northern half of the said vale was nigh cleft atwain by it;
|
||
well grassed was the vale, and a fair river ran through it,
|
||
and there were on either side the water great groves of tall and great
|
||
sweet-chestnuts and walnut trees, whereon the nuts were now ripe.
|
||
They rejoiced as they rode into it; for they remembered how the Sage
|
||
had told them thereof, that their travel and toil should be stayed
|
||
there awhile, and that there they should winter, because of the bread
|
||
which they could make them of the chestnuts, and the plenty of walnuts,
|
||
and that withal there was foison of venison.
|
||
|
||
So they found a ford of the river and crossed it, and went straight
|
||
to the head of the rocky ness, being shown thither by the lore of
|
||
the Sage, and they found in the face of the rock the mouth of a cavern,
|
||
and beside it the token of the sword and the branch. Therefore they knew
|
||
that they had come to their winter house, and they rejoiced thereat,
|
||
and without more ado they got off their horses and went into the cavern.
|
||
The entry thereof was low, so that they must needs creep into it,
|
||
but within it was a rock-hall, high, clean and sweet-smelling.
|
||
|
||
There then they dight their dwelling, doing all they might
|
||
to be done with their work before the winter was upon them.
|
||
The day after they had come there they fell to on the in-gathering
|
||
of their chestnut harvest, and they dried them, and made them into meal;
|
||
and the walnuts they gathered also. Withal they hunted the deer,
|
||
both great and small; amongst which Ralph, not without some peril,
|
||
slew two great bears, of which beasts, indeed, there was somewhat
|
||
more than enough, as they came into the dale to feed upon the nuts
|
||
and the berry-trees. So they soon had good store of peltries for their
|
||
beds and their winter raiment, which Ursula fell to work on deftly,
|
||
for she knew all the craft of needlework; and, shortly to tell it,
|
||
they had enough and to spare of victual and raiment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 12
|
||
|
||
Winter Amidst of the Mountains
|
||
|
||
|
||
In all this they had enough to be busy with, so that time hung
|
||
not heavy on their hands, and the shadow of the Quest was nowise
|
||
burdensome to them, since they wotted that they had to abide
|
||
the wearing of the days till spring was come with fresh tidings.
|
||
Their labour was nowise irksome to them, since Ralph was deft
|
||
in all manner of sports and crafts, such as up-country folk follow,
|
||
and though he were a king's son, he had made a doughty yeoman:
|
||
and as for Ursula, she also was country-bred, of a lineage
|
||
of field-folk, and knew all the manners of the fields.
|
||
|
||
Withal in whatsoever way it were, they loved each other dearly,
|
||
and all kind of speech flowed freely betwixt them.
|
||
Sooth to say, Ralph, taking heed of Ursula, deemed that she
|
||
were fain to love him bodily, and he wotted well by now,
|
||
that, whatever had befallen, he loved her, body and soul.
|
||
Yet still was that fear of her naysay lurking in his heart,
|
||
if he should kiss her, or caress her, as a man with a maid.
|
||
Therefore he forbore, though desire of her tormented him
|
||
grievously at whiles.
|
||
|
||
They wore their armour but little now, save when they were about
|
||
some journey wherein was peril of wild beasts. Ursula had dight
|
||
her some due woman's raiment betwixt her knight's surcoat
|
||
and doe-skins which they had gotten, so that it was not unseemly
|
||
of fashion. As for their horses, they but seldom backed them,
|
||
but used them to draw stuff to their rock-house on sledges,
|
||
which they made of tree-boughs; so that the beasts grew fat,
|
||
feeding on the grass of the valley and the wild-oats withal,
|
||
which grew at the upper end of the bight of the valley,
|
||
toward the northern mountains, where the ground was sandy.
|
||
No man they saw, nor any signs of man, nor had they seen any
|
||
save the Sage, since those riders of Utterbol had vanished
|
||
before them into the night.
|
||
|
||
So wore autumn into winter, and the frost came, and the snow,
|
||
with prodigious winds from out of the mountains:
|
||
yet was not the weather so hard but that they might go forth
|
||
most days, and come to no hurt if they were wary of the drifts;
|
||
and forsooth needs must they go abroad to take venison
|
||
for their livelihood.
|
||
|
||
So the winter wore also amidst sweet speech and friendliness betwixt the two,
|
||
and they lived still as dear friends, and not as lovers.
|
||
|
||
Seldom they spoke of the Quest, for it seemed to them now a matter
|
||
over great for speech. But now they were grown so familiar each
|
||
to each that Ursula took heart to tell Ralph more of the tidings
|
||
of Utterbol, for now the shame and grief of her bondage there was but
|
||
as a story told of another, so far away seemed that time from this.
|
||
But so grievous was her tale that Ralph grew grim thereover, and he said:
|
||
"By St. Nicholas! it were a good deed, once we are past the mountains again,
|
||
to ride to Utterbol and drag that swine and wittol from his hall
|
||
and slay him, and give his folk a good day. But then there is thou,
|
||
my friend, and how shall I draw thee into deadly strife?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay," she said, "whereso thou ridest thither will I, and one fate shall lie
|
||
on us both. We will think thereof and ask the Sage of it when we return.
|
||
Who knows what shall have befallen then? Remember the lighting of the candle
|
||
of Utterbol that we saw from the Rock-sea, and the boding thereof."
|
||
So Ralph was appeased for that time.
|
||
|
||
Oft also they spake of the little lands whence they came, and on a time amidst
|
||
of such talk Ursula said: "But alas, friend, why do I speak of all this,
|
||
when now save for my brother, who loveth me but after a fashion, to wit
|
||
that I must in all wise do his bidding, lad as he is, I have no longer kith
|
||
nor kin there, save again as all the folk of one stead are somewhat akin.
|
||
I think, my dear, that I have no country, nor any house to welcome me."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "All lands, any land that thou mayst come to,
|
||
shall welcome thee, and I shall look to it that so it shall be."
|
||
And in his heart he thought of the welcome of Upmeads,
|
||
and of Ursula sitting on the dais of the hall of the High-House.
|
||
|
||
So wore the days till Candlemass, when the frost broke and the snows began
|
||
to melt, and the waters came down from the mountains, so that the river
|
||
rose over its banks and its waters covered the plain parts of the valley,
|
||
and those two could go dryshod but a little way out of their cavern;
|
||
no further than the green mound or toft which lay at the mouth thereof:
|
||
but the waters were thronged with fowl, as mallard and teal and coots,
|
||
and of these they took what they would. Whiles also they waded
|
||
the shallows of the flood, and whiles poled a raft about it,
|
||
and so had pleasure of the waters as before they had had of the snow.
|
||
But when at last the very spring was come, and the grass began
|
||
to grow after the showers had washed the plain of the waterborne mud,
|
||
and the snowdrop had thrust up and blossomed, and the celandine had come,
|
||
and then when the blackthorn bloomed and the Lent-lilies hid the grass
|
||
betwixt the great chestnut-boles, when the sun shone betwixt the showers
|
||
and the west wind blew, and the throstles and blackbirds ceased not
|
||
their song betwixt dawn and dusk, then began Ralph to say to himself,
|
||
that even if the Well at the World's End were not, and all that the Sage
|
||
had told them was but a tale of Swevenham, yet were all better than
|
||
well if Ursula were but to him a woman beloved rather than a friend.
|
||
And whiles he was pensive and silent, even when she was by him,
|
||
and she noted it and forbore somewhat the sweetness of her glances,
|
||
and the caressing of her soft speech: though oft when he looked on
|
||
her fondly, the blood would rise to her cheeks, and her bosom would
|
||
heave with the thought of his desire, which quickened hers so sorely,
|
||
that it became a pain and grief to her.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 13
|
||
|
||
Of Ursula and the Bear
|
||
|
||
|
||
It befell on a fair sunny morning of spring, that Ralph sat alone
|
||
on the toft by the rock-house, for Ursula had gone down the meadow
|
||
to disport her and to bathe in the river. Ralph was fitting the blade
|
||
of a dagger to a long ashen shaft, to make him a strong spear;
|
||
for with the waxing spring the bears were often in the meadows again;
|
||
and the day before they had come across a family of the beasts
|
||
in the sandy bight under the mountains; to wit a carle, and a quean
|
||
with her cubs; the beasts had seen them but afar off, and whereas
|
||
the men were two and the sun shone back from their weapons, they had
|
||
forborne them; although they were fierce and proud in those wastes,
|
||
and could not away with creatures that were not of their kind.
|
||
So because of this Ralph had bidden Ursula not to fare abroad without
|
||
her sword, which was sharp and strong, and she no weakling withal.
|
||
He bethought him of this just as he had made an end of his spear-shaping,
|
||
so therewith he looked aside and saw the said sword hanging
|
||
to a bough of a little quicken-tree, which grew hard by the door.
|
||
Fear came into his heart therewith, so he arose and strode down over
|
||
the meadow hastily bearing his new spear, and girt with his sword.
|
||
Now there was a grove of chestnuts betwixt him and the river,
|
||
but on the other side of them naught but the green grass down to
|
||
the water's edge.
|
||
|
||
Sure enough as he came under the trees he heard a shrill cry, and knew
|
||
that it could be naught save Ursula; so he ran thitherward whence came
|
||
the cry, shouting as he ran, and was scarce come out of the trees ere
|
||
he saw Ursula indeed, mother-naked, held in chase by a huge bear as big
|
||
as a bullock: he shouted again and ran the faster; but even therewith,
|
||
whether she heard and saw him, and hoped for timely help, or whether she
|
||
felt her legs failing her, she turned on the bear, and Ralph saw that she
|
||
had a little axe in her hand wherewith she smote hardily at the beast;
|
||
but he, after the fashion of his kind, having risen to his hind legs,
|
||
fenced with his great paws like a boxer, and smote the axe out of her hand,
|
||
and she cried out bitterly and swerved from him and fell a running again;
|
||
but the bear tarried not, and would have caught her in a few turns;
|
||
but even therewith was Ralph come up, who thrust the beast into the side
|
||
with his long-headed spear, and not waiting to pull it out again,
|
||
drew sword in a twinkling, and smote a fore-paw off him and then drave
|
||
the sword in over the shoulder so happily that it reached his heart,
|
||
and he fell over dead with a mighty thump.
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph looked around for Ursula; but she had already run
|
||
back to the river-side and was casting her raiment on her;
|
||
so he awaited her beside the slain bear, but with drawn sword,
|
||
lest the other bear should come upon them; for this was
|
||
the he-bear. Howbeit he saw naught save presently Ursula all
|
||
clad and coming towards him speedily; so he turned toward her,
|
||
and when they met he cast himself upon her without a word,
|
||
and kissed her greedily; and she forbore not at all, but kissed
|
||
and caressed him as if she could never be satisfied.
|
||
|
||
So at last they drew apart a little, and walked quietly toward
|
||
the rock-house hand in hand. And on the way she told him that even
|
||
as she came up on to the bank from the water she saw the bear coming
|
||
down on her as fast as he could drive, and so she but caught up
|
||
her axe, and ran for it: "Yet I had little hope, dear friend,"
|
||
she said, "but that thou shouldst be left alone in the wilderness."
|
||
And therewith she turned on him and cast her arms about him again,
|
||
all weeping for joy of their two lives.
|
||
|
||
Thus slowly they came before the door of their rock-house and Ralph said:
|
||
"Let us sit down here on the grass, and if thou art not over wearied
|
||
with the flight and the battle, I will ask thee a question."
|
||
She laid herself down on the grass with a sigh, yet it was as of one
|
||
who sighs for pleasure and rest, and said, as he sat down beside her:
|
||
"I am fain to rest my limbs and my body, but my heart is at rest;
|
||
so ask on, dear friend."
|
||
|
||
The song of birds was all around them, and the scent of many
|
||
blossoms went past on the wings of the west wind, and Ralph was
|
||
silent a little as he looked at the loveliness of his friend;
|
||
then he said: "This is the question; of what kind are thy kisses
|
||
this morning, are they the kisses of a friend or a lover?
|
||
Wilt thou not called me beloved and not friend? Shall not we
|
||
two lie on the bridal bed this same night?"
|
||
|
||
She looked on him steadily, smiling, but for love and sweetness,
|
||
not for shame and folly; then she said: "O, dear friend
|
||
and dearest lover, three questions are these and not one;
|
||
but I will answer all three as my heart biddeth me.
|
||
And first, I will tell thee that my kisses are as thine;
|
||
and if thine are aught but the kisses of love, then am I befooled.
|
||
And next, I say that if thou wilt be my friend indeed,
|
||
I will not spare to call thee beloved, or to be all thy friend.
|
||
But as to thy third question; tell me, is there not time
|
||
enough for that?"
|
||
|
||
She faltered as she spake, but he said: "Look, beloved, and see how fair
|
||
the earth is to-day! What place and what season can be goodlier than this?
|
||
And were it not well that we who love each other should have our full joy
|
||
out of this sweet season, which as now is somewhat marred by our desire?"
|
||
|
||
"Ah, beloved!" she said, looking shyly at him, "is it so marred
|
||
by that which marreth not us?"
|
||
|
||
"Hearken!" he said; "how much longer shall this fairness and peace,
|
||
and our leisure and safety endure? Here and now the earth rejoiceth about us,
|
||
and there is none to say us nay; but to-morrow it may all be otherwise.
|
||
Bethink thee, dear, if but an hour ago the monster had slain thee,
|
||
and rent thee ere we had lain in each other's arms!"
|
||
|
||
"Alas!" she said, "and had I lain in thine arms an hundred times,
|
||
or an hundred times an hundred, should not the world be barren
|
||
to me, wert thou gone from it, and that could never more be?
|
||
But thou friend, thou well-beloved, fain were I to do thy
|
||
will that thou mightest be the happier...and I withal.
|
||
And if thou command it, be it so! Yet now should I tell
|
||
thee all my thought, and it is on my mind, that for a many
|
||
hundreds of years, yea, while our people were yet heathen,
|
||
when a man should wed a maid all the folk knew of it, and were
|
||
witnesses of the day and the hour thereof: now thou knowest
|
||
that the time draws nigh when we may look for those messengers
|
||
of the Innocent Folk, who come every spring to this cave to see
|
||
if there be any whom they may speed on the way to the Well
|
||
at the World's End. Therefore if thou wilt (and not otherwise)
|
||
I would abide their coming if it be not over long delayed;
|
||
so that there may be others to witness our wedding besides God,
|
||
and those his creatures who dwell in the wilderness.
|
||
Yet shall all be as thou wilt."
|
||
|
||
"How shall I not do after thy bidding?" said Ralph.
|
||
"I will abide their coming: yet would that they were here
|
||
to-day! And one thing I will pray of thee, that because of them
|
||
thou wilt not forbear, or cause me to forbear, such kissing
|
||
and caressing as is meet betwixt troth-plight lovers."
|
||
|
||
She laughed and said: "Nay, why should I torment thee...or me?
|
||
We will not tarry for this." And therewith she took her arm
|
||
about his neck and kissed him oft.
|
||
|
||
Then they said naught awhile, but sat listening happily
|
||
to the song of the pairing birds. At last Ralph said:
|
||
"What was it, beloved, that thou wert perchance to tell me concerning
|
||
the thing that caused thine heart to see that thy betrothed,
|
||
for whom thou wepst or seemedst to weep at the ale-house
|
||
at Bourton Abbas, was of no avail to thee?"
|
||
|
||
She said: "It was the sight of thee; and I thought also how I might
|
||
never be thine. For that I have sorrowed many a time since."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "I am young and unmighty, yet lo!
|
||
I heal thy sorrow as if I were an exceeding mighty man.
|
||
And now I tell thee that I am minded to go back with thee
|
||
to Upmeads straightway; for love will prevail."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," she said, "that word is but from the teeth outwards;
|
||
for thou knowest, as I do, that the perils of the homeward
|
||
road shall overcome us, despite of love, if we have not drunk
|
||
of the Well at the World's End."
|
||
|
||
Again they were silent awhile, but anon she arose to her feet and said:
|
||
"Now must I needs dight victual for us twain; but first"
|
||
(and she smiled on him withal), "how is it that thou hast not asked
|
||
me if the beast did me any hurt? Art thou grown careless of me,
|
||
now the wedding is so nigh?"
|
||
|
||
He said: "Nay, but could I not see thee that thou wert not hurt?
|
||
There was no mark of blood upon thee, nor any stain at all."
|
||
Then she reddened, and said: "Ah, I forgot how keen-eyes thou art."
|
||
And she stood silent a little while, as he looked on her and loved
|
||
her sweetness. Then he said: "I am exceeding full of joy,
|
||
but my body is uneasy; so I will now go and skin that troll
|
||
who went so nigh to slay thee, and break up the carcase,
|
||
if thou wilt promise to abide about the door of the house,
|
||
and have thy sword and the spear ready to hand, and to don thine
|
||
helm and hauberk to boot."
|
||
|
||
She laughed and said: "That were but strange attire for a cook-maid, Ralph,
|
||
my friend; yet shall I do thy will, my lord and my love."
|
||
|
||
Then went Ralph into the cave, and brought forth the armour and did it on her,
|
||
and kissed her, and so went his ways to the carcase of the bear, which lay
|
||
some two furlongs from their dwelling; and when he came to the quarry
|
||
he fell to work, and was some time about it, so huge as the beast was.
|
||
Then he hung the skin and the carcase on a tree of the grove, and went
|
||
down to the river and washed him, and then went lightly homewards.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 14
|
||
|
||
Now Come the Messengers of the Innocent Folk
|
||
|
||
|
||
But when he had come forth from the chestnut-grove, and could
|
||
see the face of their house-rock clearly, he beheld new tidings;
|
||
for there were folk before the door of the dwelling, and Ursula was
|
||
standing amidst of them, for he could see the gleam of her armour;
|
||
and with the men he could see also certain beasts of burden,
|
||
and anon that these were oxen. So he hastened on to find
|
||
what this might mean, and drew his sword as he went.
|
||
But when he came up to the rock, he found there two young men
|
||
and an elder, and they had with them five oxen, three for riding,
|
||
and two sumpter beasts, laden: and Ursula and these men
|
||
were talking together friendly; so that Ralph deemed that
|
||
the new-comers must be the messengers of the Innocent Folk.
|
||
They were goodly men all three, somewhat brown of skin,
|
||
but well fashioned, and of smiling cheerful countenance,
|
||
well knit, and tall. The elder had a long white beard,
|
||
but his eye was bright, and his hand firm and smooth.
|
||
They were all clad in white woollen raiment, and bore no armour,
|
||
but each had an axe with a green stone blade, curiously tied
|
||
to the heft, and each of the young men carried a strong bow
|
||
and a quiver of arrows.
|
||
|
||
Ralph greeted the men, and bade them sit down on the toft and eat
|
||
a morsel; they took his greeting kindly, and sat down, while Ursula
|
||
went into the cave to fetch them matters for their victual,
|
||
and there was already venison roasting at the fire on the toft,
|
||
in the place where they were wont to cook their meat.
|
||
So then came Ursula forth from the cave, and served the new-comers
|
||
and Ralph of such things as she had, and they ate and drank together;
|
||
and none said aught of their errand till they had done their meat,
|
||
but they talked together pleasantly about the spring,
|
||
and the blossoms of the plain and the mountain, and the wild
|
||
things that dwelt thereabout.
|
||
|
||
But when the meal was over, the new-comers rose to their feet, and bowed
|
||
before Ralph and Ursula, and the elder took up the word and said:
|
||
"Ye fair people, have ye any errand in the wilderness, or are ye
|
||
chance-comers who have strayed thus far, and know not how to return?"
|
||
|
||
"Father," said Ralph, "we have come a long way on an errand
|
||
of life or death; for we seek the WELL at the WORLD'S END.
|
||
And see ye the token thereof, the pair of beads which we bear,
|
||
either of us, and the fashion whereof ye know."
|
||
|
||
Then the elder bowed to them again, and said: "It is well;
|
||
then is this our errand with you, to be your way-leaders as far
|
||
as the House of the Sorceress, where ye shall have other help.
|
||
Will ye set out on the journey to-day? In one hour shall
|
||
we be ready."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "we will not depart till tomorrow morn, if it may be so.
|
||
Therewith I bid you sit down and rest you, while ye hearken a word which I
|
||
have to say to you."
|
||
|
||
So they sat down again, and Ralph arose and took Ursula
|
||
by the hand, and stood with her before the elder, and said:
|
||
"This maiden, who is my fellow-farer in the Quest,
|
||
I desire to wed this same night, and she also desireth me:
|
||
therefore I would have you as witnesses hereto.
|
||
But first ye shall tell us if our wedding and the knowing
|
||
each other carnally shall be to our hurt in the Quest;
|
||
for if that be so, then shall we bridle our desires and perform
|
||
our Quest in their despite."
|
||
|
||
The old man smiled upon them kindly, and said: "Nay, son,
|
||
we hear not that it shall be the worse for you in any wise
|
||
that ye shall become one flesh; and right joyful it is to us,
|
||
not only that we have found folk who seek to the Well
|
||
at the World's End, but also that there is such love as I
|
||
perceive there is betwixt such goodly and holy folk as ye be.
|
||
For hither we come year by year according to the behest
|
||
that we made to the fairest woman of the world, when she came
|
||
back to us from the Well at the World's End, and it is many
|
||
and many a year ago since we found any seekers after the Well
|
||
dwelling here. Therefore have we the more joy in you.
|
||
And we have brought hither matters good for you, as raiment,
|
||
and meal, and wine, on our sumpter-beasts; therefore as ye
|
||
have feasted us this morning, so shall we feast you this even.
|
||
And if ye will, we shall build for you in the grove yonder
|
||
such a bower as we build for our own folk on the night
|
||
of the wedding."
|
||
|
||
Ralph yeasaid this, and thanked them. So then the elder cried:
|
||
"Up, my sons, and show your deftness to these dear friends!"
|
||
Then the young men arose, naught loth, and when they had hoppled
|
||
their oxen and taken the burdens from off them, they all went
|
||
down the meadow together into the chestnut grove, and they
|
||
fell to and cut willow boughs, and such-like wood, and drave
|
||
stakes and wove the twigs together; and Ralph and Ursula worked
|
||
with them as they bade, and they were all very merry together:
|
||
because for those two wanderers it was a great delight to see
|
||
the faces of the children of men once more after so many months,
|
||
and to hold converse with them; while for their part the young men
|
||
marvelled at Ursula's beauty, and the pith and goodliness of Ralph.
|
||
|
||
By then it was nigh evening they had made a very goodly wattled bower,
|
||
and roofed it with the skins that were in the cave, and hung it
|
||
about with garlands, and strewn flowers on the floor thereof.
|
||
And when all was done they went back to the toft before
|
||
the rock-chamber, where the elder had opened the loads,
|
||
and had taken meal thence, and was making cakes at the fire.
|
||
And there was wine there in well-hooped kegs, and wooden cups
|
||
fairly carven, and raiment of fine white wool for those twain,
|
||
broidered in strange but beauteous fashion with the feathers
|
||
of bright-hued birds.
|
||
|
||
So then were those twain arrayed for the bridal; and the meat
|
||
was dight and the cups filled, and they sat down on the grassy
|
||
toft a little before sunset, and feasted till the night was come,
|
||
and was grown all light with the moon; and then Ralph rose up,
|
||
and took Ursula's hand, and they stood before the elder,
|
||
and bade him and the young men bear witness that they were wedded:
|
||
then those twain kissed the newcomers and departed to their bridal
|
||
bower hand in hand through the freshness of the night.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 15
|
||
|
||
They Come to the Land of the Innocent Folk
|
||
|
||
|
||
When it was morning they speedily gat them ready for the road,
|
||
whereas they had little to take with them; so they departed joyously,
|
||
howbeit both Ralph and Ursula felt rather love than loathing for their
|
||
winter abode. The day was yet young when they went their ways.
|
||
Their horses and all their gear were a great wonder to the young men,
|
||
for they had seen no such beasts before: but the elder said that once
|
||
in his young days he had led a man to the Well who was riding a horse
|
||
and was clad in knightly array.
|
||
|
||
So they went by ways which were nowise dreadful, though they
|
||
were void of men-folk, and in three days' time they were come
|
||
out of the mountains, and in three more the said mountains were
|
||
to behold but a cloud behind them, and the land was grown goodly,
|
||
with fair valleys and little hills, though still they saw no men,
|
||
and forsooth they went leisurely, for oxen are but slow-going nags.
|
||
But when they were gone eight days from the Valley of Sweet-chestnuts,
|
||
they came across a flock of uncouth-looking sheep on a green hill-side,
|
||
and four folk shepherding them, two carles to wit, and two queans,
|
||
like to their way-leaders, but scarce so goodly, and ruder of raiment.
|
||
These men greeted them kindly, and yet with more worship than fellowship,
|
||
and they marvelled exceedingly at their horses and weapons.
|
||
Thence they passed on, and the next day came into a wide valley,
|
||
well-grassed and watered, and wooded here and there; moreover there
|
||
were cots scattered about it. There and thenceforth they met men
|
||
a many, both carles and queans, and sheep and neat in plenty, and they
|
||
passed by garths wherein the young corn was waxing, and vineyards
|
||
on the hillsides, where the vines were beginning to grow green.
|
||
The land seemed as goodly as might be, and all the folk they met
|
||
were kind, if somewhat over reverent.
|
||
|
||
On the evening of that day they came into the town of that folk,
|
||
which was but simple, wholly unfenced for war, and the houses but low,
|
||
and not great. Yet was there naught of filth or famine, nor any
|
||
poverty or misery; and the people were merry-faced and well-liking,
|
||
and clad goodly after their fashion in white woollen cloth or frieze.
|
||
All the people of the town were come forth to meet them, for runners
|
||
had gone before them, and they stood on either side of the way
|
||
murmuring greetings, and with their heads bent low in reverence.
|
||
|
||
Thus rode Ralph and Ursula up to the door of the Temple,
|
||
or Mote-house, or Guest-house, for it was all these,
|
||
a house great, and as fair as they knew how to make it.
|
||
Before the door thereof were standing the elders of the Folk;
|
||
and when they drew rein, the eldest and most reverend of these
|
||
came forth and spake in a cheerful voice, yet solemnly:
|
||
"Welcome and thrice welcome to the Seekers after length
|
||
of days and happy times, and the loving-kindness of the Folks
|
||
of the Earth!"
|
||
|
||
Then all the elders gathered about them, and bade them light
|
||
down and be at rest amongst them, and they made much of them
|
||
and brought them into the Mote-house, where-in were both women
|
||
and men fair and stately, and the men took Ralph by the hand
|
||
and the women Ursula, and brought them into chambers where they
|
||
bathed them and did off their wayfaring raiment, and clad them
|
||
in white woollen gowns of web exceeding fine, and fragrant withal.
|
||
Then they crowned them with flowers, and led them back into
|
||
the hall, whereas now was much folk gathered, and they set them
|
||
down on a dais as though they had been kings, or rather gods;
|
||
and when they beheld them there so fair and lovely, they cried
|
||
out for joy of them, and bade them hail oft and oft.
|
||
|
||
There then were they feasted by that kind folk, and when meat was
|
||
done certain youths and maidens fell to singing songs very sweetly;
|
||
and the words of the songs were simple and harmless, and concerning
|
||
the fairness of the earth and the happy loves of the creatures
|
||
that dwell therein.
|
||
|
||
Thereafter as the night aged, they were shown to a sleeping chamber,
|
||
which albeit not richly decked, or plenished with precious things,
|
||
was most dainty clean, and sweet smelling, and strewn with flowers,
|
||
so that the night was sweet to them in a chamber of love.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 16
|
||
|
||
They Come to the House of the Sorceress
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow the kind people delayed them little,
|
||
though they sorrowed for their departure, and before
|
||
noon were their old way-leaders ready for them;
|
||
and the old man and his two grandsons (for such they were)
|
||
were much honoured of the simple people for their way-leading
|
||
of the Heavenly Folk; for so they called Ralph and Ursula.
|
||
So they gat them to the way in suchlike guise as before,
|
||
only they had with them five sumpter oxen instead of two;
|
||
for the old man told them that not only was their way longer,
|
||
but also they must needs pass through a terrible waste, wherein was
|
||
naught for their avail, neither man, nor beast, nor herb.
|
||
Even so they found it as he said; for after the first day's
|
||
ride from the town they came to the edge of this same waste,
|
||
and on the fourth day were deep in the heart of it:
|
||
a desert it was, rather rocky and stony and sandy
|
||
than mountainous, though they had hills to cross also:
|
||
withal there was but little water there, and that foul and stinking.
|
||
Long lasted this waste, and Ralph thought indeed that it
|
||
had been hard to cross, had not their way-leaders been;
|
||
therefore he made marks and signs by the wayside, and took note
|
||
of the bearings of rocks and mounds against the day of return.
|
||
|
||
Twelve days they rode this waste, and on the thirteenth it began
|
||
to mend somewhat, and there was a little grass, and sweet waters,
|
||
and they saw ahead the swelling hills of a great woodland,
|
||
albeit they had to struggle through marshland and low scrubby
|
||
thicket for a day longer, or ever they got to the aforesaid trees,
|
||
which at first were naught but pines; but these failed in a while,
|
||
and they rode a grass waste nearly treeless, but somewhat
|
||
well watered, where they gat them good store of venison.
|
||
Thereafter they came on woods of oak and sweet-chestnut,
|
||
with here and there a beech-wood.
|
||
|
||
Long and long they rode the woodland, but it was hard on May
|
||
when they entered it, and it was pleasant therein, and what with
|
||
one thing, what with another, they had abundant livelihood there.
|
||
Yet was June at its full when at last they came within sight
|
||
of the House of the Sorceress, on the hottest of a fair afternoon.
|
||
And it was even as Ralph had seen it pictured in the arras
|
||
of the hall of the Castle of Abundance; a little house built
|
||
after the fashion of houses in his own land of the west;
|
||
the thatch was trim, and the windows and doors were unbroken,
|
||
and the garth was whole, and the goats feeding therein,
|
||
and the wheat was tall and blossoming in the little closes,
|
||
where as he had looked to see all broken down and wild,
|
||
and as to the house, a mere grass-grown heap, or at the most
|
||
a broken gable fast crumbling away.
|
||
|
||
Then waxed his heart sore with the memory of that passed time,
|
||
and the sweetness of his short-lived love, though he refrained
|
||
him all he might: yet forsooth Ursula looked on him anxiously,
|
||
so much his face was changed by the thoughts of his heart.
|
||
|
||
But the elder of the way-leaders saw that he was moved, and deemed that
|
||
he was wondering at that house so trim and orderly amidst the wildwood,
|
||
so he said: "Here also do we after our behest to that marvellous
|
||
and lovely Lady, that we suffer not this house to go to ruin:
|
||
ever are some of our folk here, and every year about this season
|
||
we send two or more to take the places of those who have dwelt in
|
||
the House year-long: so ever is there someone to keep all things trim.
|
||
But as to strangers, I have never in my life seen any Seeker of
|
||
the Well herein, save once, and that was an old hoar man like to me,
|
||
save that he was feebler in all wise than I be."
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph heard him talking, yet noted his words but little;
|
||
for it was with him as if all the grief of heart which he had penned
|
||
back for so long a while swelled up within him and burst its bounds;
|
||
and he turned toward Ursula and their eyes met, and she looked shy
|
||
and anxious on him and he might no longer refrain himself, but put
|
||
his hands to his face (for they had now drawn rein at the garth-gate)
|
||
and brake out a weeping, and wept long for the friend whose feet
|
||
had worn that path so often, and whose heart, though she were dead,
|
||
had brought them thither for their thriving; and for love and sorrow
|
||
of him Ursula wept also.
|
||
|
||
But the old man and his grandsons turned their heads away from
|
||
his weeping, and got off their horses, and went up to the house-door,
|
||
whereby were now standing a carle and a quean of their people.
|
||
But Ralph slowly gat off his horse and stood by Ursula who was on
|
||
the ground already, but would not touch her, for he was ashamed.
|
||
But she looked on him kindly and said: "Dear friend, there is
|
||
no need for shame; for though I be young, I know how grievous it
|
||
is when the dead that we have loved come across our ways, and we
|
||
may not speak to them, nor they to us. So I will but bid thee
|
||
be comforted and abide in thy love for the living and the dead."
|
||
His tears brake out again at that word, for he was but young,
|
||
and for a while there was a lull in the strife that had beset his days.
|
||
But after a little he looked up, and dashed the tears from his eyes
|
||
and smiled on Ursula and said: "The tale she told me of this place,
|
||
the sweetness of it came back upon me, and I might not forbear."
|
||
She said: "O friend, thou art kind, and I love thee."
|
||
|
||
So then they joined hands and went through the garth together, and up to
|
||
the door, where stood the wardens, who, when they saw them turning thither,
|
||
came speedily down the path to them, and would have knelt in worship to them;
|
||
but they would not suffer it, but embraced and kissed them, and thanked
|
||
them many times for their welcome. The said wardens, both carle and quean,
|
||
were goodly folk of middle age, stalwart, and kind of face.
|
||
|
||
So then they went into the house together, and entered into
|
||
the self-same chamber, where of old the Lady of Abundance had
|
||
sickened for fear of the Sorceress sitting naked at her spell-work.
|
||
|
||
Great joy they made together, and the wardens set meat and drink
|
||
before the guests, and they ate and drank and were of good cheer.
|
||
But the elder who had brought them from Chestnut-dale said:
|
||
"Dear friends, I have told you that these two young men are my
|
||
grand-children, and they are the sons of this man and woman whom ye see;
|
||
for the man is my son. And so it is, that amongst us the care
|
||
of the Quest of the Well at the World's End hath for long been
|
||
the heritage of our blood, going with us from father to son.
|
||
Therefore is it naught wonderful, though I have been sundry times
|
||
at this house, and have learned about the place all that may
|
||
be learned. For my father brought me hither when I was yet a boy;
|
||
that time it was that I saw the last man of whom we know for sure
|
||
that he drank of the Water of the Well, and he was that old
|
||
hoar man like unto me, but, as I said, far weaker in all wise;
|
||
but when he came back to us from the Well he was strong and stalwart,
|
||
and a better man than I am now; and I heard him tell his name
|
||
to my father, that he was called the Sage of Swevenham."
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked on Ursula and said: "Yea, father, and it was
|
||
through him that we had our lore concerning the way hither;
|
||
and it was he that bade us abide your coming in the rock-house
|
||
of the Vale of Sweet-chestnuts."
|
||
|
||
"Then he is alive still," said the elder. Said Ralph:
|
||
"Yea, and as fair and strong an old man as ye may lightly see."
|
||
"Yea, yea," said the elder, "and yet fifty years ago his
|
||
course seemed run."
|
||
|
||
Then said Ralph: "Tell me, father, have none of your own folk sought
|
||
to the Well at the World's End?" "Nay, none," said the elder.
|
||
Said Ralph: "That is strange, whereas ye are so nigh thereto,
|
||
and have such abundant lore concerning the way."
|
||
|
||
"Son," said the elder, "true it is that the water of that Well
|
||
shall cause a man to thrive in all ways, and to live through
|
||
many generations of men, maybe, in honour and good-liking;
|
||
but it may not keep any man alive for ever; for so have
|
||
the Gods given us the gift of death lest we weary of life.
|
||
Now our folk live well and hale, and without the sickness
|
||
and pestilence, such as I have heard oft befall folk in other lands:
|
||
even as I heard the Sage of Swevenham say, and I wondered
|
||
at his words. Of strife and of war also we know naught:
|
||
nor do we desire aught which we may not easily attain to.
|
||
Therefore we live long, and we fear the Gods if we should
|
||
strive to live longer, lest they should bring upon us war
|
||
and sickness, and over-weening desire, and weariness of life.
|
||
Moreover it is little that all of us should seek to the Well
|
||
at the World's End; and those few that sought and drank
|
||
should be stronger and wiser than the others, and should make
|
||
themselves earthly gods, and, maybe, should torment the others
|
||
of us and make their lives a very burden to be borne.
|
||
Of such matters are there tales current amongst us that so it
|
||
hath been of yore and in other lands; and ill it were if such
|
||
times came back upon us."
|
||
|
||
Ralph hung his head and was silent; for the joy of the Quest seemed
|
||
dying out as the old man's words dropped slowly from his mouth.
|
||
But he smiled upon Ralph and went on: "But for you, guests,
|
||
it is otherwise, for ye of the World beyond the Mountains
|
||
are stronger and more godlike than we, as all tales tell;
|
||
and ye wear away your lives desiring that which ye may scarce get;
|
||
and ye set your hearts on high things, desiring to be masters
|
||
of the very Gods. Therefore ye know sickness and sorrow,
|
||
and oft ye die before your time, so that ye must depart
|
||
and leave undone things which ye deem ye were born to do;
|
||
which to all men is grievous. And because of all this ye
|
||
desire healing and thriving, whether good come of it, or ill.
|
||
Therefore ye do but right to seek to the Well at the World's End,
|
||
that ye may the better accomplish that which behoveth you,
|
||
and that ye may serve your fellows and deliver them from
|
||
the thralldom of those that be strong and unwise and unkind,
|
||
of whom we have heard strange tales."
|
||
|
||
Ralph reddened as he spake, and Ursula looked on him anxiously,
|
||
but that talk dropped for the present, and they fell to talking
|
||
of lighter and more familiar matters.
|
||
|
||
Thereafter they wandered about the woods with the wardens
|
||
and the way-leaders, and the elder brought them to the ancient
|
||
altar in the wood whereon the Sorceress had offered up the goat;
|
||
and the howe of the woman dight with the necklace of the Quest
|
||
whom the Lady found dead in the snow; and the place nigh
|
||
the house where the Sorceress used to torment her thrall
|
||
that was afterwards the Lady of Abundance; yea, and they went
|
||
further afield till they came to the Vale of Lore, and the Heath
|
||
above it where they met, the King's Son and the Lady.
|
||
All these and other places were now become as hallowed
|
||
ground to the Innocent People, and to Ralph no less.
|
||
In the house, moreover, was a fair ark wherein they kept matters
|
||
which had belonged to the Lady, as her shoes and her smock,
|
||
wrapped in goodly cloth amidst well-smelling herbs; and these
|
||
things they worshipped as folk do with relics of the saints.
|
||
In another ark also they showed the seekers a book wherein
|
||
was written lore concerning the Well, and the way thereto.
|
||
But of this book had the Sage forewarned Ralph and his mate,
|
||
and had bidden them look to it that they should read in it,
|
||
and no otherwhere than at that ancient altar in the wood,
|
||
they two alone, and clad in such-like gear as they wore
|
||
when they hearkened to his reading by his hermitage.
|
||
And so it was that they found the due raiment in the ark along
|
||
with the book. Therefore day after day betimes in the morning
|
||
they bore the said book to the altar and read therein,
|
||
till they had learned much wisdom.
|
||
|
||
Thus they did for eight days, and on the ninth they rested and were merry
|
||
with their hosts: but on the tenth day they mounted their horses and
|
||
said farewell, and departed by the ways they had learned of, they two alone.
|
||
And they had with them bread and meal, as much as they might bear,
|
||
and water-skins moreover, that they might fill them at the last sweet
|
||
water before they came to the waterless desert.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 17
|
||
|
||
They Come Through the Woodland to the Thirsty Desert
|
||
|
||
|
||
So they ride their ways, and when they were come well into the wildwood
|
||
past the house, and had spoken but few words to each other, Ralph put
|
||
forth his hand, and stayed Ursula, and they gat off their horses
|
||
under a great-limbed oak, and did off their armour, and sat down on
|
||
the greensward there, and loved each other dearly, and wept for joy
|
||
of their pain and travail and love. And afterwards, as they sat side
|
||
by side leaning up against the great oak-bole, Ralph spake and said:
|
||
"Now are we two once again all alone in the uttermost parts of the earth,
|
||
and belike we are not very far from the Well at the World's End;
|
||
and now I have bethought me that if we gain that which we seek for,
|
||
and bear back our lives to our own people, the day may come when we
|
||
are grown old, for as young as we may seem, that we shall be as lonely
|
||
then as we are this hour, and that the folk round about us shall
|
||
be to us as much and no more than these trees and the wild things
|
||
that dwell amongst them."
|
||
|
||
She looked on him and laughed as one over-happy, and said:
|
||
"Thou runnest forward swiftly to meet trouble, beloved!
|
||
But I say that well will it be in those days if I love the folk
|
||
then as well as now I love these trees and the wild things
|
||
whose house they are."
|
||
|
||
And she rose up therewith and threw her arms about the oak-bole and kissed
|
||
its ruggedness, while Ralph as he lay kissed the sleekness of her feet.
|
||
And there came a robin hopping over the leaves anigh them, for in
|
||
that wood most of the creatures, knowing not man, were tame to him,
|
||
and feared the horses of those twain more than their riders.
|
||
And now as Ursula knelt to embrace Ralph with one hand, she held out
|
||
the other to the said robin who perched on her wrist, and sat there
|
||
as a hooded falcon had done, and fell to whistling his sweet notes,
|
||
as if he were a-talking to those new-comers: then Ursula gave him a
|
||
song-reward of their broken meat, and he flew up and perched on her shoulder,
|
||
and nestled up against her cheek, and she laughed happily and said:
|
||
"Lo you, sweet, have not the wild things understood my words, and sent
|
||
this fair messenger to foretell us all good?"
|
||
|
||
"It is good," said Ralph laughing, "yet the oak-tree hath not spoken yet,
|
||
despite of all thy kissing: and lo there goes thy friend the robin,
|
||
now thou hast no more meat to give him."
|
||
|
||
"He is flying towards the Well at the World's End," she said,
|
||
"and biddeth us onward: let us to horse and hasten:
|
||
for if thou wilt have the whole truth concerning my heart,
|
||
it is this, that some chance-hap may yet take thee from me
|
||
ere thou hast drunk of the waters of the Well."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and in the innermost of my heart lieth the fear
|
||
that mayhappen there is no Well, and no healing in it if we
|
||
find it, and that death, and the backward way may yet sunder us.
|
||
This is the worst of my heart, and evil is my coward fear."
|
||
|
||
But she cast her arms about him and kissed and caressed him, and cried out:
|
||
"Yea, then fair have been the days of our journeying, and fair this hour
|
||
of the green oak! And bold and true thine heart that hath led thee thus far,
|
||
and won thee thy desire of my love."
|
||
|
||
So then they armed them, and mounted their horses and set forward.
|
||
They lived well while they were in the wood, but on the third day they
|
||
came to where it thinned and at last died out into a stony waste like
|
||
unto that which they had passed through before they came to the House
|
||
of the Sorceress, save that this lay in ridges as the waves of a great sea;
|
||
and these same ridges they were bidden to cross over at their highest,
|
||
lest they should be bewildered in a maze of little hills and dales
|
||
leading no whither.
|
||
|
||
So they entered on this desert, having filled their water-skins at
|
||
a clear brook, whereat they rejoiced when they found that the face
|
||
of the wilderness was covered with a salt scurf, and that naught
|
||
grew there save a sprinkling of small sage bushes.
|
||
|
||
Now on the second day of their riding this ugly waste,
|
||
as they came up over the brow of one of these stony ridges,
|
||
Ralph the far-sighted cried out suddenly: "Hold! for I see
|
||
a man weaponed."
|
||
|
||
"Where is he?" quoth Ursula, "and what is he about?"
|
||
Said Ralph: "He is up yonder on the swell of the next ridge,
|
||
and by seeming is asleep leaning against a rock."
|
||
|
||
Then he bent the Turk bow and set an arrow on the string and they
|
||
went on warily. When they were down at the foot of the ridge
|
||
Ralph hailed the man with a lusty cry, but gat no answer of him;
|
||
so they went on up the bent, till Ralph said: "Now I can see
|
||
his face under his helm, and it is dark and the eyes are hollow:
|
||
I will off horse and go up to him afoot, but do thou, beloved,
|
||
sit still in thy saddle."
|
||
|
||
But when he had come nigher, he turned and cried out to her:
|
||
"The man is dead, come anigh." So she went up to him and dismounted,
|
||
and they both together stood over the man, who was lying up against
|
||
a big stone like one at rest. How long he had lain there none knows
|
||
but God; for in the saltness of the dry desert the flesh had dried
|
||
on his bones without corrupting, and was as hardened leather.
|
||
He was in full armour of a strange and ancient fashion, and his sword
|
||
was girt to his side, neither was there any sign of a wound about him.
|
||
Under a crag anigh him they found his horse, dead and dry like to himself;
|
||
and a little way over the brow of the ridge another horse in like case;
|
||
and close by him a woman whose raiment had not utterly perished, nor her hair;
|
||
there were gold rings on her arms, and her shoes were done with gold:
|
||
she had a knife stuck in her breast, with her hand still clutching the
|
||
handle thereof; so that it seemed that she had herself given herself death.
|
||
|
||
Ralph and Ursula buried these two with the heaping of stones
|
||
and went their ways; but some two miles thence they came upon
|
||
another dead man-at-arms, and near him an old man unweaponed,
|
||
and they heaped stones on them.
|
||
|
||
Thereabout night overtook them, and it was dark, so they lay down
|
||
in the waste, and comforted each other, and slept two or three hours,
|
||
but arose with the first glimmer of dawn, and mounted and rode
|
||
forth onward, that they might the sooner be out of that deadly desert,
|
||
for fear clung to their hearts.
|
||
|
||
This day, forsooth, they found so many dead folk, that they might not stay
|
||
to bury them, lest they themselves should come to lie there lacking burial.
|
||
So they made all the way they might, and rode on some hours by starlight
|
||
after the night was come, for it was clear and cold. So that at last
|
||
they were so utterly wearied that they lay down amongst those dead folk,
|
||
and slept soundly.
|
||
|
||
On the morrow morn Ralph awoke and saw Ursula sleeping peacefully
|
||
as he deemed, and he looked about on the dreary desert and its dead
|
||
men and saw no end to it, though they lay on the top of one of those
|
||
stony bents; and he said softly to himself: "Will it end at all then?
|
||
Surely all this people of the days gone by were Seekers of the Well
|
||
as we be; and have they belike turned back from somewhere further on,
|
||
and might not escape the desert despite of all? Shall we turn now:
|
||
shall we turn? surely we might get into the kindly wood from here."
|
||
|
||
So he spake; but Ursula sat up (for she was not asleep) and said:
|
||
"The perils of the waste being abundant and exceeding hard to face,
|
||
would not the Sage or his books have told us of the most deadly?"
|
||
Said Ralph: "Yet here are all these dead, and we were not told of them,
|
||
nevertheless we have seen the token on the rocks oft-times yesterday,
|
||
so we are yet in the road, unless all this hath been but a snare
|
||
and a betrayal."
|
||
|
||
She shook her head, and was silent a little; then she said:
|
||
"Ralph, my lad, didst thou see this token (and she set hand to
|
||
the beads about her neck) on any of those dead folk yesterday?"
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "though sooth to say I looked for it."
|
||
"And I in likewise," she said; "for indeed I had misgivings
|
||
as the day grew old; but now I say, let us on in the faith
|
||
of that token and the kindness of the Sage, and the love of
|
||
the Innocent People; yea, and thy luck, O lad of the green fields
|
||
far away, that hath brought thee unscathed so far from Upmeads."
|
||
|
||
So they mounted and rode forth, and saw more and more of the dead folk;
|
||
and ever and anon they looked to them to note if they wore
|
||
the beads like to them but saw none so dight. Then Ursula said:
|
||
"Yea, why should the Sage and the books have told us aught of these
|
||
dead bodies, that are but as the plenishing of the waste; like to
|
||
the flowers that are cast down before the bier of a saint on a holy-day
|
||
to be trodden under foot by the churls and the vicars of the close.
|
||
Forsooth had they been alive now, with swords to smite withal,
|
||
and hands to drag us into captivity, it had been another matter:
|
||
but against these I feel bold."
|
||
|
||
Ralph sighed, and said: "Yea, but even if we die not in the waste,
|
||
yet this is piteous; so many lives passed away, so many hopes slain."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said; "but do not folk die there in the world behind us?
|
||
I have seen sights far worser than this at Utterbol,
|
||
little while as I was there. Moreover I can note that this
|
||
army of dead men has not come all in one day or one year,
|
||
but in a long, long while, by one and two and three;
|
||
for hast thou not noted that their raiment and wargear both,
|
||
is of many fashions, and some much more perished than other,
|
||
long as things last in this Dry Waste? I say that men die
|
||
as in the world beyond, but here we see them as they lie dead,
|
||
and have lain for so long."
|
||
|
||
He said: "I fear neither the Waste nor the dead men if thou
|
||
fearest not, beloved: but I lament for these poor souls."
|
||
|
||
"And I also," said she; "therefore let us on, that we may come
|
||
to those whose grief we may heal."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 18
|
||
|
||
They Come to the Dry Tree
|
||
|
||
|
||
Presently as they rode they had before them one of the greatest
|
||
of those land-waves, and they climbed it slowly, going afoot
|
||
and leading their horses; but when they were but a little way
|
||
from the brow they saw, over a gap thereof, something, as it were
|
||
huge horns rising up into the air beyond the crest of the ridge.
|
||
So they marvelled, and drew their swords, and held them still awhile,
|
||
misdoubting if this were perchance some terrible monster of the waste;
|
||
but whereas the thing moved not at all, they plucked up heart
|
||
and fared on.
|
||
|
||
So came they to the brow and looked over it into a valley,
|
||
about which on all sides went the ridge, save where it was broken
|
||
down into a narrow pass on the further side, so that the said
|
||
valley was like to one of those theatres of the ancient
|
||
Roman Folk, whereof are some to be seen in certain lands.
|
||
Neither did those desert benches lack their sitters;
|
||
for all down the sides of the valley sat or lay children of men;
|
||
some women, but most men-folk, of whom the more part
|
||
were weaponed, and some with their drawn swords in their hands.
|
||
Whatever semblance of moving was in them was when the eddying
|
||
wind of the valley stirred the rags of their raiment,
|
||
or the long hair of the women. But a very midmost of this
|
||
dreary theatre rose up a huge and monstrous tree, whose topmost
|
||
branches were even the horns which they had seen from below
|
||
the hill's brow. Leafless was that tree and lacking of twigs,
|
||
and its bole upheld but some fifty of great limbs,
|
||
and as they looked on it, they doubted whether it were not
|
||
made by men's hands rather than grown up out of the earth.
|
||
All round about the roots of it was a pool of clear water,
|
||
that cast back the image of the valley-side and the bright sky
|
||
of the desert, as though it had been a mirror of burnished steel.
|
||
The limbs of that tree were all behung with blazoned shields
|
||
and knight's helms, and swords, and spears, and axes, and hawberks;
|
||
and it rose up into the air some hundred feet above the flat
|
||
of the valley.
|
||
|
||
For a while they looked down silently on to this marvel then
|
||
from both their lips at once came the cry THE DRY TREE.
|
||
Then Ralph thrust his sword back into his sheath and said:
|
||
"Meseems I must needs go down amongst them; there is naught
|
||
to do us harm here; for all these are dead like the others
|
||
that we saw."
|
||
|
||
Ursula turned to him with burning cheeks and sparkling eyes,
|
||
and said eagerly: "Yea, yea, let us go down, else might we
|
||
chance to miss something that we ought to wot of."
|
||
|
||
Therewith she also sheathed her sword, and they went both
|
||
of them down together, and that easily; for as aforesaid
|
||
the slope was as if it had been cut into steps for their feet.
|
||
And as they passed by the dead folk, for whom they had often
|
||
to turn aside, they noted that each of the dead leathery
|
||
faces was drawn up in a grin as though they had died in pain,
|
||
and yet beguiled, so that all those visages looked somewhat alike,
|
||
as though they had come from the workshop of one craftsman.
|
||
|
||
At last Ralph and Ursula stood on the level ground underneath the Tree,
|
||
and they looked up at the branches, and down to the water at their feet;
|
||
and now it seemed to them as though the Tree had verily growth in it,
|
||
for they beheld its roots, that they went out from the mound or islet of earth
|
||
into the water, and spread abroad therein, and seemed to waver about.
|
||
So they walked around the Tree, and looked up at the shields that hung
|
||
on its branches, but saw no blazon that they knew, though they were many
|
||
and diverse; and the armour also and weapons were very diverse of fashion.
|
||
|
||
Now when they were come back again to the place where they had
|
||
first stayed, Ralph said: "I thirst, and so belike dost thou;
|
||
and here is water good and clear; let us drink then, and so spare our
|
||
water-skins, for belike the dry desert is yet long." And therewith
|
||
he knelt down that he might take of the water in the hollow of his hand.
|
||
But Ursula drew him back, and cried out in terror: "O Ralph, do it not!
|
||
Seest thou not this water, that although it be bright and clear,
|
||
so that we may see all the pebbles at the bottom, yet nevertheless
|
||
when the wind eddies about, and lifts the skirts of our raiment,
|
||
it makes no ripple on the face of the pool, and doubtless it is heavy
|
||
with venom; and moreover there is no sign of the way hereabout,
|
||
as at other watering-steads; O forbear, Ralph!"
|
||
|
||
Then he rose up and drew back with her but slowly and unwillingly
|
||
as she deemed; and they stood together a while gazing on these marvels.
|
||
But lo amidst of this while, there came a crow wheeling over
|
||
the valley of the dead, and he croaked over the Dry Tree, and let
|
||
himself drop down to the edge of the pool, whereby he stalked
|
||
about a little after the manner of his kind. Then he thrust
|
||
his neb into the water and drank, and thereafter took wing again;
|
||
but ere he was many feet off the ground he gave a grievous croak,
|
||
and turning over in the air fell down stark dead close to the feet of
|
||
those twain; and Ralph cried out but spake no word with meaning therein;
|
||
then said Ursula: "Yea, thus are we saved from present death."
|
||
Then she looked in Ralph's face, and turned pale and said hastily:
|
||
"O my friend how is it with thee?" But she waited not for an answer,
|
||
but turned her face to the bent whereby they had come down,
|
||
and cried out in a loud, shrill voice: "O Ralph, Ralph! look up
|
||
yonder to the ridge whereby we left our horses; look, look! there
|
||
glitters a spear and stirreth! and lo a helm underneath the spear:
|
||
tarry not, let us save our horses!"
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph let a cry out from his mouth, and set off running to
|
||
the side of the slope, and fell to climbing it with great strides,
|
||
not heeding Ursula; but she followed close after, and scrambled
|
||
up with foot and hand and knee, till she stood beside him
|
||
on the top, and he looked around wildly and cried out:
|
||
"Where! where are they?"
|
||
|
||
"Nowhere," she said, "it was naught but my word to draw thee from death;
|
||
but praise to the saints that thou are come alive out of the accursed valley."
|
||
|
||
He seemed not to hearken, but turned about once, and beat the air
|
||
with his hands, and then fell down on his back and with a great wail
|
||
she cast herself upon him, for she deemed at first that he was dead.
|
||
But she took a little water from one of their skins, and cast
|
||
it into his face, and took a flask of cordial from her pouch,
|
||
and set it to his lips, and made him drink somewhat thereof.
|
||
So in a while he came to himself and opened his eyes and smiled
|
||
upon her, and she took his head in her hands and kissed his cheek,
|
||
and he sat up and said feebly: "Shall we not go down into the valley?
|
||
there is naught there to harm us."
|
||
|
||
"We have been down there already," she said, "and well it is that we
|
||
are not both lying there now."
|
||
|
||
Then he got to his feet, and stretched himself, and yawned
|
||
like one just awakened from long sleep. But she said:
|
||
"Let us to horse and begone; it is early hours to slumber,
|
||
for those that are seeking the Well at the World's End."
|
||
|
||
He smiled on her again and took her hand, and she led him to his horse,
|
||
and helped him till he was in the saddle and lightly she gat
|
||
a-horseback, and they rode away swiftly from that evil place;
|
||
and after a while Ralph was himself again, and remembered all
|
||
that had happened till he fell down on the brow of the ridge.
|
||
Then he praised Ursula's wisdom and valiancy till she bade him
|
||
forbear lest he weary her. Albeit she drew up close to him
|
||
and kissed his face sweetly.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 19
|
||
|
||
They Come Out of the Thirsty Desert
|
||
|
||
|
||
Past the Valley of the Dry Tree they saw but few dead
|
||
men lying about, and soon they saw never another:
|
||
and, though the land was still utterly barren, and all cast up
|
||
into ridges as before, yet the salt slime grew less and less,
|
||
and before nightfall of that day they had done with it:
|
||
and the next day those stony waves were lower; and the next
|
||
again the waste was but a swelling plain, and here and there
|
||
they came on patches of dwarf willow, and other harsh
|
||
and scanty herbage, whereof the horses might have a bait,
|
||
which they sore needed, for now was their fodder done:
|
||
but both men and horses were sore athirst; for, as carefully
|
||
as they had hoarded their water, there was now but little left,
|
||
which they durst not drink till they were driven perforce,
|
||
lest they should yet die of drought.
|
||
|
||
They journeyed long that day, and whereas the moon was up at night-tide
|
||
they lay not down till she was set; and their resting place was by some
|
||
low bushes, whereabout was rough grass mingled with willow-herb, whereby
|
||
Ralph judged that they drew nigh to water, so or ever they slept,
|
||
they and the horses all but emptied the water-skins. They heard some
|
||
sort of beasts roaring in the night, but they were too weary to watch,
|
||
and might not make a fire.
|
||
|
||
When Ralph awoke in the morning he cried out that he could see the woodland;
|
||
and Ursula arose at his cry and looked where he pointed, and sure enough
|
||
there were trees on a rising ground some two miles ahead, and beyond them,
|
||
not very far by seeming, they beheld the tops of great dark mountains.
|
||
On either hand moreover, nigh on their right hand, far off on their left,
|
||
ran a reef of rocks, so that their way seemed to be as between two walls.
|
||
And these said reefs were nowise like those that they had seen of late,
|
||
but black and, as to their matter, like to the great mountains by the rock of
|
||
the Fighting Man: but as the reefs ran eastward they seemed to grow higher.
|
||
|
||
Now they mounted their horses at once and rode on; and the beasts
|
||
were as eager as they were, and belike smelt the water.
|
||
So when they had ridden but three miles, they saw a fair little
|
||
river before them winding about exceedingly, but flowing
|
||
eastward on the whole. So they spurred on with light
|
||
hearts and presently were on the banks of the said river,
|
||
and its waters were crystal-clear, though its sands were black:
|
||
and the pink-blossomed willow-herb was growing abundantly
|
||
on the sandy shores. Close to the water was a black rock,
|
||
as big as a man, whereon was graven the sign of the way,
|
||
so they knew that there was no evil in the water, wherefore they
|
||
drank their fill and watered their horses abundantly,
|
||
and on the further bank was there abundance of good grass.
|
||
So when they had drunk their fill, for the pleasure of the cool water
|
||
they waded the ford barefoot, and it was scarce above Ursula's knee.
|
||
Then they had great joy to lie on the soft grass and eat their meat,
|
||
while the horses tore eagerly at the herbage close to them.
|
||
So when they had eaten, they rested awhile, but before they
|
||
went further they despoiled them, one after other, and bathed
|
||
in a pool of the river to wash the foul wilderness off them.
|
||
Then again they rested and let the horses yet bite the grass,
|
||
and departed not from that pleasant place till it was two hours
|
||
after noon. As they were lying there Ralph said he could hear
|
||
a great roar like the sound of many waters, but very far off:
|
||
but to Ursula it seemed naught but the wind waxing in the boughs
|
||
of the woodland anigh them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 20
|
||
|
||
They Come to the Ocean Sea
|
||
|
||
|
||
Being come to the wood they went not very far into it that day,
|
||
for they were minded to rest them after the weariness of the wilderness:
|
||
they feasted on a hare which Ralph shot, and made a big fire
|
||
to keep off evil beasts, but none came nigh them, though they
|
||
heard the voices of certain beasts as the night grew still.
|
||
To be short, they slept far into the morrow's morn, and then,
|
||
being refreshed, and their horses also, they rode strongly all day,
|
||
and found the wood to be not very great; for before sunset they
|
||
were come to its outskirts, and the mountains lay before them.
|
||
These were but little like to that huge wall they had passed
|
||
through on their way to Chestnut-dale, being rather great hills
|
||
than mountains, grass-grown, and at their feet somewhat wooded,
|
||
and by seeming not over hard to pass over.
|
||
|
||
The next day they entered them by a pass marked with the token,
|
||
which led them about by a winding way till they were on the side
|
||
of the biggest fell of all; so there they rested that night
|
||
in a fair little hollow or dell in the mountain-side. There
|
||
in the stillness of the night both Ursula, as well as Ralph,
|
||
heard that roaring of a great water, and they said to each other
|
||
that it must be the voice of the Sea, and they rejoiced thereat,
|
||
for they had learned by the Sage and his books that they must needs
|
||
come to the verge of the Ocean-Sea, which girdles the earth about.
|
||
So they arose betimes on the morrow, and set to work to climb
|
||
the mountain, going mostly a-foot; and the way was long,
|
||
but not craggy or exceeding steep, so that in five hours'
|
||
time they were at the mountain-top, and coming over the brow
|
||
beheld beneath them fair green slopes besprinkled with trees,
|
||
and beyond them, some three or four miles away, the blue
|
||
landless sea and on either hand of them was the sea also,
|
||
so that they were nigh-hand at the ending of a great ness,
|
||
and there was naught beyond it; and naught to do if they missed
|
||
the Well, but to turn back by the way they had come.
|
||
|
||
Now when they saw this they were exceedingly moved and they looked on
|
||
one another, and each saw that the other was pale, with glistening eyes,
|
||
since they were to come to the very point of their doom, and that it should
|
||
be seen whether there were no such thing as the Well in all the earth,
|
||
but that they had been chasing a fair-hued cloud; or else their Quest
|
||
should be achieved and they should have the world before them, and they
|
||
happy and mighty, and of great worship amidst all men.
|
||
|
||
Little they tarried, but gat them down the steep of the mountain,
|
||
and so lower and lower till they were come to ground nigh level;
|
||
and then at last it was but thus, that without any great rock-wall
|
||
or girdle of marvellous and strange land, there was an end of earth,
|
||
with its grass and trees and streams, and a beginning of the ocean,
|
||
which stretched away changeless, and it might be for ever.
|
||
Where the land ended there was but a cliff of less than an hundred
|
||
feet above the eddying of the sea; and on the very point of the ness
|
||
was a low green toft with a square stone set atop of it, whereon as
|
||
they drew nigh they saw the token graven, yea on each face thereof.
|
||
|
||
Then they went along the edge of the cliff a mile on each side
|
||
of the said toft, and then finding naught else to note, naught save
|
||
the grass and the sea, they came back to that place of the token,
|
||
and sat down on the grass of the toft.
|
||
|
||
It was now evening, and the sun was setting beyond them,
|
||
but they could behold a kind of stair cut in the side of the cliff,
|
||
and on the first step whereof was the token done; wherefore they
|
||
knew that they were bidden to go down by the said stair;
|
||
but it seemed to lead no whither, save straight into the sea.
|
||
And whiles it came into Ralph's mind that this was naught
|
||
but a mock, as if to bid the hapless seekers cast themselves
|
||
down from the earth, and be done with it for ever.
|
||
But in any case they might not try the adventure of that stair
|
||
by the failing light, and with the night long before them.
|
||
So when they had hoppled their horses, and left them to graze
|
||
at their will on the sweet grass of the meadow, they laid
|
||
them down behind the green toft, and, being forwearied,
|
||
it was no long time ere they twain slept fast at the uttermost
|
||
end of the world.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 21
|
||
|
||
Now They Drink of the Well at the World's End
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph awoke from some foolish morning dream of Upmeads,
|
||
wondering where he was, or what familiar voice had cried out
|
||
his name: then he raised himself on his elbow, and saw Ursula
|
||
standing before him with flushed face and sparkling eyes,
|
||
and she was looking out seaward, while she called on his name.
|
||
So he sprang up and strove with the slumber that still
|
||
hung about him, and as his eyes cleared he looked down,
|
||
and saw that the sea, which last night had washed the face
|
||
of the cliff, had now ebbed far out, and left bare betwixt
|
||
the billows and the cliff some half mile of black sand,
|
||
with rocks of the like hue rising out of it here and there.
|
||
But just below the place where they stood, right up against the cliff,
|
||
was builded by man's hand of huge stones a garth of pound,
|
||
the wall whereof was some seven feet high, and the pound
|
||
within the wall of forty feet space endlong and overthwart;
|
||
and the said pound was filled with the waters of a spring
|
||
that came forth from the face of the cliff as they deemed,
|
||
though from above they might not see the issue thereof;
|
||
but the water ran seaward from the pound by some way unseen,
|
||
and made a wide stream through the black sand of the foreshore:
|
||
but ever the great basin filled somewhat faster than
|
||
it voided, so that it ran over the lip on all sides,
|
||
making a thin veil over the huge ashlar-stones of the garth.
|
||
The day was bright and fair with no wind, save light airs
|
||
playing about from the westward ort, and all things gleamed
|
||
and glittered in the sun.
|
||
|
||
Ralph stood still a moment, and then stretched abroad his arms,
|
||
and with a great sob cast them round about the body of his beloved,
|
||
and strained her to his bosom as he murmured about her, THE WELL
|
||
AT THE WORLD'S END. But she wept for joy as she fawned upon him,
|
||
and let her hands beat upon his body.
|
||
|
||
But when they were somewhat calmed of their ecstasy of joy,
|
||
they made ready to go down by that rocky stair. And first they did
|
||
off their armour and other gear, and when they were naked they did
|
||
on the hallowed raiment which they had out of the ark in the House
|
||
of the Sorceress; and so clad gat them down the rock-hewn stair,
|
||
Ralph going first, lest there should be any broken place;
|
||
but naught was amiss with those hard black stones, and they came
|
||
safely to a level place of the rock, whence they could see the face
|
||
of the cliff, and how the waters of the Well came gushing forth
|
||
from a hollow therein in a great swelling wave as clear as glass;
|
||
and the sun glistened in it and made a foam-bow about its edges.
|
||
But above the issue of the waters the black rock had been smoothed
|
||
by man's art, and thereon was graven the Sword and the Bough,
|
||
and above it these words, to wit:
|
||
|
||
YE WHO HAVE COME A LONG WAY TO LOOK UPON ME, DRINK OF ME, IF YE
|
||
DEEM THAT YE BE STRONG ENOUGH IN DESIRE TO BEAR LENGTH OF DAYS:
|
||
OR ELSE DRINK NOT; BUT TELL YOUR FRIENDS AND THE KINDREDS OF THE
|
||
EARTH HOW YE HAVE SEEN A GREAT MARVEL.
|
||
|
||
So they looked long and wondered; and Ursula said: "Deemest thou,
|
||
my friend, that any have come thus far and forborne to drink?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Surely not even the exceeding wise might remember
|
||
the bitterness of his wisdom as he stood here."
|
||
|
||
Then he looked on her and his face grew bright beyond measure, and cried out:
|
||
"O love, love! why tarry we? For yet I fear lest we be come too late,
|
||
and thou die before mine eyes ere yet thou hast drunken."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said, "and I also fear for thee, though thy face is ruddy and thine
|
||
eyes sparkle, and thou art as lovely as the Captain of the Lord's hosts."
|
||
|
||
Then she laughed, and her laughter was as silver bells rung tunably,
|
||
and she said: "But where is the cup for the drinking?"
|
||
|
||
But Ralph looked on the face of the wall, and about the height of his hand saw
|
||
square marks thereon, as though there were an ambrye; and amidst the square
|
||
was a knop of latten, all green with the weather and the salt spray.
|
||
So Ralph set his hand to the knop and drew strongly, and lo it was
|
||
a door made of a squared stone hung on brazen hinges, and it opened
|
||
easily to him, and within was a cup of goldsmith's work, with the sword
|
||
and the bough done thereon; and round about the rim writ this posey:
|
||
"THE STRONG OF HEART SHALL DRINK FROM ME." So Ralph took it and held
|
||
it aloft so that its pure metal flashed in the sun, and he said:
|
||
"This is for thee, Sweetling."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, and for thee," she said.
|
||
|
||
Now that level place, or bench-table went up to the very gushing and
|
||
green bow of the water, so Ralph took Ursula's hand and led her along,
|
||
she going a little after him, till he was close to the Well, and stood
|
||
amidst the spray-bow thereof, so that he looked verily like one
|
||
of the painted angels on the choir wall of St. Laurence of Upmeads.
|
||
Then he reached forth his hand and thrust the cup into the water, holding it
|
||
stoutly because the gush of the stream was strong, so that the water of
|
||
the Well splashed all over him, wetting Ursula's face and breast withal:
|
||
and he felt that the water was sweet without any saltness of the sea.
|
||
But he turned to Ursula and reached out the full cup to her, and said:
|
||
"Sweetling, call a health over the cup!"
|
||
|
||
She took it and said: "To thy life, beloved!" and drank withal,
|
||
and her eyes looked out of the cup the while, like a child's
|
||
when he drinketh. Then she gave him the cup again and said:
|
||
"Drink, and tarry not, lest thou die and I live."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph plunged the cup into the waters again, and he held
|
||
the cup aloft, and cried out: "To the Earth, and the World of Manfolk!"
|
||
and therewith he drank.
|
||
|
||
For a minute then they clung together within the spray-bow of the Well,
|
||
and then she took his hand and led him back to the midst of the bench-table,
|
||
and he put the cup into the ambrye, and shut it up again, and then they sat
|
||
them down on the widest of the platform under the shadow of a jutting rock;
|
||
for the sun was hot; and therewithal a sweet weariness began to steal
|
||
over them, though there was speech betwixt them for a little, and Ralph said:
|
||
"How is it with thee, beloved?"
|
||
|
||
"O well indeed," she said.
|
||
|
||
Quoth he: "And how tasteth to thee the water of the Well?"
|
||
|
||
Slowly she spake and sleepily: "It tasted good, and as if thy
|
||
love were blended with it."
|
||
|
||
And she smiled in his face; but he said: "One thing I wonder over:
|
||
how shall we wot if we have drunk aright? For whereas if we were sick or old
|
||
and failing, or ill-liking, and were now presently healed of all this,
|
||
and become strong and fair to look on, then should we know it for sure--
|
||
but now, though, as I look on thee, I behold thee the fairest of all women,
|
||
and on thy face is no token of toil and travail, and the weariness of the way;
|
||
and though the heart-ache of loneliness and captivity, and the shame
|
||
of Utterbol has left no mark upon thee--yet hast thou not always been
|
||
sweet to my eyes, and as sweet as might be? And how then?"...But
|
||
he broke off and looked on her and she smiled upon the love in his eyes,
|
||
and his head fell back and he slept with a calm and smiling face.
|
||
And she leaned over him to kiss his face but even therewith her own eyes
|
||
closed and she laid her head upon his breast, and slept as peacefully as he.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 22
|
||
|
||
Now They Have Drunk and Are Glad
|
||
|
||
Long they slept till the shadows were falling from the west,
|
||
and the sea was flowing fast again over the sands beneath them,
|
||
though there was still a great space bare betwixt the cliff and the sea.
|
||
Then spake Ursula as if Ralph had but just left speaking; and she said:
|
||
"Yea, dear lord, and I also say, that, lovely as thou art now,
|
||
never hast thou been aught else but lovely to me. But tell me,
|
||
hast thou had any scar of a hurt upon thy body? For if now that
|
||
were gone, surely it should be a token of the renewal of thy life.
|
||
But if it be not gone, then there may yet be another token."
|
||
|
||
Then he stood upon his feet, and she cried out:
|
||
"O but thou art fair and mighty, who now shall dare gainsay thee?
|
||
Who shall not long for thee?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Look, love! how the sea comes over the sand like the creeping
|
||
of a sly wood-snake! Shall we go hence and turn from the ocean-sea without
|
||
wetting our bodies in its waters?"
|
||
|
||
"Let us go," she said.
|
||
|
||
So they went down on to the level sands, and along the edges of
|
||
the sweet-water stream that flowed from the Well; and Ralph said:
|
||
"Beloved, I will tell thee of that which thou hast asked me:
|
||
when I was but a lad of sixteen winters there rode men a-lifting
|
||
into Upmeads, and Nicholas Longshanks, who is a wise man of war,
|
||
gathered force and went against them, and I must needs ride beside him.
|
||
Now we came to our above, and put the thieves to the road;
|
||
but in the hurly I got a claw from the war-beast, for the stroke
|
||
of a sword sheared me off somewhat from my shoulder:
|
||
belike thou hast seen the scar and loathed it."
|
||
|
||
"It is naught loathsome," she said, "for a lad to be a bold warrior,
|
||
nor for a grown man to think lightly of the memory of death drawn near
|
||
for the first time. Yea, I have noted it but let me see now what has
|
||
befallen with it."
|
||
|
||
As she spoke they were come to a salt pool in a rocky bight on their
|
||
right hand, which the tide was filling speedily; and Ralph spake:
|
||
"See now, this is the bath of the water of the ocean sea."
|
||
So they were speedily naked and playing in the water:
|
||
and Ursula took Ralph by the arm and looked to his shoulder and said:
|
||
"O my lad of the pale edges, where is gone thy glory?
|
||
There is no mark of the sword's pilgrimage on thy shoulder."
|
||
"Nay, none?" quoth he.
|
||
|
||
"None, none!" she said, "Didst thou say the very sooth of thy hurt
|
||
in the battle, O poor lad of mine?" "Yea, the sooth," said he.
|
||
Then she laughed sweetly and merrily like the chuckle of a flute
|
||
over the rippling waters, that rose higher and higher about them,
|
||
and she turned her eyes askance and looked adown to her own sleek side,
|
||
and laid her hand on it and laughed again. Then said Ralph:
|
||
"What is toward, beloved? For thy laugh is rather of joy that
|
||
of mirth alone."
|
||
|
||
She said: "O smooth-skinned warrior, O Lily and Rose of battle;
|
||
here on my side yesterday was the token of the hart's tyne
|
||
that gored me when I was a young maiden five years ago:
|
||
look now and pity the maiden that lay on the grass of the forest,
|
||
and the woodman a-passing by deemed her dead five years ago."
|
||
|
||
Ralph stooped down as the ripple washed away from her, then said:
|
||
"In sooth here is no mark nor blemish, but the best handiwork of God,
|
||
as when he first made a woman from the side of the Ancient Father
|
||
of the field of Damask. But lo you love, how swift the tide cometh up,
|
||
and I long to see thy feet on the green grass, and I fear the sea,
|
||
lest it stir the joy over strongly in our hearts and we be not able
|
||
to escape from its waves."
|
||
|
||
So they went up from out of the water, and did on the hallowed raiment
|
||
fragrant with strange herbs, and passed joyfully up the sand towards
|
||
the cliff and its stair; and speedily withal, for so soon as they were
|
||
clad again, the little ripple of the sea was nigh touching their feet.
|
||
As they went, they noted that the waters of the Well flowed seaward
|
||
from the black-walled pound by three arched openings in its outer face,
|
||
and they beheld the mason's work, how goodly it was; for it was as if it
|
||
had been cut out of the foot of a mountain, so well jointed were its stones,
|
||
and its walls solid against any storm that might drive against it.
|
||
|
||
They climbed the stair, and sat them down on the green grass awhile
|
||
watching the ocean coming in over the sand and the rocks, and Ralph said:
|
||
"I will tell thee, sweetling, that I am grown eager for the road;
|
||
though true it is that whiles I was down yonder amidst the ripple
|
||
of the sea I longed for naught but thee, though thou wert beside me,
|
||
and thy joyous words were as fire to the heart of my love.
|
||
But now that I am on the green grass of the earth I called to mind a dream
|
||
that came to me when we slept after the precious draught of the Well:
|
||
for methought that I was standing before the porch of the Feast-hall
|
||
of Upmeads and holding thine hand, and the ancient House spake to me
|
||
with the voice of a man, greeting both thee and me, and praising thy
|
||
goodliness and valiancy. Surely then it is calling me to deeds,
|
||
and if it were but morning, as it is now drawing towards sunset,
|
||
we would mount and be gone straightway."
|
||
|
||
"Surely," she said, "thou hast drunk of the Well, and the fear
|
||
of thee has already entered into the hearts of thy foemen far away,
|
||
even as the love of thee constraineth me as I lie by thy side;
|
||
but since it is evening and sunset, let it be evening,
|
||
and let the morning see to its own matters. So now let us be
|
||
pilgrims again, and eat the meal of pilgrims, and see to our horses,
|
||
and then wander about this lovely wilderness and its green meads,
|
||
where no son of man heedeth the wild things, till the night come,
|
||
bringing to us the rest and the sleep of them that have prevailed
|
||
over many troubles."
|
||
|
||
Even so they did, and broke bread above the sea, and looked
|
||
to their horses, and then went hand in hand about the goodly
|
||
green bents betwixt the sea and the rough of the mountain;
|
||
and it was the fairest and softest of summer evenings;
|
||
and the deer of that place, both little and great, had no
|
||
fear of man, but the hart and hind came to Ursula's hand;
|
||
and the thrushes perched upon her shoulder, and the hares
|
||
gambolled together close to the feet of the twain; so that it
|
||
seemed to them that they had come into the very Garden of God;
|
||
and they forgat all the many miles of the waste and
|
||
the mountain that lay before them, and they had no thought
|
||
for the strife of foemen and the thwarting of kindred,
|
||
that belike awaited them in their own land, but they thought
|
||
of the love and happiness of the hour that was passing.
|
||
So sweetly they wore through the last minutes of the day,
|
||
and when it was as dark as it would be in that fair season,
|
||
they lay down by the green knoll at the ending of the land,
|
||
and were lulled to sleep by the bubbling of the Well at
|
||
the World's End.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BOOK FOUR
|
||
|
||
The Road Home
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 1
|
||
|
||
Ralph and Ursula Come Back Again Through the Great Mountains
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow morning they armed them and took to their horses and departed
|
||
from that pleasant place and climbed the mountain without weariness,
|
||
and made provision of meat and drink for the Dry Desert, and so entered it,
|
||
and journeyed happily with naught evil befalling them till they came
|
||
back to the House of the Sorceress; and of the Desert they made little,
|
||
and the wood was pleasant to them after the drought of the Desert.
|
||
|
||
But at the said House they saw those kind people, and they saw
|
||
in their eager eyes as in a glass how they had been bettered
|
||
by their drinking of the Well, and the Elder said to them:
|
||
"Dear friends, there is no need to ask you whether ye
|
||
have achieved your quest; for ye, who before were lovely,
|
||
are now become as the very Gods who rule the world.
|
||
And now methinks we have to pray you but one thing, to wit
|
||
that ye will not be overmuch of Gods, but will be kind and lowly
|
||
with them that needs must worship you."
|
||
|
||
They laughed on him for kindness' sake, and kissed and embraced
|
||
the old man, and they thanked them all for their helping,
|
||
and they abode with them for a whole day in good-will and love,
|
||
and thereafter the carle, who was the son of the Elder, with his wife,
|
||
bade farewell to his kinsmen, and led Ralph and Ursula back through
|
||
the wood and over the desert to the town of the Innocent Folk.
|
||
The said Folk received them in all joy and triumph, and would have
|
||
them abide there the winter over. But they prayed leave to depart,
|
||
because their hearts were sore for their own land and their kindred.
|
||
So they abode there but two days, and on the third day were led
|
||
away by a half score of men gaily apparelled after their manner,
|
||
and having with them many sumpter-beasts with provision for the road.
|
||
With this fellowship they came safely and with little pain unto
|
||
Chestnut Vale, where they abode but one night, though to Ralph and Ursula
|
||
the place was sweet for the memory of their loving sojourn there.
|
||
|
||
They would have taken leave of the Innocent Folk in the said vale,
|
||
but those others must needs go with them a little further,
|
||
and would not leave them till they were come to the jaws
|
||
of the pass which led to the Rock of the Fighting Man.
|
||
Further than that indeed they would not, or durst not go;
|
||
and those huge mountains they called the Wall of Strife,
|
||
even as they on the other side called them the Wall of the World.
|
||
|
||
So the twain took leave of their friends there, and howbeit that they
|
||
had drunk of the Well at the World's End, yet were their hearts
|
||
grieved at the parting. The kind folk left with them abundant
|
||
provision for the remnant of the road, and a sumpter-ox to bear it;
|
||
so they were in no doubt of their livelihood. Moreover, though the turn
|
||
of autumn was come again and winter was at hand, yet the weather was
|
||
fair and calm, and their journey through the dreary pass was as light
|
||
as it might be to any men.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 2
|
||
|
||
They Hear New Tidings of Utterbol
|
||
|
||
|
||
It was on a fair evening of later autumn-tide that they won their way out
|
||
of the Gates of the Mountains, and came under the rock of the Fighting Man.
|
||
There they kissed and comforted each other in memory of the terror
|
||
and loneliness wherewith they had entered the Mountains that other time;
|
||
though, sooth to say, it was to them now like the reading of sorrow
|
||
in a book.
|
||
|
||
But when they came out with joyful hearts into the green plain
|
||
betwixt the mountains and the River of Lava, they looked westward,
|
||
and beheld no great way off a little bower or cot, builded of boughs
|
||
and rushes by a blackthorn copse; and as they rode toward it they
|
||
saw a man come forth therefrom, and presently saw that he was hoary,
|
||
a man with a long white beard. Then Ralph gave a glad cry,
|
||
and set spurs to his horse and galloped over the plain;
|
||
for he deemed that it could be none other than the Sage of Swevenham;
|
||
and Ursula came pricking after him laughing for joy.
|
||
The old man abode their coming, and Ralph leapt off his horse
|
||
at once, and kissed and embraced him; but the Sage said:
|
||
"There is no need to ask thee of tidings; for thine eyes and thine whole
|
||
body tell me that thou hast drunk of the Well at the World's End.
|
||
And that shall be better for thee belike than it has been for me;
|
||
though for me also the world has not gone ill after my fashion
|
||
since I drank of that water."
|
||
|
||
Then was Ursula come up, and she also lighted down and made much
|
||
of the Sage. But he said: "Hail, daughter! It is sweet to see
|
||
thee so, and to wot that thou art in the hands of a mighty man:
|
||
for I know that Ralph thy man is minded for his Father's House,
|
||
and the deeds that abide him there; and I think we may journey
|
||
a little way together; for as for me, I would go back to Swevenham
|
||
to end my days there, whether they be long or short."
|
||
|
||
But Ralph said: "As for that, thou mayst go further than Swevenham,
|
||
and as far as Upmeads, where there will be as many to love and cherish
|
||
thee as at Swevenham."
|
||
|
||
The old man laughed a little, and reddened withal, but answered nothing.
|
||
|
||
Then they untrussed their sumpter-beast, and took meat and drink from
|
||
his burden, and they ate and drank together, sitting on the green grass there;
|
||
and the twain made great joy of the Sage, and told him the whole tale;
|
||
and he told them that he had been abiding there since the spring-tide,
|
||
lest they might have turned back without accomplishing their quest,
|
||
and then may-happen he should have been at hand to comfort them,
|
||
or the one of them left, if so it had befallen. "But," quoth he,
|
||
"since ye have verily drunk of the Well at the World's End, ye have come
|
||
back no later than I looked for you."
|
||
|
||
That night they slept in the bower there, and on the morrow betimes,
|
||
the Sage drove together three or four milch goats that he pastured there,
|
||
and went their ways over the plain, and so in due time entered into the
|
||
lava-sea. But the first night that they lay there, though it was moonless and
|
||
somewhat cloudy, they saw no glare of the distant earth-fires which they had
|
||
looked for; and when on the morrow they questioned the Sage thereof, he said:
|
||
"The Earth-fires ceased about the end of last year, as I have heard tell.
|
||
But sooth it is that the foreboding of the Giant's Candle was not for naught.
|
||
For there hath verily been a change of masters at Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "for better or worse?"
|
||
|
||
Said the Sage: "It could scarce have been for worse;
|
||
but if rumour runneth right it is much for the better.
|
||
Hearken how I learned thereof. One fair even of late March,
|
||
a little before I set off hither, as I was sitting before
|
||
the door of my house, I saw the glint of steel through the wood,
|
||
and presently rode up a sort of knights and men-at-arms, about
|
||
a score; and at the head of them a man on a big red-roan horse,
|
||
with his surcoat blazoned with a white bull on a green field:
|
||
he was a man black-haired, but blue-eyed; not very big,
|
||
but well knit and strong, and looked both doughty
|
||
and knightly; and he wore a gold coronet about his basnet:
|
||
so not knowing his blazonry, I wondered who it was that durst
|
||
be so bold as to ride in the lands of the Lord of Utterbol.
|
||
Now he rode up to me and craved a drink of milk,
|
||
for he had seen my goats; so I milked two goats for him,
|
||
and brought whey for the others, whereas I had no more goats
|
||
in milk at that season. So the bull-knight spake to me about
|
||
the woodland, and wherefore I dwelt there apart from others;
|
||
somewhat rough in his speech he was, yet rather jolly than fierce;
|
||
and he thanked me for the bever kindly enough, and said:
|
||
"I deem that it will not avail to give thee money;
|
||
but I shall give thee what may be of avail to thee.
|
||
Ho, Gervaise! give me one of those scrolls!" So a squire hands
|
||
him a parchment and he gave it me, and it was a safe-conduct
|
||
to the bearer from the Lord of Utterbol; but whereas I saw
|
||
that the seal bore not the Bear on the Castle-wall, but the Bull,
|
||
and that the superscription was unknown to me, I held the said
|
||
scroll in my hand and wondered; and the knight said to me:
|
||
"Yea, look long at it; but so it is, though thou trow it not, that I
|
||
am verily Lord of Utterbol, and that by conquest; so that belike I
|
||
am mightier than he was, for that mighty runagate have I slain.
|
||
And many there be who deem that no mishap, heathen though I be.
|
||
Come thou to Utterbol and see for thyself if the days be not
|
||
changed there; and thou shalt have a belly-full of meat and drink,
|
||
and honour after thy deserving." So they rested a while,
|
||
and then went their ways. To Utterbol I went not, but ere I
|
||
departed to come hither two or three carles strayed my way,
|
||
as whiles they will, who told me that this which the knight
|
||
had said was naught but the sooth, and that great was the change
|
||
of days at Utterbol, whereas all men there, both bond and free,
|
||
were as merry as they deserved to be, or belike merrier."
|
||
|
||
Ralph pondered this tale, and was not so sure but that this new lord
|
||
was not Bull Shockhead, his wartaken thrall; natheless he held his peace;
|
||
but Ursula said: "I marvel not much at the tale, for sure I am,
|
||
that had Gandolf of the Bear been slain when I was at Utterbol,
|
||
neither man nor woman had stirred a finger to avenge him.
|
||
But all feared him, I scarce know why; and, moreover, there was none
|
||
to be master if he were gone."
|
||
|
||
Thereafter she told more tales of the miseries of Utterbol than Ralph
|
||
had yet heard, as though this tale of the end of that evil rule had set
|
||
her free to utter them; and they fell to talking of others matters.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 3
|
||
|
||
They Winter With the Sage; and Thereafter Come Again to Vale Turris
|
||
|
||
|
||
Thus with no peril and little pain they came to the Sage's hermitage;
|
||
and whereas the autumn was now wearing, and it was not to be looked
|
||
for that they should cross even the mountains west of Goldburg,
|
||
let alone those to the west of Cheaping Knowe, when winter had once
|
||
set in, Ralph and Ursula took the Sage's bidding to abide the winter
|
||
through with him, and set forth on their journey again when spring
|
||
should be fairly come and the mountain ways be clear of snow.
|
||
|
||
So they dwelt there happily enough; for they helped the Sage in his husbandry,
|
||
and he enforced him to make them cheer, and read in the ancient book to them,
|
||
and learned them as much as it behoved them to hearken; and told them tales
|
||
of past time.
|
||
|
||
Thereafter when May was at hand they set out on their road, and whereas
|
||
the Sage knew the wood well, he made a long story short by bringing them
|
||
to Vale Turris in four days' time. But when they rode down into the dale,
|
||
they saw the plain meads below the Tower all bright with tents and booths,
|
||
and much folk moving about amidst them; here and there amidst the roofs
|
||
of cloth withal was showing the half finished frame of a timber house
|
||
a-building. But now as they looked and wondered what might be toward,
|
||
a half score of weaponed men rode up to them and bade them, but courteously,
|
||
to come with them to see their Lord. The Sage drew forth his
|
||
let-pass thereat; but the leader of the riders said, as he shook his head:
|
||
"That is good for thee, father; but these two knights must needs give
|
||
an account of themselves: for my lord is minded to put down all lifting
|
||
throughout his lands; therefore hath he made the meshes of his net small.
|
||
But if these be thy friends it will be well. Therefore thou art free
|
||
to come with them and bear witness to their good life."
|
||
|
||
Here it must be said that since they were on the road again Ursula
|
||
had donned her wargear once more, and as she rode was to all men's
|
||
eyes naught but a young and slender knight.
|
||
|
||
So without more ado they followed those men-at-arms, and saw
|
||
how the banner of the Bull was now hung out from the Tower;
|
||
and the sergeants brought them into the midst of the vale,
|
||
where, about those tents and those half-finished frame-houses
|
||
(whereof they saw six) was a market toward and much concourse of folk.
|
||
But the sergeants led through them and the lanes of the booths
|
||
down to the side of the river, where on a green knoll,
|
||
with some dozen of men-at-arms and captains about him,
|
||
sat the new Lord of Utterbol.
|
||
|
||
Now as the others drew away from him to right and left, the Lord sat before
|
||
Ralph with naught to hide him, and when their eyes met Ralph gave a cry
|
||
as one astonished; and the Lord of Utterbol rose up to his feet and shouted,
|
||
and then fell a laughing joyously, and then cried out: "Welcome, King's Son,
|
||
and look on me! for though the feathers be fine 'tis the same bird.
|
||
I am Lord of Utterbol and therewithal Bull Shockhead, whose might was less
|
||
than thine on the bent of the mountain valley."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he caught hold of Ralph's hand, and sat himself down and drew
|
||
Ralph down, and made him sit beside him.
|
||
|
||
"Thou seest I am become great?" said he. "Yea," said Ralph,
|
||
"I give thee joy thereof!" Said the new Lord:
|
||
"Perchance thou wilt be deeming that since I was once
|
||
thy war-taken thrall I should give myself up to thee:
|
||
but I tell thee I will not: for I have much to do here.
|
||
Moreover I did not run away from thee, but thou rannest
|
||
from me, lad."
|
||
|
||
Thereat in his turn Ralph fell a laughing, and when he might speak he said:
|
||
"What needeth the lord of all these spears to beg off his service
|
||
to the poor wandering knight?"
|
||
|
||
Then Bull put his arms about him, and said:
|
||
"I am fain at the sight of thee, time was thou wert a kind
|
||
lad and a good master; yet naught so merry as thou shouldest
|
||
have been; but now I see that gladness plays all about
|
||
thy face, and sparkles in thine eyes; and that is good.
|
||
But these thy fellows? I have seen the old carle before:
|
||
he was dwelling in the wildwood because he was overwise
|
||
to live with other folk. But this young man, who may he be?
|
||
Or else--yea, verily, it is a young woman. Yea, and now
|
||
I deem that it is the thrall of my brother Bull Nosy.
|
||
Therefore by heritage she is now mine."
|
||
|
||
Ralph heard the words but saw not the smiling face, so wroth he was;
|
||
therefore the bare sword was in his fist in a twinkling.
|
||
But ere he could smite Bull caught hold of his wrist, and said:
|
||
"Master, master, thou art but a sorry lawyer, or thou wouldst have said:
|
||
'Thou art my thrall, and how shall a thrall have heritage?'
|
||
Dost thou not see that I cannot own her till I be free, and that thou
|
||
wilt not give me my freedom save for hers? There, now is all
|
||
the matter of the service duly settled, and I am free and a Lord.
|
||
And this damsel is free also, and--yea, is she not thy
|
||
well-beloved, King's Son?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph was somewhat abashed, and said: "I crave thy pardon, Lord,
|
||
for misdoubting thee: but think how feeble are we two lovers
|
||
amongst the hosts of the aliens."
|
||
|
||
"It is well, it is well," said Bull, "and in very sooth I deem
|
||
thee my friend; and this damsel was my brother's friend.
|
||
Sit down, dear maiden, I bid thee; and thou also, O man overwise;
|
||
and let us drink a cup, and then we will talk about what we
|
||
may do for each other."
|
||
|
||
So they sat down all on the grass, and the Lord of Utterbol called
|
||
for wine, and they drank together in the merry season of May;
|
||
and the new Lord said: "Here be we friends come together,
|
||
and it were pity of our lives if we must needs sunder speedily:
|
||
howbeit, it is thou must rule herein, King's Son;
|
||
for in my eyes thou art still greater than I, O my master.
|
||
For I can see in thine eyes and thy gait, and in thine also,
|
||
maiden, that ye have drunk of the Well at the World's End.
|
||
Therefore I pray you gently and heartily that ye come home
|
||
with me to Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
Ralph shook his head, and answered: "Lord of Utterbol,
|
||
I bid thee all thanks for thy friendliness, but it may not be."
|
||
|
||
"But take note," said Bull, "that all is changed there, and it hath
|
||
become a merry dwelling of men. We have cast down the Red Pillar,
|
||
and the White and the Black also; and it is no longer a place of torment
|
||
and fear, and cozening and murder; but the very thralls are happy
|
||
and free-spoken. Now come ye, if it were but for a moon's wearing:
|
||
I shall be there in eight days' time. Yea, Lord Ralph, thou would'st
|
||
see old acquaintance there withal: for when I slew the tyrant,
|
||
who forsooth owed me no less than his life for the murder
|
||
of my brother, I made atonement to his widow, and wedded her:
|
||
a fair woman as thou wottest, lord, and of good kindred, and of no
|
||
ill conditions, as is well seen now that she lives happy days.
|
||
Though I have heard say that while she was under the tyrant she
|
||
was somewhat rough with her women when she was sad. Eh, fair sir!
|
||
but is it not so that she cast sheep's eyes on thee, time was,
|
||
in this same dale?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph reddened and answered naught; and Bull spake again, laughing:
|
||
"Yea, so it is: she told me that much herself, and afterwards I heard more
|
||
from her damsel Agatha, who told me the merry tale of that device they made
|
||
to catch thee, and how thou brakest through the net. Forsooth, though this
|
||
she told me not, I deem that she would have had the same gift of thee as her
|
||
mistress would. Well, lad, lucky are they with whom all women are in love.
|
||
So now I prithee trust so much in thy luck as to come with me to Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
Quoth Ralph: "Once again, Lord of Utterbol, we thank thee;
|
||
but whereas thou hast said that thou hast much to do in
|
||
this land; even so I have a land where deeds await me.
|
||
For I stole myself away from my father and mother, and who knows
|
||
what help they need of me against foemen, and evil days;
|
||
and now I might give help to them were I once at home,
|
||
and to the people of the land also, who are a stout-hearted
|
||
and valiant and kindly folk."
|
||
|
||
The new Lord's face clouded somewhat, as he said: "If thine
|
||
heart draweth thee to thy kindred, there is no more to say.
|
||
As for me, what I did was for kindred's sake, and then
|
||
what followed after was the work of need. Well, let it be!
|
||
But since we must needs part hastily, this at least I bid you,
|
||
that ye abide with me for to-night, and the banquet in
|
||
the great pavilion. Howsoever ye may be busied, gainsay me
|
||
not this; and to-morrow I shall further you on your way,
|
||
and give you a score of spears to follow thee to Goldburg.
|
||
Then as for Goldburg and Cheaping Knowe, see ye to it yourselves:
|
||
but beyond Cheaping Knowe and the plain country, thy name is known,
|
||
and the likeness of thee told in words; and no man in those
|
||
mountains shall hurt or hinder thee, but all thou meetest shall aid
|
||
and further thee. Moreover, at the feast to-night thou shalt see
|
||
thy friend Otter, and he and I betwixt us shall tell thee how I
|
||
came to Utterbol, and of the change of days, and how it betid.
|
||
For he is now my right-hand man, as he was of the dead man.
|
||
Forsooth, after the slaying I would have had him take the lordship
|
||
of Utterbol, but he would not, so I must take it perforce or be slain,
|
||
and let a new master reign there little better than the old.
|
||
Well then, how sayest thou? Or wilt thou run from me without
|
||
leave-taking, as thou didst ere-while at Goldburg?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed at his word, and said that he would not be so
|
||
churlish this time, but would take his bidding with a good heart;
|
||
and thereafter they fell to talking of many things.
|
||
But Ralph took note of Bull, that now his hair and beard
|
||
were trim and his raiment goodly, for all his rough speech
|
||
and his laughter and heart-whole gibes and mocking, his aspect
|
||
and bearing was noble and knightly.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 4
|
||
|
||
A Feast in the Red Pavilion
|
||
|
||
|
||
So in a while they went with him to the Tower, and there was
|
||
woman's raiment of the best gotten for Ursula, and afterwards at
|
||
nightfall they went to the feast in the Red Pavillion of Utterbol,
|
||
which awhile ago the now-slain Lord of Utterbol had let make;
|
||
and it was exceeding rich with broidery of pearl and gems:
|
||
since forsooth gems and fair women were what the late lord
|
||
had lusted for the most, and have them he would at the price
|
||
of howsoever many tears and groans. But that pavilion was yet
|
||
in all wise as it was wont to be, saving that the Bull had
|
||
supplanted the Bear upon the Castle-wall.
|
||
|
||
Now the wayfarers were treated with all honour and were set
|
||
upon the high-seat, Ralph upon the right-hand of the Lord,
|
||
and Ursula upon his left, and the Sage of Swevenham out from her.
|
||
But on Ralph's right hand was at first a void place,
|
||
whereto after a while came Otter, the old Captain of the Guard.
|
||
He came in hastily, and as though he had but just taken his armour off:
|
||
for his raiment was but such as the men-at-arm of that country were
|
||
wont to wear under their war-gear, and was somewhat stained and worn;
|
||
whereas the other knights and lords were arrayed grandly in silks
|
||
and fine cloth embroidered and begemmed.
|
||
|
||
Otter was fain when he saw Ralph, and kissed and embraced him, and said:
|
||
"Forsooth, I saw by thy face, lad, that the world would be soft before thee;
|
||
and now that I behold thee I know already that thou hast won thy quest;
|
||
and the Gods only know to what honour thou shalt attain."
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed for joy of him, and yet said soberly: "As to honour, meseems I
|
||
covet little world's goods, save that it may be well with my folk at home."
|
||
Nevertheless as the words were out of his mouth his thought went back
|
||
to the tall man whom he had first met at the churchyard gate of Netherton,
|
||
and it seemed to him that he wished his thriving, yea, and in a lesser way,
|
||
he wished the same to Roger of the Rope-walk, whereas he deemed that both
|
||
of these, each in his own way, had been true to the lady whom he had lost.
|
||
|
||
Then Otter fell a-talking to him of the change of days at Utterbol, and how
|
||
that it was the Lord's intent that a cheaping town should grow up in the Dale
|
||
of the Tower, and that the wilderness beyond it should be tilled and builded.
|
||
"And," said he, "if this be done, and the new lord live to see it, as he may,
|
||
being but young of years, he may become exceedingly mighty, and if he hold
|
||
on in the way whereas he now is, he shall be well-beloved also."
|
||
|
||
So they spake of many things, and there was minstrelsy and diverse joyance,
|
||
till at last the Lord of Utterbol stood up and said: "Now bring in the Bull,
|
||
that we may speak some words over him; for this is a great feast."
|
||
Ralph wondered what bull this might be whereof he spake; but the harps
|
||
and fiddlers, and all instruments of music struck up a gay and gallant tune,
|
||
and presently there came into the hall four men richly attired, who held
|
||
up on spears a canopy of bawdekin, under which went a man-at-arms helmed,
|
||
and clad in bright armour, who held in his hands a great golden cup
|
||
fashioned like to a bull, and he bore it forth unto the dais, and gave
|
||
it into the hands of the Lord. Then straightway all the noise ceased,
|
||
and the glee and clatter of the hall, and there was dead silence.
|
||
Then the Lord held the cup aloft and said in a loud voice:
|
||
|
||
"Hail, all ye folk! I swear by the Bull, and they that made him,
|
||
that in three years' time or less I will have purged all the lands
|
||
of Utterbol of all strong-thieves and cruel tyrants, be they big
|
||
or little, till all be peace betwixt the mountains and the mark
|
||
of Goldburg; and the wilderness shall blossom like the rose.
|
||
Or else shall I die in the pain."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he drank of the cup, and all men shouted. Then he sat him
|
||
down and bade hand the cup to Otter; and Otter took the cup and looked
|
||
into the bowl and saw the wave of wine, and laughed and cried out:
|
||
"As for me, what shall I swear but that I will follow the Bull through
|
||
thick and thin, through peace and unpeace, through grief and joy.
|
||
This is my oath-swearing."
|
||
|
||
And he drank mightily and sat down.
|
||
|
||
Then turned the Lord to Ralph and said: "And thou who art my master,
|
||
wilt thou not tell thy friends and the Gods what thou wilt do?"
|
||
|
||
"No great matter, belike," said Ralph; "but if ye will it,
|
||
I will speak out my mind thereon."
|
||
|
||
"We will it," said the Lord.
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph arose and took the cup and lifted it and spake:
|
||
"This I swear, that I will go home to my kindred, yet on
|
||
the road will I not gainsay help to any that craveth it.
|
||
So may all Hallows help me!"
|
||
|
||
Therewith he drank: and Bull said: "This is well said, O happy man!
|
||
But now that men have drunk well, do ye three and Otter come with me
|
||
into the Tower, whereas the chambers are dight for you, that I may make
|
||
the most of this good day wherein I have met thee again."
|
||
|
||
So they went with him, and when they had sat down in the goodliest
|
||
chamber of the Tower, and they had been served with wine and spices,
|
||
the new Lord said to Ralph: "And now, my master, wilt thou
|
||
not ask somewhat concerning me?" "Yea," said Ralph, "I will ask
|
||
thee to tell the tale of how thou camest into thy Lordship."
|
||
Said the Lord, "This shall ye hear of me with Otter to help
|
||
me out. Hearken!"
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 5
|
||
|
||
Bull Telleth of His Winning of the Lordship of Utterbol
|
||
|
||
|
||
"When thou rannest away from me, and left me alone at Goldburg,
|
||
I was grieved; then Clement Chapman offered to take me back with him
|
||
to his own country, which, he did me to wit, lieth hard by thine:
|
||
but I would not go with him, since I had an inkling that I
|
||
should find the slayer of my brother and be avenged on him.
|
||
So the Chapmen departed from Goldberg after that Clement had
|
||
dealt generously by me for thy sake; and when they were gone
|
||
I bethought me what to do, and thou knowest I can some skill
|
||
with the fiddle and song, so I betook myself to that craft,
|
||
both to earn somewhat and that I might gather tidings and be
|
||
little heeded, till within awhile folk got to know me well,
|
||
and would often send for me to their merry-makings, where they
|
||
gave me fiddler's wages, to wit, meat, drink, and money.
|
||
So what with one thing what with another I was rich enough
|
||
to leave Goldburg and fall to my journey unto Utterbol;
|
||
since I misdoubted me from the first that the caytiff who had
|
||
slain my brother was the Lord thereof.
|
||
|
||
"But one day when I went into the market-place I found a great
|
||
stir and clutter there; some folk, both men and women screeching
|
||
and fleeing, and some running to bows and other weapons.
|
||
So I caught hold of one of the fleers, and asked him what was toward;
|
||
and he cried out, 'Loose me! let me go! he is loose, he is loose!'
|
||
|
||
"'Who is loose, fool?' quoth I. 'The lion,' said he, and therewith
|
||
in the extremity of his terror tore himself away from me and fled.
|
||
By this time the others also had got some distance away from me,
|
||
and I was left pretty much alone. So I went forth on a little,
|
||
looking about me, and sure enough under one of the pillars
|
||
of the cloister beneath the market-house (the great green pillar,
|
||
if thou mindest it), lay crouched a huge yellow lion, on the carcase
|
||
of a goat, which he had knocked down, but would not fall to eating
|
||
of amidst all that cry and hubbub.
|
||
|
||
"Now belike one thing of me thou wottest not, to wit, that I
|
||
have a gift that wild things love and will do my bidding.
|
||
The house-mice will run over me as I lie awake looking on them;
|
||
the small birds will perch on my shoulders without fear;
|
||
the squirrels and hares will gambol about quite close to me
|
||
as if I were but a tree; and, withal, the fiercest hound
|
||
or mastiff is tame before me. Therefore I feared not
|
||
this lion, and, moreover, I looked to it that if I might tame
|
||
him thoroughly, he would both help me to live as a jongleur,
|
||
and would be a sure ward to me.
|
||
|
||
"So I walked up towards him quietly, till he saw me and half rose
|
||
up growling; but I went on still, and said to him in a peaceable voice:
|
||
'How now, yellow mane! what aileth thee? down with thee, and eat thy meat.'
|
||
So he sat down to his quarry again, but growled still, and I went up close
|
||
to him, and said to him: 'Eat in peace and safety, am I not here?'
|
||
And therewith I held out my bare hand unclenched to him, and he smelt to it,
|
||
and straightway began to be peaceable, and fell to tearing the goat,
|
||
and devouring it, while I stood by speaking to him friendly.
|
||
|
||
"But presently I saw weapons glitter on the other side of the square place,
|
||
and men with bended bows. The yellow king saw them also, and rose
|
||
up again and stood growling; then I strove to quiet him, and said,
|
||
'These shall not harm thee.'
|
||
|
||
"Therewith the men cried out to me to come away, for they would shoot:
|
||
But I called out; 'Shoot not yet! but tell me, does any man own this beast?'
|
||
'Yea,' said one, 'I own him, and happy am I that he doth not own me.'
|
||
Said I, 'Wilt thou sell him?' 'Yea' said he, 'if thou livest another
|
||
hour to tell down the money.' Said I, 'I am a tamer of wild beasts,
|
||
and if thou wilt sell this one at such a price, I will rid thee of him.'
|
||
The man yeasaid this, but kept well aloof with his fellows, who looked on,
|
||
handling their weapons.
|
||
|
||
"Then I turned to my new-bought thrall and bade him come with me,
|
||
and he followed me like a dog to his cage, which was hard by;
|
||
and I shut him in there, and laid down the money to his owner;
|
||
and folk came round about, and wondered, and praised me.
|
||
But I said: 'My masters, have ye naught of gifts for the tamer
|
||
of beasts, and the deliverer of men?' Thereat they laughed:
|
||
but they brought me money and other goods, till I had gotten
|
||
far more than I had given for the lion.
|
||
|
||
"Howbeit the next day the officers of the Porte came and bade
|
||
me avoid the town of Goldburg, but gave me more money withal.
|
||
I was not loth thereto, but departed, riding a little horse
|
||
that I had, and leading my lion by a chain, though when I
|
||
was by he needed little chaining.
|
||
|
||
"So that without more ado I took the road to Utterbol,
|
||
and wheresoever I came, I had what was to be had that I would;
|
||
neither did any man fall on me, or on my lion. For though they
|
||
might have shot him or slain him with many spear-thrusts, yet
|
||
besides that they feared him sorely, they feared me still more;
|
||
deeming me some mighty sending from their Gods.
|
||
|
||
"Thus came I to Utterness, and found it poor and wretched,
|
||
(as forsooth, it yet is, but shall not be so for long). But
|
||
the House of Utterbol is exceeding fair and stately (as thou
|
||
mightest have learned from others, my master,) and its gardens,
|
||
and orchards, and acres, and meadows as goodly as may be.
|
||
Yea, a very paradise; yet the dwellers therein as if it were hell,
|
||
as I saw openly with mine own eyes.
|
||
|
||
"To be short, the fame of me and my beast had somehow gone before me, and when
|
||
I came to the House, I was dealt with fairly, and had good entertainment:
|
||
and this all the more, as the Lord was away for a while, and the life
|
||
of folk not so hard by a great way as it had been if he had been there:
|
||
but the Lady was there in the house, and on the morrow of my coming by
|
||
her command, I brought my lion before her window and made him come and go,
|
||
and fetch and carry at my bidding, and when I had done my play she bade me up
|
||
into her bower, and bade me sit and had me served with wine, while she asked
|
||
me many questions as to my country and friends, and whence and whither I was;
|
||
and I answered her with the very sooth, so far as the sooth was handy;
|
||
and there was with her but one of her women, even thy friend Agatha, fair sir.
|
||
|
||
"Methought both that this Queen was a fair woman, and that she looked
|
||
kindly upon me, and at last she said, sighing, that she were well at
|
||
ease if her baron were even such a man as I, whereas the said Lord
|
||
was fierce and cruel, and yet a dastard withal. But the said Agatha
|
||
turned on her, and chided her, as one might with a child, and said:
|
||
'Hold thy peace of thy loves and thy hates before a very stranger!
|
||
Or must I leave yet more of my blood on the pavement of the White Pillar,
|
||
for the pleasure of thy loose tongue? Come out now, mountain-carle!'
|
||
|
||
"And she took me by the hand and led me out, and when we had
|
||
passed the door and it was shut, she turned to me and said:
|
||
'Thou, if I hear any word abroad of what my Lady has just spoken,
|
||
I shall know that thou hast told it, and though I be but a thrall,
|
||
yea, and of late a mishandled one, yet am I of might enough
|
||
in Utterbol to compass thy destruction.'
|
||
|
||
"I laughed in her face and went my ways: and thereafter I saw many folk
|
||
and showed them my beast, and soon learned two things clearly.
|
||
|
||
"And first that the Lord and the Lady were now utterly at variance.
|
||
For a little before he had come home, and found a lack in his household--
|
||
to wit, how a certain fair woman whom he had but just got hold of,
|
||
and whom he lusted after sorely, was fled away. And he laid
|
||
the wyte thereof on his Lady, and threatened her with death:
|
||
and when he considered that he durst not slay her, or torment her
|
||
(for he was verily but a dastard), he made thy friend Agatha pay
|
||
for her under pretence of wringing a true tale out of her.
|
||
|
||
"Now when I heard this story I said to myself that I should hear
|
||
that other one of the slaying of my brother, and even so it befell.
|
||
For I came across a man who told me when and how the Lord came
|
||
by the said damsel (whom I knew at once could be none other
|
||
than thou, Lady,) and how he had slain my brother to get her,
|
||
even as doubtless thou knowest, Lord Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"But the second thing which I learned was that all folk at Utterbol,
|
||
men and women, dreaded the home-coming of this tyrant;
|
||
and that there was no man but would have deemed it a good deed
|
||
to slay him. But, dastard as he was, use and wont, and the fear
|
||
that withholdeth rebels, and the doubt that draweth back slaves,
|
||
saved him; and they dreaded him moreover as a devil rather than a man.
|
||
Forsooth one of the men there, who looked upon me friendly, who had
|
||
had tidings of this evil beast drawing near, spake to me a word
|
||
of warning, and said: 'Friend lion-master, take heed to thyself!
|
||
For I fear for thee when the Lord cometh home and findeth thee here;
|
||
lest he let poison thy lion and slay thee miserably afterward.'
|
||
|
||
"Well, in three days from that word home cometh the Lord with a rout
|
||
of his spearmen, and some dozen of captives, whom he had taken.
|
||
And the morrow of his coming, he, having heard of me, sent and bade me
|
||
showing the wonder of the Man and the Lion; therefore in the bright morning
|
||
I played with the lion under his window as I had done by the Queen.
|
||
And after I had played some while, and he looking out of the window,
|
||
he called to me and said: 'Canst thou lull thy lion to sleep,
|
||
so that thou mayst leave him for a little? For I would fain have
|
||
thee up here.'
|
||
|
||
"I yeasaid that, and chid the beast, and then sang to him
|
||
till he lay down and slept like a hound weary with hunting.
|
||
And then I went up into the Lord's chamber; and as it happed,
|
||
all the while of my playing I had had my short-sword naked in
|
||
my hand, and thus, I deem without noting it, yet as weird would,
|
||
I came before the tyrant, where he sat with none anigh him
|
||
save this Otter and another man-at-arms. But when I saw him,
|
||
all the blood within me that was come of one mother with my
|
||
brother's blood stirred within me, and I set my foot on the
|
||
foot-pace of this murderer's chair, and hove up my short-sword,
|
||
and clave his skull, in front and with mine own hand:
|
||
not as he wrought, not as he wrought with my brother.
|
||
|
||
"Then I turned about to Otter (who had his sword in his fist
|
||
when it was too late) till he should speak. Hah Otter,
|
||
what didst thou say?"
|
||
|
||
Otter laughed: Quoth he, "I said: thus endeth the worst man in the world.
|
||
Well done, lion-tamer! thou art no ill guest, and hast paid on
|
||
the nail for meat, drink and lodging. But what shall we do now?
|
||
Then thou saidst; 'Well, I suppose thou wilt be for slaying me.'
|
||
'Nay,' said I, 'We will not slay thee; at least not for this, nor now,
|
||
nor without terms.' Thou saidst: 'Perchance then thou wilt let me
|
||
go free, since this man was ill-beloved: yea, and he owed me a life.'
|
||
'Nay, nay,' said I, 'not so fast, good beast-lord.' 'Why not?'
|
||
saidst thou, 'I can see of thee that thou art a valiant man, and whereas
|
||
thou hast been captain of the host, and the men-at-arms will lightly
|
||
do thy bidding, why shouldest thou not sit in the place of this man,
|
||
and be Lord of Utterbol?'
|
||
|
||
"'Nay nay,' said I, 'it will not do, hearken thou rather:
|
||
For here I give thee the choice of two things, either that thou
|
||
be Lord of Utterbol, or that we slay thee here and now.
|
||
For we be two men all-armed.'
|
||
|
||
"Thou didst seem to ponder it a while, and then saidst at last:
|
||
'Well, I set not out on this journey with any such-like intent;
|
||
yet will I not wrestle with weird. Only I forewarn thee that I
|
||
shall change the days of Utterbol.'
|
||
|
||
"'It will not be for the worst then,' quoth I. 'So now go
|
||
wake up thy lion, and lead him away to his den: and we will
|
||
presently send him this carrion for a reward of his jonglery.'
|
||
'Gramercy, butcher,' saidst thou, 'I am not for thy flesh-meat
|
||
to-day. I was forewarned that the poor beast should be poisoned
|
||
at this man's home-coming, and so will he be if he eat
|
||
of this dastard; he will not outlive such a dinner.'
|
||
Thereat we all laughed heartily."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Bull, "So I went to lead away the lion when thou hadst bidden
|
||
me return in an hours' wearing, when all should be ready for my Lordship.
|
||
And thou wert not worse than thy word, for when I came into that court again,
|
||
there were all the men-at-arms assembled, and the free carles,
|
||
and the thralls; and the men-at-arms raised me on a shield, set a crowned
|
||
helm on my head, and thrust a great sword into my hand, and hailed me
|
||
by the name of the Bull of Utterbol, Lord of the Waste and the Wildwood,
|
||
and the Mountain-side: and then thou, Otter, wert so simple as to kneel before
|
||
me and name thyself my man, and take the girding on of sword at my hand.
|
||
Then even as I was I went in to my Lady and told her the end of my tale,
|
||
and in three minutes she lay in my arms, and in three days in my bed as my
|
||
wedded wife. As to Agatha, when I had a little jeered her, I gave her rich
|
||
gifts and good lands, and freedom, to boot her for her many stripes.
|
||
And lo there, King's Son and Sweet Lady, the end of all my tale."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," quoth Otter, "saving this, that even already thou has
|
||
raised up Utterbol from Hell to Earth, and yet meseemeth thou
|
||
hast good-will to raise it higher."
|
||
|
||
Bull reddened at his word, and said: "Tush, man! praise the day
|
||
when the sun has set." Then he turned to Ralph, and said:
|
||
"Yet couldst thou at whiles put in a good word for me here and there
|
||
amongst the folks that thou shalt pass through on thy ways home,
|
||
I were fain to know that I had a well-speaking friend abroad."
|
||
"We shall do no less," said Ralph; and Ursula spake in like wise.
|
||
|
||
So they talked together merrily a while longer, till night began to grow old,
|
||
and then went to their chambers in all content and good-liking.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 6
|
||
|
||
They Ride From Vale Turris. Redhead Tells of Agatha
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow when they arose, Ralph heard the sound of horses
|
||
and the clashing of arms: he went to the window, and looked out,
|
||
and saw how the spears stood up thick together at the Tower's foot,
|
||
and knew that these were the men who were to be his fellows by the way.
|
||
Their captain he saw, a big man all-armed in steel, but himseemed that
|
||
he knew his face under his sallet, and presently saw that it was Redhead.
|
||
He was glad thereof, and clad himself hastily, and went out a-doors,
|
||
and went up to him and hailed him, and Redhead leapt off his horse,
|
||
and cast his arms about Ralph, and made much of him, and said:
|
||
"It is good for sore eyes to see thee, lord; and I am glad at heart
|
||
that all went well with thee that time. Although, forsooth, there was
|
||
guile behind it. Yet whereas I wotted nothing thereof, which I
|
||
will pray thee to believe, and whereas thou hast the gain of all,
|
||
I deem thou mayst pardon me."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Thou hast what pardon of me thou needest; so be content.
|
||
For the rest, little need is there to ask if thou thrivest, for I behold
|
||
thee glad and well honoured."
|
||
|
||
As they spoke came the Lord forth from the Tower, and said:
|
||
"Come thou, Lord Ralph, and eat with us ere thou takest to the road;
|
||
I mean with Otter and me. As for thee, Redhead, if aught of ill
|
||
befall this King's Son under thy way-leading, look to it that thou
|
||
shalt lose my good word with Agatha; yea, or gain my naysay herein;
|
||
whereby thou shalt miss both fee and fair dame."
|
||
|
||
Redhead looked sheepishly on Ralph at that word, yet winked at
|
||
him also, as if it pleased him to be jeered concerning his wooing;
|
||
so that Ralph saw how the land lay, and that the guileful handmaid
|
||
was not ill content with that big man. So he smiled kindly
|
||
on him and nodded, and went back with Bull into the Tower.
|
||
There they sat down all to meat together; and when they
|
||
were done with their victual, Bull spake, and said to Ralph:
|
||
"Fair King's Son, is this then the last sight of thee? wilt thou
|
||
never come over the mountains again?" Said Ralph: "Who knoweth?
|
||
I am young yet, and have drunk of the Water of the Well."
|
||
Bull grew somewhat pensive and said: "Yea, thou meanest
|
||
that thou mayest come back and find me no longer here.
|
||
Yet if thou findest but my grave-mound, yet mayhappen thou shalt
|
||
come on something said or sung of me, which shall please thee.
|
||
For I will tell thee, that thou hast changed my conditions;
|
||
how, I wot not."
|
||
|
||
"Thy word is good," said Ralph, "yet I meant not that; never should
|
||
I come to Utterbol if I looked not to find thee living there."
|
||
Bull smiled on him as though he loved him, and said:
|
||
"This is well spoken; I shall look to see thee before I die."
|
||
|
||
Then said Ursula: "Lord of Utterbol, this also thou mayst think on, that it
|
||
is no further from Utterbol to Upmeads than from Upmeads to Utterbol."
|
||
The Lord laughed and said: "Sooth is that; and were but my Bull here,
|
||
as I behold you I should be of mind to swear by him to come and see you
|
||
at Upmeads ere ten years have worn."
|
||
|
||
Then she put forth her hand and said: "Swear by this!"
|
||
So he took it and swore the oath; but the Sage of Swevenham said:
|
||
"This oath thou shalt keep to the gain and not the loss both
|
||
of thee and of thy friends of Upmeads."
|
||
|
||
Thus were they fain of each other, and Ralph saw how Bull's heart
|
||
was grown big, and he rejoiced thereat. But anon he arose and said:
|
||
"Now, Lord, we ask leave to depart for the way is long, and mayhappen
|
||
my kindred now lack a man's helping. Then Bull stood up and called
|
||
for his horse, and Otter also, and they all went forth and gat
|
||
a-horseback and rode away from Vale Turris, and Redhead rode
|
||
behind them humbly, till it was noon and they made stay for meat.
|
||
Then after they had broken bread together and drunk a cup Bull
|
||
and Otter kissed the wayfarers, and bade them farewell and so rode
|
||
back to Vale Turris, and Ralph and Ursula and the Sage tarried
|
||
not but rode on their ways.
|
||
|
||
But anon Ralph called to Redhead, and bade him ride beside
|
||
them that they might talk together, and he came up with them,
|
||
and Ursula greeted him kindly, and they were merry one with another.
|
||
And Ralph said to Redhead: "Friend captain, thou art exceeding
|
||
in humility not to ride with the Lord or Captain Otter;
|
||
save for chance-hap, I see not that thou art worser than they."
|
||
|
||
Redhead grinned, and said: "Well, as to Otter, that is all true;
|
||
but as for Lord Bull it is another matter; I wot not but his
|
||
kindred may be as good or better than any in these east parts.
|
||
In any case, he hath his kin and long descent full often
|
||
in his mouth, while I am but a gangrel body. Howbeit it
|
||
is all one, whereas whatso he or Otter bid any man to do,
|
||
he doeth it, but my bidding may be questioned at whiles.
|
||
And look you, lord, times are not ill, so wherefore should I
|
||
risk a change of days? Sooth to say, both these great lords
|
||
have done well by me."
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed: "And better will they do, as thou deemest;
|
||
give thee Agatha, to wit?" "Yea, fair sir," quoth Redhead.
|
||
"No great gift, that seemeth to me, for thy valiancy,"
|
||
said Ralph; "she is guileful enough and loose enough for a worse
|
||
man than thee."
|
||
|
||
"Lord," said Redhead, "even of her thou shalt say what pleaseth thee;
|
||
but no other man shall say of her what pleaseth me not.
|
||
For all that is come and gone she is true and valiant, and none may
|
||
say that she is not fair and sweet enough for a better man than me;
|
||
and my great good luck it is that, as I hope, she looketh no further
|
||
for a better."
|
||
|
||
Ursula said: "Is it so, perchance, that now she is free
|
||
and hath naught to fear, she hath no need for guile?"
|
||
"Hail to thee for thy word, lady," quoth Redhead; and then
|
||
he was silent, glooming somewhat on Ralph.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph said: "Nay, my friend, I meant no harm, but I was wondering
|
||
what had befallen to bring you two so close together."
|
||
|
||
"It was fear and pain, and the helping of each other that wrought it,"
|
||
said Redhead. Said Ursula: "Good Captain, how was it that she escaped
|
||
the uttermost of evil at the tyrant's hands? since from all that I have heard,
|
||
it must needs be that he laid the blame on her (working for her mistress)
|
||
of my flight from Utterbol."
|
||
|
||
"Even so it was, lady," said Redhead; "but, as thou wottest belike, she had
|
||
got it spread abroad that she was cunning in sorcery, and that her spell
|
||
would not end when her life ended; nay, that he to whom her ghost should
|
||
bear ill-will, and more especially such an one as might compass her death,
|
||
should have but an ill time of it while he lived, which should not be long.
|
||
This tale, which, sooth to say, I myself helped to spread, the Lord
|
||
of Utterbol trowed in wholly, so cunningly was it told; so that, to make
|
||
a long story short, he feared her, and feared her more dead than living.
|
||
So that when he came home, and found thee gone, lady, he did indeed
|
||
deem that thy flight was of Agatha's contrivance. And this the more
|
||
because his nephew (he whom thou didst beguile; I partly guess how)
|
||
told him a made-up tale how all was done by the spells of Agatha.
|
||
For this youth was of all men, not even saving his uncle, most full of malice;
|
||
and he hated Agatha, and would have had her suffer the uttermost of torments
|
||
and he to be standing by the while; howbeit his malice overshot itself,
|
||
since his tale made her even more of a witch than the lord deemed before.
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ursula, "and what hath befallen that evil
|
||
young man, Captain?" Said Redhead: "It is not known
|
||
to many, lady; but two days before the slaying of his uncle,
|
||
I met him in a wood a little way from Utterbol, and, the mood
|
||
being on me I tied him neck and heels and cast him, with a stone
|
||
round his neck, into a deep woodland pool hight the Ram's Bane,
|
||
which is in that same wood. Well, as to my tale of Agatha.
|
||
When the lord came home first, he sent for her, and his rage had
|
||
so mastered his fear for a while that his best word was scourge
|
||
and rack and faggot; but she was, outwardly, so calm and cold,
|
||
smiling on him balefully, that he presently came to himself, a found
|
||
that fear was in his belly, and that he might not do what he would
|
||
with her; wherefore he looked to it that however she were used
|
||
(which was ill enough, God wot!) she should keep the soul in her body.
|
||
And at last the fear so mounted into his head that he made
|
||
peace with her, and even craved forgiveness of her and gave
|
||
her gifts. She answered him sweetly indeed, yet so as he
|
||
(and all others who were bystanding, of whom I was one,)
|
||
might well see that she deemed she owed him a day in harvest.
|
||
As for me, he heeded me naught, and I lay low all I might.
|
||
And in any wise we wore the time till the great day of deliverance."
|
||
|
||
Therewith dropped the talk about Agatha, when they had bidden him all luck
|
||
in his life. Forsooth, they were fain of his words, and of his ways withal.
|
||
For he was a valiant man, and brisk, and one who forgat no benefit, and was
|
||
trusty as steel; merry-hearted withal, and kind and ready of speech despite
|
||
his uplandish manners, which a life not a little rude had thrust on him.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 7
|
||
|
||
Of Their Riding the Waste, and of a Battle Thereon
|
||
|
||
|
||
They slept in no house that night nor for many nights after;
|
||
for they were now fairly on the waste. They bore with them
|
||
a light tent for Ursula's lodging benights, and the rest
|
||
of them slept on the field as they might; or should they come
|
||
to a thicket or shaw, they would lodge them there softly.
|
||
Victual and drink failed them not, for they bore what they needed
|
||
on sumpter-horses, and shot some venison on the way withal.
|
||
They saw but few folk; for the most part naught save a fowler
|
||
of the waste, or a peat-cutter, who stood to look on the men-at-arms
|
||
going by, and made obeisance to the token of Utterbol .
|
||
|
||
But on a time, the fifth day of their journey, they saw, in the morning,
|
||
spears not a few standing up against a thicket-side in the offing.
|
||
Redhead looked under the sharp of his hand, and laughed as though
|
||
he were glad, and said: "I know not clearly what these may be,
|
||
but it looketh like war. Now, knight, this is best to do:
|
||
hold with thee three of our best men, so that ye may safe guard the Lady,
|
||
and I with the others will prick on and look into this."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "thou mayst yet be apaid of a man's aid;
|
||
and if there be strokes on sale in the cheaping-stead yonder,
|
||
I will deal along with thee. Leave thy three men with the Lady,
|
||
and let us on; we shall soon be back."
|
||
|
||
"Nay once more, dear lord," quoth Ursula, "I fear to be left alone
|
||
of thee, and it is meet that thou free me from fear. I will ride
|
||
with you, but three horse-lengths behind, so as not to hinder you.
|
||
I have been worse bestead than this shall be."
|
||
|
||
"It is good," quoth Redhead, "let her ride with us:
|
||
for why should she suffer the pain of fear in the lonely waste?
|
||
But let her do on a hauberk over her coats, and steel coif
|
||
over her head, for shaft and bolt will ofttimes go astray."
|
||
|
||
Even so they did, and rode forward, and presently they saw the spearmen
|
||
that they were somewhat more than their company, and that they
|
||
were well mounted on black horses and clad in black armour.
|
||
Then they drew rein for awhile and Redhead scanned them again and said:
|
||
"Yea, these are the men of the brother of thy hot wooer,
|
||
Lady Ursula, whom I cooled in the Ram's Bane, but a man well nigh
|
||
as old as his uncle, though he hath not made men tremble so sore,
|
||
albeit he be far the better man, a good warrior, a wise leader,
|
||
a reiver and lifter well wrought at all points. Well, 'tis not unlike
|
||
that we shall have to speak to his men again, either out-going
|
||
or home-coming: so we had best kill as many of these as we may now.
|
||
Do on thy sallet, my lord; and thou, Michael-a-green shake out the Bull;
|
||
and thou, our Noise, blow a point of war that they may be warned.
|
||
God to aid! but they be ready and speedy!"
|
||
|
||
In sooth even as the pennon of the Bull ran down the wind and the
|
||
Utterbol horn was winded, the Black men-at-arms came on at a trot,
|
||
and presently with a great screeching yell cast their spears
|
||
into the rest, and spurred on all they might, while a half score
|
||
of bowmen who had come out of the thicket bent their bows and fell
|
||
a-shooting. But now the men of Utterbol spurred to meet the foe,
|
||
and as Redhead cast his spear into the rest, he said to Ralph:
|
||
"Glad am I that thy Lady is anear to see me, for now I worship her."
|
||
|
||
Therewith the two bands met, and whereas on neither side was the armour
|
||
very stout, some men of either band were hurt or slain at once
|
||
with spearthrust; though, save for Ralph, they did not run straight
|
||
on each other; but fenced and foined with their spears deftly enough.
|
||
As for Ralph, he smote a tall man full on the breast and pierced him
|
||
through and through, and then pulled out the Upmeads blade and smote
|
||
on the right hand and the left, so that none came anigh him willingly.
|
||
|
||
Shortly to say it, in five minutes' time the Black Riders
|
||
were fleeing all over the field with them of Utterbol at
|
||
their heels, and the bowmen ran back again into the wood.
|
||
But one of the foemen as he fled cast a javelin at a venture,
|
||
and who should be before it save Ursula, so that she reeled
|
||
in her saddle, and would have fallen downright but for one of the
|
||
Utterbol fellows who stayed her, and got her gently off her horse.
|
||
This Ralph saw not, for he followed far in the chase, and was
|
||
coming back somewhat slowly along with Redhead, who was hurt,
|
||
but not sorely. So when he came up, and saw Ursula sitting on
|
||
the grass with four or five men about her, he sickened for fear;
|
||
but she rose up and came slowly and pale-faced to meet him,
|
||
and said: "Fear not, beloved, for steel kept out steel:
|
||
I have no scratch or point or edge on me." So therewith
|
||
he kissed her, and embraced her, and was glad.
|
||
|
||
The Utterbol Riders had slain sixteen of their foemen;
|
||
for they took none to mercy, and four of their band
|
||
were slain outright, and six hurt, but not grievously.
|
||
So they tarried awhile on the field of deed to rest them
|
||
and tend their wounded men, and so rode on again heedfully.
|
||
|
||
But Redhead spake: "It is good to see thee tilting, King's Son.
|
||
I doubt me I shall never learn thy downright thrust.
|
||
Dost thou remember how sorry a job I made of it, when we met
|
||
in the lists at Vale Turris that other day?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, yea," said Ralph. "Thou were best let that flea stick on the wall.
|
||
For to-day, at least, I have seen thee play at sharps deftly enough."
|
||
|
||
Quoth Redhead: "Lord, it is naught, a five minutes' scramble.
|
||
That which trieth a man, is to fight and overcome, and straight
|
||
have to fight with fresh foemen, and yet again, till ye long
|
||
for dark night to cover you--yea, or even death."
|
||
|
||
"Warrior-like and wisely thou speakest," said Ralph;
|
||
"and whoever thou servest thou shalt serve well.
|
||
And now once more I would it were me."
|
||
|
||
Redhead shook his head at that word, and said: "I would it might be so;
|
||
but it will not be so as now."
|
||
|
||
Forth on they rode, and slept in a wood that night, keeping good watch;
|
||
but saw no more of the Black Riders for that time.
|
||
|
||
On a day thereafter when it was nigh evening, Ralph looked about, and saw
|
||
a certain wood on the edge of a plain, and he stayed Ursula, and said:
|
||
"Look round about, beloved; for this is the very field whereas I was betrayed
|
||
into the hands of the men of Utterbol." She smiled on him and said:
|
||
"Let me light down then, that I may kiss the earth of that kind field,
|
||
where thou wert not stayed over long, but even long enough that we might
|
||
meet in the dark wood thereafter."
|
||
|
||
"Sweetling," said Ralph, "this mayst thou do and grieve no man,
|
||
not even for a little. For lo you! the captain is staying
|
||
the sumpter-beasts, and it is his mind, belike, that we shall sleep
|
||
in yonder wood to-night." Therewith he lighted down and she in likewise:
|
||
then he took her by the hand and led her on a few yards, and said:
|
||
"Lo, beloved, this quicken-tree; hereby it was that the tent was
|
||
pitched wherein I lay the night when I was taken."
|
||
|
||
She looked on him shyly and said: "Wilt thou not sleep here
|
||
once more to-night?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, well-beloved," said he, "I will bid them pitch thy tent
|
||
on this same place, that I may smell the wild thyme again,
|
||
as I did that other while."
|
||
|
||
So there on the field of his ancient grief they rested that night
|
||
in all love and content.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 8
|
||
|
||
Of Goldburg Again, and the Queen Thereof
|
||
|
||
|
||
Next day they went forth through the country wherethrough
|
||
Morfinn had led Ralph into captivity; and Redhead rode warily;
|
||
for there were many passes which looked doubtful: but whether
|
||
the ill men feared to meddle with them, or however it were,
|
||
none waylaid them, and they all came safely to the gate of Goldburg,
|
||
the towers whereof were full of folk looking forth on them.
|
||
So they displayed their pennon, and rode into the street,
|
||
where folk pressed about them in friendly wise; for the new
|
||
Lord of Utterbol had made firm and fast peace with Goldburg.
|
||
So they rode to the hostel, and gat them victual, and rested
|
||
in peace that night. But Ralph wondered whether the Queen
|
||
would send for him when she heard of his coming back again,
|
||
and he hoped that she would let him be; for he was ashamed
|
||
when he thought of her love for him, and how that he had clean
|
||
forgotten her till he was close to Goldburg again.
|
||
|
||
But when morning was come Ralph spake to Redhead and asked him
|
||
how he should do to wage men for the homeward journey on thence;
|
||
and Redhead said: "I have already seen the Clerk of the Porte,
|
||
and he will be here in an hour with the license for thee to wage
|
||
men to go with thee to Cheaping Knowe. As for me, I must needs
|
||
go see the King, and give him a letter sealed by my lord's hand;
|
||
and when I come back from him, I will go round to the alehouses which be
|
||
haunted of the men-at-arms to see after strong carles for thine avail.
|
||
But to the King hast thou no need to go, save he send for thee,
|
||
whereas thou art not come hither to chaffer, and he needeth not
|
||
men of war."
|
||
|
||
Ralph stared at him and said: "The King, sayst thou? is there
|
||
no Queen of Goldburg?" Said Redhead: "There is the King's
|
||
wedded wife, but her they call not Queen, but Lady."
|
||
"But the Queen that was," said Ralph, "where is she then?"
|
||
"Yea truly," said Redhead, "a Queen sat alone as ruler here a while ago;
|
||
but whether she died, or what befell her, I know nothing.
|
||
I had little to do with Goldburg till our lord conquered Utterbol.
|
||
Lo here the host! he may tell thee the tale thereof."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he departed, and left Ralph with the host, whom Ralph
|
||
questioned of the story, for his heart was wrung lest such a fair
|
||
woman and so friendly should have come to harm.
|
||
|
||
So the host sat down by Ralph and said: "My master, this is a tale
|
||
which is grievous to us: for though the saints forbid I should say a word
|
||
against my lord that is now, nor is there any need to, yet we deemed
|
||
us happy to be under so dear a lady and so good and fair as she was.
|
||
Well, she is gone so that we wot not whether she be living or dead.
|
||
For so it is that in the early spring, somewhat more than a year ago
|
||
that is, one morning when folk arose, the Queen's place was empty.
|
||
Riding and running there was about and about, but none the more was
|
||
she found. Forsooth as time wore, tales were told of what wise she
|
||
left us, and why: but she was gone. Well, fair sir, many deemed
|
||
that though her lineage was known by seeming, yet she was of the fairy,
|
||
and needed neither steed nor chariot to go where she would.
|
||
But her women and those that knew her best, deemed that whatso she were,
|
||
she had slain herself, as they thought, for some unhappiness of love.
|
||
For indeed she had long gone about sad and distraught, though she
|
||
neither wept, nor would say one word of her sorrow, whatsoever it might be.
|
||
|
||
"But, fair sir, since thou art a stranger, and art presently
|
||
departing from our city, I will tell thee a thing.
|
||
To wit; one month or so after she had vanished away,
|
||
I held talk with a certain old fisherman of our water,
|
||
and he told me that on that same night of her vanishing,
|
||
as he stood on the water-side handing the hawser of his barque,
|
||
and the sail was all ready to be sheeted home, there came along
|
||
the shore a woman going very swiftly, who, glancing about her,
|
||
as if to see that there was none looking on or prying, came up to him,
|
||
and prayed him in a sweet voice for instant passage down the water.
|
||
Wrapped she was in a dark cloak and a cowl over her head,
|
||
but as she put forth her hand to give him gold, he saw
|
||
even by the light of his lantern that it was exceeding fair,
|
||
and that great gems flashed from the finger-rings, and that there
|
||
was a great gold ring most precious on her arm.
|
||
|
||
"He yeasaid her asking, partly because of her gold, partly
|
||
(as he told me) that he feared her, deeming her to be of the fairy.
|
||
Then she stepped over his gangway of one board on to his boat,
|
||
and as he held the lantern low down to light her, lest she should
|
||
make a false step and fall into the water, he noted (quoth he)
|
||
that a golden shoe all begemmed came out from under gown-hem
|
||
and that the said hem was broidered thickly with pearl and jewels.
|
||
|
||
"Small was his barque, and he alone with the woman, and there
|
||
was a wind in the March night, and the stream is swift betwixt
|
||
the quays of our city; so that by night and cloud they made
|
||
much way down the water, and at sunrise were sailing through
|
||
the great wood which lieth hence a twenty leagues seaward.
|
||
So when the sun was risen she stood up in the fore part
|
||
of the boat, and bade him turn the barque toward the shore,
|
||
and even as the bows ran upon the sand, she leapt out and let
|
||
the thicket cover her; nor have any of Goldburg seen her since,
|
||
or the Queen. But for my part I deem the woman to have been
|
||
none other than the Queen. Seest thou then! she is gone:
|
||
but the King Rainald her cousin reigns in her stead, a wise man,
|
||
and a mighty, and no tyrant or skinner of the people."
|
||
|
||
Ralph heard and pondered, and was exceeding sorry, and more had
|
||
he been but for the joyousness which came of the Water of the Well.
|
||
Howbeit he might not amend it: for even were he to seek for the Queen
|
||
and find her, it might well be worse than letting it be. For he knew
|
||
(when he thought of her) that she loved him, and how would it be if she
|
||
might not outwear her love, or endure the days of Goldburg, and he far away?
|
||
This he said to himself, which he might not have said to any other soul.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 9
|
||
|
||
They Come to Cheaping Knowe Once More. Of the King Thereof
|
||
|
||
|
||
Toward evening comes Redhead, and tells Ralph how he hired him
|
||
a dozen men-at-arms to follow him well-weaponed to Cheaping Knowe:
|
||
withal he counselled him to take a good gift with him to that same
|
||
town to buy the good will of the King there; who was a close-fist
|
||
and a cruel lord.
|
||
|
||
Afterwards they sat together in the court of that fair house before
|
||
good wine, Ralph and Ursula, and Redhead and the Sage of Swevenham,
|
||
and spake of many things, and were merry and kind together.
|
||
But on the morrow Redhead departed from Goldburg with his men,
|
||
and he loth to depart, and they gave him farewell lovingly.
|
||
Thereafter Ralph's new men came to him in the hostelry, and he
|
||
feasted them and did well to them, so that they praised him much.
|
||
Then he gat him victuals and sumpter-horses for the journey,
|
||
and bought good store of bows and arrows withal. Furthermore he took
|
||
heed to Redhead's word and bought a goodly gift of silver vessel
|
||
and fine cloth for the King of Cheaping Knowe.
|
||
|
||
The day after he and his company departed from Goldburg toward
|
||
the mountains, which they passed unfought and unwaylaid:
|
||
partly because they were a band of stout men, and partly because
|
||
a little before there had been a great overthrow of the wild
|
||
men of those mountains at the hands of the men of Goldburg
|
||
and the Chapmen; so that now the mountain-men lay close,
|
||
and troubled none that rode with any force.
|
||
|
||
On the way they failed not to pass by the place where they had
|
||
erst found Bull Nosy slain: there they saw his howe, heaped up
|
||
exceeding high, covered in with earth, whereon the grass was now
|
||
beginning to grow, and with a great standing stone on the top thereof,
|
||
whereon was graven the image of a bull, with a sword thereunder;
|
||
whereby the wayfarers wotted that this had been done in his memory
|
||
by his brother, the new Lord of Utterbol.
|
||
|
||
So they came down out of the mountains to Whiteness,
|
||
where they had good entertainment, but tarried not save
|
||
for one night, riding their ways betimes to Cheaping Knowe:
|
||
and they came before the gate thereof safe and sound on
|
||
the third day; and slept in the hostelry of the chapmen.
|
||
On the morrow Ralph went up to the King's Castle with but three
|
||
men unweaponed bearing the gift which he had got for the King.
|
||
Albeit he sent not away his men-at-arms till he should know
|
||
how the King was minded towards him.
|
||
|
||
As he went he saw in the streets sad tokens of the lord's cruel justice,
|
||
as handless men, fettered, dragging themselves about, and folk hung up
|
||
before chapmen's booths, and whipping-cheer, and the pillar, and such like.
|
||
But whereas he might not help he would not heed, but came right
|
||
to the Castle-gate, and entered easily when he had told his errand,
|
||
for gift-bearing men are not oftenest withstood.
|
||
|
||
He was brought straightway into the great hall, where sat the King on his
|
||
throne amidst the chiefs of the Porte, and his captains and sergeants,
|
||
who were, so to say, his barons, though they were not barons of lineage,
|
||
but masterful men who were wise to do his bidding.
|
||
|
||
As he went up the hall he saw a sort of poor caytiffs, women as well as men,
|
||
led away from the high-place in chains by bailiffs and tipstaves;
|
||
and he doubted not that these were for torments or maiming and death;
|
||
and thought it were well might he do them some good.
|
||
|
||
Being come to the King, he made his obeisance to him,
|
||
and craved his good will and leave to wage men-at-arms to bring
|
||
him through the mountains.
|
||
|
||
The King was a tall man, a proper man of war; long-legged, black
|
||
bearded, and fierce-eyed. Some word he had heard of Ralph's gift,
|
||
therefore he was gracious to him; he spake and said: "Thou hast come
|
||
across the mountains a long way, fair Sir; prithee on what errand?"
|
||
Answered Ralph: "For no errand, lord, save to fare home to mine own land."
|
||
"Where is thine own land?" said the King, stretching out his legs and
|
||
lying back in his chair. "West-away, lord, many a mile," said Ralph.
|
||
"Yea," quoth the King, "and how far didst thou go beyond the mountains?
|
||
As far as Utterbol?" Said Ralph: "Yet further, but not to Utterbol."
|
||
"Hah!" said the King, "who goeth beyond Utterbol must have a great errand;
|
||
what was thine?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph thought for a moment, and deemed it best to say as little as he might
|
||
concerning Ursula; so he answered, and his voice grew loud and bold:
|
||
"I was minded to drink a draught of the WELL at the WORLD'S END, and even
|
||
so I did." As he spake, he drew himself up, and his brows were knit a little,
|
||
but his eyes sparkled from under them, and his cheleks were bright and rosy.
|
||
He half drew the sword from the scabbard, and sent it back rattling,
|
||
so that the sound of it went about the hall; he upreared his head and
|
||
looked around him on this and that one of the warriors of the aliens,
|
||
and he sniffed the air into his nostrils as he stood alone amongst them,
|
||
and set his foot down hard on the floor of the King's hall, and his armour
|
||
rattled upon him.
|
||
|
||
But the King sat bolt upright in his chair and stared Ralph's face;
|
||
and the warriors and lords and merchants fell back from Ralph and stood
|
||
in an ordered rank on either side of him and bent their heads before him.
|
||
None spoke till the King said in a hoarse voice, but lowly and wheedling:
|
||
"Tell us, fair Sir, what is it that we can do to pleasure thee?"
|
||
|
||
"King," said Ralph, "I am not here to take gifts but to give them rather:
|
||
yet since thou biddest me I will crave somewhat of thee, that thou mayst
|
||
be the more content: and moreover the giving shall cost thee nothing:
|
||
I crave of thee to give me life and limb and freedom for the poor
|
||
folk whom I saw led down the hall by thy tipstaves, even now.
|
||
Give me that or nothing." The King scowled, but he spake:
|
||
"This is indeed a little gift of thee to take; yet to none else save
|
||
thee had I given it."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he spake to a man beside him and said: "Go thou,
|
||
set them free, and if any hurt hath befallen them thy life shall
|
||
answer for it. Is it enough, fair Sir, and have we thy goodwill?"
|
||
Ralph laughed for joy of his life and his might, and he answered:
|
||
"King, this is the token of my goodwill; fear naught of me."
|
||
And he turned to his men, and bade them bright forth the gift
|
||
of Goldburg and open it before the King; and they did so.
|
||
But when the King cast eyes on the wares his face was gladdened,
|
||
for he was a greedy wolf, and whoso had been close to his mouth
|
||
would have heard him mutter: "So mighty! yet so wealthy!"
|
||
But he thanked Ralph aloud and in smooth words. And Ralph made
|
||
obeisance to him again, and then turned and went his ways down
|
||
the hall, and was glad at heart that he had become so mighty a man,
|
||
for all fell back before him and looked on him with worship.
|
||
Howbeit he had looked on the King closely and wisely, and deemed
|
||
that he was both cruel and guileful, so that he rejoiced
|
||
that he had spoken naught of Ursula, and he was minded to keep
|
||
her within gates all the while they abode at Cheaping-Knowe.
|
||
|
||
When he came to the hostel he called his men-at-arms together and asked them
|
||
how far they would follow him, and with one voice they said all that they
|
||
would go with him whereso he would, so that it were not beyond reason.
|
||
So they arrayed them for departure on the morrow, and were to ride
|
||
out of gates about mid-morning. So wore the day to evening;
|
||
but ere the night was old came a man asking for Ralph, as one who would
|
||
have a special alms of him, a poor man by seeming, and evilly clad.
|
||
But when Ralph was alone with him, the poor man did him to wit
|
||
that for all his seeming wretchedness he was but disguised,
|
||
and was in sooth a man of worship, and one of the Porte. Quoth he:
|
||
"I am of the King's Council, and I must needs tell thee a thing of the King:
|
||
that though he was at the first overawed and cowed by the majesty of thee,
|
||
a Friend of the Well, he presently came to himself, which was but ill;
|
||
so that what for greed, what for fear even, he is minded to send men to
|
||
waylay thee, some three leagues from the town, on your way to the mountains,
|
||
but ye shall easily escape his gin now I have had speech of thee;
|
||
for ye may take a by-road and fetch a compass of some twelve miles,
|
||
and get aback of the waylayers. Yet if ye escape this first ambush,
|
||
unless ye are timely in riding early tomorrow it is not unlike that he shall
|
||
send swift riders to catch up with you ere ye come to the mountains.
|
||
Now I am come to warn thee hereof, partly because I would not have
|
||
so fair a life spilt, which should yet do so well for the sons of Adam,
|
||
and partly also because I would have a reward of thee for my warning
|
||
and my wayleading, for I shall show thee the way and the road."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Ask and fear not; for if I may trust thee I already
|
||
owe thee a reward." "My name is Michael-a-dale," said the man,
|
||
"and from Swevenham I came hither, and fain would I go thither,
|
||
and little hope I have thereof save I go privily in some such band
|
||
as thine, whereas the tyrant holdeth me on pain, as well I know,
|
||
of an evil death."
|
||
|
||
"I grant thine asking, friend," said Ralph; "and now thou wert best go
|
||
to thine house and truss what stuff thou mayst have with thee and come
|
||
back hither in the grey of the morning."
|
||
|
||
The man shook his head and said: "Nay; here must I bide night-long,
|
||
and go out of gates amongst thy men-at-arms, and clad like one
|
||
of them with iron enough about me to hide the fashion of me;
|
||
it were nowise safe for me to go back into the town; for this
|
||
tyrant wages many a spy: yea, forsooth, I fear me by certain
|
||
tokens that it is not all so certain that I have not been spied
|
||
upon already, and that it is known that I have come to thee.
|
||
And I will tell thee that by hook or by crook the King already
|
||
knoweth somewhat of thee and of the woman who is in thy company."
|
||
|
||
Ralph flushed red at that word, and felt his heart bound:
|
||
but even therewith came into them the Sage; and straightway Ralph
|
||
took him apart and told him on what errand the man was come,
|
||
and ask him if he deemed him trusty. Then the Sage went up
|
||
to Michael and looked him hard in the face awhile, and then said:
|
||
"Yea, honest he is unless the kindred of Michael of the Hatch
|
||
of Swevenham have turned thieves in the third generation."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Michael, "and dost thou know the Hatch?"
|
||
|
||
"As I know mine own fingers," said the Sage; "and even so I knew it
|
||
years and years before thou wert born." Therewith he told the new-comer
|
||
what he was, and the two men of Swevenham made joy of each other.
|
||
And Ralph was fain of them, and went into the chamber wherein sat Ursula,
|
||
and told her how all things were going, and she said that she would
|
||
be naught but glad to leave that town, which seemed to her like to
|
||
Utterbol over again.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 10
|
||
|
||
An Adventure on the Way to the Mountains
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow Ralph got his men together betimes and rode out
|
||
a-gates, and was little afraid that any should meddle with him
|
||
within the town or anigh it, and even so it turned out.
|
||
But Michael rode in the company new clad, and with his head
|
||
and face all hidden in a wide sallet. As for Ralph and Ursula,
|
||
they were exceeding glad, and now that their heads were turned
|
||
to the last great mountains, it seemed to them that they
|
||
were verily going home, and they longed for the night,
|
||
that they might be alone together, and talk of all these matters
|
||
in each others' arms.
|
||
|
||
When they were out a-gates, they rode for two miles along the highway,
|
||
heedlessly enough by seeming, and then, as Michael bade, turned suddenly
|
||
into a deep and narrow lane, and forth on, as it led betwixt hazelled
|
||
banks and coppices of small wood, skirting the side of the hills,
|
||
so that it was late in the afternoon before they came into the Highway again,
|
||
which was the only road leading into the passes of the mountains.
|
||
Then said Michael that now by all likelihood they had beguiled the waylayers
|
||
for that time; so they went on merrily till half the night was worn,
|
||
when they shifted for lodging in a little oak-wood by the wayside.
|
||
There they lay not long, but were afoot betimes in the morning, and rode
|
||
swiftly daylong, and lay down at night on the wayside with the less
|
||
dread because they were come so far without hurt.
|
||
|
||
But on the third day, somewhat after noon, when they were come up
|
||
above the tilled upland and the land was rough and the ways steep,
|
||
there lay before them a dark wood swallowing up the road.
|
||
Thereabout Ralph deemed that he saw weapons glittering ahead,
|
||
but was not sure, for as clear-sighted as he was.
|
||
So he stayed his band, and had Ursula into the rearward,
|
||
and bade all men look to their weapons, and then they went forward
|
||
heedfully and in good order, and presently not only Ralph,
|
||
but all of them could see men standing in the jaws of the pass
|
||
with the wood on either side of them, and though at first they
|
||
doubted if these were aught but mere strong-thieves, such as any
|
||
wayfarers might come on, they had gone but a little further
|
||
when Michael knew them for the riders of Cheaping Knowe.
|
||
"Yea," said the Sage of Swevenham, "it is clear how it has been:
|
||
when they found that we came not that first morning,
|
||
they had an inkling of what had befallen, and went forward
|
||
toward the mountains, and not back to Cheaping Knowe, and thus
|
||
outwent us while we were fetching that compass to give them
|
||
the go-by: wherefore I deem that some great man is with them,
|
||
else had they gone back to town for new orders."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Ralph, "then will they be too many for us;
|
||
so now will I ride ahead and see if we may have peace."
|
||
Said the Sage, "Yea, but be wary, for thou hast to do
|
||
with the guileful."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph rode on alone till he was come within hail of those waylayers.
|
||
Then he thrust his sword into the sheath, and cried out:
|
||
"Will any of the warriors in the wood speak with me; for I am
|
||
the captain of the wayfarers?"
|
||
|
||
Then rode out from those men a very tall man, and two with him,
|
||
one on either side, and he threw back the sallet from his face, and said:
|
||
"Wayfarer, all we have weapons in our hands, and we so many that
|
||
thou and thine will be in regard of us as the pips to the apple.
|
||
Wherefore, yield ye!" Quoth Ralph: "Unto whom then shall I yield me?"
|
||
Said the other: "To the men of the King of Cheaping Knowe."
|
||
Then spake Ralph: "What will ye do with us when we are yolden?
|
||
Shall we not pay ransom and go our ways?" "Yea," said the tall man,
|
||
"and this is the ransom: that ye give up into my hands my dastard
|
||
who hath bewrayed me, and the woman who wendeth in your company."
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed; for by this time he knew the voice
|
||
of the King, yea, and the face of him under his sallet.
|
||
So he cried back in answer, and in such wise as if the words
|
||
came rather from his luck than from his youth: "Ho, Sir King!
|
||
beware beware! lest thou tremble when thou seest the bare blade
|
||
of the Friend of the Well more than thou trembledst erst,
|
||
when the blade was hidden in the sheath before the throne
|
||
of thine hall."
|
||
|
||
But the King cried out in a loud harsh voice.
|
||
"Thou, young man, beware thou! and try not thy luck overmuch.
|
||
We are as many as these trees, and thou canst not prevail over us.
|
||
Go thy ways free, and leave me what thou canst not help leaving."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, fool," cried Ralph, "and what wilt thou do with these two?"
|
||
|
||
Said the King: "The traitor I will flay, and the woman I will bed."
|
||
|
||
Scarce were the words out of his mouth ere Ralph gave forth a great cry
|
||
and drew his sword, set spurs to his horse, and gallopped on up the road
|
||
with all his band at his back for they had drawn anigh amidst this talk.
|
||
But or ever they came on the foemen, they heard a great confused cry
|
||
of onset mingled with affright, and lo! the King threw up his arms,
|
||
and fell forward on his horse's neck with a great arrow through his throat.
|
||
|
||
Ralph drave on sword in hand, crying out, "Home, home to Upmeads!"
|
||
and anon was amidst of the foe smiting on either hand.
|
||
His men followed, shouting: "Ho, for the Friend of the Well!"
|
||
And amongst the foemen, who were indeed very many, was huge dismay,
|
||
so that they made but a sorry defence before the band of
|
||
the wayfarers, who knew not what to make of it, till they noted
|
||
that arrows and casting-spears were coming out of the wood on
|
||
either side, which smote none of them, but many of the foemen.
|
||
Short was the tale, for in a few minutes there were no men
|
||
of the foe together save those that were fleeing down the road
|
||
to Cheaping Knowe.
|
||
|
||
Ralph would not suffer his men to follow the chase, for he wotted
|
||
not with whom he might have to deal besides the King's men.
|
||
He drew his men together and looked round for Ursula,
|
||
and saw that the Sage had brought her up anigh him, and there
|
||
she sat a-horseback, pale and panting with the fear of death
|
||
and joy of deliverance.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph cried out from his saddle in a loud voice, and said:
|
||
"Ho ye of the arrows of the wood! ye have saved me from my foemen;
|
||
where be ye, and what be ye?" Came a loud voice from out of the wood
|
||
on the right hand: "Children, tell the warrior whose sons ye be!"
|
||
Straightway brake out a huge bellowing on either side of the road,
|
||
as though the wood were all full of great neat.
|
||
|
||
Then cried out Ralph: "If ye be of the kindred of the Bull, ye will belike be
|
||
my friends rather than my foes. Or have ye heard tell of Ralph of Upmeads?
|
||
Now let your captain come forth and speak with me."
|
||
|
||
Scarce were the words out of his mouth ere a man came leaping forth
|
||
from out the wood, and stood before Ralph in the twilight of the boughs,
|
||
and Ralph noted of him that he was clad pretty much like to Bull
|
||
Shockhead of past time, save that he had a great bull's head for a helm
|
||
(which afterwards Ralph found out was of iron and leather)
|
||
and a great gold ring on his arm.
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph thrust his sword back into the sheath, and his folk
|
||
handled their weapons peaceably, while Ralph hailed the new-comer
|
||
as Lord or Duke of the Bulls.
|
||
|
||
"Belike," quoth the said chieftain, "thou wouldst wish to show me some token,
|
||
whereby we may wot that thou art that Friend of the Well and of our kinsman
|
||
concerning whom he sent us a message."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph bethought him of the pouch with the knot of grass
|
||
therein which Bull Shockhead had given him at Goldburg;
|
||
so he drew it out, and gave it into the hand of the chieftain,
|
||
who no sooner caught a glimpse thereof than he said:
|
||
"Verily our brother's hand hath met thine when he gave thee this.
|
||
Yet forsooth, now that I look on thee, I may say that scarce
|
||
did I need token to tell me that thou wert the very man.
|
||
For I can see thee, that thou art of great honour
|
||
and worship, and thou didst ride boldly against the foemen
|
||
when thou knewest not that we had waylaid thy waylayers.
|
||
Now I wot that there is no need to ask thee whether thou
|
||
wouldst get thee out of our mountains by the shortest road,
|
||
yet wilt thou make it little longer, and somewhat safer,
|
||
if ye will suffer us to lead thee by way of our dwelling."
|
||
So Ralph yeasaid his bidding without more words.
|
||
|
||
As they spake thus together the road both above and below was
|
||
become black with weaponed men, and some of Ralph's band looked
|
||
on one another, as though they doubted their new friends somewhat.
|
||
But the Sage of Swevenham spoke to them and bade them fear nought.
|
||
"For," said he, "so far as we go, who are now their friends,
|
||
there is no guile in these men." The Bull captain heard him and said:
|
||
"Thou sayest sooth, old man; and I shall tell thee that scarce had
|
||
a band like thine come safe through the mountains, save by great
|
||
good luck, without the leave of us; for the fool with the crown
|
||
that lieth there dead had of late days so stirred up the Folks
|
||
of the Fells through his grimness and cruelty that we have been
|
||
minded to stop everything bigger than a cur-dog that might seek
|
||
to pass by us, for at least so long as yonder rascal should live.
|
||
But ye be welcome; so now let us to the road, for the day weareth."
|
||
|
||
So the tribesmen gat them into order, and their Duke went on the left
|
||
side of Ralph, while Ursula rode on his right hand. The Duke and all
|
||
his men were afoot, but they went easily and swiftly, as wolves trot.
|
||
As for the slain of the waylayers, of whom there were some threescore,
|
||
the Bull captain would do nought but let them lie on the road.
|
||
"For," said he, "there be wolves and lynxes enough in the wood,
|
||
and the ravens of the uplands, and the kites shall soon scent the carrion.
|
||
They shall have burial soon enough. Neither will we meddle with it;
|
||
nay, not so much as to hang the felon King's head at thy saddle-bow, lord."
|
||
|
||
By sunset they were out of the wood and on the side of a rough fell,
|
||
so they went no further, but lighted fires at the edge of the thicket,
|
||
and made merry round about them, singing their songs concerning the deeds
|
||
of their folk, and jesting withal, but not foully; and they roasted
|
||
venison of hart and hind at the fires, and they had with them wine,
|
||
the more part whereof they had found in the slain King's carriages,
|
||
and they made great feast to the wayfarers, and were exceeding fain
|
||
of them; after their fashion, whereas if a man were their friend
|
||
he could scarce be enough their friend, and if he were their foe,
|
||
they could never be fierce enough with him.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 11
|
||
|
||
They Come Through the Mountains Into the Plain
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow early they all fared on together, and thereafter
|
||
they went for two days more till they came into a valley
|
||
amidst of the mountains which was fair and lovely, and therein
|
||
was the dwelling or town of this Folk of the Fells.
|
||
It was indeed no stronghold, save that it was not easy to find,
|
||
and that the way thither was well defensible were foemen
|
||
to try it. The houses thereof were artless, the chiefest
|
||
of them like to the great barn of an abbey in our land,
|
||
the others low and small; but the people, both men and women,
|
||
haunted mostly the big house. As for the folk, they were
|
||
for the more part like those whom they had met afore:
|
||
strong men, but not high of stature, black-haired, with blue
|
||
or grey eyes, cheerful of countenance, and of many words.
|
||
Their women were mostly somewhat more than comely, smiling,
|
||
kind of speech, but not suffering the caresses of aliens.
|
||
They saw no thralls amongst them; and when Ralph asked hereof,
|
||
how that might be, since they were men-catchers, they told him
|
||
that when they took men and women, as oft they did, they always
|
||
sold them for what they would bring to the plain-dwellers;
|
||
or else slew them, or held them to ransom, but never brought
|
||
them home to their stead. Howbeit, when they took children,
|
||
as whiles befell, they sometimes brought them home, and made
|
||
them very children of their Folk with many uncouth prayers
|
||
and worship of their Gods, who were indeed, as they deemed,
|
||
but forefathers of the Folk.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph, he and his, being known for friends, these wild men could
|
||
not make enough of them, and as it were, compelled them to abide there
|
||
three days, feasting them, and making them all the cheer they might.
|
||
And they showed the wayfarers their manner of hunting, both of the hart
|
||
and the boar, and of wild bulls also. At first Ralph somewhat loathed
|
||
all this (though he kept a pleasant countenance toward his host),
|
||
for sorely he desired the fields of Upmeads and his father's house.
|
||
But at last when the hunt was up in the mountains, and especially of
|
||
the wild bulls, the heart and the might in him so arose that he enforced
|
||
himself to do well, and the wild men wondered at his prowess, whereas he was
|
||
untried in this manner of sports, and they deemed him one of the Gods,
|
||
and said that their kinsman had done well to get him so good a friend.
|
||
Both Ursula and the Sage withheld them from this hunting, and Ursula
|
||
abode with the women, who told her much of their ways of life,
|
||
and stories of old time; frank and free they were, and loved her much,
|
||
and she was fain of such manly-minded women after the sleight and lies
|
||
of the poor thralls of Utterbol.
|
||
|
||
On the fourth day the wayfarers made them ready and departed;
|
||
and the chief of the Folk went with them with a chosen
|
||
band of weaponed men, partly for the love of his guests,
|
||
and partly that he might see the Goldburg men-at-arms safe back
|
||
to the road unto the plain and the Midhouse of the Mountains,
|
||
for they went now by other ways, which missed the said House.
|
||
On this journey naught befell to tell of, and they all came
|
||
down safe into the plain.
|
||
|
||
There the Goldburg men took their wage, and bidding farewell, turned back
|
||
with the wild men, praising Ralph much for his frankness and open hand.
|
||
As for the wild men, they exceeded in their sorrow for the parting, and many
|
||
of them wept and howled as though they had seen him die before their faces.
|
||
But all that came to an end, and presently their cheer was amended, and their
|
||
merry speech and laughter came down from the pass unto the wayfarers'
|
||
ears as each band rode its way.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 12
|
||
|
||
The Roads Sunder Again
|
||
|
||
Ralph and Ursula, with the Sage and Michael-a-dale went their ways, and all
|
||
was smooth with them, and they saw but few folk, and those mild and lowly.
|
||
At last, of an afternoon, they saw before them afar off the towers
|
||
and pinnacles of Whitwall, and Ralph's heart rose within him, so that
|
||
he scarce knew how to contain himself; but Ursula was shy and silent,
|
||
and her colour came and went, as though some fear had hold of her.
|
||
Now they two were riding on somewhat ahead of the others, so Ralph turned
|
||
to Ursula, and asked what ailed her. She smiled on him and said:
|
||
"A simple sickness. I am drawing nigh to thy home, and I am ashamed.
|
||
Beyond the mountains, who knew what and whence I was? I was fair,
|
||
and for a woman not unvaliant, and that was enough. But now when I am
|
||
coming amongst the baronages and the lineages, what shall I do to hold
|
||
up my head before the fools and the dastards of these high kindreds?
|
||
And that all the more, my knight, because thou art changed since yester-year,
|
||
and since we met on the want-way of the Wood Perilous, when I bade
|
||
thee remember that thou wert a King's son and I a yeoman's daughter;
|
||
for then thou wert but a lad, high-born and beautiful, but simple maybe,
|
||
and untried; whereas now thou art meet to sit in the Kaiser's throne
|
||
and rule the world from the Holy City."
|
||
|
||
He laughed gaily and said: "What! is it all so soon forgotten,
|
||
our deeds beyond the Mountains? Belike because we had no minstrel
|
||
to rhyme it for us. Or is it all but a dream? and has the last
|
||
pass of the mountains changed all that for us? What then! hast
|
||
thou never become my beloved, nor lain in one bed with me?
|
||
Thou whom I looked to deliver from the shame and the torment
|
||
of Utterbol, never didst thou free thyself without my helping,
|
||
and meet me in the dark wood, and lead me to the Sage who rideth
|
||
yonder behind us! No, nor didst thou ride fearless with me,
|
||
leaving the world behind; nor didst thou comfort me when my
|
||
heart went nigh to breaking in the wilderness! Nor thee did I
|
||
deliver as I saw thee running naked from the jaws of death.
|
||
Nor were we wedded in the wilderness far from our own folk.
|
||
Nor didst thou deliver me from the venom of the Dry Tree.
|
||
Yea verily, nor did we drink together of the Water of the Well!
|
||
It is all but tales of Swevenham, a blue vapour hanging on
|
||
the mountains yonder! So be it then! And here we ride together,
|
||
deedless, a man and a maid of whom no tale may be told.
|
||
What next then, and who shall sunder us?"
|
||
|
||
Therewith he drew his sword from the sheath, and tossed it into the air,
|
||
and caught it by the hilts as it came down, and he cried out:
|
||
"Hearken, Ursula! By my sword I swear it, that when I come home to
|
||
the little land, if my father and my mother and all my kindred fall not
|
||
down before thee and worship thee, then will I be a man without kindred,
|
||
and I will turn my back on the land I love, and the House wherein I was born,
|
||
and will win for thee and me a new kindred that all the world shall tell of.
|
||
So help me Saint Nicholas, and all Hallows, and the Mother of God!"
|
||
|
||
She looked on him with exceeding love, and said: "Ah, beloved,
|
||
how fair thou art! Is it not as I said, yea, and more, that now
|
||
lieth the world at thy feet, if thou wilt stoop to pick it up?
|
||
Believe me, sweet, all folk shall see this as I see it, and shall
|
||
judge betwixt thee and me, and deem me naught."
|
||
|
||
"Beloved," he said, "thou dost not wholly know thyself;
|
||
and I deem that the mirrors of steel serve thee but ill;
|
||
and now must thou have somewhat else for a mirror, to wit,
|
||
the uprising and increase of trouble concerning thee and
|
||
thy fairness, and the strife of them that love thee overmuch,
|
||
who shall strive to take thee from me; and then the blade that hath
|
||
seen the Well at the World's End shall come out of his sheath
|
||
and take me and thee from the hubbub, and into the quiet fields
|
||
of my father's home, and then shalt thou be learned of thyself,
|
||
when thou seest that thou art the desire of all hearts."
|
||
|
||
"Ah, the wisdom of thee," she said, "and thy valiancy,
|
||
and I am become feeble and foolish before thee!
|
||
What shall I do then?"
|
||
|
||
He said: "Many a time shall it be shown what thou shalt do; but here
|
||
and now is the highway dry and long, and the plain meads and acres
|
||
on either hand, and a glimmer of Whitwall afar off, and the little
|
||
cloud of dust about us two in the late spring weather; and the Sage
|
||
and Michael riding behind us, and smiting dust from the hard road.
|
||
And now if this also be a dream, let it speedily begone, and let us
|
||
wake up in the ancient House at Upmeads, which thou hast never seen--
|
||
and thou and I in each other's arms."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 13
|
||
|
||
They Come to Whitwall Again
|
||
|
||
|
||
Herewith they were come to a little thorp where the way sundered,
|
||
for the highway went on to Whitwall, and a byway turned off
|
||
to Swevenham. Thereby was a poor hostel, where they stayed
|
||
and rested for the night, because evening was at hand.
|
||
So when those four had eaten and drunk there together, Ralph spoke
|
||
and said: "Michael-a-dale, thou art for Swevenham to-morrow?"
|
||
"Yea, lord," said Michael, "belike I shall yet find kindred there;
|
||
and I call to thy mind that I craved of thee to lead me to Swevenham
|
||
as payment for all if I had done aught for thy service."
|
||
|
||
"Sooth is that," said Ralph, "thou shalt go with my good-will;
|
||
and, as I deem, thou shalt not lack company betwixt here and Swevenham,
|
||
whereas our dear friend here, the friend of thy father's father,
|
||
is going the same road."
|
||
|
||
Then the Sage of Swevenham leaned across the board, and said:
|
||
"What word hath come out of thy mouth, my son?" Said Ralph,
|
||
smiling on him: "It is the last word which we have heard from
|
||
thee of this matter, though verily it was spoken a while ago.
|
||
What wilt thou add to it as now?" "This," quoth the Sage,
|
||
"that I will leave thee no more till thou biddest me go from thee.
|
||
Was this word needful?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph reached his hand to him and said: "It is well and more;
|
||
but the road hence to Upmeads may yet be a rough one."
|
||
"Yea," said the Sage, "yet shall we come thither all living,
|
||
unless my sight now faileth."
|
||
|
||
Then Ursula rose up and came to the old man, and cast her arms about him
|
||
and said: "Yea, father, come with us, and let thy wisdom bless our roof-tree.
|
||
Wilt thou not teach our children wisdom; yea, maybe our children's children,
|
||
since thou art a friend of the Well?"
|
||
|
||
"I know not of the teaching of wisdom," said the Sage;
|
||
"but as to my going with thee, it shall be as I said e'en-now;
|
||
and forsooth I looked for this bidding of thee to make naught
|
||
of the word which I spoke ere yet I had learned wisdom of thee."
|
||
|
||
Therewith were they merry, and fain of each other, and the evening
|
||
wore amidst great content.
|
||
|
||
But when morning was come they gat to horse, and Ralph spake
|
||
to Michael and said: "Well, friend, now must thou ride alone
|
||
to thy kindred, and may fair days befall thee in Swevenham.
|
||
But if thou deem at any time that matters go not so well
|
||
with thee as thou wouldst, then turn thine head to Upmeads,
|
||
and try it there, and we shall further thee all we may."
|
||
|
||
Then came the Sage to Michael as he sat upon his horse, a stalwarth man
|
||
of some forty winters, and said: "Michael-a-dale, reach me thine hand."
|
||
So did he, and the Sage looked into the palm thereof, and said:
|
||
"This man shall make old bones, and it is more like than not,
|
||
King's son, that he shall seek to thee at Upmeads ere he die."
|
||
Said Ralph: "His coming shall be a joy to us, how pleasant soever
|
||
our life may be otherwise. Farewell, Michael! all good go with thee
|
||
for thine wholesome redes."
|
||
|
||
So then Michael gave them farewell, and rode his ways to Swevenham,
|
||
going hastily, as one who should hurry away from a grief.
|
||
|
||
But the three held on their way to Whitwall, and it was barely
|
||
noon when they came to the gate thereof on a Saturday of
|
||
latter May, It was a market-day, and the streets were thronged,
|
||
and they looked on the folk and were fain of them,
|
||
since they seemed to them to be something more than aliens.
|
||
The folk also looked on them curiously, and deemed them goodly,
|
||
both the old man and the two knights, for they thought no
|
||
otherwise of Ursula than that she was a carle.
|
||
|
||
But now as they rode, slowly because of the crowd, up Petergate,
|
||
they heard a cry of one beside them, as of a man astonished but joyful;
|
||
so Ralph drew rein, and turned thither whence the cry came,
|
||
and Ursula saw a man wide-shouldered, grey-haired, blue-eyed,
|
||
and ruddy of countenance--a man warrior-like to look on,
|
||
and girt with a long sword. Ralph lighted down from his horse,
|
||
and met the man, who was coming toward him, cast his arms
|
||
about his neck, and kissed him, and lo, it was Richard the Red.
|
||
The people round about, when they saw it, clapped their hands,
|
||
and crowded about the two crying out: "Hail to the friends
|
||
long parted, and now united!" But Richard, whom most knew,
|
||
cried out: "Make way, my masters! will ye sunder us again?"
|
||
Then he said to Ralph: "Get into thy saddle, lad; for surely
|
||
thou hast a tale to tell overlong for the open street."
|
||
|
||
Ralph did as he was bidden, and without more ado they went on all
|
||
toward that hostelry where Ralph had erst borne the burden of grief.
|
||
Richard walked by Ralph's side, and as he went he said:
|
||
"Moreover, lad, I can see that thy tale is no ill one; therefore my
|
||
heart is not wrung for thee or me, though I wait for it a while."
|
||
Then again he said: "Thou doest well to hide her loveliness
|
||
in war-weed even in this town of peace."
|
||
|
||
Ursula reddened, and Richard laughed and said:
|
||
"Well, it is a fair rose which thou hast brought from east-away.
|
||
There will be never another couple in these parts like you.
|
||
Now I see the words on thy lips; so I tell thee that Blaise
|
||
thy brother is alive and well and happy; which last word means
|
||
that his coffer is both deep and full. Forsooth, he would
|
||
make a poor bargain in buying any kingship that I wot of,
|
||
so rich he is, yea, and mighty withal."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "And how went the war with Walter the Black?"
|
||
|
||
Even as he spake his face changed, for he bethought him over closely of the
|
||
past days, and his dream of the Lady of Abundance and of Dorothea, who rode
|
||
by him now as Ursula. But Richard spake: "Short is the tale to tell.
|
||
I slew him in shock of battle, and his men craved peace of the good town.
|
||
Many were glad of his death, and few sorrowed for it; for, fair as his young
|
||
body was, he was a cruel tyrant."
|
||
|
||
Therewith were they come to the hostel of the Lamb which was the very
|
||
same house wherein Ralph had abided aforetime; and as he entered it,
|
||
it is not to be said but that inwardly his heart bled for the old sorrow.
|
||
Ursula looked on him lovingly and blithely; and when they were within
|
||
doors Richard turned to the Sage and said: "Hail to thee, reverend man!
|
||
wert thou forty years older to behold, outworn and forgotten of death,
|
||
I should have said that thou wert like to the Sage that dwelt alone
|
||
amidst the mountains nigh to Swevenham when I was a little lad,
|
||
and fearsome was the sight of thee unto me."
|
||
|
||
The Sage laughed and said: "Yea, somewhat like am I yet to myself
|
||
of forty years ago. Good is thy memory, greybeard."
|
||
|
||
Then Richard shook his head, and spake under his breath:
|
||
"Yea, then it was no dream or coloured cloud, and he hath
|
||
drank of the waters, and so then hath my dear lord."
|
||
Then he looked up bright-faced, and called on the serving-men,
|
||
and bade one lead them into a fair chamber, and another go
|
||
forth and provide a banquet to be brought in thither.
|
||
So they went up into a goodly chamber high aloft; and Ursula went
|
||
forth from it awhile, and came back presently clad in very fair
|
||
woman's raiment, which Ralph had bought for her at Goldburg.
|
||
Richard looked on her and nothing else for a while;
|
||
then he walked about the chamber uneasily, now speaking
|
||
with the Sage, now with Ursula, but never with Ralph.
|
||
At last he spake to Ursula, and said: "Grant me a grace, lady,
|
||
and be not wroth if I take thy man into the window yonder that I
|
||
may talk with him privily while ye hold converse together,
|
||
thou and the Sage of Swevenham."
|
||
|
||
She laughed merrily and said: "Sir nurse, take thy bantling
|
||
and cosset him in whatso corner thou wilt, and I will turn
|
||
away mine eyes from thy caresses."
|
||
|
||
So Richard took Ralph into a window, and sat down beside him and said:
|
||
"Mayhappen I shall sadden thee by my question, but I mind me what our last
|
||
talking together was about, and therefore I must needs ask thee this,
|
||
was that other one fairer than this one is?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph knit his brows: "I wot not," quoth he, "since she is gone,
|
||
that other one."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Richard, "but this I say, that she is without a blemish.
|
||
Did ye drink of the Well together?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, surely," said Ralph. Said Richard: "And is this
|
||
woman of a good heart? Is she valiant?" "Yea, yea,"
|
||
said Ralph, flushing red.
|
||
|
||
"As valiant as was that other?" said Richard. Said Ralph:
|
||
"How may I tell, unless they were tried in one way?"
|
||
Yet Richard spake: "Are ye wedded?" "Even so," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"Dost thou deem her true?" said Richard. "Truer than myself,"
|
||
said Ralph, in a voice which was somewhat angry.
|
||
|
||
Quoth Richard: "Then is it better than well, and better than well;
|
||
for now hast thou wedded into the World of living men, and not to a dream
|
||
of the Land of Fairy."
|
||
|
||
Ralph sat silent a little, and as if he were swallowing somewhat;
|
||
at last he said: "Old friend, I were well content if thou wert
|
||
to speak such words no more; for it irks me, and woundeth my heart."
|
||
|
||
Said Richard: "Well, I will say no more thereof; be content therefore,
|
||
for now I have said it, and thou needest not fear me, what I have to say
|
||
thereon any more, and thou mayst well wot that I must needs have said
|
||
somewhat of this."
|
||
|
||
Ralph nodded to him friendly, and even therewith came in the banquet,
|
||
which was richly served, as for a King's son, and wine was poured forth
|
||
of the best, and they feasted and were merry. And then Ralph told all
|
||
the tale of his wanderings how it had betid, bringing in all that Ursula
|
||
had told him of Utterbol; while as for her she put in no word of it.
|
||
So that at last Ralph, being wishful to hear her tell somewhat, made more
|
||
of some things than was really in them, so that she might set him right;
|
||
but no word more she said for all that, but only smiled on him now and again,
|
||
and sat blushing like a rose over her golden-flowered gown, while Richard
|
||
looked on her and praised her in his heart exceedingly.
|
||
|
||
But when Ralph had done the story (which was long, so that by then
|
||
it was over it had been dark night some while), Richard said:
|
||
"Well, fosterling, thou hast seen much, and done much, and many
|
||
would say that thou art a lucky man, and that more and much
|
||
more lieth ready to thine hand. Whither now wilt thou wend,
|
||
or what wilt thou do?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph's face reddened, as its wont had been when it was two
|
||
years younger, at contention drawing nigh, and he answered:
|
||
"Where then should I go save to the House of my Fathers, and the fields
|
||
that fed them? What should I do but live amongst my people,
|
||
warding them from evil, and loving them and giving them good counsel?
|
||
For wherefore should I love them less than heretofore?
|
||
Have they become dastards, and the fools of mankind?"
|
||
|
||
Quoth Richard: "They are no more fools than they were belike,
|
||
nor less valiant. But thou art grown wiser and mightier by far;
|
||
so that thou art another manner man than thou wert, and the Master
|
||
of Masters maybe. To Upmeads wilt thou go; but wilt thou abide there?
|
||
Upmeads is a fair land, but a narrow; one day is like another there,
|
||
save when sorrow and harm is blent with it. The world is wide,
|
||
and now I deem that thou holdest the glory thereof in the hollow
|
||
of thine hand."
|
||
|
||
Then spake the Sage, and said: "Yea, Richard of Swevenham, and how knowest
|
||
thou but that this sorrow and trouble have not now fallen upon Upmeads?
|
||
And if that be so, upon whom should they call to their helping rather
|
||
than him who can help them most, and is their very lord?" Said Richard:
|
||
"It may be so, wise man, though as yet we have heard no tidings thereof.
|
||
But if my lord goeth to their help, yet, when the trouble shall be over,
|
||
will he not betake him thither where fresh deeds await him?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay, Richard," said the Sage, "art thou so little a friend
|
||
of thy fosterling as not to know that when he hath brought
|
||
back peace to the land, it will be so that both he shall need
|
||
the people, and they him, so that if he go away for awhile,
|
||
yet shall he soon come back? Yea, and so shall the little land,
|
||
it may be, grow great."
|
||
|
||
Now had Ralph sat quiet while this talk was going on, and as if he heeded not,
|
||
and his eyes were set as if he were beholding something far away.
|
||
Then Richard spoke again after there had been silence awhile:
|
||
"Wise man, thou sayest sooth; yea, and so it is, that though we
|
||
here have heard no tale concerning war in Upmeads, yet, as it were,
|
||
we have been feeling some stirring of the air about us; even as though
|
||
matters were changing, great might undone, and weakness grown to strength.
|
||
Who can say but our lord may find deeds to hand or ever he come to Upmeads?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph turned his head as one awaking from a dream, and he said:
|
||
"When shall to-morrow be, that we may get us gone from Whitwall,
|
||
we three, and turn our faces toward Upmeads?"
|
||
|
||
Said Richard: "Wilt thou not tarry a day or two, and talk
|
||
with thine own mother's son and tell him of thine haps?"
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and so would I, were it not that my father's
|
||
trouble and my mother's grief draw me away."
|
||
|
||
"O tarry not," said Ursula; "nay, not for the passing of the night;
|
||
but make this hour the sunrise, and begone by the clear of the moon.
|
||
For lo! how he shineth through the window!"
|
||
|
||
Then she turned to Richard, and said: "O fosterer of my love,
|
||
knowest thou not that as now he speaketh as a Friend of the Well,
|
||
and wotteth more of far-off tidings than even this wise man
|
||
of many years?"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "She sayeth sooth, O Richard. Or how were it
|
||
if the torch were even now drawing nigh to the High House
|
||
of Upmeads: yea, or if the very House were shining as a dreary
|
||
candle of the meadows, and reddening the waters of the ford!
|
||
What do we here?"
|
||
|
||
Therewith he thrust the board from him, and arose and went
|
||
to his harness, and fell to arming him, and he spake to Richard:
|
||
"Now shall thine authority open to us the gates of the good town,
|
||
though the night be growing old; we shall go our ways, dear friend,
|
||
and mayhappen we shall meet again, and mayhappen not: and thou
|
||
shalt tell my brother Blaise who wotteth not of my coming hither,
|
||
how things have gone with me, and how need hath drawn me hence.
|
||
And bid him come see me at Upmeads, and to ride with a good band
|
||
of proper men, for eschewing the dangers of the road."
|
||
|
||
Then spake Richard: "I shall tell Lord Blaise neither more nor less
|
||
than thou mayst tell him thyself: for think it not that thou shalt
|
||
go without me. As for Blaise, he may well spare me; for he is become
|
||
a chief and Lord of the Porte; and the Porte hath now right good
|
||
men-at-arms, and captains withal younger and defter than I be.
|
||
But now suffer me to send a swain for my horse and arms, and another to
|
||
the captain of the watch at West-gate Bar that he be ready to open to me
|
||
and three of my friends, and to send me a let-pass for the occasion.
|
||
So shall we go forth ere it be known that the brother of the Lord of the Porte
|
||
is abiding at the Lamb. For verily I see that the Lady hath spoken truth;
|
||
and it is like that she is forseeing, even as thou hast grown to be.
|
||
And now I bethink me I might lightly get me a score of men to ride with us,
|
||
whereas we may meet men worse than ourselves on the way."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "All good go with thy words, Richard; yet gather not force:
|
||
there may stout men be culled on the road; and if thou runnest or
|
||
ridest about the town, we may yet be stayed by Blaise and his men.
|
||
Wherefore now send for thine horse and arms, and bid the host
|
||
here open his gates with little noise when we be ready;
|
||
and we will presently ride out by the clear of the moon.
|
||
But thou, beloved, shalt don thine armour no more, but shalt ride
|
||
henceforth in thy woman's raiment, for the wild and the waste
|
||
is well nigh over, and the way is but short after all these months
|
||
of wandering; and I say that now shall all friends drift toward us,
|
||
and they that shall rejoice to strike a stroke for my father's son,
|
||
and the peaceful years of the Friend of the Well."
|
||
|
||
To those others, and chiefly to Ursula, it seemed that now he spoke
|
||
strongly and joyously, like to a king and a captain of men.
|
||
Richard did his bidding, and was swift in dealing with the messengers.
|
||
But the Sage said: "Ralph, my son, since ye have lost one man-at-arms,
|
||
and have gotten but this golden angel in his stead, I may better that.
|
||
I prithee bid thy man Richard find me armour and weapons that I may
|
||
amend the shard in thy company. Thou shalt find me no feeble man
|
||
when we come to push of staves."
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed, and bade Richard see to it; so he dealt with the host,
|
||
and bought good war-gear of him, and a trenchant sword, and an axe withal;
|
||
and when the Sage was armed he looked as doughty a warrior as need be.
|
||
By this time was Richard's horse and war-gear come, and he armed him
|
||
speedily and gave money to the host, and they rode therewith all four out of
|
||
the hostel, and found the street empty and still, for the night was wearing.
|
||
So rode they without tarrying into Westgate and came to the Bar,
|
||
and speedily was the gate opened to them; and anon were they on the moonlit
|
||
road outside of Whitwall.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 14
|
||
|
||
They Ride Away From Whitwall
|
||
|
||
|
||
But when they were well on the way, and riding a good pace
|
||
by the clear of the moon, Richard spake to Ralph, and said:
|
||
"Wither ride we now?" said Ralph: "Wither, save to Upmeads?"
|
||
"Yea, yea," said Richard, "but by what road? shall we ride
|
||
down to the ford of the Swelling Flood, and ride the beaten way,
|
||
or take to the downland and the forest, and so again by the forest
|
||
and downland and the forest once more, till we come to the Burg
|
||
of the Four Friths?"
|
||
|
||
"Which way is the shorter?" said Ralph. "Forsooth," said Richard,
|
||
"by the wildwood ye may ride shorter, if ye know it as I do."
|
||
Quoth the Sage: "Yea, or as I do. Hear a wonder! that two
|
||
men of Swevenham know the wilds more than twenty miles from
|
||
their own thorp."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Well, wend we the shorter road; why make more words over it?
|
||
Or what lion lieth on the path? Is it that we may find it hard to give
|
||
the go-by to the Burg of the Four Friths?"
|
||
|
||
Said Richard: "Though the Burg be not very far from Whitwall,
|
||
we hear but little tidings thence; our chapmen but seldom go there,
|
||
and none cometh to us thence save such of our men as have strayed thither.
|
||
Yet, as I said e'en now in the hostel, there is an air of tidings abroad,
|
||
and one rumour sayeth, and none denieth it, that the old fierceness
|
||
and stout headstrong mood of the Burg is broken down, and that men
|
||
dwell there in peace and quiet."
|
||
|
||
Said the Sage: "In any case we have amongst us lore enough
|
||
to hoodwink them if they be foes; so that we shall pass easily.
|
||
Naught of this need we fear."
|
||
|
||
But Richard put his mouth close to Ralph's ear, and spake to him softly:
|
||
"Shall we indeed go by that shorter road, whatever in days gone by may
|
||
have befallen in places thereon, to which we must go a-nigh tomorrow?"
|
||
Ralph answered softly in turn: "Yea, forsooth: for I were fain to try
|
||
my heart, how strong it may be."
|
||
|
||
So they rode on, and turned off from the road that led
|
||
down to the ford of the Swelling Flood, anigh which Ralph
|
||
had fallen in with Blaise and Richard on the day after the
|
||
woeful slaying, which had made an end of his joy for that time.
|
||
But when they were amidst of the bushes and riding a deep ghyll
|
||
of the waste, Richard said: "It is well that we are here:
|
||
for now if Blaise send riders to bring us back courteously,
|
||
they shall not follow us at once, but shall ride straight
|
||
down to the ford, and even cross it in search of us."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "it is well in all wise."
|
||
|
||
So then they rode thence awhile till the moon grew low, and great,
|
||
and red, and sank down away from them; and by then were they come
|
||
to a shepherd's cot, empty of men, with naught therein save an old dog,
|
||
and some victual, as bread and white cheese, and a well for drinking.
|
||
So there they abode and rested that night.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 15
|
||
|
||
A Strange Meeting in the Wilderness
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow betimes they got to the road again; the country
|
||
at first, though it was scanty of tillage, was not unfurnished
|
||
of sheep, being for the most part of swelling hills and downs
|
||
well grassed, with here and there a deep cleft in them.
|
||
They saw but few houses, and those small and poor.
|
||
A few shepherds they fell in with, who were short of speech,
|
||
after the manner of such men, but deemed a greeting not wholly
|
||
thrown away on such goodly folk as those wayfarers.
|
||
|
||
So they rode till it was noon, and Richard talked more than his
|
||
wont was, though his daily use it was to be of many words:
|
||
nor did the Sage spare speech; but Ursula spoke little,
|
||
nor heeded much what the others said, and Ralph deemed that she
|
||
was paler than of wont, and her brows were knitted as if she
|
||
were somewhat anxious. As for him, he was grave and calm,
|
||
but of few words; and whiles when Richard was wordiest he looked
|
||
on him steadily for a moment whereat Richard changed countenance,
|
||
and for a while stinted his speech, but not for long;
|
||
while Ralph looked about him, inwardly striving to gather
|
||
together the ends of unhappy thoughts that floated about him,
|
||
and to note the land he was passing through, if indeed he had
|
||
verily seen it aforetime, elsewhere than in some evil dream.
|
||
|
||
At last when they stopped to bait by some scrubby bushes at
|
||
the foot of a wide hill-side, he took Richard apart, and said
|
||
to him: "Old friend, and whither go we?" Said Richard:
|
||
"As thou wottest, to the Burg of the Four Friths."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "but by what road?" Said Richard:
|
||
"Youngling is not thine heart, then, as strong as thou deemedst
|
||
last night?" Ralph was silent a while, and then he said:
|
||
"I know what thou wouldst say; we are going by the shortest
|
||
road to the Castle of Abundance."
|
||
|
||
He spake this out loud, but Richard nodded his head to him, as if
|
||
he would say: "Yea, so it is; but hold thy peace." But Ralph knew
|
||
that Ursula had come up behind him, and, still looking at Richard,
|
||
he put his open hand aback toward her, and her hand fell into it.
|
||
Then he turned about to her, and saw that her face was verily pale;
|
||
so he put his hands on her shoulders and kissed her kindly;
|
||
and she let her head fall on to his bosom and fell a-weeping,
|
||
and the two elders turned away to the horses, and feigned to be
|
||
busy with them.
|
||
|
||
Thus then they bided some minutes of time, and then all gat
|
||
to horse again, and Ursula's face was cleared of the grief
|
||
of fear, and the colour had come back to her cheeks and lips.
|
||
But Ralph's face was stern and sorrowful to behold; howbeit, as they
|
||
rode away he spake in a loud and seeming cheerful voice:
|
||
"Still ever shorteneth more and more the way unto my Fathers' House:
|
||
and withal I am wishful to see if it be indeed true that the men
|
||
of the Burg have become mild and peaceful; and to know what hath
|
||
befallen those doughty champions of the Dry Tree; and if perchance
|
||
they have any will to hold us a tilting in courteous fashion."
|
||
|
||
Richard smiled on him, and said: "Thou holdest more then by the Dry
|
||
Tree than by the Burg; though while agone we deemed the Champions
|
||
worse men to meet in the wood than the Burgers."
|
||
|
||
"So it is," said Ralph; "but men are oft mis-said by them that know them
|
||
not thoroughly: and now, if it were a good wish, O Sage of Swevenham,
|
||
I were fain to fall in with the best of all those champions, a tall man
|
||
and a proper, who, meseems, had good-will toward me, I know not why."
|
||
|
||
Quoth the Sage: "If thou canst not see the end of this wish fulfilled,
|
||
no more can I. And yet, meseems something may follow it which is akin
|
||
to grief: be content with things so done, my son."
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph holds his peace, and they speed on their way,
|
||
Ursula riding close by Ralph's side, and caressing him with looks,
|
||
and by touch also when she might; and after a while he fell
|
||
to talking again, and ever in the same loud, cheerful voice.
|
||
Till at last, in about another hour, they came in sight of the stream
|
||
which ran down toward the Swelling Flood from that pool wherein
|
||
erst the Lady of Abundance had bathed her before the murder.
|
||
Hard looked Ralph on the stream, but howsoever his heart might
|
||
ache with the memory of that passed grief, like as the body aches
|
||
with the bruise of yesterday's blow, yet he changed countenance
|
||
but little, and in his voice was the same cheery sound.
|
||
But Ursula noted him, and how his eyes wandered, and how little
|
||
he heeded the words of the others, and she knew what ailed him,
|
||
for long ago he had told her all that tale, and so now her heart
|
||
was troubled, and she looked on him and was silent.
|
||
|
||
Thus, then, a little before sunset, they came on that steep cliff
|
||
with the cave therein, and the little green plain thereunder,
|
||
and the rocky bank going down sheer into the water of the stream.
|
||
Forsooth they came on it somewhat suddenly from out of the bushes
|
||
of the valley; and there indeed not only the Sage and Richard,
|
||
but Ursula also, were stayed by the sight as folk compelled;
|
||
for all three knew what had befallen there. But Ralph, though he looked
|
||
over his shoulder at it all, yet rode on steadily, and when he saw
|
||
that the others lingered, he waved his hand and cried out as he rode:
|
||
"On, friends, on! for the road shortens towards my Fathers' House."
|
||
Then were they ashamed, and shook their reins to hasten after him.
|
||
|
||
But in that very nick of time there came forth one from amidst the bushes
|
||
that edged the pool of the stream and strode dripping on to the shallow;
|
||
a man brown and hairy, and naked, save for a green wreath about his middle.
|
||
Tall he was above the stature of most men; awful of aspect, and his
|
||
eyes glittered from his dark brown face amidst of his shockhead
|
||
of the colour of rain-spoilt hay. He stood and looked while one might
|
||
count five, and then without a word or cry rushed up from the water,
|
||
straight on Ursula, who was riding first of the three lingerers,
|
||
and in the twinkling of an eye tore her from off her horse;
|
||
and she was in his grasp as the cushat in the claws of the kite.
|
||
Then he cast her to earth, and stood over her, shaking a great club,
|
||
but or ever he brought it down he turned his head over his shoulder
|
||
toward the cliff and the cave therein, and in that same moment first
|
||
one blade and then another flashed about him, and he fell crashing down
|
||
upon his back, smitten in the breast and the side by Richard and Ralph;
|
||
and the wounds were deep and deadly.
|
||
|
||
Ralph heeded him no more, but drew Ursula away from him,
|
||
and raised her up and laid her head upon his knee; and she had
|
||
not quite swooned away, and forsooth had taken but little hurt;
|
||
only she was dizzy with terror and the heaving up and casting down.
|
||
|
||
She looked up into Ralph's face, and smiled on him and said:
|
||
"What hath been done to me, and why did he do it?"
|
||
|
||
His eyes were still wild with fear and wrath, as he answered: "O Beloved,
|
||
Death and the foeman of old came forth from the cavern of the cliff.
|
||
What did they there, Lord God? and he caught thee to slay thee;
|
||
but him have I slain. Nevertheless, it is a terrible and evil place:
|
||
let us go hence."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said, "let us go speedily!" Then she stood up,
|
||
weak and tottering still, and Ralph arose and put his left
|
||
arm about her to stay her; and lo, there before them was
|
||
Richard kneeling over the wild-man, and the Sage was coming
|
||
back from the river with his headpiece full of water;
|
||
so Ralph cried out: "To horse, Richard, to horse!
|
||
Hast thou not done slaying the woodman?"
|
||
|
||
But therewith came a weak and hoarse voice from the earth,
|
||
and the wild-man spake. "Child of Upmeads, drive not on so hard:
|
||
it will not be long. For thou and Richard the Red
|
||
are naught lighthanded."
|
||
|
||
Ralph marvelled that the wild-man knew him and Richard,
|
||
but the wild-man spake again: "Hearken, thou lover,
|
||
thou young man!"
|
||
|
||
But therewith was the Sage come to him and kneeling beside him
|
||
with the water, and he drank thereof, while Ralph said to him:
|
||
"What is this woodman? and canst thou speak my Latin?
|
||
What art thou?"
|
||
|
||
Then the wild-man when he had drunk raised him up a little, and said:
|
||
"Young man, thou and Richard are deft leeches; ye have let me blood to
|
||
a purpose, and have brought back to me my wits, which were wandering wide.
|
||
Yet am I indeed where my fool's brains told me I was."
|
||
|
||
Then he lay back again, and turned his head as well as he could toward
|
||
the cavern in the cliff. But Ralph deemed he had heard his voice before,
|
||
and his heart was softened toward him, he knew not why; but he said:
|
||
"Yea, but wherefore didst thou fall upon the Lady?" The wild-man strove
|
||
with his weakness, and said angrily: "What did another woman there?"
|
||
Then he said in a calmer but weaker voice: "Nay, my wits shall wander no more
|
||
from me; we will make the journey together, I and my wits. But 0, young man,
|
||
this I will say if I can. Thou fleddest from her and forgattest her.
|
||
I came to her and forgat all but her; yea, my very life I forgat."
|
||
|
||
Again he spoke, and his voice was weaker yet: "Kneel down by me,
|
||
or I may not tell thee what I would; my voice dieth before me."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph knelt down by him, for he began to have a deeming of what he was,
|
||
and he put his face close to the dying man's, and said to him; "I am here,
|
||
what wouldst thou?"
|
||
|
||
Said the wild-man very feebly: "I did not much for thee time was;
|
||
how might I, when I loved her so sorely? But I did a little.
|
||
Believe it, and do so much for me that I may lie by her side
|
||
when I am dead, who never lay by her living. For into the cave
|
||
I durst go never."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph knew him, that he was the tall champion whom he had
|
||
met first at the churchyard gate of Netherton; so he said:
|
||
"I know thee now, and I will promise to do thy will herein.
|
||
I am sorry that I have slain thee; forgive it me."
|
||
|
||
A mocking smile came into the dying man's eyes, and he spake whispering:
|
||
"Richard it was; not thou."
|
||
|
||
The smile spread over his face, he strove to turn more toward Ralph,
|
||
and said in a very faint whisper: "The last time!"
|
||
|
||
No more he said, but gave up the ghost presently. The Sage rose
|
||
up from his side and said: "Ye may now bury this man as he craved
|
||
of thee, for he is dead. Thus hath thy wish been accomplished;
|
||
for this was the great champion and duke of the men of the Dry Tree.
|
||
Indeed it is a pity of him that he is dead, for as terrible as he was
|
||
to his foes, he was no ill man."
|
||
|
||
Spake Richard: "Now is the riddle areded of the wild-man and the mighty
|
||
giant that haunted these passes. We have played together or now,
|
||
in days long past, he and I; and ever he came to his above.
|
||
He was a wise man and a prudent that he should have become a wild-man.
|
||
It is great pity of him."
|
||
|
||
But Ralph took his knight's cloak of red scarlet, and they lapped
|
||
the wild-man therein, who had once been a champion beworshipped.
|
||
But first Ursula sheared his hair and his beard, till the face
|
||
of him came back again, grave, and somewhat mocking, as Ralph
|
||
remembered it, time was. Then they bore him in the four corners
|
||
across the stream, and up on to the lawn before the cliff;
|
||
and Richard and the Sage bore him into the cave, and laid him down
|
||
there beside the howe which Ralph had erewhile heaped over the Lady;
|
||
and now over him also they heaped stones.
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile Ursula knelt at the mouth of the cave and wept;
|
||
but Ralph turned him about and stood on the edge of the bank,
|
||
and looked over the ripple of the stream on to the valley,
|
||
where the moon was now beginning to cast shadows,
|
||
till those two came out of the cave for the last time.
|
||
Then Ralph turned to Ursula and raised her up and kissed her,
|
||
and they went down all of them from that place of death
|
||
and ill-hap, and gat to horse on the other side of the stream,
|
||
and rode three miles further on by the glimmer of the moon,
|
||
and lay down to rest amongst the bushes of the waste,
|
||
with few words spoken between them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 16
|
||
|
||
They Come to the Castle of Abundance Once More
|
||
|
||
|
||
When they rode on next morning Ralph was few-spoken, and seemed
|
||
to heed little so long as they made good speed on the way:
|
||
most of the talk was betwixt Richard and the Sage, Ralph but putting
|
||
in a word when it would have seemed churlish to forbear.
|
||
|
||
So they went their ways through the wood till by then the sun
|
||
was well westering they came out at the Water of the Oak,
|
||
and Richard drew rein there, and spake: "Here is a fair place
|
||
for a summer night's lodging, and I would warrant both good knight
|
||
and fair lady have lain here aforetime, and wished the dark longer:
|
||
shall we not rest here?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph stared at him astonished, and then anger grew in his face
|
||
for a little, because, forsooth, as Richard and the Sage both wotted
|
||
of the place of the slaying of the Lady, and he himself had every
|
||
yard of the way in his mind as they went, it seemed but due
|
||
that they should have known of this place also, what betid there:
|
||
but it was not so, and the place was to Richard like any other lawn
|
||
of the woodland.
|
||
|
||
But thought came back to Ralph in a moment, and he smiled
|
||
at his own folly, howbeit he could not do to lie another night
|
||
on that lawn with other folk than erst. So he said quietly:
|
||
"Nay, friend, were we not better to make the most of this daylight?
|
||
Seest thou it wants yet an hour of sunset?"
|
||
|
||
Richard nodded a yeasay, and the Sage said no word more; but Ursula cast
|
||
her anxious look on Ralph as though she understood what was moving in him;
|
||
and therewith those others rode away lightly, but Ralph turned slowly
|
||
from the oak-tree, and might not forbear looking on to the short
|
||
sward round about, as if he hoped to see some token left behind.
|
||
Then he lifted up his face as one awaking, shook his rein, and rode
|
||
after the others down the long water.
|
||
|
||
So they turned from the water anon, and rode the woodland ways,
|
||
and lay that night by a stream that ran west.
|
||
|
||
They arose betimes on the morrow, and whereas the Sage knew the woodland
|
||
ways well, they made but a short journey of it to the Castle of Abundance,
|
||
and came into the little plain but two hours after noon, where saving
|
||
that the scythe had not yet wended the tall mowing grass in the crofts
|
||
which the beasts and sheep were not pasturing, all was as on that other tide.
|
||
The folk were at work in their gardens, or herding their cattle in the meads,
|
||
and as aforetime they were merry of countenance and well-clad, fair and gentle
|
||
to look on.
|
||
|
||
There were their pleasant cots, and the little white church,
|
||
and the fair walls of the castle on its low mound, and the day
|
||
bright and sunny, all as aforetime, and Ralph looked on it all,
|
||
and made no countenance of being moved beyond his wont.
|
||
|
||
So they came out of the wood, and rode to the ford of the river,
|
||
and the carles and queans came streaming from their garths and meads
|
||
to meet them, and stood round wondering at them; but an old carle came
|
||
from out the throng and went up to Ralph, and hailed him, and said:
|
||
"Oh, Knight! and hast thou come back to us? and has thou brought us
|
||
tidings of our Lady? Who is this fair woman that rideth with thee?
|
||
Is it she?"
|
||
|
||
Spake Ralph: "Nay; go look on her closely, and tell me thy
|
||
deeming of her."
|
||
|
||
So the carle went up to Ursula, and peered closely into her face,
|
||
and took her hand and looked on it, and knelt down and took her foot
|
||
out of the stirrup, and kissed it, and then came back to Ralph,
|
||
and said: "Fair Sir, I wot not but it may be her sister;
|
||
for yonder old wise man I have seen here erst with our heavenly Lady.
|
||
But though this fair woman may be her sister, it is not she.
|
||
So tell me what is become of her, for it is long since we have seen her;
|
||
and what thou tellest us, that same shall we trow, even as if thou
|
||
wert her angel. For I spake with thee, it is nigh two years agone,
|
||
when thou wert abiding the coming of our Lady in the castle yonder
|
||
But now I see of thee that thou art brighter-faced, and mightier
|
||
of aspect than aforetime, and it is in my mind that the Lady
|
||
of Abundance must have loved thee and holpen thee, and blessed thee
|
||
with some great blessing."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Old man, canst thou feel sorrow, and canst thou bear it?"
|
||
The carle shook his head. "I wot not," said he, "I fear thy words."
|
||
Said Ralph: "It were naught to say less than the truth; and this
|
||
is the very truth, that thou shalt never see thy Lady any more.
|
||
I was the last living man that ever saw her alive."
|
||
|
||
Then he spake in a loud voice and said: "Lament, ye people! for the Lady
|
||
of Abundance is dead; yet sure I am that she sendeth this message to you,
|
||
Live in peace, and love ye the works of the earth."
|
||
|
||
But when they heard him, the old man covered up his face with the folds
|
||
of his gown, and all that folk brake forth into weeping, and crying out:
|
||
"Woe for us! the Lady of Abundance is dead!" and some of the younger men
|
||
cast themselves down on to the earth, and wallowed, weeping and wailing:
|
||
and there was no man there that seemed as if he knew which way to turn,
|
||
or what to do; and their faces were foolish with sorrow. Yet forsooth it
|
||
was rather the carles than the queans who made all this lamentation.
|
||
|
||
At last the old man spake: "Fair sir, ye have brought us heavy tidings,
|
||
and we know not how to ask you to tell us more of the tale.
|
||
Yet if thou might'st but tell us how the Lady died?
|
||
Woe's me for the word!"
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "She was slain with the sword."
|
||
|
||
The old man drew himself up stiff and stark, the eyes of him
|
||
glittered under his white hair, and wrath changed his face,
|
||
and the other men-folk thronged them to hearken what more
|
||
should be said.
|
||
|
||
But the elder spake again: "Tell me who it was that slew her,
|
||
for surely shall I slay him, or die in the pain else."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Be content, thou mayst not slay him; he was a great
|
||
and mighty man, a baron who bore a golden sun on a blue field.
|
||
Thou mayst not slay him." "Yea," said the old man, "but I will,
|
||
or he me."
|
||
|
||
"Live in peace," said Ralph, "for I slew him then and there."
|
||
|
||
The old man held his peace a while, and then he said:
|
||
"I know the man, for he hath been here aforetime, and not so long ago.
|
||
But if he be dead, he hath a brother yet, an exceeding mighty man:
|
||
he will be coming here to vex us and minish us."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "He will not stir from where he lies till Earth's
|
||
bones be broken, for my sword lay in his body yesterday."
|
||
|
||
The old man stood silent again, and the other carles
|
||
thronged him; but the woman stood aloof staring on Ralph.
|
||
Then the elder came up to Ralph and knelt before him
|
||
and kissed his feet; then he turned and called to him three
|
||
of the others who were of the stoutest and most stalwarth,
|
||
and he spake with them awhile, and then he came to Ralph again,
|
||
and again knelt before him and said: "Lord, ye have come to us,
|
||
and found us void of comfort, since we have lost our Lady.
|
||
But we see in thee, that she hath loved thee and blessed thee,
|
||
and thou hast slain her slayer and his kindred.
|
||
And we see of thee also that thou art a good lord.
|
||
O the comfort to us, therefore, if thou wouldest be our Lord!
|
||
We will serve thee truly so far as we may: yea, even if
|
||
thou be beset by foes, we will take bow and bill from
|
||
the wall, and stand round about thee and fight for thee.
|
||
Only thou must not ask us to go hence from this place:
|
||
for we know naught but the Plain of Abundance, and the edges
|
||
of the wood, and the Brethren of the House of the Thorn,
|
||
who are not far hence. Now we pray thee by thy fathers
|
||
not to naysay us, so sore as thou hast made our hearts.
|
||
Also we see about thy neck the same-like pair of beads
|
||
which our Lady was wont to bear, and we deem that ye were
|
||
in one tale together."
|
||
|
||
Then was Ralph silent awhile, but the Sage spake to the elder:
|
||
"Old man, how great is the loss of the Lady to you?"
|
||
"Heavy loss, wise old man," said the carle, "as thou thyself
|
||
mayst know, having known her."
|
||
|
||
"And what did she for you?" said the Sage. Said the elder:
|
||
"We know that she was gracious to us; never did she lay tax
|
||
or tale on us, and whiles she would give us of her store,
|
||
and that often, and abundantly. We deem also that every
|
||
time when she came to us our increase became more plenteous,
|
||
which is well seen by this, that since she hath ceased to come,
|
||
the seasons have been niggard unto us."
|
||
|
||
The Sage smiled somewhat, and the old man went on:
|
||
"But chiefly the blessing was to see her when she came to us:
|
||
for verily it seemed that where she set her feet the grass grew greener,
|
||
and that the flowers blossomed fairer where the shadow of her body fell."
|
||
And therewith the old man fell a-weeping again.
|
||
|
||
The Sage held his peace, and Ralph still kept silence; and now of these men
|
||
all the younger ones had their eyes upon Ursula.
|
||
|
||
After a while Ralph spake and said: "O elder, and ye folk of the People
|
||
of Abundance, true it is that your Lady who is dead loved me,
|
||
and it is through her that I am become a Friend of the Well.
|
||
Now meseemeth though ye have lost your Lady, whom ye so loved
|
||
and worshipped, God wot not without cause, yet I wot not why ye
|
||
now cry out for a master, since ye dwell here in peace and quiet
|
||
and all wealth, and the Fathers of the Thorn are here to do good
|
||
to you. Yet, if ye will it in sooth, I will be called your Lord,
|
||
in memory of your Lady whom ye shall not see again. And as time
|
||
wears I will come and look on you and hearken to your needs:
|
||
and if ye come to fear that any should fall upon you with the strong hand,
|
||
then send ye a message to me, Ralph of Upmeads, down by the water,
|
||
and I will come to you with such following as need be.
|
||
And as for service, this only I lay upon you, that ye look
|
||
to the Castle and keep it in good order, and ward it against
|
||
thieves and runagates, and give guesting therein to any wandering
|
||
knight or pilgrim, or honest goodman, who shall come to you.
|
||
Now is all said, my masters, and I pray you let us depart in peace;
|
||
for time presses."
|
||
|
||
Then all they (and this time women as well as men) cried out joyfully:
|
||
"Hail to our lord! and long life to our helper." And the women withal drew
|
||
nearer to him, and some came close up to him, as if they would touch him
|
||
or kiss his hand, but by seeming durst not, but stood blushing before him,
|
||
and he looked on them, smiling kindly.
|
||
|
||
But the old man laid his hand on his knee and said:
|
||
"Lord, wouldst thou not light down and enter thy Castle;
|
||
for none hath more right there now than thou.
|
||
The Prior of the Thorn hath told us that there is no lineage
|
||
of the Lady left to claim it; and none other might ever have
|
||
claimed it save the Baron of Sunway, whom thou hast slain.
|
||
And else would we have slain him, since he slew our Lady."
|
||
|
||
Ralph shook his head and said: "Nay, old friend, and new vassal,
|
||
this we may not do: we must on speedily, for belike there is work
|
||
for us to do nearer home."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, Lord," said the carle, "but at least light down and sit
|
||
for a while under this fair oak-tree in the heat of the day,
|
||
and eat a morsel with us, and drink a cup, that thy luck may
|
||
abide with us when thou art gone."
|
||
|
||
Ralph would not naysay him; so he and all of them got off
|
||
their horses, and sat down on the green grass under the oak:
|
||
and that people gathered about and sat down by them, save that a
|
||
many of the women went to their houses to fetch out the victual.
|
||
Meanwhile the carles fell to speech freely with the wayfarers,
|
||
and told them much concerning their little land, were it hearsay,
|
||
or stark sooth: such as tales of the wights that dwelt in
|
||
the wood, wodehouses, and elf-women, and dwarfs, and such like,
|
||
and how fearful it were to deal with such creatures.
|
||
Amongst other matters they told how a hermit, a holy man,
|
||
had come to dwell in the wood, in a clearing but a little way thence
|
||
toward the north-west. But when Ralph asked if he dwelt on the way
|
||
to the ford of the Swelling Flood, they knew not what he meant;
|
||
for the wood was to them as a wall.
|
||
|
||
Hereon the Sage held one of the younger men in talk, and taught
|
||
him what he might of the way to the Burg of the Four Friths,
|
||
so that they might verily send a messenger to Upmeads if need were.
|
||
But the country youth said there was no need to think thereof,
|
||
as no man of theirs would dare the journey through the wood,
|
||
and that if they had need of a messenger, one of the Fathers
|
||
of the Thorn would do their errand, whereas they were holy men,
|
||
and knew the face of the world full well.
|
||
|
||
Now in this while the folk seemed to have gotten their courage again,
|
||
and to be cheery, and to have lost their grief for the Lady:
|
||
and of the maidens left about the oak were more than two or three very fair,
|
||
who stood gazing at Ralph as if they were exceeding fain of him.
|
||
|
||
But amidst these things came back the women with the victual;
|
||
to wit bread in baskets, and cheeses both fresh and old,
|
||
and honey, and wood-strawberries, and eggs cooked diversely,
|
||
and skewers of white wood with gobbets of roasted lamb's flesh,
|
||
and salad good plenty. All these they bore first to Ralph and Ursula,
|
||
and their two fellows, and then dealt them to their own folk:
|
||
and they feasted and were merry in despite of that tale of evil tidings.
|
||
They brought also bowls and pitchers of wine that was good and strong,
|
||
and cider of their orchards, and called many a health to the new
|
||
Lord and his kindred.
|
||
|
||
Thus then they abode a-feasting till the sun was westering
|
||
and the shadows waxed about them, and then at last Ralph rose
|
||
up and called to horse, and the other wayfarers arose also,
|
||
and the horses were led up to them. Then the maidens, made bold
|
||
by the joy of the feast, and being stirred to the heart by much
|
||
beholding of this beloved Lord, cast off their shamefacedness
|
||
and crowded about him, and kissed his raiment and his hands:
|
||
some even, though trembling, and more for love than fear,
|
||
prayed him for kisses, and he, nothing loath, laughed merrily
|
||
and laid his hands on their shoulders or took them by the chins,
|
||
and set his lips to the sweetness of their cheeks and their lips,
|
||
of those that asked and those that refrained; so that their hearts
|
||
failed them for love of him, and when he was gone, they knew not how
|
||
to go back to their houses, or the places that were familiar to them.
|
||
Therewith he and his got into their saddles and rode away slowly,
|
||
because of the thronging about them of that folk, who followed
|
||
them to the edge of the wood, and even entered a little thereinto;
|
||
and then stood gazing on Ralph and his fellows after they had
|
||
spurred on and were riding down a glade of the woodland.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 17
|
||
|
||
They Fall in With That Hermit
|
||
|
||
|
||
So much had they tarried over this greeting and feasting,
|
||
that though they had hoped to have come to the hermit's house
|
||
that night, he of whom that folk had told them, it fell not so,
|
||
whereas the day had aged so much ere they left the Plain
|
||
of Abundance that it began to dusk before they had gone far,
|
||
and they must needs stay and await the dawn there; so they dight
|
||
their lodging as well as they might, and lay down and slept
|
||
under the thick boughs.
|
||
|
||
Ralph woke about sunrise, and looking up saw a man standing over him,
|
||
and deemed at first that it would be Richard or the Sage; but as his
|
||
vision cleared, he saw that it was neither of them, but a new comer;
|
||
a stout carle clad in russet, with a great staff in his hand and a
|
||
short-sword girt to his side. Ralph sprang up, still not utterly awake,
|
||
and cried out, "Who art thou, carle?" The man laughed, and said:
|
||
"Yea, thou art still the same brisk lad, only filled out to something
|
||
more warrior-like than of old. But it is unmeet to forget old friends.
|
||
Why dost thou not hail me?"
|
||
|
||
"Because I know thee not, good fellow," said Ralph.
|
||
But even as he spoke, he looked into the man's face again,
|
||
and cried out: "By St. Nicholas! but it is Roger of the Ropewalk.
|
||
But look you, fellow, if I have somewhat filled out, thou, who wast
|
||
always black-muzzled, art now become as hairy as a wodehouse.
|
||
What dost thou in the wilds?" Said Roger: "Did they not tell
|
||
thee of a hermit new come to these shaws?" "Yea," said Ralph.
|
||
"I am that holy man," quoth Roger, grinning; "not that I am
|
||
so much of that, either. I have not come hither to pray or
|
||
fast overmuch, but to rest my soul and be out of the way of men.
|
||
For all things have changed since my Lady passed away."
|
||
|
||
He looked about, and saw Ursula just rising up from the ground and
|
||
the Sage stirring, while Richard yet hugged his bracken bed, snoring.
|
||
So he said: "And who be these, and why hast thou taken to the wildwood?
|
||
Yea lad, I see of thee, that thou hast gotten another Lady; and if mine
|
||
eyes do not fail me she is fair enough. But there be others as fair;
|
||
while the like to our Lady that was, there is none such."
|
||
|
||
He fell silent a while, and Ralph turned about to the others,
|
||
for by this time Richard also was awake, and said:
|
||
"This man is the hermit of whom we were told."
|
||
|
||
Roger said: "Yea, I am the hermit and the holy man;
|
||
and withal I have a thing to hear and a thing to tell.
|
||
Ye were best to come with me, all of you, to my house in the woods;
|
||
a poor one, forsooth, but there is somewhat of victual here,
|
||
and we can tell and hearken therein well sheltered and at peace.
|
||
So to horse, fair folk."
|
||
|
||
They would not be bidden twice, but mounted and went along with him,
|
||
who led them by a thicket path about a mile, till they came to a lawn
|
||
where-through ran a stream; and there was a little house in it,
|
||
simple enough, of one hall, built with rough tree-limbs and reed thatch.
|
||
He brought them in, and bade them sit on such stools or bundles
|
||
of stuff as were there. But withal he brought out victual nowise ill,
|
||
though it were but simple also, of venison of the wildwood,
|
||
with some little deal of cakes baked on the hearth, and he poured
|
||
for them also both milk and wine.
|
||
|
||
They were well content with the banquet, and when they were full, Roger said:
|
||
"Now, my Lord, like as oft befalleth minstrels, ye have had your wages before
|
||
your work. Fall to, then, and pay me the scot by telling me all that hath
|
||
befallen you since (woe worth the while!) my Lady died,--I must needs say,
|
||
for thy sake."
|
||
|
||
"'All' is a big word," said Ralph, "but I will tell thee somewhat.
|
||
Yet I bid thee take note that I and this ancient wise one, and my
|
||
Lady withal, deem that I am drawn by my kindred to come to their help,
|
||
and that time presses."
|
||
|
||
Roger scowled somewhat on Ursula; but he said: "Lord and master,
|
||
let not that fly trouble thy lip. For so I deem of it, that whatsoever
|
||
time ye may lose by falling in with me, ye may gain twice as much
|
||
again by hearkening my tale and the rede that shall go with it.
|
||
And I do thee to wit that the telling of thy tale shall unfreeze mine;
|
||
so tarry not, if ye be in haste to be gone, but let thy tongue wag."
|
||
|
||
Ralph smiled, and without more ado told him all that had befallen him;
|
||
and of Swevenham and Utterbol, and of his captivity and flight;
|
||
and of the meeting in the wood, and of the Sage (who there was),
|
||
and of the journey to the Well, and what betid there and since,
|
||
and of the death of the Champion of the Dry Tree.
|
||
|
||
But when he had made an end, Roger said: "There it is, then, as I
|
||
said when she first spake to me of thee and bade me bring about
|
||
that meeting with her, drawing thee first to the Burg and after
|
||
to the Castle of Abundance, I have forgotten mostly by what lies;
|
||
but I said to her that she had set her heart on a man over lucky,
|
||
and that thou wouldst take her luck from her and make it thine.
|
||
But now I will let all that pass, and will bid thee ask what thou wilt;
|
||
and I promise thee that I will help thee to come thy ways to thy kindred,
|
||
that thou mayst put forth thy luck in their behalf."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "First of all, tell me what shall I do to pass
|
||
unhindered through the Burg of the Four Friths?" Said Roger:
|
||
"Thou shalt go in at one gate and out at the other, and none
|
||
shall hinder thee."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "And shall I have any hindrance from them of the Dry Tree?"
|
||
|
||
Roger made as if he were swallowing down something, and answered:
|
||
"Nay, none."
|
||
|
||
"And the folk of Higham by the Way, and the Brethren and
|
||
their Abbot?" said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"I know but little of them," quoth Roger, "but I deem
|
||
that they will make a push to have thee for captain;
|
||
because they have had war on their hands of late.
|
||
But this shall be at thine own will to say yea or nay to them.
|
||
But for the rest on this side of the shepherds' country ye
|
||
will pass by peaceful folk."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "what then hath become of the pride and cruelty
|
||
of the Burg of the Four Friths, and the eagerness and fierceness
|
||
of the Dry Tree?"
|
||
|
||
Quoth Roger: "This is the tale of it: After the champions of the Dry
|
||
Tree had lost their queen and beloved, the Lady of Abundance,
|
||
they were both restless and fierce, for the days of sorrow hung
|
||
heavy on their hands. So on a time a great company of them had
|
||
ado with the Burgers somewhat recklessly and came to the worse;
|
||
wherefore some drew back into their fastness of the Scaur and
|
||
the others still rode on, and further west than their wont had been;
|
||
but warily when they had the Wood Perilous behind them, for they
|
||
had learned wisdom again. Thus riding they had tidings of an host
|
||
of the Burg of the Four Friths who were resting in a valley hard
|
||
by with a great train of captives and beasts and other spoil:
|
||
for they had been raising the fray against the Wheat-wearers,
|
||
and had slain many carles there, and were bringing home to the Burg
|
||
many young women and women-children, after their custom.
|
||
So they of the Dry Tree advised them of these tidings, and deemed
|
||
that it would ease the sorrow of their hearts for their Lady if they
|
||
could deal with these sons of whores and make a mark upon the Burg:
|
||
so they lay hid while the daylight lasted, and by night and cloud
|
||
fell upon these faineants of the Burg, and won them good cheap,
|
||
as was like to be, though the Burg-dwellers were many the more.
|
||
Whereof a many were slain, but many escaped and gat home to the Burg,
|
||
even as will lightly happen even in the worst of overthrows,
|
||
that not all, or even the more part be slain.
|
||
|
||
"Well, there were the champions and their prey, which was very great,
|
||
and especially of women, of whom the more part were young and fair:
|
||
for the women of the Wheat-wearers be goodly, and these had been picked
|
||
out by the rutters of the Burg for their youth and strength and beauty.
|
||
And whereas the men of the Dry Tree were scant of women at home,
|
||
and sore-hearted because of our Lady, they forbore not these women,
|
||
but fell to talking with them and loving them; howbeit in
|
||
courteous and manly fashion, so that the women deemed themselves
|
||
in heaven and were ready to do anything to please their lovers.
|
||
So the end of it was that the Champions sent messengers to Hampton
|
||
and the Castle of the Scaur to tell what had betid, and they themselves
|
||
took the road to the land of the Wheat-wearers, having those women
|
||
with them not as captives but as free damsels.
|
||
|
||
"Now the road to the Wheat-wearing country was long,
|
||
and on the way the damsels told their new men many things
|
||
of their land and their unhappy wars with them of the Burg
|
||
and the griefs and torments which they endured of them.
|
||
And this amongst other things, that wherever they came,
|
||
they slew all the males even to the sucking babe, but spared
|
||
the women, even when they bore them not into captivity.
|
||
|
||
"'Whereof,' said these poor damsels, 'it cometh that our land is ill-furnished
|
||
of carles, so that we women, high and low, go afield and do many things,
|
||
as crafts and the like, which in other lands are done by carles.'
|
||
In sooth it seemed of them that they were both of stouter fashion,
|
||
and defter than women are wont to be. So the champions, part in jest,
|
||
part in earnest, bade them do on the armour of the slain Burgers,
|
||
and take their weapons, and fell to teaching them how to handle
|
||
staff and sword and bow; and the women took heart from the valiant
|
||
countenance of their new lovers, and deemed it all bitter earnest
|
||
enough, and learned their part speedily; and yet none too soon.
|
||
For when the fleers of the Burg came home the Porte lost no time,
|
||
but sent out another host to follow after the Champions and their spoil;
|
||
for they had learned that those men had not turned about to Hampton
|
||
after their victory, but had gone on to the Wheat-wearers.
|
||
|
||
"So it befell that the host of the Burg came up with the Champions on
|
||
the eve of a summer day when there were yet three hours of daylight.
|
||
But whereas they had looked to have an easy bargain of their foemen,
|
||
since they knew the Champions to be but a few, lo! there was the hillside
|
||
covered with a goodly array of spears and glaives and shining helms.
|
||
They marvelled; but now for very shame, and because they scarce could
|
||
help it, they fell on, and before sunset were scattered to the winds again,
|
||
and the fleers had to bear back the tale that the more part of their foes
|
||
were women of the Wheat-wearers; but this time few were those that came
|
||
back alive to the Burg of the Four Friths; for the freed captives were
|
||
hot and eager in the chase, casting aside their shields and hauberks
|
||
that they might speed the better, and valuing their lives at naught
|
||
if they might but slay a man or two of the tyrants before they died.
|
||
|
||
"Thus was the Burg wounded with its own sword: but the matter
|
||
stopped not there: for when that victorious host of men and women
|
||
came into the land of the Wheat-wearers, all men fled away in terror
|
||
at first, thinking that it was a new onset of the men of the Burg;
|
||
and that all the more, as so many of them bore their weapons and armour.
|
||
But when they found out how matters had gone, then, as ye may deem,
|
||
was the greatest joy and exultation, and carles and queans
|
||
both ran to arms and bade their deliverers learn them all that
|
||
belonged to war, and said that one thing should not be lacking,
|
||
to wit, the gift of their bodies, that should either lie dead
|
||
in the fields, or bear about henceforth the souls of free men.
|
||
Nothing lothe, the Champions became their doctors and teachers
|
||
of battle, and a great host was drawn together; and meanwhile
|
||
the Champions had sent messengers again to Hampton telling them
|
||
what was befallen, and asking for more men if they might be had.
|
||
But the Burg-abiders were not like to sit down under their foil.
|
||
Another host they sent against the Wheat-wearers, not so huge,
|
||
as well arrayed and wise in war. The Champions espied its goings,
|
||
and knew well that they had to deal with the best men of the Burg,
|
||
and they met them in like wise; for they chose the very best of the men
|
||
and the women, and pitched on a place whence they might ward them well,
|
||
and abode the foemen there; who failed not to come upon them,
|
||
stout and stern and cold, and well-learned in all feats of war.
|
||
|
||
"Long and bitter was the battle, and the Burgers were fierce without
|
||
head-strong folly, and the Wheat-wearers deemed that if they
|
||
blenched now, they had something worse than death to look to.
|
||
But in the end when both sides were grown weary and worn out,
|
||
and yet neither would flee, on a sudden came into the field
|
||
the help from the Dry Tree, a valiant company of riders to whom
|
||
battle was but game and play. Then indeed the men of the Burg
|
||
gave back and drew out of the battle as best they might:
|
||
yet were they little chased, save by the new-comers of the Dry Tree,
|
||
for the others were over weary, and moreover the leaders had no
|
||
mind to let the new-made warriors leave their vantage-ground
|
||
lest the old and tried men-at-arms of the Burg should turn upon
|
||
them and put them to the worse.
|
||
|
||
"Men looked for battle again the next day; but it fell not out so;
|
||
for the host of the Burg saw that there was more to lose
|
||
than to gain, so they drew back towards their own place.
|
||
Neither did they waste the land much; for the riders of the Dry
|
||
Tree followed hard at heel, and cut off all who tarried,
|
||
or strayed from the main battle.
|
||
|
||
"When they were gone, then at last did the Wheat-wearers give themselves
|
||
up to the joy of their deliverance and the pleasure of their new lives:
|
||
and one of their old men that I have spoken with told me this;
|
||
that before when they were little better than the thralls of the Burg,
|
||
and durst scarce raise a hand against the foemen, the carles were but slow
|
||
to love, and the queans, for all their fairness, cold and but little kind.
|
||
However, now in the fields of the wheat-wearers themselves all this
|
||
was changed, and men and maids took to arraying themselves gaily
|
||
as occasion served, and there was singing and dancing on every green,
|
||
and straying of couples amongst the greenery of the summer night;
|
||
and in short the god of love was busy in the land, and made the eyes
|
||
seem bright, and the lips sweet, and the bosom fair, and the arms
|
||
sleek and the feet trim: so that every hour was full of allurement;
|
||
and ever the nigher that war and peril was, the more delight had man
|
||
and maid of each other's bodies.
|
||
|
||
"Well, within a while the Wheat-wearers were grown so full
|
||
of hope that they bade the men of the Dry Tree lead them
|
||
against the Burg of the Four Friths, and the Champions were
|
||
ready thereto; because they wotted well, that, Hampton being
|
||
disgarnished of men, the men of the Burg might fall on it;
|
||
and even if they took it not, they would beset all ways
|
||
and make riding a hard matter for their fellowship.
|
||
So they fell to, wisely and deliberately, and led an host
|
||
of the best of the carles with them, and bade the women keep
|
||
their land surely, so that their host was not a great many.
|
||
But so wisely they led them that they came before the Burg
|
||
well-nigh unawares; and though it seemed little likely that
|
||
they should take so strong a place, yet nought less befell.
|
||
For the Burg-dwellers beset with cruelty and bitter anger
|
||
cried out that now at last they would make an end of this
|
||
cursed people, and the whoreson strong-thieves their friends:
|
||
so they went out a-gates a great multitude, but in worser
|
||
order than their wont was; and there befell that marvel
|
||
which sometimes befalleth even to very valiant men,
|
||
that now at the pinch all their valour flowed from them,
|
||
and they fled before the spears had met, and in such evil
|
||
order that the gates could not be shut, and their foemen
|
||
entered with them slaying and slaying even as they would.
|
||
So that in an hour's space the pride and the estate of the Burg
|
||
of the Four Friths was utterly fallen. Huge was the slaughter;
|
||
for the Wheat-wearers deemed they had many a grief whereof
|
||
to avenge them; nor were the men of the Dry Tree either
|
||
sluggards or saints to be careless of their foemen, or to be
|
||
merciful in the battle: but at last the murder was stayed:
|
||
and then the men of the Wheat-wearers went from house to house
|
||
in the town to find the women of their folk who had been made
|
||
thralls by the Burgers. There then was many a joyful meeting
|
||
betwixt those poor women and the men of their kindred:
|
||
all was forgotten now of the days of their thralldom,
|
||
their toil and mocking and stripes; and within certain days
|
||
all the sort of them came before the host clad in green raiment,
|
||
and garlanded with flowers for the joy of their deliverance;
|
||
and great feast was made to them.
|
||
|
||
"As for them of the Burg, the battle and chase over, no more were slain,
|
||
save that certain of the great ones were made shorter by the head.
|
||
But the Champions and the Wheat-wearers both, said that none
|
||
of that bitter and cruel folk should abide any longer in the town;
|
||
so that after a delay long enough for them to provide stuff for
|
||
their wayfaring, they were all thrust out a-gates, rich and poor,
|
||
old and young, man, woman and child. Proudly and with a stout
|
||
countenance they went, for now was their valour come again to them.
|
||
And it is like that we shall hear of them oft again; for though
|
||
they had but a few weapons amongst them when they were driven
|
||
out of their old home, and neither hauberk nor shield nor helm,
|
||
yet so learned in war be they and so marvellous great of pride,
|
||
that they will somehow get them weapons; and even armed but
|
||
with headless staves, and cudgels of the thicket, woe betide
|
||
the peaceful folk whom they shall first fall on. Yea, fair sir,
|
||
the day shall come meseemeth when folk shall call on thee to lead
|
||
the hunt after these famished wolves, and when thou dost so,
|
||
call on me to tell thee tales of their doings which shall make
|
||
thine heart hard, and thine hand heavy against them."
|
||
|
||
"Meantime," said Ralph, "what has betid to the Fellowship of the Dry Tree?
|
||
for I see that thou hast some grief on thy mind because of them."
|
||
|
||
Roger kept silence a little and then he said: "I grieve
|
||
because Hampton is no more a strong place of warriors;
|
||
two or three carles and a dozen of women dwell now in the halls
|
||
and chambers of the Scaur. Here on earth, all endeth.
|
||
God send us to find the world without end!"
|
||
|
||
"What then," said Ralph, "have they then had another great overthrow,
|
||
worse than that other?" "Nay," said Roger doggedly, "it is not so."
|
||
"But where is the Fellowship?" said Ralph. "It is scattered abroad,"
|
||
quoth Roger. "For some of the Dry Tree had no heart to leave
|
||
the women whom they had wooed in the Wheat-wearer's land:
|
||
and some, and a great many, have taken their dears to dwell in
|
||
the Burg of the Four Friths, whereas a many of the Wheat-wearers
|
||
have gone to beget children on the old bondwomen of the Burgers;
|
||
of whom there were some two thousand alive after the Burg was taken;
|
||
besides that many women also came with the carles from their own land.
|
||
|
||
"So that now a mixed folk are dwelling in the Burg, partly of
|
||
those women-thralls, partly of carles and queans come newly from
|
||
the Wheat-wearers, partly of men of our Fellowship the more part
|
||
of whom are wedded to queans of the Wheat-wearers, and partly of men,
|
||
chapmen and craftsmen and others who have drifted into the town,
|
||
having heard that there is no lack of wealth there, and many
|
||
fair women unmated."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and is all this so ill?" Said Roger, "Meseems it
|
||
is ill enough that there is no longer, rightly said, a Fellowship of
|
||
the Dry Tree, though the men be alive who were once of that fellowship."
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "and why should they not make a new fellowship in the Burg,
|
||
whereas they may well be peaceful, since they have come to their above
|
||
of their foemen?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Roger slowly, "that is sooth; and so is this,
|
||
that there in the Burg they are a strong band, with a captain
|
||
of their own, and much worshipped of the peaceful folk;
|
||
and moreover, though they be not cruel to torment helpless folk,
|
||
or hard to make an end of all joy to-day, lest they lose their
|
||
joy to-morrow, they now array all men in good order within
|
||
the Burg, so that it shall be no easier for a foeman to win
|
||
that erst it was."
|
||
|
||
"What, man!" said Ralph, "then be of better cheer, and come thou with us, and
|
||
may be the old steel of the champions may look on the sun down in Upmeads.
|
||
Come thou with me, I say, and show me and my luck to some of thy fellows who
|
||
are dwelling in the Burg, and it may be when thou hast told my tale to them,
|
||
that some of them shall be content to leave their beds cold for a while,
|
||
that they may come help a Friend of the Well in his need."
|
||
|
||
Roger sat silent as if he were pondering the matter, while Richard
|
||
and the Sage, both of them, took up the word one after the other,
|
||
and urged him to it.
|
||
|
||
At last he said: "Well, so be it for this adventure. Only I say
|
||
not that I shall give up this hermitage and my holiness for ever.
|
||
Come thou aside, wise man of Swevenham, and I shall tell thee wherefore."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, laughing, "and when he hath told thee, tell me not again;
|
||
for sure I am that he is right to go with us, and belike shall be wrong
|
||
in his reason therefore."
|
||
|
||
Roger looked a little askance at him, and he went without doors
|
||
with the Sage, and when they were out of earshot, he said to him:
|
||
"Hearken, I would have gone with my lord at the first word, and have
|
||
been fain thereof; but there is this woman that followeth him.
|
||
At every turn she shall mind me of our Lady that was; and I shall
|
||
loath her, and her fairness and the allurements of her body,
|
||
because I see of her, that she it is that hath gotten my Lady's luck,
|
||
and that but for her my Lady might yet have been alive."
|
||
|
||
Said the Sage: "Well quoth my lord that thou wouldst give me
|
||
a fool's reason! What! dost not thou know, thou that knowest so much
|
||
of the Lady of Abundance, that she it was who ordained this Ursula
|
||
to be Ralph's bedmate, when she herself should be gone from him,
|
||
were she dead or alive, and that she also should be a Friend
|
||
of the Well, so that he might not lack a fellow his life long?
|
||
But this thou sayest, not knowing the mind of our Lady, and how she
|
||
loved him in her inmost heart."
|
||
|
||
Roger hung his head and spake not for a while, and then he said:
|
||
"Well, wise man, I have said that I will go on this adventure,
|
||
and I will smooth my tongue for this while at least, and for what
|
||
may come hereafter, let it be. And now we were best get to horse;
|
||
for what with meat and minstrelsy, we have worn away the day till
|
||
it wants but a little of noon. Go tell thy lord that I am ready.
|
||
Farewell peace, and welcome war and grudging!"
|
||
|
||
So the Sage went within, and came out with the others,
|
||
and they mounted their horses anon, and Roger went ahead on foot,
|
||
and led them through the thicket-ways without fumbling; and they
|
||
lay down that night on the farther side of the Swelling Flood.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 18
|
||
|
||
A Change of Days in the Burg of the Four Friths
|
||
|
||
|
||
There is naught to tell of their ways till they came out of the thicket
|
||
into the fields about the Burg of the Four Friths; and even there was
|
||
a look of a bettering of men's lives; though forsooth the husbandmen
|
||
there were much the same as had abided in the fields aforetime,
|
||
whereas they were not for the most part freemen of the Burg, but aliens
|
||
who did service in war and otherwise thereto. But, it being eventide,
|
||
there were men and women and children, who had come out of gates,
|
||
walking about and disporting themselves in the loveliness of early summer,
|
||
and that in far merrier guise than they had durst do in the bygone days.
|
||
Moreover, there was scarce a sword or spear to be seen amongst them,
|
||
whereat Roger grudged somewhat, and Richard said: "Meseems this
|
||
folk trusts the peace of the Burg overmuch since, when all is told,
|
||
unpeace is not so far from their borders."
|
||
|
||
But as they drew a little nigher Ralph pointed out to his fellows
|
||
the gleam of helms and weapons on the walls, and they saw a watchman
|
||
on each of the high towers of the south gate; and then quoth Roger:
|
||
"Nay, the Burg will not be won so easily; and if a few fools get
|
||
themselves slain outside it is no great matter."
|
||
|
||
Folk nowise let them come up to the gate unheeded, but gathered
|
||
about them to look at the newcomers, but not so as to hinder them,
|
||
and they could see that these summerers were goodly folk enough,
|
||
and demeaned them as though they had but few troubles
|
||
weighing on them. But the wayfarers were not unchallenged
|
||
at the gate, for a stout man-at-arms stayed them and said:
|
||
"Ye ride somewhat late, friends. What are ye?" Quoth Ralph:
|
||
"We be peaceful wayfarers save to them that would fall on us,
|
||
and we seek toward Upmeads." "Yea?" said the man, "belike ye shall
|
||
find something less than peace betwixt here and Upmeads, for rumour
|
||
goes that there are alien riders come into the lands of Higham,
|
||
and for aught I know the said unpeace may spread further on.
|
||
Well if ye will go to the Flower de Luce and abide there this night,
|
||
ye shall have a let-pass to-morn betimes."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph spake a word in Roger's ear, and Roger nodded his head,
|
||
and, throwing his cowl aback, went up to the man-at-arms and said:
|
||
"Stephen a-Hurst, hast thou time for a word with an old friend?"
|
||
"Yea, Roger," said the man "is it verily thou? I deemed that thou
|
||
hadst fled away from all of us to live in the wilds."
|
||
|
||
"So it was, lad," said Roger, "but times change from good to bad
|
||
and back again; and now am I of this good lord's company; and I shall
|
||
tell thee, Stephen, that though he rideth but few to-day, yet merry
|
||
shall he be that rideth with him to-morrow if unpeace be in the land.
|
||
Lo you, Stephen, this is the Child of Upmeads, whom belike thou hast
|
||
heard of; and if thou wilt take me into the chamber of thy tower,
|
||
I will tell thee things of him that thou wottest not."
|
||
|
||
Stephen turned to Ralph and made obeisance to him and said:
|
||
"Fair Sir, there are tales going about concerning thee, some whereof
|
||
are strange enow, but none of them ill; and I deem by the look
|
||
of thee that thou shalt be both a stark champion and a good lord;
|
||
and I deem that it shall be my good luck, if I see more of thee,
|
||
and much more. Now if thou wilt, pass on with thine other fellows
|
||
to the Flower de Luce, and leave this my old fellow-in-arms with me,
|
||
and he shall tell me of thy mind; for I see that thou wouldest
|
||
have somewhat of us; and since, I doubt not by the looks of thee,
|
||
that thou wilt not bid us aught unknightly, when we know thy will,
|
||
we shall try to pleasure thee."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, Lord Ralph," said Roger, "thou mayest leave all
|
||
the business with me, and I will come to thee not later than
|
||
betimes to-morrow, and let thee wot how matters have sped.
|
||
And methinks ye may hope to wend out-a-gates this time otherwise
|
||
than thou didest before."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph gave him yeasay and thanked the man-at-arms and rode
|
||
his ways with the others toward the Flower de Luce, and whereas
|
||
the sun was but newly set, Ralph noted that the booths were gayer
|
||
and the houses brighter and more fairly adorned than aforetimes.
|
||
As for the folk, they were such that the streets seemed full of
|
||
holiday makers, so joyous and well dight were they; and the women
|
||
like to those fair thralls whom he had seen that other time,
|
||
saving that they were not clad so wantonly, however gaily.
|
||
They came into the great square, and there they saw that the masons
|
||
and builders had begun on the master church to make it fairer
|
||
and bigger; the people were sporting there as in the streets,
|
||
and amongst them were some weaponed men, but the most part
|
||
of these bore the token of the Dry Tree.
|
||
|
||
So they entered the Flower de Luce, and had good welcome there, as if they
|
||
were come home to their own house; for when its people saw such a goodly
|
||
old man in the Sage, and so stout and trim a knight as was Richard,
|
||
and above all when they beheld the loveliness of Ralph and Ursula,
|
||
they praised them open-mouthed, and could scarce make enough of them.
|
||
And when they had had their meat and were rested came two of
|
||
the maids there and asked them if it were lawful to talk with them;
|
||
and Ralph laughed and bade them sit by them, and eat a dainty morsel;
|
||
and they took that blushing, for they were fair and young, and Ralph's
|
||
face and the merry words of his mouth stirred the hearts within them:
|
||
and forsooth it was not so much they that spake as Ursula and the Sage;
|
||
for Ralph was somewhat few spoken, whereas he pondered concerning
|
||
the coming days, and what he half deemed that he saw a-doing at Upmeads.
|
||
But at last they found their tongues, and said how that already
|
||
rumour was abroad that they were in the Burg who had drunk
|
||
of the Water of the Well at the World's End; and said one:
|
||
"It is indeed a fair sight to see you folk coming back in triumph;
|
||
and so methinks will many deem if ye abide with us over to-morrow,
|
||
and yet, Lady, for a while we are well-nigh as joyous as ye
|
||
can be, whereas we have but newly come into new life also:
|
||
some of us from very thralldom of the most grievous, and I am of those;
|
||
and some of us in daily peril of it, like to my sister here.
|
||
So mayhappen," said she, smiling, "none of us shall seek to the Well
|
||
until we have worn our present bliss a little threadbare."
|
||
|
||
Ursula smiled on her, but the Sage said: "Mayhappen it is of no avail
|
||
speaking of such things to a young and fair woman; but what would betide you
|
||
if the old Burgers were to come back and win their walls again?" The maid who
|
||
had been a thrall changed countenance at his word; but the other one said:
|
||
"If the Burgers come back, they will find them upon the walls who have
|
||
already chaced them. Thou mayst deem me slim and tender, old wise man;
|
||
but such as mine arm is, it has upheaved the edges against the foe; and if it
|
||
be a murder to slay a Burger, then am I worthy of the gallows." "Yea, yea,"
|
||
quoth Richard, laughing, "ye shall be double-manned then in this good town:
|
||
ye may well win, unless the sight of you shall make the foe over fierce
|
||
for the gain."
|
||
|
||
Said the Sage "It is well, maiden, and if ye hold to that, and keep
|
||
your carles in the same road, ye need not to fear the Burgers:
|
||
and to say sooth, I have it in my mind, that before long ye shall
|
||
have both war and victory."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph seemed to wake up as from a dream, and he arose, and said:
|
||
"Thou art in the right, Sage, and to mine eyes it seemeth that
|
||
both thou and I shall be sharers in the war and the victory."
|
||
And therewith he fell to striding up and down the hall, while the two
|
||
maidens sat gazing on him with gleaming eyes and flushed cheeks.
|
||
|
||
But in a little while he came back to his seat and sat him down,
|
||
and fell to talk with the women, and asked them of the town
|
||
and the building therein, and the markets, whether they throve;
|
||
and they and two or three of the townsmen or merchants
|
||
answered all, and told him how fair their estate was,
|
||
and how thriving was the lot of one and all with them.
|
||
Therewith was Ralph well pleased, and they sat talking
|
||
there in good fellowship till the night was somewhat worn,
|
||
and all men fared to bed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 19
|
||
|
||
Ralph Sees Hampton and the Scaur
|
||
|
||
|
||
When it was morning Ralph arose and went into the hall of the hostelry,
|
||
and even as he entered it the outside door opened, and in came Roger,
|
||
and Richard with him (for he had been astir very early) and Roger,
|
||
who was armed from head to foot and wore a coat of the Dry Tree, cried out:
|
||
"Now, Lord, thou wert best do on thy war-gear, for thou shalt presently be
|
||
captain of an host." "Yea, Roger," quoth Ralph, "and hast thou done well?"
|
||
"Well enough," said Richard; "thine host shall not be a great one, but no
|
||
man in it will be a blencher, for they be all champions of the Dry Tree."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," quoth Roger, "so it was that Stephen a-Hurst brought
|
||
me to a company of my old fellows, and we went all of us
|
||
together to the Captain of the Burg (e'en he of the Dry Tree,
|
||
who in these latest days is made captain of all), and did him
|
||
to wit that thou hadst a need; and whereas he, as all of us,
|
||
had heard of the strokes that thou struckest in the wood that day
|
||
when thy happiness first began, (woe worth the while!) he stickled
|
||
not to give some of us leave to look on the hand-play with thee.
|
||
But soft, my Lord! abound not in thanks as yet, till I tell thee.
|
||
The said Captain hath gotten somewhat of the mind of a chapman
|
||
by dwelling in a town, 'tis like (the saints forgive me
|
||
for saying so!) and would strike a bargain with thee."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, smiling, "I partly guess what like the bargain is;
|
||
but say thou."
|
||
|
||
Said Roger: "I like not his bargain, not for thy sake but mine own;
|
||
this it is, that we shall ride, all of us who are to be of thy fellowship,
|
||
to the Castle of the Scaur to-day, and there thy Lady shall sit in the throne
|
||
whereas in past days our Lady and Queen was wont to sit; and that thou shalt
|
||
swear upon her head, that whensoever he biddeth thee come to the help of the
|
||
Burg of the Four Friths and the tribes of the Wheat-wearers, thou shalt come
|
||
in arms by the straightest road with such fellowship as thou mayst gather;
|
||
and if thou wilt so do, we of the Dry Tree who go with thee on this
|
||
journey are thine to save or to spend by flood or field, or castle wall,
|
||
amidst the edges and the shafts and the fire-flaught. What sayest thou--
|
||
thou who art lucky, and hast of late become wise? And I will tell thee,
|
||
that though I hope it not, yet I would thou shouldst naysay it; for it
|
||
will be hard for me to see another woman sitting in our Lady's seat:
|
||
yea, to see her sitting there, who hath stolen her luck."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Now this proffer of the Captain's I call friendly
|
||
and knightly, and I will gladly swear as he will; all the more as without
|
||
any oath I should never fail him whensoever he may send for me.
|
||
As for thee, Roger, ride with us if thou wilt, and thou shalt be
|
||
welcome both in the company, and at the High House of Upmeads whenso
|
||
we come there."
|
||
|
||
Then was Roger silent, but nowise abashed; and as they spoke they
|
||
heard the tramp of horses and the clash of weapons, and they saw
|
||
through the open door three men-at-arms riding up to the house;
|
||
so Ralph went out to welcome them; they were armed full
|
||
well in bright armour, and their coats were of the Dry Tree,
|
||
and were tall men and warrior-like. They hailed Ralph as captain,
|
||
and he gave them the sele of the day and bade come in and drink a cup;
|
||
so did they, but they were scarce off their horses ere there came
|
||
another three, and then six together, and so one after other till
|
||
the hall of the Flower de Luce was full of the gleam of steel
|
||
and clash of armour, and the lads held their horses without
|
||
and were merry with the sight of the stalwart men-at-arms.
|
||
Now cometh Ursula down from her chamber clad in her bravery;
|
||
and when they saw her they set up a shout for joy of her,
|
||
so that the rafters rang again; but she laughed for pleasure
|
||
of them, and poured them out the wine, till they were merrier
|
||
with the sight of her than with the good liquor.
|
||
|
||
Now Roger comes to Ralph and tells him that he deems his host hath come
|
||
to the last man. Then Ralph armed him, and those two maidens brought him
|
||
his horse, and they mount all of them and draw up in the Square; and Roger
|
||
and Stephen a-Hurst array them, for they were chosen of them as leaders
|
||
along with Ralph, and Richard, whom they all knew, at least by hearsay.
|
||
Then Roger drew from his pouch a parchment, and read the roll of names,
|
||
and there was no man lacking, and they were threescore save five, besides
|
||
Roger and the way-farers, and never was a band of like number seen better;
|
||
and Richard said softly unto Ralph: "If we had a few more of these,
|
||
I should care little what foemen we should meet in Upmeads: soothly, my lord,
|
||
they had as well have ridden into red Hell as into our green fields."
|
||
"Fear not, Richard," said Ralph, "we shall have enough."
|
||
|
||
So then they rode out of the Square and through the streets
|
||
to the North Gate, and much folk was abroad to look on them,
|
||
and they blessed them as they went, both carles and queans;
|
||
for the rumour was toward that there was riding a good and dear
|
||
Lord and a Friend of the Well to get his own again from out
|
||
of the hands of the aliens.
|
||
|
||
Herewith they ride a little trot through the Freedom of the Burg,
|
||
and when they were clear of it they turned aside from the woodland
|
||
highway whereon Ralph had erst ridden with Roger and followed
|
||
the rides a good way till it was past noon, when they came into
|
||
a very close thicket where there was but a narrow and winding
|
||
way whereon two men might not ride abreast, and Roger said:
|
||
"Now, if we were the old Burgers, and the Dry Tree still holding
|
||
the Scaur, we should presently know what steel-point dinner meaneth;
|
||
if the dead could rise out of their graves to greet their foemen,
|
||
we should anon be a merry company here. But at last they learned
|
||
the trick, and were wont to fetch a compass round about Grey Goose
|
||
Thicket as it hight amongst us."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Ralph, "but how if there by any waylaying us;
|
||
the Burgers may be wiser still than thou deemest, and ye may
|
||
have learned them more than thou art minded to think."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Roger, "I bade a half score turn aside by the thicket path
|
||
on our left hands; that shall make all sure; but indeed I look for no
|
||
lurkers as yet. In a month's time that may betide, but not yet; not yet.
|
||
But tell me, fair Sir, have ye any deeming of where thou mayst get thee
|
||
more folk who be not afraid of the hard hand-play? For Richard hath been
|
||
telling me that there be tidings in the air."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "If hope play me not false, I look to gather some stout carles
|
||
of the Shepherd Country." "Yea," said Roger, "but I shall tell thee
|
||
that they have been at whiles unfriends of the Dry Tree." Said Ralph:
|
||
"I think they will be friends unto me." "Then it shall do well,"
|
||
said Roger, "for they be good in a fray."
|
||
|
||
So talked they as they rode, but ever Roger would give no heed to Ursula.
|
||
but made as if he wotted not that she was there, though ever and anon Ralph
|
||
would be turning back to speak to her and help her through the passes.
|
||
|
||
At last the thicket began to dwindle, and presently riding
|
||
out of a little valley or long trench on to a ridge nearly
|
||
bare of trees, they saw below them a fair green plain,
|
||
and in the midst of it a great heap of grey rocks rising
|
||
out of it like a reef out of the sea, and on the said reef,
|
||
and climbing up as it were to the topmost of it, the white walls
|
||
of a great castle, the crown whereof was a huge round tower.
|
||
At the foot of the ridge was a thorp of white houses thatched
|
||
with straw scattered over a good piece of the plain.
|
||
The company drew rein on the ridge-top, and the Champions
|
||
raised a great shout at the sight of their old strong-place;
|
||
and Roger turned to Ralph and said: "Fair Sir, how deemest
|
||
thou of the Castle of the Scaur?" but Richard broke in:
|
||
"For my part, friend Roger, I deem that ye do like to people
|
||
unlearned in war to leave the stronghold ungarnished of men.
|
||
This is a fool's deed." "Nay, nay," said Roger, "we need
|
||
not be over-hasty, while it is our chief business to order
|
||
the mingled folk of the Wheat-wearers and others who dwell
|
||
in the Burg as now."
|
||
|
||
Then spake Ralph: "Yet how wilt thou say but that the foemen whom we go
|
||
to meet in Upmeads may be some of those very Burgers: hast thou heard whether
|
||
they have found a new dwelling among some unhappy folk, or be still roving:
|
||
maybe they shall deem Upmeads fair."
|
||
|
||
Spake Michael a-Hurst: "By thy leave, fair Sir, we have had a word of those
|
||
riders and strong-thieves that they have fetched a far compass, and got
|
||
them armour, and be come into the woodland north of the Wood Debateable.
|
||
For like all strong-thieves, they love the wood."
|
||
|
||
Roger laughed: "Yea, as we did, friend Michael, when we were thieves;
|
||
whereas now we be lords and gentlemen. But as to thy tidings, I set
|
||
not much by them; for of the same message was this word that they had
|
||
already fallen on Higham by the Way; and we know that this cannot be true;
|
||
since though forsooth the Abbot has had unpeace on his hands, we know
|
||
where his foemen came from, the West to wit, and the Banded Barons."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, yea," quoth the Sage, "but may not the Burgers have taken
|
||
service with them?" "Yea, forsooth," quoth Roger, "but I deem not,
|
||
or we had been surer thereof."
|
||
|
||
Thus they spake, and they lighted down all of them to
|
||
breathe their horses, and Ursula spake with Ralph as they
|
||
walked the greensward together a little apart, and said:
|
||
"Sweetheart, I am afraid of to-day."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, dear," said he, "and wherefore?" She said:
|
||
"It will be hard for me to enter that grim house yonder,
|
||
and sit in the seat whence I was erewhile threatened by the evil
|
||
hag with hair like a grey she-bear."
|
||
|
||
He made much of her and said: "Yet belike a Friend of the Well may overcome
|
||
this also; and withal the hall shall be far other to-day when it was."
|
||
|
||
She looked about on the warriors as they lay on the grass
|
||
or loitered by their horses; then she smiled, and her face
|
||
lightened, and she reddened and cast down her eyes and said:
|
||
"Yea, that is sooth; that day there were few men in the hall,
|
||
and they old and evil of semblance. It was a band of women
|
||
who took me in the thorp and brought me up into the Castle,
|
||
and mishandled me there, and cast me into prison there;
|
||
whereas these be good fellows, and frank and free of aspect.
|
||
But 0, my heart, look thou how fearful the piled-up rocks
|
||
rise from the plain and the walls wind up amongst them;
|
||
and that huge tower, the crown of all! Surely there is none
|
||
more fearful in the world."
|
||
|
||
He kissed her and laughed merrily, and said: "Yea, sweetheart,
|
||
and there will be another change in the folk of the hall when we come
|
||
there this time, to wit, that thou shouldst not be alone therein,
|
||
even were all these champions, and Richard and the Sage away from thee.
|
||
Wilt thou tell me how that shall be?"
|
||
|
||
She turned to him and kissed him and caressed him, and then
|
||
they turned back again toward their fellows, for by now they
|
||
had walked together a good way along the ridge.
|
||
|
||
So then they gat to horse again and rode into the thorp, where men and women
|
||
stood about to behold them, and made them humble reverence as they passed by.
|
||
So rode they to the bailly of the Castle; and if that stronghold looked
|
||
terrible from the ridge above, tenfold more terrible of aspect it was
|
||
when the upper parts were hidden by the grey rocks, and they so huge
|
||
and beetling, and though the sun was bright about them, and they in the midst
|
||
of their friends, yet even Ralph felt somewhat of dread creep over him:
|
||
yet he smiled cheerfully as Ursula turned an anxious face on him.
|
||
They alighted from their horses in the bailly, for over steep for horse-hoofs
|
||
was the walled way upward; and as they began to mount, even the merry
|
||
Champions hushed their holiday clamour for awe of the huge stronghold,
|
||
and Ralph took Ursula by the hand, and she sidled up to him,
|
||
and said softly: "Yea, it was here they drave me up, those women,
|
||
thrusting and smiting me; and some would have stripped off my raiment,
|
||
but one who seemed the wisest, said, 'Nay, leave her till she come
|
||
before the ancient Lady, for her gear may be a token of whence she is,
|
||
and whither, if she be come as a spy.' So I escaped them for that moment.
|
||
And now I wonder what we shall find in the hall when we come in thither.
|
||
It is somewhat like to me, as when one gets up from bed in the dead night,
|
||
when all is quiet and the moon is shining, and goes out of the chamber
|
||
into the hall, and coming back, almost dreads to see some horror lying
|
||
in one's place amid the familiar bedclothes."
|
||
|
||
And she grew paler as she spake. Then Ralph comforted her and trimmed
|
||
his countenance to a look of mirth, but inwardly he was ill at ease.
|
||
|
||
So up they went and up, till they came to a level place whereon
|
||
was built the chief hall and its chambers: there they stood awhile
|
||
to breathe them before the door, which was rather low than great;
|
||
and Ursula clung to Ralph and trembled, but Ralph spake in her ear:
|
||
"Take heart, my sweet, or these men, and Roger in especial,
|
||
will think the worse of thee; and thou a Friend of the Well.
|
||
What! here is naught to hurt thee! this is naught beside the perils
|
||
of the desert, and the slaves and the evil lord of Utterbol."
|
||
"Yea," she said, "but meseemeth I loved thee not so sore as now I do.
|
||
O friend, I am become a weak woman and unvaliant, and there is
|
||
naught in me but love of thee, and love of life because of thee;
|
||
nor dost thou know altogether what befell me in that hall."
|
||
|
||
But Ralph turned about and cried out in a loud, cheerful voice:
|
||
"Let us enter, friends! and lo you, I will show the Champions
|
||
of the Dry Tree the way into their own hall and high place."
|
||
Therewith he thrust the door open, for it was not locked,
|
||
and strode into the hall, still leading Ursula by the hand,
|
||
and all the company followed him, the clash of their armour
|
||
resounding through the huge building. Though it was long, it was not
|
||
so much that it was long as that it was broad, and exceeding high,
|
||
so that in the dusk of it the great vault of the roof was dim
|
||
and misty. There was no man therein, no halling on its walls,
|
||
no benches nor boards, naught but the great standing table
|
||
of stone on the dais, and the stone high-seat amidst of it:
|
||
and the place did verily seem like the house and hall of a people
|
||
that had died out in one hour because of their evil deeds.
|
||
|
||
They stood still a moment when they were all fairly within doors, and Roger
|
||
thrust up to Ralph and said, but softly: "The woman is blenching, and all
|
||
for naught; were it not for the oath, we had best have left her in the thorp:
|
||
I fear me she will bring evil days on our old home with her shivering fear.
|
||
How far otherwise came our Lady in hither when first she came amongst us,
|
||
when the Duke of us found her in the wood after she had been
|
||
thrust out from Sunway by the Baron whom thou slewest afterward.
|
||
Our Duke brought her in hither wrapped up in his knight's scarlet cloak,
|
||
and went up with her on to the dais; but when she came thither, she turned
|
||
about and let her cloak fall to earth, and stood there barefoot in her smock,
|
||
as she had been cast out into the wildwood, and she spread abroad her hands,
|
||
and cried out in a loud voice as sweet as the May blackbird, 'May God bless
|
||
this House and the abode of the valiant, and the shelter of the hapless.'"
|
||
|
||
Said Ursula (and her voice was firm and the colour come back
|
||
to her cheeks now, while Ralph stood agaze and wondering): "Roger,
|
||
thou lovest me little, meseemeth, though if I did less than I do,
|
||
I should do against the will of thy Lady that was Queen in this hall.
|
||
But tell me, Roger, where is gone that other one, the fearful she-bear
|
||
of this crag, who sat in yonder stone high-seat, and roared at me
|
||
and mocked me, and gave me over into the hands of her tormentors,
|
||
who haled me away to the prison wherefrom thy very Lady delivered me?"
|
||
|
||
"Lady," said Roger, "the tale of her is short since the day thou sawest
|
||
her herein. On the day when we first had the evil tidings of the slaying
|
||
of my Lady we were sad at heart, and called to mind ancient transgressions
|
||
against us; therefore we fell on the she-bear, as thou callest her,
|
||
and her company of men and women, and some we slew and some we thrust forth;
|
||
but as to her, I slew her not three feet from where thou standest now.
|
||
A rumour there is that she walketh, and it may be so; yet in the summer
|
||
noon ye need not look to see her."
|
||
|
||
Ralph said coldly: "Roger, let us be done with minstrels' tales; lead me
|
||
to the place where the oath is to be sworn, for time presses."
|
||
|
||
Scarce were the words out of his mouth ere Roger strode forward and gat
|
||
him on to the dais and went hastily to the wall behind the high-seat,
|
||
whence he took down a very great horn, and set it to his lips and winded
|
||
it loudly thrice, so that the great and high hall was full of its echoes.
|
||
Richard started thereat and half drew his sword; but the Sage put his hand
|
||
upon the hilts, and said: "It is naught, let the edges lie quiet."
|
||
Ursula stared astonished, but now she quaked no more; Ralph changed not
|
||
countenance a wit, and the champions of the Tree made as if naught had been
|
||
done that they looked not for. But thereafter cried Roger from the dais:
|
||
"This is the token that the men of the Dry Tree are met for matters of import;
|
||
thus is the Mote hallowed. Come up hither, ye aliens, and ye also of
|
||
the fellowship, that the oath may be sworn, and we may go our ways,
|
||
even as the alien captain biddeth."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph took Ursula's hand again, and went up the hall calmly
|
||
and proudly, and the champions followed with Richard and the Sage.
|
||
Ralph and Ursula went up on to the dais, and he set down Ursula
|
||
in the stone high-seat, and even in the halldusk a right fair-coloured
|
||
picture she looked therein; for she was clad in a goodly green
|
||
gown broidered with flowers, and a green cloak with gold orphreys
|
||
over it; her hair was spread abroad over her shoulders, and on
|
||
her head was a garland of roses which the women of the Flower
|
||
de Luce had given her; so there she sat with her fair face,
|
||
whence now all the wrinkles of trouble and fear were smoothed out,
|
||
looking like an image of the early summer-tide itself.
|
||
And the champions looked on her and marvelled, and one whispered
|
||
to the other that it was their Lady of aforetime come back again;
|
||
only Roger, who had now gone back to the rest of the fellowship,
|
||
cast his eyes upon the ground, and muttered.
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph draws his sword, and lays it naked on the stone table,
|
||
and he stood beside Ursula and said: "Champions of the Dry Tree,
|
||
by the blade of Upmeads which lieth here before me, and by the head
|
||
which I love best in the world, and is best worthy of love"
|
||
(and herewith he laid his hand on Ursula's head), "I swear
|
||
that whensoever the Captain of the Dry Tree calleth on me,
|
||
whether I be eating or drinking, abed or standing on my feet,
|
||
at peace or at war, glad or sorry, I shall do my utmost to come
|
||
to his aid straightway with whatso force I may gather.
|
||
Is this rightly sworn, Champions?"
|
||
|
||
Said Stephen a-Hurst: "It is sworn well and knightly,
|
||
and now cometh our oath."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "I had no mind to drive a bargain with you;
|
||
your deeds shall prove you; and I fear not for your doughtiness."
|
||
|
||
Said Stephen: "Yea, Lord; but he bade us swear to thee.
|
||
Reach me thy sword, I pray thee."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph reached him his sword across the great stone table,
|
||
and Stephen took it, and kissed the blade and the hilts;
|
||
and then lifted up his voice and said: "By the hilts and the blade,
|
||
by the point and the edge, we swear to follow the Lord Ralph
|
||
of Upmeads for a year and a day, and to do his will in all wise.
|
||
So help us God and Allhallows!"
|
||
|
||
And therewith he gave the sword to the others, and each man of them
|
||
kissed it as he had.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph said: "Champions, for this oath I thank you all heartily.
|
||
But it is not my meaning that I should hold you by me for a year,
|
||
whereas I deem I shall do all that my kindred may need in three days'
|
||
space from the first hour wherein we set foot in Upmeads."
|
||
|
||
Stephen smiled friendly at him and nodded, and said: "That may well be;
|
||
but now to make a good end of this mote I will tell thee a thing; to wit,
|
||
that our Captain, yea, and all we, are minded to try thee by this fray
|
||
in Upmeads, now we know that thou hast become a Friend of the Well.
|
||
And if thou turn out as we deem is likest, we will give thee this Castle
|
||
of the Scaur, for thee and those that shall spring from thy loins;
|
||
for we deem that some such man as thou will be the only one to hold
|
||
it worthily, and in such wise as it may be a stronghold against
|
||
tyrants and for the helping of peaceable folk; since forsooth,
|
||
we of the Dry Tree have heard somewhat of the Well at the World's End,
|
||
and trow in the might thereof."
|
||
|
||
He made an end; and Ralph kept silence and pondered the matter.
|
||
But Roger lifted up his head and broke in, and said: "Yea, yea! that is it:
|
||
we are all become men of peace, we riders of the Dry Tree!"
|
||
And he laughed withal, but as one nowise best pleased.
|
||
|
||
But as Ralph was gathering his words together, and Ursula
|
||
was looking up to him with trouble in her face again,
|
||
came a man of the thorp rushing into the hall, and cried out:
|
||
"O, my lords! there are weaponed men coming forth from the thicket.
|
||
Save us, we pray you, for we are ill-weaponed and men of peace."
|
||
|
||
Roger laughed, and said: "Eh, good man! So ye want us back again?
|
||
But my Lord Ralph, and thou Richard, and thou Stephen,
|
||
come ye to the shot-window here, that giveth on to the forest.
|
||
We are high up here, and we shall see all as clearly as in a good mirror.
|
||
Hast thou shut the gates, carle?" "Yea, Lord Roger," quoth he,
|
||
"and there are some fifty of us together down in the base-court."
|
||
|
||
Ralph and Richard and Stephen looked forth from the shot window,
|
||
and saw verily a band of men riding down the bent into the thorp,
|
||
and Ralph, who as aforesaid was far-sighted and clear-sighted, said:
|
||
"Yea, it is strange: but without doubt these are riders of the Dry Tree;
|
||
and they seem to me to be some ten-score. Thou Stephen, thou Roger,
|
||
what is to hand? Is your Captain wont to give a gift and take it
|
||
back...and somewhat more with it?" Stephen looked abashed at his word;
|
||
and Roger hung his head again.
|
||
|
||
But therewith the Sage drew up to them and said: "Be not dismayed,
|
||
Lord Ralph. What wert thou going to say to the Champions when this
|
||
carle brake in?"
|
||
|
||
"This," said Ralph, "that I thanked the Dry Tree heartily for its gift,
|
||
but that meseemed it naught wise to leave this stronghold disgarnished
|
||
of men till I can come or send back from Upmeads."
|
||
|
||
Stephen's face cleared at the word, and he said: "I bid thee
|
||
believe it, lord, that there is no treason in our Captain's heart;
|
||
and that if there were I would fight against him and his men
|
||
on thy behalf." And Roger, though in a somewhat surly voice,
|
||
said the like.
|
||
|
||
Ralph thought a little, and then he said: "It is well; go we down and out
|
||
of gates to meet them, that we may the sooner get on our way to Upmeads."
|
||
And without more words he went up to Ursula and took her hand and went
|
||
out of the hall, and down the rock-cut stair, and all they with him.
|
||
And when they came into the Base-court, Ralph spoke to the carles
|
||
of the thorp, who stood huddled together sore afeard, and said:
|
||
"Throw open the gates. These riders who have so scared you are naught else
|
||
than the Champions of the Dry Tree who are coming back to their stronghold
|
||
that they may keep you sure against wicked tyrants who would oppress you."
|
||
|
||
The carles looked askance at one another, but straightway opened
|
||
the gates, and Ralph and his company went forth, and abode the
|
||
new-comers on a little green mound half a bowshot from the Castle.
|
||
Ralph sat down on the grass and Ursula by him, and she said:
|
||
"My heart tells me that these Champions are no traitors, however rough
|
||
and fierce they have been, and still shall be if occasion serve.
|
||
But 0, sweetheart, how dear and sweet is this sunlit greensward after
|
||
yonder grim hold. Surely, sweet, it shall never be our dwelling?"
|
||
|
||
"I wot not, beloved," said he; "must we not go and dwell
|
||
where deeds shall lead us? and the hand of Weird is mighty.
|
||
But lo thou, here are the newcomers to hand!"
|
||
|
||
So it was as he said, and presently the whole band came before them,
|
||
and they were all of the Dry Tree, stout men and well weaponed, and they
|
||
had ridden exceeding fast, so that their horses were somewhat spent.
|
||
A tall man very gallantly armed, who rode at their head, leapt at
|
||
once from his horse and came up to Ralph and hailed him, and Roger
|
||
and Stephen both made obeisance to him. Ralph, who had risen up,
|
||
hailed him in his turn, and the tall man said: "I am the Captain of
|
||
the Dry Tree for lack of a better; art thou Ralph of Upmeads, fair sir?"
|
||
"Even so," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Said the Captain: "Thou wilt marvel that I have ridden
|
||
after thee on the spur; so here is the tale shortly.
|
||
Your backs were not turned on the walls of the Burg an hour,
|
||
ere three of my riders brought in to me a man who said,
|
||
and gave me tokens of his word being true, that he had fallen
|
||
in with a company of the old Burgers in the Wood Debateable,
|
||
which belike thou wottest of."
|
||
|
||
"All we of Upmeads wot of it," said Ralph. "Well," said the Captain,
|
||
"amongst these said Burgers, who were dwelling in the wildwood in summer
|
||
content, the word went free that they would gather to them other bands
|
||
of strong-thieves who haunt that wood, and go with them upon Upmeads,
|
||
and from Upmeads, when they were waxen strong, they would fall upon Higham by
|
||
the Way, and thence with yet more strength on their old dwelling of the Burg.
|
||
Now whereas I know that thou art of Upmeads, and also what thou art, and what
|
||
thou hast done, I have ridden after thee to tell thee what is toward.
|
||
But if thou deemest I have brought thee all these riders it is not wholly so.
|
||
For it was borne into my mind that our old stronghold was left bare of men,
|
||
and I knew not what might betide; and that the more, as more than one man
|
||
has told us how that another band of the disinherited Burgers have fallen
|
||
upon Higham or the lands thereof, and Higham is no great way hence;
|
||
so that some five score of these riders are to hold our Castle of the Scaur,
|
||
and the rest are for thee to ride afield with. As for the others, thou hast
|
||
been told already that the Scaur, and Hampton therewith is a gift from us
|
||
to thee; for henceforward we be the lords of the Burg of the Four Friths,
|
||
and that is more than enough for us."
|
||
|
||
Ralph thanked the Captain for this, and did him to wit that he would
|
||
take the gift if he came back out the Upmeads fray alive: said he,
|
||
"With thee and the Wheat-wearers in the Burg, and me in the Scaur,
|
||
no strong-thief shall dare lift up his hand in these parts."
|
||
|
||
The Captain smiled, and Ralph went on: "And now I must needs
|
||
ask thee for leave to depart; which is all the more needful,
|
||
whereas thy men have over-ridden their horses, and we must
|
||
needs go a soft pace till we come to Higham."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, art thou for Higham, fair sir?" said the Captain. "That is well;
|
||
for ye may get men therefrom, and at the least it is like that ye shall
|
||
hear tidings: as to my men and their horses, this hath been looked to.
|
||
For five hundred good men of the Wheat-wearers, men who have not learned
|
||
the feat of arms a-horseback, are coming through the woods hither to help
|
||
ward thy castle, fair lord; they will be here in some three hours'
|
||
space and will bring horses for thy five score men, therefore do ye but ride
|
||
softly to Higham and if these sergeants catch up with you it is well,
|
||
but if not, abide them at Higham."
|
||
|
||
"Thanks have thou for this once more," said Ralph; "and now I
|
||
have no more word than this for thee; that I will come to thee
|
||
at thy least word, and serve thee with all that I have,
|
||
to my very life if need be. And yet I must say this,
|
||
that I wot not why ye and these others are become to me,
|
||
who am alien to you, as very brothers." Said the Captain:
|
||
"There is this to be said of it, as was aforesaid, that all we
|
||
count thy winning of the Well at the World's End as valiancy
|
||
in thee, yea, and luck withal. But, moreover, she who was
|
||
Our Lady would have had thee for her friend had she lived,
|
||
and how then could we be less than friends to thee?
|
||
Depart in peace, my friend, and we look to see thee again
|
||
in a little while."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he kissed him, and bade farewell; and Ralph bade
|
||
his band to horse, and they were in the saddle in a twinkling,
|
||
and rode away from Hampton at a soft pace.
|
||
|
||
But as they went, Ralph turned to Ursula and said:
|
||
"And now belike shall we see Bourton Abbas once more,
|
||
and the house where first I saw thee. And O how sweet thou wert!
|
||
And I was so happy and so young."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," she said, "and sorely I longed for thee, and now we
|
||
have long been together, as it seemeth; and yet that long space
|
||
shall be but a little while of our lives. But, my friend,
|
||
as to Bourton Abbas, I misdoubt me of our seeing it;
|
||
for there is a nigher road by the by-ways to Higham,
|
||
which these men know, and doubtless that way we shall wend:
|
||
and I am glad thereof; for I shall tell thee, that somewhat I
|
||
fear that thorp, lest it should lay hold of me, and wake me
|
||
from a dream."
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "but even then, belike thou shouldst find me
|
||
beside thee; as if I had fallen asleep in the ale-house, and dreamed
|
||
of the Well at the World's End, and then awoke and seen the dear
|
||
barefoot maiden busying her about her house and its matters.
|
||
That were naught so ill."
|
||
|
||
"Ah," she said, "look round on thy men, and think of the might
|
||
of war that is in them, and think of the deeds to come.
|
||
But O how I would that these next few days were worn away,
|
||
and we yet alive for a long while."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 20
|
||
|
||
They Come to the Gate of Higham By the Way
|
||
|
||
|
||
It was as Ursula had deemed, and they made for Higham by the shortest road,
|
||
so that they came before the gate a little before sunset:
|
||
to the very gate they came not; for there were strong barriers before it,
|
||
and men-at-arms within them, as though they were looking for an onfall.
|
||
And amongst these were bowmen who bended their bows on Ralph and his company.
|
||
So Ralph stayed his men, and rode up to the barriers with Richard and Stephen
|
||
a-Hurst, all three of them bare-headed with their swords in the sheaths;
|
||
and Stephen moreover bearing a white cloth on a truncheon. Then a knight
|
||
of the town, very bravely armed, came forth from the barriers and went up
|
||
to Ralph, and said: "Fair sir, art thou a knight?" "Yea," said Ralph.
|
||
Said the knight, "Who be ye?" "I hight Ralph of Upmeads," said Ralph,
|
||
"and these be my men: and we pray thee for guesting in the town of my Lord
|
||
Abbot to-night, and leave to depart to-morrow betimes."
|
||
|
||
"O unhappy young man," said the knight, "meseems these men be not
|
||
so much thine as thou art theirs; for they are of the Dry Tree,
|
||
and bear their token openly. Wilt thou then lodge thy company
|
||
of strong-thieves with honest men?"
|
||
|
||
Stephen a-Hurst laughed roughly at this word, but Ralph said mildly:
|
||
"These men are indeed of the Dry Tree, but they are my men and under my rule,
|
||
and they be riding on my errands, which be lawful."
|
||
|
||
The knight was silent a while and then he said: "Well, it may be so;
|
||
but into this town they come not, for the tale of them is over long
|
||
for honest men to hearken to."
|
||
|
||
Even as he spake, a man-at-arms somewhat evilly armed shoved through
|
||
the barriers, thrusting aback certain of his fellows, and, coming up to Ralph,
|
||
stood staring up into his face with the tears starting into his eyes.
|
||
Ralph looked a moment, and then reached down his arms to embrace him,
|
||
and kissed his face; for lo! it was his own brother Hugh.
|
||
Withal he whispered in his ear: "Get thee behind us, Hugh, if thou
|
||
wilt come with us, lad." So Hugh passed on quietly toward the band,
|
||
while Ralph turned to the knight again, who said to him, "Who is that man?"
|
||
"He is mine own brother," said Ralph. "Be he the brother of whom he will,"
|
||
said the knight, "he was none the less our sworn man. Ye fools,"
|
||
said he, turning toward the men in the barrier, "why did ye not slay him?"
|
||
"He slipped out," said they, "before we wotted what he was about."
|
||
Said the knight, "Where were your bows, then?"
|
||
|
||
Said a man: "They were pressing so hard on the barrier,
|
||
that we could not draw a bowstring. Besides, how might we
|
||
shoot him without hitting thee, belike?"
|
||
|
||
The knight turned toward Ralph, grown wroth and surly,
|
||
and that the more he saw Stephen and Richard grinning; he said:
|
||
"Fair sir, ye have strengthened the old saw that saith, Tell me
|
||
what thy friends are, and I will tell thee what thou art.
|
||
Thou hast stolen our man with not a word on it."
|
||
|
||
"Fair sir," said Ralph, "meseemeth thou makest more words
|
||
than enough about it. Shall I buy my brother of thee, then?
|
||
I have a good few pieces in my pouch." The captain shook
|
||
his head angrily.
|
||
|
||
"Well," said Ralph, "how can I please thee, fair sir?"
|
||
|
||
Quoth the knight: "Thou canst please me best by turning thy horses'
|
||
heads away from Higham, all the sort of you." He stepped back
|
||
toward the barriers, and then came forward again, and said:
|
||
"Look you, man-at-arms, I warn thee that I trust thee not, and deem
|
||
that thou liest. Now have I mind to issue out and fall upon you:
|
||
for ye shall be evil guests in my Lord Abbot's lands."
|
||
|
||
Now at last Ralph waxed somewhat wroth, and he said:
|
||
"Come out then, if you will, and we shall meet you man for man;
|
||
there is yet light on this lily lea, and we will do so much
|
||
for thee, churl though thou be."
|
||
|
||
But as he spoke, came the sounds of horns, and lo, over the bent showed
|
||
the points of spears, and then all those five-score of the Dry Tree
|
||
whom the captain had sent after Ralph came pouring down the bent.
|
||
The knight looked on them under the sharp of his hand, till he saw
|
||
the Dry Tree on their coats also, and then he turned and gat him hastily
|
||
into the barriers; and when he was amongst his own men he fell to roaring
|
||
out a defiance to Ralph, and a bolt flew forth, and two or three shafts,
|
||
but hurt no one. Richard and Stephen drew their swords, but Ralph cried out:
|
||
"Come away, friends, tarry not to bicker with these fools, who are afraid
|
||
of they know not what: it is but lying under the naked heaven to-night
|
||
instead of under the rafters, but we have all lodged thus a many times:
|
||
and we shall be nigher to our journey's end to-morrow when we wake up."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he turned his horse with Richard and Stephen and came
|
||
to his own men. There was much laughter and jeering at the Abbot's
|
||
men amidst of the Dry Tree, both of those who had ridden with Ralph,
|
||
and the new-comers; but they arrayed them to ride further in good order,
|
||
and presently were skirting the walls of Higham out of bow-shot,
|
||
and making for the Down country by the clear of the moon.
|
||
The sergeants had gotten a horse for Hugh, and by Ralph's bidding
|
||
he rode beside him as they went their ways, and the two brethren
|
||
talked together lovingly.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 21
|
||
|
||
Talk Between Those Two Brethren
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph asked Hugh first if he wotted aught of Gregory their brother.
|
||
Hugh laughed and pointed to Higham, and said: "He is yonder."
|
||
"What," said Ralph, "in the Abbot's host?" "Yea," said Hugh,
|
||
laughing again, "but in his spiritual, not his worldly host:
|
||
he is turned monk, brother; that is, he is already a novice,
|
||
and will be a brother of the Abbey in six months' space." Said Ralph:
|
||
"And Launcelot Long-tongue, thy squire, how hath he sped?" Said Hugh:
|
||
"He is yonder also, but in the worldly host, not the spiritual:
|
||
he is a sergeant of theirs, and somewhat of a catch for them,
|
||
for he is no ill man-at-arms, as thou wottest, and besides he adorneth
|
||
everything with words, so that men hearken to him gladly."
|
||
"But tell me," said Ralph, "how it befalleth that the Abbot's men
|
||
of war be so churlish, and chary of the inside of their town;
|
||
what have they to fear? Is not the Lord Abbot still a mighty man?"
|
||
Hugh shook his head: "There hath been a change of days at Higham;
|
||
though I say not but that the knights are over careful,
|
||
and much over fearful." "What has the change been?" said Ralph.
|
||
Hugh said: "In time past my Lord Abbot was indeed a mighty man,
|
||
and both this town of Higham was well garnished of men-at-arms,
|
||
and also many of his manors had castles and strong-houses on them,
|
||
and the yeomen were ready to run to their weapons whenso the gathering
|
||
was blown. In short, Higham was as mighty as it was wealthy;
|
||
and the Abbot's men had naught to do with any, save with thy friends
|
||
here who bear the Tree Leafless; all else feared those holy walls
|
||
and the well-blessed men who warded them. But the Dry Tree feared,
|
||
as men said, neither man nor devil (and I hope it may be so still
|
||
since they are become thy friends), and they would whiles lift
|
||
in the Abbot's lands when they had no merrier business on hand,
|
||
and not seldom came to their above in their dealings with his men.
|
||
But all things come to an end; for, as I am told, some year and a
|
||
half ago, the Abbot had debate with the Westland Barons, who both
|
||
were and are ill men to deal with, being both hungry and doughty.
|
||
The quarrel grew till my Lord must needs defy them, and to make a long
|
||
tale short, he himself in worldly armour led his host against them,
|
||
and they met some twenty miles to the west in the field of the
|
||
Wry Bridge, and there was Holy Church overthrown; and the Abbot,
|
||
who is as valiant a man as ever sang mass, though not over-wise in war,
|
||
would not flee, and as none would slay him, might they help it,
|
||
they had to lead him away, and he sits to this day in their
|
||
strongest castle, the Red Mount west-away. Well, he being gone,
|
||
and many of his wisest warriors slain, the rest ran into gates again;
|
||
but when the Westlanders beset Higham and thought to have it good cheap,
|
||
the monks and their men warded it not so ill but that the Westlanders
|
||
broke their teeth over it. Forsooth, they turned away thence
|
||
and took most of the castles and strong-houses of the Abbot's lands;
|
||
burned some and put garrisons into others, and drave away a mighty
|
||
spoil of chattels and men and women, so that the lands of Higham
|
||
are half ruined; and thereby the monks, though they be stout enough
|
||
within their walls, will not suffer their men to ride abroad.
|
||
Whereby, being cooped up in a narrow place, and with no deeds to hand
|
||
to cheer their hearts withal, they are grown sour and churlish."
|
||
|
||
"But, brother," said Ralph, "howsoever churlish they may be,
|
||
and howso timorous, I cannot see why they should shut their gates
|
||
in our faces, a little band, when there is no foe anear them."
|
||
|
||
"Ralph," said Hugh, "thou must think of this once more, that the Dry
|
||
Tree is no good let-pass to flourish in honest men's faces;
|
||
specialiter if they be monks. Amongst the brothers of Higham
|
||
the tale goes that those Champions have made covenant with the devil
|
||
to come to their above whensoever they be not more than one to five.
|
||
Nay, moreover, it is said that there be very devils amongst them;
|
||
some in the likeness of carles, and some (God help us)
|
||
dressed up in women's flesh; and fair flesh also, meseemeth.
|
||
Also to-day they say in Higham that no otherwise might they ever
|
||
have overcome the stark and cruel carles of the Burg of the Four
|
||
Friths and chased them out of their town, as we know they have done.
|
||
Hah! what sayest thou?"
|
||
|
||
"I say, Hugh," quoth Ralph angrily, "that thou art a fool to go about with
|
||
a budget of slanderous old wives' tales." Hugh laughed. "Be not so wroth,
|
||
little lord, or I shall be asking thee tales of marvels also. But hearken.
|
||
I shall smooth out thy frowns with a smile when thou hast heard this:
|
||
this folk are not only afeard of their old enemies, the devil-led men,
|
||
but also they fear those whom the devil-led men have driven out of house
|
||
and home, to wit, the Burgers. Yet again they fear the Burgers yet more,
|
||
because they have beaten some of the very foes of Higham, to wit,
|
||
the Westland Barons; for they have taken from them some of their strong-holds,
|
||
and are deemed to be gathering force."
|
||
|
||
Ralph pondered a while, and then he said: "Brother, hast thou any
|
||
tidings of Upmeads, or that these Burgers have gone down thither?"
|
||
"God forbid!" said Hugh. "Nay, I have had no tidings of Upmeads
|
||
since I was fool enough to leave it."
|
||
|
||
"What! brother," said Ralph, "thou hast not thriven then?"
|
||
|
||
"I have had ups and downs," said Hugh, "but the ups have
|
||
been one rung of the ladder, and the downs three--or more.
|
||
Three months I sat in prison for getting me a broken head in a quarrel
|
||
that concerned me not. Six months was I besieged in a town whither
|
||
naught led me but ill-luck. Two days I wore in running thence,
|
||
having scaled the wall and swam the ditch in the night.
|
||
Three months I served squire to a knight who gave me the business
|
||
of watching his wife of whom he was jealous; and to help me
|
||
out of the weariness of his house I must needs make love myself
|
||
to the said wife, who sooth to say was perchance worth it.
|
||
Thence again I went by night and cloud. Ten months I wore
|
||
away at the edge of the wildwood, and sometimes in it,
|
||
with a sort of fellows who taught me many things, but not how
|
||
to keep my hands from other men's goods when I was hungry.
|
||
There was I taken with some five others by certain sergeants
|
||
of Higham, whom the warriors of the town had sent out cautiously
|
||
to see if they might catch a few men for their ranks.
|
||
Well, they gave me the choice of the gallows-tree or service
|
||
for the Church, and so, my choice made, there have I been
|
||
ever since, till I saw thy face this evening, fair sir."
|
||
|
||
"Well, brother," said Ralph, "all that shall be amended, and thou shalt
|
||
back to Upmeads with me. Yet wert thou to amend thyself somewhat,
|
||
it might not be ill."
|
||
|
||
Quoth Hugh: "It shall be tried, brother. But may I ask thee somewhat?"
|
||
Said Ralph: "Ask on." "Fair Sir," said Hugh, "thou seemedst grown
|
||
into a pretty man when I saw thee e'en-now before this twilight
|
||
made us all alike; but the men at thy back are not wont to be led
|
||
by men who have not earned a warrior's name, yet they follow thee:
|
||
how cometh that about? Again, before the twilight gathered I saw the woman
|
||
that rideth anigh us (who is now but a shadow) how fair and gentle she is:
|
||
indeed there is no marvel in her following thee (though if she be an earl's
|
||
daughter she is a fair getting for an imp of Upmeads), for thou art
|
||
a well shapen lad, little lord, and carriest a sweet tongue in thy mouth.
|
||
But tell me, what is she?"
|
||
|
||
"Brother," said Ralph kindly, "she is my wife."
|
||
|
||
"I kiss her hands," said Hugh; "but of what lineage is she?"
|
||
|
||
"She is my wife," said Ralph. Said Hugh: "That is, forsooth,
|
||
a high dignity." Said Ralph: "Thou sayest sooth, though in mockery
|
||
thou speakest, which is scarce kind to thine own mother's son:
|
||
but learn, brother, that I am become a Friend of the Well,
|
||
and were meet to wed with the daughters of the best of the Kings:
|
||
yet is this one meeter to wed with me than the highest of the Queens;
|
||
for she also is a Friend of the Well. Moreover, thou sayest
|
||
it that the champions of the Dry Tree, who would think
|
||
but little of an earl for a leader, are eager to follow me:
|
||
and if thou still doubt what this may mean, abide, till in two days
|
||
or three thou see me before the foeman. Then shalt thou tell
|
||
me how much changed I am from the stripling whom thou knewest
|
||
in Upmeads a little while ago."
|
||
|
||
Then was Hugh somewhat abashed, and he said: "I crave thy pardon,
|
||
brother, but never had I a well filed tongue, and belike it hath
|
||
grown no smoother amid the hard haps which have befallen me of late.
|
||
Besides it was dull in there, and I must needs try to win a little
|
||
mirth out of kith and kin."
|
||
|
||
"So be it, lad," quoth Ralph kindly, "thou didst ask and I told,
|
||
and all is said."
|
||
|
||
"Yet forsooth," said Hugh, "thou hast given me marvel for marvel, brother."
|
||
"Even so," said Ralph, "and hereafter I will tell thee more when we sit safe
|
||
by the wine at Upmeads."
|
||
|
||
Now cometh back one of the fore-riders and draweth rein by Ralph
|
||
and saith that they are hard on a little thorp under the hanging
|
||
of the hill that was the beginning of the Down country on that road.
|
||
So Ralph bade make stay there and rest the night over, and seek
|
||
new tidings on the morrow; and the man told Ralph that the folk
|
||
of the thorp were fleeing fast at the tidings of their company,
|
||
and that it were best that he and some half score should
|
||
ride sharply into the thorp, so that it might not be quite
|
||
bare of victuals when they came to their night's lodging.
|
||
Ralph bids him so do, but to heed well that he hurt no man, or let
|
||
fire get into any house or roof; so he takes his knot of men and rides
|
||
off on the spur, and Ralph and the main of them come on quietly;
|
||
and when they came into the street of the thorp, lo there by the cross
|
||
a big fire lighted, and the elders standing thereby cap in hand,
|
||
and a score of stout carles with weapons in their hands.
|
||
Then the chief man came up to Ralph and greeted him and said:
|
||
"Lord, when we heard that an armed company was at hand we
|
||
deemed no less than that the riders of the Burg were upon us,
|
||
and deemed that there was nought for it but to flee each as far
|
||
and as fast as he might. But now we have heard that thou art
|
||
a good lord seeking his own with the help of worthy champions,
|
||
and a foeman to those devils of the Burg, we bid thee look upon
|
||
us and all we have as thine, lord, and take kindly such guesting
|
||
as we may give thee."
|
||
|
||
The old man's voice quavered a little as he looked on the stark
|
||
shapes of the Dry Tree; but Ralph looked kindly on him, and said:
|
||
"Yea, my master, we will but ask for a covering for our heads,
|
||
and what victual thou mayst easily spare us in return
|
||
for good silver, and thou shalt have our thanks withal.
|
||
But who be these stout lads with staves and bucklers,
|
||
or whither will they to-night?"
|
||
|
||
Thereat a tall young man with a spear in his hand and girt with
|
||
a short sword came forth and said boldly: "Lord, we be a few
|
||
who thought when we heard that the Burg-devils were at hand that we
|
||
might as well die in the field giving stroke for stroke, as be
|
||
hauled off and drop to pieces under the hands of their tormentors;
|
||
and now thou hast come, we have little will to abide behind,
|
||
but were fain to follow thee, and do thee what good we can:
|
||
and after thou hast come to thine above, when we go back
|
||
to our kin thou mayst give us a gift if it please thee:
|
||
but we deem that no great matter if thou but give us leave
|
||
to have the comfort of thee and thy Champions for a while in
|
||
these hard days."
|
||
|
||
When he had done speaking there rose up from the Champions a hum as
|
||
of praise, and Ralph was well-pleased withal, deeming it a good omen;
|
||
so he said: "Fear not, good fellows, that I shall forget you when we
|
||
have overcome the foemen, and meanwhile we will live and die together.
|
||
But thou, ancient man, show our sergeants where our riders shall lie
|
||
to-night, and what they shall do with their horses."
|
||
|
||
So the elders marshalled the little host to their abodes
|
||
for that night, lodging the more part of them in a big barn on
|
||
the western outskirt of the thorp. The elder who led them thither,
|
||
brought them victual and good drink, and said to them:
|
||
"Lords, ye were best to keep a good watch to-night because it
|
||
is on this side that we may look for an onfall from the foemen
|
||
if they be abroad to-night; and sooth to say that is one cause
|
||
we have bestowed you here, deeming that ye would not grudge us
|
||
the solace of knowing that your valiant bodies were betwixt us
|
||
and them, for we be a poor unwalled people."
|
||
|
||
Stephen to whom he spake laughed at his word, and said:
|
||
"Heart-up, carle! within these few days we shall build
|
||
up a better wall than ye may have of stone and lime;
|
||
and that is the overthrow of our foemen in the open field."
|
||
|
||
So there was kindness and good fellowship betwixt the thorp-dwellers
|
||
and the riders, and the country folk told those others many tales
|
||
of the evil deeds of the Burg-devils, as they called them;
|
||
but they could not tell them for certain whether they had gone
|
||
down into Upmeads.
|
||
|
||
As to Ralph and Ursula they, with Richard and Roger,
|
||
were lodged in the headman's house, and had good feast there,
|
||
and he also talked over the where-abouts of the Burgers
|
||
with the thorp-dwellers, but might have no certain tidings.
|
||
So he and Ursula and his fellows went to bed and slept peacefully
|
||
for the first hours of the night.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 22
|
||
|
||
An Old Acquaintance Comes From the Down Country to See Ralph
|
||
|
||
|
||
But an hour after midnight Ralph arose, as his purpose was,
|
||
and called Richard, and they took their swords and went forth
|
||
and about the thorp and around its outskirts, and found naught
|
||
worse than their own watch any where; so they came back again
|
||
to their quarters and found Roger standing at the door,
|
||
who said to Ralph: "Lord, here is a man who would see thee."
|
||
"What like is he?" said Ralph. Said Roger "He is an old man,
|
||
but a tough one; however, I have got his weapons from him."
|
||
"Bring him in," said Ralph, "and he shall have his say."
|
||
|
||
So they all went into the chamber together and there was light therein;
|
||
but the man said to Ralph: "Art thou the Captain of the men-at-arms, lord?"
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph. Said the man, "I were as lief have these others away."
|
||
"So be it," said Ralph; "depart for a little while, friends."
|
||
So they went but Ursula lay in the bed, which was in a nook in the wall;
|
||
the man looked about the chamber and said: "Is there any one in the bed?"
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "my wife, good fellow; shall she go also?"
|
||
"Nay," said the carle, "we shall do as we are now. So I will begin my tale."
|
||
|
||
Ralph looked on him and deemed he had seen him before,
|
||
but could not altogether call his visage to mind; so he held
|
||
his peace and the man went on.
|
||
|
||
"I am of the folk of the shepherds of the Downs: we be not a many
|
||
by count of noses, but each one of us who is come to man's yean,
|
||
and many who be past them, as I myself, can handle weapons at a pinch.
|
||
Now some deal we have been harried and have suffered by these wretches
|
||
who have eaten into the bowels of this land; that is to say,
|
||
they have lifted our sheep, and slain some of us who withstood them:
|
||
but whereas our houses be uncostly and that we move about easily
|
||
from one hill-side to another, it is like that we should have deemed
|
||
it wisest to have borne this trouble, like others of wind and weather,
|
||
without seeking new remedy, but that there have been tokens on earth
|
||
and in the heavens, whereof it is too long to tell thee, lord, at present,
|
||
which have stirred up our scattered folk to meet together in arms.
|
||
Moreover, the blood of our young men is up, because the Burg-devils
|
||
have taken some of our women, and have mishandled them grievously
|
||
and shamefully, so that naught will keep point and edge from seeking
|
||
the war-clash. Furthermore, there is an old tale which hath now come
|
||
up again, That some time when our folk shall be in great need,
|
||
there shall come to our helping one from afar, whose home is anigh;
|
||
a stripling and a great man; a runaway, and the conqueror of many:
|
||
then, say they, shall the point and the edge bring the red water
|
||
down on the dear dales; whereby we understand that the blood
|
||
of men shall be shed there, and naught to our shame or dishonour.
|
||
Again I mind me of a rhyme concerning this which sayeth:
|
||
|
||
The Dry Tree shall be seen On the green earth, and green
|
||
The Well-spring shall arise For the hope of the wise.
|
||
They are one which were twain, The Tree bloometh again,
|
||
And the Well-spring hath come From the waste to the home.
|
||
|
||
Well, lord, thou shalt tell me presently if this hath aught to do with thee:
|
||
for indeed I saw the Dry Tree, which hath scared us so many a time,
|
||
beaten on thy sergeants' coats; but now I will go on and make an end
|
||
of my story."
|
||
|
||
Ralph nodded to him kindly, for now he remembered the carle, though he had
|
||
seen him but that once when he rode the Greenway across the downs to Higham.
|
||
The old man looked up at him as if he too had an inkling of old acquaintance
|
||
with Ralph, but went on presently:
|
||
|
||
"There is a woman who dwells alone with none to help her,
|
||
anigh to Saint Ann's Chapel; a woman not very old; for she
|
||
is of mine own age, and time was we have had many a fair play
|
||
in the ingles of the downs in the July weather--not very old,
|
||
I say, but wondrous wise, as I know better than most men;
|
||
for oft, even when she was young, would she foretell things
|
||
to come to me, and ever it fell out according to her spaedom.
|
||
To the said woman I sought to-day in the morning, not to win
|
||
any wisdom of her, but to talk over remembrances of old days;
|
||
but when I came into her house, lo, there was my carline walking
|
||
up and down the floor, and she turned round upon me like the young
|
||
woman of past days, and stamped her foot and cried out:
|
||
'What does the sluggard dallying about women's chambers
|
||
when the time is come for the deliverance?'
|
||
|
||
"I let her talk, and spake no word lest I should spoil her story,
|
||
and she went on:
|
||
|
||
"'Take thy staff, lad, for thou art stout as well as merry,
|
||
and go adown to the thorps at the feet of the downs toward Higham;
|
||
keep thee well from the Burg-devils, and go from stead to stead
|
||
till thou comest on a captain of men-at-arms who is lord over a
|
||
company of green-coats, green-coats of the Dry Tree--a young lord,
|
||
fair-faced, and kind-faced, and mighty, and not to be conquered,
|
||
and the blessing of the folk and the leader of the Shepherds,
|
||
and the foe of their foeman and the well-beloved of Bear-father.
|
||
Go night and day, sit not down to eat, stand not to drink;
|
||
heed none that crieth after thee for deliverance, but go, go, go till
|
||
thou hast found him. Meseems I see him riding toward Higham,
|
||
but those dastards will not open gate to him, of that be sure.
|
||
He shall pass on and lie to-night, it may be at Mileham, it may be
|
||
at Milton, it may be at Garton; at one of those thorps shall ye find him.
|
||
And when ye have found him thus bespeak him: O bright Friend
|
||
of the Well, turn not aside to fall on the Burgers in this land,
|
||
either at Foxworth Castle, or the Longford, or the Nineways Garth:
|
||
all that thou mayest do hereafter, thou or thy champions.
|
||
There be Burgers otherwhere, housed in no strong castle,
|
||
but wending the road toward the fair greensward of Upmeads.
|
||
If thou delay to go look on them, then shall thy work be to begin
|
||
again amid sorrow of heart and loss that may not be remedied.'
|
||
Hast thou heard me, lord?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea, verily," said Ralph, "and at sunrise shall we be in the saddle
|
||
to ride straight to Upmeads. For I know thee, friend."
|
||
|
||
"Hold a while," said the carle, "for meseemeth I know thee also.
|
||
But this withal she said: 'But hearken, Giles, hearken a while,
|
||
for I see him clearly, and the men that he rideth with, and the men
|
||
that are following to his aid, fierce and fell are they; but so withal
|
||
are the foemen that await them, and his are few, howsoever fierce.
|
||
Therefore bid him this also. Haste, haste, haste! But haste not overmuch,
|
||
lest thou speed the worse: in Bear Castle I see a mote of our folk,
|
||
and thee amidst of it with thy champions, and I see the staves of the
|
||
Shepherds rising round thee like a wood. In Wulstead I see a valiant
|
||
man with sword by side and sallet on head, and with him sitteth a tall
|
||
man-at-arms grizzle-headed and red-bearded, big-boned and mighty;
|
||
they sit at the wine in a fair chamber, and a well-looking dame
|
||
serveth them; and there are weaponed men no few about the streets.
|
||
Wilt thou pass by friends, and old friends? Now ride on, Green Coats!
|
||
stride forth, Shepherds! staves on your shoulders, Wool-wards! and there
|
||
goes the host over the hills into Upmeads, and the Burg-devils will
|
||
have come from the Wood Debateable to find graves by the fair river.
|
||
And then do thy will, O Friend of the Well.'"
|
||
|
||
The carle took a breath, and then he said: "Lord, this is the say I was
|
||
charged with, and if thou understandest it, well; but if it be dark to thee,
|
||
I may make it clear if thou ask me aught."
|
||
|
||
Ralph pondered a while, and then he said: "Is it known
|
||
of others than thy spaewife that the Burgers be in Upmeads?"
|
||
"Nay, lord," said the carle, "and this also I say to thee,
|
||
that I deem what she said that they be not in Upmeads yet,
|
||
and but drawing thitherward, as I deem from the Wood Debateable."
|
||
|
||
Ralph arose from his seat and strode up and down the chamber a while;
|
||
then he went to bed, and stood over Ursula, who lay twixt sleeping
|
||
and waking, for she was weary; then he came back to the carle, and said
|
||
to him: "Good friend, I thank thee, and this is what I shall do:
|
||
when daylight is broad (and lo, the dawn beginning!) I shall gather my men,
|
||
and ride the shortest way, which thou shalt show me, to Bear Castle,
|
||
and there I shall give the token of the four fires which erewhile a good man
|
||
of the Shepherds bade me if I were in need. And it seems to me that there
|
||
shall the mote be hallowed, though it may be not before nightfall.
|
||
But the mote done, we shall wend, the whole host of us, be we few or many,
|
||
down to Wulstead, where we shall fall in with my friend Clement Chapman,
|
||
and hear tidings. Thence shall we wend the dear ways I know into
|
||
the land where I was born and the folk amongst whom I shall die.
|
||
And so let St. Nicholas and All Hallows do as they will with us.
|
||
Deemest thou, friend, that this is the meaning of thy wise shefriend?"
|
||
|
||
The carle's eyes glittered, and he rose up and stood close by Ralph,
|
||
and said: "Even so she meant; and now I seem to see that but few of thy
|
||
riders shall be lacking when they turn their heads away from Upmeads
|
||
towards the strong-places of the Burg-devils that are hereabouts.
|
||
But tell me, Captain of the host, is that victual and bread that I see
|
||
on the board?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed: "Fall to, friend, and eat thy fill; and here is wine withal.
|
||
Thou needest not to fear it. Wert thou any the worse of the wine that Thirly
|
||
poured into thee that other day?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay, nay, master," said the carle between his mouthfuls,
|
||
"but mickle the better, as I shall be after this: all luck to thee!
|
||
Yet see I that I need not wish thee luck, since that is thine already.
|
||
Sooth to say, I deemed I knew thee when I first set eyes on thee again.
|
||
I looked not to see thee more; though I spoke to thee words
|
||
at that time which came from my heart, almost without my will.
|
||
Though it is but a little while ago, thou hast changed much since then,
|
||
and hast got another sort of look in the eyes than then they had.
|
||
Nay, nay," said he laughing, "not when thou lookest on me so frankly
|
||
and kindly; that is like thy look when we passed Thirly about.
|
||
Yea, I see the fashion of it: one look is for thy friends,
|
||
another for thy foes. God be praised for both. And now I am full,
|
||
I will go look on thy wife."
|
||
|
||
So he went up to the bed and stood over Ursula, while she,
|
||
who was not fully awake, smiled up into his face. The old man
|
||
smiled back at her and bent down and kissed her mouth, and said:
|
||
"I ask thy pardon, lady, and thine, my lord, if I be too free,
|
||
but such is our custom of the Downs; and sooth to say thy face is
|
||
one that even a old man should not fail to kiss if occasion serve,
|
||
so that he may go to paradise with the taste thereof on his lips."
|
||
|
||
"We are nowise hurt by thy love, friend," said Ursula;
|
||
"God make thy latter days of life sweet to thee!"
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 23
|
||
|
||
They Ride to Bear Castle
|
||
|
||
|
||
But while they spake thus and were merry, the dawn had wellnigh
|
||
passed into daylight. Then Ralph bade old Giles sleep for an hour,
|
||
and went forth and called Roger and Richard and went to the great barn.
|
||
There he bade the watch wake up Stephen and all men, and they gat to horse
|
||
as speedily as they might, and were on the road ere the sun was fully up.
|
||
The spearmen of the thorp did not fail them, and numbered twenty and
|
||
three all told. Giles had a horse given him and rode the way by Ralph.
|
||
|
||
They rode up and down the hills and dales, but went across country
|
||
and not by the Greenway, for thuswise the road was shorter.
|
||
|
||
But when they had gone some two leagues, and were nigh on top
|
||
of a certain low green ridge, they deemed that they heard
|
||
men's voices anigh and the clash of arms; and it must be said
|
||
that by Ralph's rede they journeyed somewhat silently.
|
||
So Ralph, who was riding first with Giles, bid all stay and let
|
||
the crown of the ridge cover them. So did they, and Giles gat
|
||
off his horse and crept on to the top of the ridge till he could
|
||
see down to the dale below. Presently he came down again the old
|
||
face of him puckered with mirth, and said softly to Ralph:
|
||
"Did I not say thou wert lucky? here is the first fruits thereof.
|
||
Ride over the ridge, lord, at once, and ye shall have what there
|
||
is of them as safe as a sheep in a penfold."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph drew sword and beckoned his men up, and they all handled
|
||
their weapons and rode over the brow, and tarried not one moment there,
|
||
not even to cry their cries; for down in the bottom were a sort
|
||
of men, two score and six (as they counted them afterward)
|
||
sitting or lying about a cooking fire, or loitering here and there,
|
||
with their horses standing behind them, and they mostly unhelmed.
|
||
The Champions knew them at once for men of their old foes, and there
|
||
was scarce time for a word ere the full half of them had passed
|
||
by the sword of the Dry Tree; then Ralph cried out to spare the rest,
|
||
unless they offered to run; so the foemen cast down their weapons
|
||
and stood still, and were presently brought before Ralph, who sat
|
||
on the grass amidst of the ring of the Champions. He looked on them
|
||
a while and remembered the favour of those whom he had seen erewhile
|
||
in the Burg; but ere he could speak Giles said softly in his ear:
|
||
"These be of the Burg, forsooth, as ye may see by their dogs' faces;
|
||
but they be not clad nor armed as those whom we have met heretofore.
|
||
Ask them whence they be, lord."
|
||
|
||
Ralph spake and said: "Whence and whither are ye, ye manslayers?"
|
||
But no man of them answered. Then said Ralph: "Pass these murderers
|
||
by the edge of the sword, Stephen; unless some one of them will save
|
||
his life and the life of his fellows by speaking."
|
||
|
||
As he spake, one of the youngest of the men hung down his head a little,
|
||
and then raised it up: "Wilt thou spare our lives if I speak?"
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph. "Wilt thou swear it by the edge of the blade?"
|
||
said the man. Ralph drew forth his sword and said: "Lo then!
|
||
I swear it." The man nodded his head, and said: "Few words
|
||
are best; and whereas I wot not if my words will avail thee aught,
|
||
and since they will save our lives, I will tell thee truly.
|
||
We are men of the Burg whom these green-coated thieves drave out
|
||
of the Burg on an unlucky day. Well, some of us, of whom I was one,
|
||
fetched a compass and crossed the water that runneth through
|
||
Upmeads by the Red Bridge, and so gat us into the Wood Debateable
|
||
through the Uplands. There we struck a bargain with the main band
|
||
of strong-thieves of the wood, that we and they together would
|
||
get us a new home in Upmeads, which is a fat and pleasant land.
|
||
So we got us ready; but the Woodmen told us that the Upmeads carles,
|
||
though they be not many, are strong and dauntless, and since we
|
||
now had pleasant life before us, with good thralls to work for us,
|
||
and with plenty of fair women for our bed-mates, we deemed it best
|
||
to have the most numbers we might, so that we might over-whelm the said
|
||
carles at one blow, and get as few of ourselves slain as might be.
|
||
Now we knew that another band of us had entered the lands of
|
||
the Abbot of Higham, and had taken hold of some of his castles;
|
||
wherefore the captains considered and thought, and sent us to give
|
||
bidding to our folk south here to march at once toward us in Upmeads,
|
||
that our bands might meet there, and scatter all before us.
|
||
There is our story, lord."
|
||
|
||
Ralph knitted his brow, and said: "Tell me (and thy life
|
||
lieth on thy giving true answers), do thy folk in these
|
||
strongholds know of your purpose of falling upon Upmeads?"
|
||
"Nay," said the Burger. Said Ralph: "And will they know
|
||
otherwise if ye do them not to wit?" "Nay," again said the man.
|
||
Said Ralph: "Are thy folk already in Upmeads?" "Nay," said
|
||
the captive, "but by this time they will be on the road thither."
|
||
"How many all told?" said Ralph The man reddened and stammered:
|
||
"A thousand--two--two thousand--A thousand, lord," said he.
|
||
"Get thy sword ready, Stephen," said Ralph. "How many,
|
||
on thy life, Burger?" "Two thousand, lord," said the man.
|
||
"And how many do ye look to have from Higham-land?" Said the Burger,
|
||
"Somewhat more than a thousand." Withal he looked uneasily
|
||
at his fellows, some of whom were scowling on him felly.
|
||
"Tell me now," said Ralph, "where be the other bands
|
||
of the Burgers?"
|
||
|
||
Ere the captive could speak, he who stood next him snatched an unsheathed
|
||
knife from the girdle of one of the Dry Tree, and quick as lightning thrust
|
||
it into his fellow's belly, so that he fell dead at once amongst them.
|
||
Then Stephen, who had his sword naked in his hand, straightway hewed
|
||
down the slayer, and swords came out of the scabbards everywhere;
|
||
and it went but a little but that all the Burgers were slain at once.
|
||
But Ralph cried out: "Put up your swords, Champions! Stephen slew yonder
|
||
man for slaying his fellow, who was under my ward, and that was but his due.
|
||
But I have given life to these others, and so it must be held to.
|
||
Tie their hands behind them and let us on to Bear Castle. For this tide
|
||
brooks no delay."
|
||
|
||
So they gat to horse, and the footmen from Garton mounted the horses of
|
||
the slain Burgers, and had the charge of guarding the twenty that were left.
|
||
So they rode off all of them toward Bear Castle, and shortly to say it,
|
||
came within sight of its rampart two hours before noon. Sooner had they
|
||
came thither; but divers times they caught up with small companies
|
||
of weaponed men, whose heads were turned the same way; and Giles told
|
||
Ralph each time that they were of the Shepherd-folk going to the mote.
|
||
But now when they were come so nigh to the castle they saw a very stream
|
||
of men setting that way, and winding up the hill to the rampart.
|
||
And Giles said: "It is not to be doubted but that Martha hath sent round
|
||
the war-brand, and thou wilt presently have an host that will meet thy foemen
|
||
without delay; and what there lacks in number shall be made good by thy luck,
|
||
which once again was shown by our falling in with that company e'en now."
|
||
|
||
"Yea truly," said Ralph, "but wilt thou now tell me how I shall guide
|
||
myself amongst thy folk, and if they will grant me the aid I ask?"
|
||
|
||
"Look, look," said Giles, already some one hath made clear thine asking
|
||
to our folk; and hearken! up there they are naming the ancient Father of
|
||
our Race, without whom we may do nought, even with the blessed saints to aid.
|
||
There then is thine answer, lord."
|
||
|
||
Indeed as he spoke came down on the wind the voice of a chant,
|
||
sung by many folk, the words whereof he well remembered:
|
||
SMITE ASIDE AXE, O BEAR-FATHER. And therewith rose up into
|
||
the air a column of smoke intermingled with fire from each
|
||
of the four corners of that stronghold of the Ancient Folk.
|
||
Ralph rejoiced when he saw it, and the heart rose within him
|
||
and fluttered in his bosom, and Ursula, who rode close behind him,
|
||
looked up into his face well pleased and happy.
|
||
|
||
Thus rode they up the bent and over the turf bridge into
|
||
the plain of the garth, and whatso of people were there
|
||
flocked about to behold the new-come warriors; sooth to say,
|
||
there were but some two hundreds, who looked but few indeed in
|
||
the great square place, but more were streaming in every minute.
|
||
Giles led him and his men into the north-east corner of the castle,
|
||
and there they gat off their horses and lay down on the grass
|
||
awaiting what should betide.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 24
|
||
|
||
The Folkmote of the Shepherds
|
||
|
||
|
||
In about an hour all the folk within the castle began to set toward
|
||
the ingle wherein lay Ralph and his fellows, and then all rose up,
|
||
while the folk of the Shepherds took their places on the slopes
|
||
of the earth walls, but on the top hard by the fire, which was
|
||
still burning, stood up an old hoar man with a beard exceeding long;
|
||
he had a sallet on his head, and held a guisarme in his hand.
|
||
All men held their peace when they saw him standing there; and straightway
|
||
he proclaimed the hallowing of the Mote in such form of words as was
|
||
due amongst that folk, and which were somewhat long to tell here.
|
||
Then was silence again for a little, and then the old man spake:
|
||
"Few words are best to-day, neighbours; for wherefore are we met together?
|
||
There arose a hum of assent from the Shepherds as he spoke and men
|
||
clashed their weapons together; but none said any clear word.
|
||
Then spake the old man: "We be met together because we have trouble
|
||
on hand, and because there is a helper to hand, of whom the words
|
||
of the wise and tales of old have told us; and because as he shall
|
||
help us, so shall we help him, since indeed our trouble is his also:
|
||
now, neighbours, shall I say the word for you which ye would say to this
|
||
young man, who is nevertheless old in wisdom, and true-hearted and kind?"
|
||
|
||
Then came the hum of yeasay again, the clashing of weapons,
|
||
and the old man spake again: "Ralph of Upmeads, there thou standest,
|
||
wilt thou help us against the tyrants, as we shall help thee?"
|
||
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph. Said the Elder: "Wilt thou be our Captain,
|
||
if we do according to thy bidding? For thou needest not fear
|
||
our failing thee."
|
||
|
||
"Yea verily," said Ralph.
|
||
|
||
Said the Elder: "Ralph of Upmeads, wilt thou be our Captain
|
||
as an alien and a hireling, or as a brother?"
|
||
|
||
"As a brother," quoth Ralph.
|
||
|
||
"Come up here then, Captain of our folk, and take my hand in thine,
|
||
and swear by our fathers and thine to be a true brother
|
||
of us, and take this ancient staff of war in thine hand.
|
||
And, ye kindred of the Shepherds, bear witness of his swearing.
|
||
Yea and ye also, O neighbours of the Dry Tree!"
|
||
|
||
So Ralph went up on the wall-top and took the Elder's hand, and took from
|
||
him the ancient guisarme, which was inlaid with gold letters of old time;
|
||
and he swore in a loud voice to be a true brother of the Shepherd-folk,
|
||
and raised the weapon aloft and shook it strongly, and all the Folk cried,
|
||
"Hail our brother!" and the Champions shouted gladly withal, and great joy
|
||
there was in that ingle of the ancient work.
|
||
|
||
Then spake the Elder and said: "Ye champions of the Dry Tree,
|
||
will ye wend with us under the Captain our brother against his
|
||
foemen and ours?"
|
||
|
||
Then stood forth Stephen a-Hurst and said, "Master shepherd,
|
||
for nought else are we come hither."
|
||
|
||
Said the Elder: "Will ye come with us as friends or as hirelings?
|
||
for in any case we would have you by our sides, and not in face of us;
|
||
and though we be shepherds, and unhoused, or ill-housed, yet have we
|
||
wherewithal to wage you, as ye know well enough, who have whiles
|
||
lifted our gear."
|
||
|
||
Then Stephen laughed and said: "True it is that we have whiles
|
||
driven prey in your country, yea, and had some hard knocks therein;
|
||
but all that was in playing the game of war, and now since we
|
||
are to fight side by side, we will be paid by our foes and not
|
||
by our friends; so neither hair nor wool will we have of yours,
|
||
whatever we may have of the Burgers; and it is like that we shall
|
||
be good friends of yours hence-forward."
|
||
|
||
Once more all they that were there shouted. But once more
|
||
the Elder spoke and said: "Is any man now wishful to speak?"
|
||
None answered till a big and burly man rose up and said:
|
||
"Nay, Tall Thomas, thou hast said and done all that need was,
|
||
and I deem that time presses; wherefore my mind is that we
|
||
now break up this mote, and that after we have eaten a morsel
|
||
we get ourselves into due array and take to the road.
|
||
Now let any man speak against this if he will."
|
||
|
||
None gainsaid him; nay, all seemed well-pleased. So the Elder
|
||
proclaimed the breaking up of the mote, and they went from out
|
||
the hallowed place and sat down in the dyke on the outside
|
||
of the rampart and behind the country which stretched out all
|
||
lovely and blue before them, for the day was bright and fair.
|
||
There then certain women brought victual and drink to them,
|
||
and served the strangers first.
|
||
|
||
So when they had eaten and drunk, Ralph bade the Shepherds array them duly,
|
||
and appointed them leaders of tens and hundreds with the help of Giles,
|
||
who was now clad in a hauberk and mail-coif and looked a proper man-at-arms.
|
||
Then they told over their company, and numbered of the Dry Tree one hundred
|
||
and fifty champions, outtaken Stephen and Roger; of the men of Garton were
|
||
twenty and two, and of the Shepherds three hundred and seventy and seven
|
||
stout carles, some eighty of whom had bows, and the rest glaives and spears
|
||
and other staff-weapons. There was not much armour of defence amongst them,
|
||
but they were one and all stark carles and doughty.
|
||
|
||
So when they were told over and made five hundred and
|
||
fifty and four, they gat them into array for the road;
|
||
and Ralph went afoot with no armour but his sallet,
|
||
and a light coat of fence which he had gotten him in the Burg.
|
||
He would have had Ursula ride on her palfrey with the Sage,
|
||
but she would not, and held it for mirth and pleasure that she
|
||
should go afoot through the land, now she was so nigh come
|
||
home to her lord's house; so she went forth by Ralph's side
|
||
with her broidered gown trussed through her girdle so that
|
||
the trimness of her feet drew the eyes of all men to them.
|
||
As for Richard, he took a half score of the champions, and they
|
||
rode on ahead to see that all was clear before the main host;
|
||
which he might well do, as he knew the country so well.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 25
|
||
|
||
They Come to Wulstead
|
||
|
||
|
||
Thus went they, and nought befell them to tell of till
|
||
they came anigh the gates of Wulstead hard on sunset.
|
||
The gates, it has been said; for whereas Ralph left Wulstead
|
||
a town unwalled, he now found it fenced with pales,
|
||
and with two towers strongly framed of timber, one on either
|
||
side the gate, and on the battlements of the said towers they
|
||
saw spears glittering; before the gate they saw a barrier
|
||
of big beams also, and the gleaming of armour therein.
|
||
Ralph was glad when he saw that they meant some defence;
|
||
for though Wulstead was not in the lands of Upmeads,
|
||
yet it was always a friendly neighbour, and he looked to eke
|
||
out his host therein.
|
||
|
||
Wulstead standeth on a little hill or swelling of the earth,
|
||
and the road that the company of Ralph took went up to the gate across
|
||
the plain meadows, which had but here and there a tree upon them,
|
||
so that the going of the company was beheld clearly from the gate;
|
||
as was well seen, because anon came the sound of the blowing
|
||
of great horns, and the spears thickened in the towers.
|
||
Then Ralph stayed his company two bowshots from the barriers,
|
||
while he himself, with his sword in his sheath, took Ursula's hand
|
||
and set forth an easy pace toward the gate. Some of his company,
|
||
and specially Roger and Stephen, would have letted him;
|
||
but he laughed and said, "Why, lads, why? these be friends."
|
||
"Yea," quoth Roger, "but an arrow knoweth no kindred nor
|
||
well-willers: have a care, lord." Said the Sage of Swevenham:
|
||
"Ye speak but after the folly of men of war; the hands and the eyes
|
||
that be behind the bows have other hands and eyes behind them
|
||
which shall not suffer that a Friend of the Well shall be hurt."
|
||
|
||
So Ralph and Ursula went forth, and came within a stone's cast
|
||
of the barrier, when Ralph lifted up his voice and said:
|
||
"Is there a captain of the townsfolk within the timber there?"
|
||
A cheery voice answered him: "Yea, yea, lad; spare thy breath;
|
||
I am coming to thee."
|
||
|
||
And therewith a man came from out the barrier and did off his
|
||
headpiece and ran straight toward Ralph, who saw at once that it
|
||
was Clement Chapman; he made no more ado, but coming up to Ralph fell
|
||
to clipping him in his arms, while the tears ran down his face.
|
||
Then he stood aloof and gazed upon him speechless a little while,
|
||
and then spake: "Hail, and a hundred times hail! but now I
|
||
look on thee I see what hath betid, and that thou art too
|
||
noble and high that I should have cast mine arms about thee.
|
||
But now as for this one, I will be better mannered with her."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he knelt down before Ursula, and kissed her feet, but reverently.
|
||
And she stooped down and raised him up, with a merry countenance
|
||
kissed his face, and stroked his cheeks with her hand and said:
|
||
"Hail, friend of my lord! Was it not rather thou than he who
|
||
delivered me from the pain and shame of Utterbol, whereas thou
|
||
didst bring him safe through the mountains unto Goldburg?
|
||
And but for that there had been no Well, either for him or for me."
|
||
|
||
But Clement stood with his head hanging down, and his face reddening.
|
||
Till Ralph said to him: "Hail, friend! many a time we thought of this meeting
|
||
when we were far away and hard bestead; but this is better than all we
|
||
thought of. But now, Clement, hold up thine head and be a stout man of war,
|
||
for thou seest that we are not alone."
|
||
|
||
Said Clement: "Yea, fair lord, and timely ye come, both thou
|
||
and thy company; and now that I have my speech again which joy
|
||
hath taken away from me at the first, I shall tell thee this,
|
||
that if ye go further than the good town ye shall be met and
|
||
fought withal by men who are over-many and over-fierce for us."
|
||
"Yea," said Ralph, "and how many be they?" Quoth Clement:
|
||
"How many men may be amongst them I wot not, but I deem there
|
||
be some two thousand devils."
|
||
|
||
Now Ralph reddened, and he took Clement by the shoulder, and said:
|
||
"Tell me, Clement, are they yet in Upmeads?" "Sooth to say,"
|
||
said Clement, "by this while they may be therein; but this morn it
|
||
was yet free of them; but when thou art home in our house, thy gossip
|
||
shall belike tell thee much more than I can; for she is foreseeing,
|
||
and hath told us much in this matter also that hath come to pass."
|
||
Then spake Ralph: "Where are my father and my mother; and shall I go
|
||
after them at once without resting, through the dark night and all?"
|
||
|
||
Said Clement, and therewith his face brightened: "Nay, thou needest go no
|
||
further to look for them than the House of Black Canons within our walls:
|
||
there are they dwelling in all honour and dignity these two days past."
|
||
"What!" said Ralph, "have they fled from Upmeads, and left the High
|
||
House empty? I pray thee, Clement, bring me to them as speedily as may be."
|
||
|
||
"Verily," said Clement, "they have fled, with many another, women and children
|
||
and old men, who should but hinder the carles who have abided behind.
|
||
Nicholas Longshanks is the leader of them down there, and the High House
|
||
is their stronghold in a way; though forsooth their stout heads and strong
|
||
hands are better defence."
|
||
|
||
Here Ralph brake in: "Sweetling Ursula, though thy feet have worn
|
||
a many miles to-day, I bid thee hasten back to the company and tell
|
||
Richard that it is as I said, to wit, that friends, and good guesting
|
||
await them; so let them hasten hither and come within gates at once.
|
||
For as for me, I have sworn it that I will not go one step back
|
||
till I have seen my father and mother in their house of Upmeads.
|
||
Is it well said, Clement?" "Yea, forsooth," said Clement;
|
||
but he could not take his eyes off Ursula's loveliness, as she kilted
|
||
her skirts and ran her ways like one of Diana's ladies in the wildwood.
|
||
At last he said, "Thou shalt wot, fair sir, that ye will have a little
|
||
band to go with thee from us of Wulstead; forsooth we had gone
|
||
to-morrow morn in any case, but since thou art here, all is well."
|
||
Even as he spake a great shout broke out from the company as Ursula had
|
||
given her message, and then came the tramp of men and horses and the clash
|
||
of weapons as they set forward; and Clement looked and beheld how first
|
||
of all the array came Ursula, bearing the hallowed staff in her hand;
|
||
for her heart also was set on what was to come. Then cried out Clement:
|
||
"Happy art thou, lord, and happy shalt thou be, and who shall withstand thee?
|
||
Lo! what a war-duke it is! and what a leader that marches with fate
|
||
in her hands before thine host!"
|
||
|
||
Therewith were they all joined together, and Ursula gave the guisarme into
|
||
Ralph's hand, and with his other hand he took hers, and the bar of the barrier
|
||
was lifted and the gates thrown open, and they all streamed into the street,
|
||
the champions coming last and towering over the footmen as they sat, big men
|
||
on their big horses, as if they were very bodyguards of the God of War.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 26
|
||
|
||
Ralph Sees His Father and Mother Again
|
||
|
||
|
||
Thus came they into the market-place of Wulstead nigh to
|
||
Clement's house, and there the company stood in ordered ranks.
|
||
Ralph looked round about half expecting to see his gossip
|
||
standing in the door; but Clement smiled and said:
|
||
"Thou art looking round for thy gossip, fair sir;
|
||
but she is upon the north gate in war-gear; for we be too few
|
||
in Wulstead to spare so clean-limbed and strong-armed a dame
|
||
from our muster; but she shall be here against thou comest back
|
||
from the Austin Canons, wither forsooth thou mayst go at once
|
||
if thou wilt let me be master in the matter of lodging."
|
||
Said Ralph, smiling: "Well, Ring of Wulstead, since thou
|
||
givest leave I will e'en take it, nor needest thou give me
|
||
any guide to the House of St. Austin, for I know it well.
|
||
Sweetheart," said he, turning to Ursula, "what sayest thou:
|
||
wilt thou come with me, or abide till to-morrow, when I
|
||
shall show thee to my kinsmen?" "Nay," she said, "I will
|
||
with thee at once, my lord, if thou wilt be kind and take me;
|
||
for meseemeth I also have a word to say to thy father,
|
||
and the mother that bore thee."
|
||
|
||
"And thou, Hugh," said Ralph, "what sayest thou?" "Why, brother,"
|
||
said Hugh, "I think my blessing will abide the morrow's morn, for I
|
||
have nought so fair and dear to show our father and mother as thou hast.
|
||
Also to-morrow thou wilt have more to do; since thou art a captain,
|
||
and I but a single varlet." And he smiled a little sourly on Ralph;
|
||
who heeded it little, but took Ursula's hand and went his way with her.
|
||
|
||
It was but a few minutes for them to come to the House of
|
||
the Canons, which was well walled toward the fields at the west
|
||
of the town, so that it was its chief defence of that side.
|
||
It was a fair house with a church but just finished, and Ralph
|
||
could see down the street its new white pinnacles and the cross
|
||
on its eastern gable rising over the ridge of the dortoir.
|
||
They came to the gate, and round about it were standing
|
||
men-at-arms not a few, who seemed doughty enough at first sight;
|
||
but when Ralph looked on them he knew some of them,
|
||
that they were old men, and somewhat past warlike deeds,
|
||
for in sooth they were carles of Upmeads. Him they knew not,
|
||
for he had somewhat cast down the visor of his helm; but they
|
||
looked eagerly on the fair lady and the goodly knight.
|
||
|
||
So Ralph spake to the porter and bade him show him where was King
|
||
Peter of Upmeads and his Lady wife; and the porter made him obeisance
|
||
and told him that they were in the church, wherein was service toward;
|
||
and bade him enter. So they went in and entered the church, and it
|
||
was somewhat dim, because the sun was set, and there were many pictures,
|
||
and knots of flowers in the glass of the windows.
|
||
|
||
So they went halfway down the nave, and stood together there;
|
||
and the whole church was full of the music that the minstrels
|
||
were making in the rood-loft, and most heavenly sweet it was;
|
||
and as Ralph stood there his heart heaved with hope and love
|
||
and the sweetness of his youth; and he looked at Ursula,
|
||
and she hung her head, and he saw that her shoulders were shaken
|
||
with sobs; but he knew that it was with her as with him,
|
||
so he spake no word to her.
|
||
|
||
Now when his eyes cleared and he was used to the twilight
|
||
of the church, he looked toward the choir, and saw near to
|
||
the Jesus altar a man and a woman standing together even as they
|
||
were standing, and they were somewhat stricken in years.
|
||
So presently he knew that this would be his father and mother;
|
||
so he stood still and waited till the service should be over;
|
||
and by then it was done the twilight was growing fast in the church,
|
||
and the sacristan was lighting a lamp here and there in some
|
||
of the chapels, and the aisles of the choir.
|
||
|
||
So King Peter and his wife turned and came slowly down the nave,
|
||
and when they were come anigh, Ralph spake aloud, and said:
|
||
"Hail, King Peter of Upmeads!" And the old man stopped and said unto him:
|
||
"Yea, forsooth, my name is Peter, and my business is to be a king,
|
||
or a kinglet rather; and once it seemed no such hard craft;
|
||
but now it all goes otherwise, and belike my craft has left me;
|
||
even as it fares with a leech when folk are either too well or too
|
||
ill to need his leech-craft."
|
||
|
||
Then he looked at Ralph and at Ursula, and said: "Either my eyes are worse
|
||
than I deemed yesterday, or thou art young, and a gallant knight, and she
|
||
that is standing by thee is young, and fair. Ah, lad! time was when I
|
||
would have bid thee come home, thou and thy sweetling, to my house with me,
|
||
and abide there in ease and feastfully; but now the best rede I can give
|
||
thee is to get thee gone from the land, for there is all unpeace in it.
|
||
And yet, forsooth, friend, I know not where to send thee to seek for peace,
|
||
since Upmeads hath failed us."
|
||
|
||
While he spoke, and Ralph was sore moved by the sound of his voice,
|
||
and his speech wherein kindness and mocking was so blended, the Dame
|
||
of Upmeads came to Ralph and laid her hand on his arm, and said
|
||
in a pleasant voice, for she was soft-hearted and soft-spoken both:
|
||
"Will not the fair young warrior and his mate do so much for an old
|
||
man and his wife, who have heard not tidings of their best beloved
|
||
son for two years well nigh, as to come with them to their chamber,
|
||
and answer a little question or two as to the parts of the world they
|
||
have seen of late?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph nodded yeasay and began to move toward the porch,
|
||
the Dame of Upmeads sticking close to him all the time, and King
|
||
Peter following after and saying: "Yea, young man, thou mayst
|
||
think the worse of me for hanging about here amongst the monks,
|
||
when e'en now, for all I know, the battle is pitched in Upmeads;
|
||
but Nicholas and all of them would have it so--Yea, and all
|
||
my sons are away, fair sir; though of the eldest, who meseems
|
||
was born with a long head, we hear that he is thriving,
|
||
and hath grown great."
|
||
|
||
As he spake they were come into the porch, and passed into the open air,
|
||
where it was still light; then the Dame turned round on Ralph and caught
|
||
him by the two arms and cried out and cast her arms about his neck;
|
||
and when she could sunder herself a little from him, she said:
|
||
"0 Ralph, I deemed that I knew thy voice, but I durst not halse thee
|
||
till I knew it was mine own flesh and blood, lest I should have died
|
||
for grief to think it was thee when it was not. O son, how fair thou art!
|
||
Now do off thy sallet that I may see thee, thy face and thy curly head."
|
||
|
||
So did he, smiling as one who loved her, and again she fell to kissing
|
||
and clipping him. Then his father came up and thrust her aside gently
|
||
and embraced him also, and said: "Tell me, son, what thou are become?
|
||
Thou art grown much of a man since thou stolest thyself away from me.
|
||
Is there aught behind this goodly raiment of thine? And this fair lady,
|
||
hath she stolen thee away from thy foes to bring thee home to us?"
|
||
|
||
Ralph laughed and said: "No less than that, father; I will tell thee
|
||
all presently; but this first, that I am the captain of a goodly
|
||
company of men-at-arms; and"----"Ah, son, sweetheart," said his mother,
|
||
"and thou wilt be going away from us again to seek more fame:
|
||
and yet, as I look on thee thou seemest to have grown great enough already.
|
||
I deem thou wilt not leave us."
|
||
|
||
"Mother, my dear," said Ralph, "to-morrow morn we shall go down
|
||
to battle in Upmeads, and the day after I shall come hither again,
|
||
and bring you back to the High House with all honour and glory.
|
||
But look, mother," and he took Ursula's hand, "here is a daughter
|
||
and a darling that I have brought back to thee, for this is
|
||
my wedded wife."
|
||
|
||
Then Ursula looked beseechingly at the Dame, who took her in her
|
||
arms and clipped her and kissed her; and said, "Welcome, daughter;
|
||
for I feel thy body that thou lovest me."
|
||
|
||
Then said King Peter; "Forsooth, son, she is a sweet and dainty creature.
|
||
If there be a fairer than her, I wot not; but none so fair have mine
|
||
eyes looked on. Tell me whose daughter she is, and of what lineage?"
|
||
And therewith he took her hand and kissed her.
|
||
|
||
But Ursula said: "I am come of no earl or baron.
|
||
I am a yeoman's daughter, and both my father and my mother are dead,
|
||
and I have no nigh kin save one brother who loveth me not,
|
||
and would heed it little if he never saw my face again.
|
||
Now I tell thee this: that if my lord biddeth me go from him,
|
||
I will depart; but for the bidding of none else will I leave him."
|
||
|
||
King Peter laughed and said: "Never will I bid thee depart" Then he took
|
||
her hand and said: "Sweetling, fair daughter, what is thy name?"
|
||
"Ursula," she said. Said he: "Ursula, thy palms are harder than be
|
||
the hands of the dainty dames of the cities, but there is no churls'
|
||
blood in thee meseemeth. What is thy kindred of the yeoman?" She said:
|
||
"We be come of the Geirings of old time: it may be that the spear
|
||
is broken, and the banner torn; but we forget not our forefathers,
|
||
though we labour afield, and the barons and the earls call us churls.
|
||
It is told amongst us that that word is but another way of saying earl
|
||
and that it meaneth a man."
|
||
|
||
Then spoke Ralph: "Father and mother both, I may well thank
|
||
thee and bless thee that your eyes look upon this half of me
|
||
with kind eyes. And now I shall tell thee that for this woman,
|
||
her heart is greater than a king's or a leader of folk.
|
||
And meseemeth her palms have hardened with the labour of delivering
|
||
me from many troubles."
|
||
|
||
Then the Dame of Upmeads put her arms about Ursula's neck again,
|
||
and bade her all welcome once more, with sweet words of darling and dear,
|
||
and well-beloved daughter.
|
||
|
||
But King Peter said: "Son, thou hast not told me what thou are become;
|
||
and true it is that thou hast the look of a great one."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Father and King, I have become the Lord of the
|
||
Little Land of Abundance, the sworn brother of the Champions
|
||
of the Dry Tree, the Lord of the Castle of the Scaur,
|
||
the brother and Warduke of the Shepherds; and to-morrow shall
|
||
I be the Conqueror of the robbers and the devils of the Burg.
|
||
And this be not enough for me, hearken! I and my wife both,
|
||
yea and she leading me, have drunk of the Well at the World's End,
|
||
and have become Friends thereof."
|
||
|
||
And he looked at his father with looks of love, and his father
|
||
drew nigh to him again, and embraced him once more, and stroked
|
||
his cheeks and kissed him as if he had become a child again:
|
||
"O son," said he, "whatsoever thou dost, that thou dost full well.
|
||
And lo, one while when I look on thee thou art my dear and sweet child,
|
||
as thou wert years agone, and I love thee dearly and finely;
|
||
and another while thou art a great and mighty man, and I fear thee;
|
||
so much greater thou seemest than we poor upland folk."
|
||
|
||
Then smiled Ralph for love and happiness, and he said:
|
||
"Father, I am thy child in the house and at the board,
|
||
and that is for thine helping. And I am thy champion and
|
||
the fierce warrior afield, and that also is for thine helping.
|
||
Be of good cheer; for thine house shall not wane, but wax."
|
||
And all those four were full of joy and their hearts
|
||
were raised aloft.
|
||
|
||
But as they spake thus came a lay-brother and bent the knee before
|
||
King Peter and bade him and the Dame of Upmeads to supper in the name
|
||
of the Prior, and the Captain and the Lady therewith; for indeed
|
||
the rumour of the coming of an host for the helping of the countryside
|
||
had gotten into that House, and the Prior and the brethern sorely
|
||
desired to look upon the Captain, not knowing him for Ralph of Upmeads.
|
||
So into the Hall they went together, and there the holy fathers made
|
||
them great feast and joy; and King Peter might not refrain him,
|
||
but told the Prior how this was his son come back from far lands,
|
||
with the goodly Lady he had won to wife therein; and the Prior
|
||
and all the fathers made much of Ralph, and rejoiced in their
|
||
hearts when they saw how goodly a man of war he had gotten to be.
|
||
And the Prior would lead him on to tell him of the marvels he had seen
|
||
in the far parts of the world; but Ralph said but little thereon,
|
||
whereas his thought was set on the days that lay even before his feet;
|
||
yet some deal he told him of the uncouth manners of the lands beyond
|
||
Whitwall, and at last he said: "Father, when the battles be over here,
|
||
and there is peace on our lands again, I will ask thee to give me
|
||
guesting for a night, that I may tell thee all the tale of what hath
|
||
befallen me since the last summer day when I rode through Wulstead;
|
||
but now I ask leave of thee to depart, for I have many things to do
|
||
this even, as behoveth a captain, before I sleep for an hour or two.
|
||
And if it be thy will, I would leave the Lady my wife with my mother
|
||
here at least till morrow morn."
|
||
|
||
So the Prior gave him leave, loth though he were, and Ralph kissed his
|
||
father and mother, and they blessed him. But Ursula said to him softly:
|
||
"It is my meaning to go with thee down into Upmeads to-morrow;
|
||
for who knoweth what may befall thee." Then he smiled upon her and went
|
||
his ways down the hall and out-a-gates, while all men looked on him
|
||
and did him worship.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 27
|
||
|
||
Ralph Holds Converse With Katherine His Gossip
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph went straight from St. Austin's to Clement's house,
|
||
and found much people about the door thereof,
|
||
what of the townsmen, what of the men of his own host.
|
||
He passed through these, and found Clement in his chamber,
|
||
and with him a half score of such company as was without,
|
||
and amongst them Roger and the Sage; but Stephen and Richard
|
||
both were amongst their men doing what was needful.
|
||
All men arose when Ralph entered; but he looked around,
|
||
and could see nought of his gossip amongst them.
|
||
Then he sat down by Clement and asked if he had any fresh tidings;
|
||
and Clement did him to wit that there had come in a carle
|
||
from out of Upmeads, who had told them by sure tokens that
|
||
the foe were come into the Upmeads-land at noon that day,
|
||
and between then and sunset had skirmished with Nicholas and them
|
||
that were holding the High House, but had gotten nought thereby.
|
||
This man, said Clement, being both bold and of good sleight
|
||
had mingled with the foe; and had heard the talk of them,
|
||
and he said that they had no inkling of the Shepherds or the Dry
|
||
Tree coming against them; but they looked to have aid from
|
||
their own folk from the lands of Higham; wherefore they made
|
||
a mock of the defence of the Upmeads' men; and said that since,
|
||
when they were all joined together in Upmeads, they might
|
||
enter where they would without the loss of a half-score men,
|
||
therefore they would risk nought now; nor would they burn
|
||
either the High House or the other steadings, since, said they,
|
||
they were minded to keep them sound and whole for their own.
|
||
|
||
These tidings seemed good to Ralph; so he took a cup of wine
|
||
and pledged the company, and said: "My masters, such of you
|
||
as list to sleep long to-night had best be abed presently,
|
||
for I warn you that the trumpets will blow for departure before
|
||
the sun riseth to-morrow; and he that faileth to see to-morrow's
|
||
battle will be sorry for his lack all his life long."
|
||
|
||
When he had thus spoken they all cried hail to him, and anon arose
|
||
and went their ways. Then Ralph bade Clement come with him that he might
|
||
visit the quarters of his men-at-arms, and see that all the leaders
|
||
knew of the muster, and of the order of departing on the morrow;
|
||
and Clement arose and went with him.
|
||
|
||
As they were on the way Ralph asked Clement what ailed his
|
||
gossip Katherine that she had not come to meet him already;
|
||
and Clement laughed and said: "Nought, nought; she is somewhat
|
||
shamefaced to meet thee first amongst a many folk, and she
|
||
not able belike to refrain her kisses and caresses to thee.
|
||
Fear not, she is in her bower-aloft, and we shall find
|
||
her there when we come back from our errand; fear not! she
|
||
will not sleep till she hath had her arms about thee."
|
||
"Good is that," said Ralph; "I had looked to see her ere now;
|
||
but when we meet apart from folk, something we shall be able
|
||
to say to each other, which belike neither she nor I had liked
|
||
to leave unsaid till we meet again."
|
||
|
||
So came they to the chief quarters of the fighting men,
|
||
and Ralph had all the leaders called to him, and he spake to them
|
||
of how they should do on the morrow, both footmen and horsemen,
|
||
whatwise they should stand together, and how they should fall on;
|
||
and he told them all as clearly as if he were already in the
|
||
field with the foe before him; so that they wondered at him,
|
||
so young in years, being so old in the wisdom of war.
|
||
Withal they saw of him that he had no doubt but that they should come
|
||
to their above on the morrow; and all men, not only of the tried
|
||
men-at-arms of the Dry Tree, but they of the Shepherds also,
|
||
even those of them who had never stricken a stroke in anger,
|
||
were of high heart and feared not what should befall.
|
||
|
||
So when all this business was over, they turned about and came
|
||
their ways home to Clement's house again.
|
||
|
||
They saw lights in the chamber or ever they entered, and when they came
|
||
to the door, lo! there within was Katherine walking up and down the floor
|
||
as if she knew not how to contain herself. She turned and saw Ralph at
|
||
the door, and she cried aloud and ran towards him with arms outspread.
|
||
But when she drew nigh to him and beheld him closely, she withheld her,
|
||
and falling down on her knees before him took his hand and fell to kissing it
|
||
and weeping and crying out, "O my lord, my lord, thou art come again to us!"
|
||
But Ralph stooped down to her, and lifted her up, and embraced her and
|
||
kissed her on the cheeks and the mouth, and led her to the settle and sat
|
||
down beside her and put his arm about her; and Clement looked on smiling,
|
||
and sat him down over against them.
|
||
|
||
Then spake Katherine: "O my lord! how great and masterful hast
|
||
thou grown; never did I hope to see thee come back so mighty a man."
|
||
And again she wept for joy; but Ralph kissed her again, and she said,
|
||
laughing through her tears: "Master Clement, this lord and warrior hath
|
||
brought back with him something that I have not seen; and belike he hath
|
||
had one fair woman in his arms, or more it may be, since I saw him last.
|
||
For though he but kisses me as his gossip and foster-mother, yet are
|
||
his kisses closer and kinder than they were aforetime."
|
||
|
||
Said Clement: "Sooth is the Sage's guess; yet verily, fair sir,
|
||
I have told her somewhat of thy journeys, so far as I knew of them."
|
||
|
||
Said Katherine: "Dear lord and gossip, wilt thou not tell me
|
||
more thereof now?"
|
||
|
||
"What!" said Ralph; "shall I not sleep to-night?"
|
||
|
||
"Dear gossip," she said, "thou art over-mighty to need sleep. And ah!
|
||
I had forgotten in the joy of our meeting that to-morrow thou goest to battle;
|
||
and how if thou come not again?"
|
||
|
||
"Fear nought," said Ralph; "art thou not somewhat foreseeing?
|
||
Dost thou not know that to-morrow or the day after I shall
|
||
come back unhurt and victorious; and then shall both thou
|
||
and Clement come to Upmeads and abide there as long as ye will;
|
||
and then shall I tell thee a many tales of my wanderings;
|
||
and Ursula my beloved, she also shall tell thee."
|
||
|
||
Katherine reddened somewhat, but she said: "Would I might kiss her feet,
|
||
dear lord. But now, I pray thee, tell me somewhat, now at once."
|
||
|
||
"So shall it be," said Ralph, "since thou wilt have it,
|
||
dear gossip; but when I have done I shall ask thee to tell
|
||
me somewhat, whereof hath long been wonder in my mind;
|
||
and meseemeth that by the time we are both done with tales,
|
||
I shall needs be putting on my helm again.--Nay, again I tell
|
||
thee it is but a show of battle that I go to!"
|
||
|
||
So then he went and sat by Clement's side, and began and told
|
||
over as shortly as might be the tidings of his journeys.
|
||
And oft she wept for pity thereat.
|
||
|
||
But when he was done and he had sat beholding her, and saw how goodly
|
||
a woman she was, and how straight and well knit of body, he said:
|
||
"Gossip, I wonder now, if thou also hast drunk of the Well;
|
||
for thou art too fair and goodly to be of the age that we call thee.
|
||
How is this! Also tell me how thou camest by this pair of beads
|
||
that seem to have led me to the Well at the World's End?
|
||
For as I said e'en now, I have long marvelled how thou hadst
|
||
them and where."
|
||
|
||
"Fair sir," said Clement, "as for her drinking of the Well at the
|
||
World's End, it is not so; but this is a good woman, and a valiant,
|
||
and of great wisdom; and such women wear well, even as a well-wrought
|
||
piece of armour that hath borne many strokes of the craftsman's hand,
|
||
and hath in it some deal of his very mind and the wisdom of him.
|
||
But now let her tell thee her tale (which forsooth I know not),
|
||
for night is growing old."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 28
|
||
|
||
Dame Katherine Tells of the Pair of Beads, and Whence She Had Them
|
||
|
||
|
||
Katherine cast friendly looks on them and said: "Gossip, and thou,
|
||
Clement, I will make a clean breast of it once for all.
|
||
In the days when I was first wedded to Master Clement yonder,
|
||
he found his bed cold without me, for he was a hot lover;
|
||
therefore would he often have me with him on his journeys,
|
||
how hard soever or perilous the way might be. Yea, Clement,
|
||
thou lookest the sooth, though thou sayest it not, I was nought
|
||
loth thereto, partly because I would not grieve thee, my man;
|
||
but partly, and belike mostly, because I was wishful to see the ways
|
||
of the world even at the risk of being thrust out of the world.
|
||
So it befell us on a time to make a journey together,
|
||
a journey exceeding long, in the company of certain chapmen,
|
||
whereof some, and not a few, died on the way. But we lived,
|
||
and came into the eastern parts of the earth to a city right ancient,
|
||
and fulfilled of marvels, which hight Sarras the Holy.
|
||
There saw we wonders whereof were it overlong to tell of here;
|
||
but one while I will tell thee, my lord. But this I must
|
||
needs say, that I heard tell of a woman dwelling there, who was
|
||
not old by seeming, but had in her the wisdom of ten lives,
|
||
and the longing gat hold of me to see her and learn wisdom of her.
|
||
So I entreated many who were called wise, some with prayers,
|
||
and some with gifts also, to help me to speech of her;
|
||
but I gat nothing either by praying or giving; they that would
|
||
have helped me could not, and they that could would not.
|
||
So, what between one thing and another, the longing to see
|
||
the Wise Woman grew as it were into a madness in me. Amidst of
|
||
which we fell in with a merchant exceeding wise in ancient lore,
|
||
who looked at me (though Clement knew it not) with eyes of love.
|
||
Of this man I asked concerning the Wise Woman, and he seeing my desire,
|
||
strove to use it merchant-like, and would deal with me and have in
|
||
payment for his learning a gift which I had nought to do to give.
|
||
Howbeit madness and my desire for speech with the Wise Woman got
|
||
the better of me, and I promised to give no less than he would,
|
||
trusting to beguile him after I had got my desire, and be
|
||
quit of him. So he led me to the woman and went his ways.
|
||
She dwelt all by herself in a nook of an ancient ruined palace,
|
||
erst the house of the ancientest of all the kings of Sarras.
|
||
When I came to her, I saw nought dreadful or ugsome about her:
|
||
she was cheerful of countenance and courteous of demeanour,
|
||
and greeted me kindly as one neighbour in the street of Wulstead
|
||
might do to another. I saw her, that she was by seeming a woman
|
||
of some forty winters, trim and well-fashioned of body, nowise big,
|
||
but slender, of dark red hair and brown eyes somewhat small.
|
||
|
||
"Now, she said to me, 'I have looked for thee a while; now thou art come,
|
||
thou shalt tell me what thou needest, and thy needs will I fulfil.
|
||
Yet needs must thou do a thing for me in return, and maybe thou wilt deem it a
|
||
great thing. Yet whereas thou has struck a bargain before thou camest hither,
|
||
if I undo that for thee, the bargain with me may be nought so burdensome.
|
||
How sayest thou?'
|
||
|
||
"Well, I saw now that I was in the trap, for ill had it been
|
||
in those days had Clement come to know that I had done amiss;
|
||
for he was a jealous lover, and a violent man."
|
||
|
||
Clement smiled hereat, but said nought, and Katherine went on:
|
||
"Trap or no trap, if I were eager before, I was over-eager now;
|
||
so when she bade me swear to do her will, I swore it without tarrying.
|
||
|
||
"Then she said: 'Sit down before me, and I will teach thee wisdom.'
|
||
What did she teach me? say ye. Well, if I told you belike
|
||
ye would be none the wiser; but so much she told me,
|
||
that my heart swelled with joy of the wisdom which I garnered.
|
||
Say thou, Clement, if I have been the worser woman to thee,
|
||
or thy friends, or mine."
|
||
|
||
"Nay, goodwife," said Clement, "I have nought against thee."
|
||
|
||
Katherine laughed and went on:
|
||
|
||
"At last the Wise Woman said, 'Now that thou hast of me all
|
||
that may avail thee, comes the other part of our bargain,
|
||
wherein I shall take and thou shalt give.'
|
||
|
||
"Quoth I, 'That is but fair, and thou shalt find me true to thee.'
|
||
She said, 'If thou be not, I shall know it, and shall amend it
|
||
in such wise that it shall cost thee much.'
|
||
|
||
"Then she looked on me long and keenly, and said afterward:
|
||
'Forsooth I should forbear laying this charge upon thee
|
||
if I did not deem that thou wouldst be no less than true.
|
||
But now I will try it, whereas I deem that the days of my life
|
||
henceforward shall not be many; and many days would it take me
|
||
to find a woman as little foolish as thee and as little false,
|
||
and thereto as fairly fashioned.'
|
||
|
||
"Therewith she put her hand to her neck, and took thence the self-same
|
||
pair of beads which I gave to thee, dear gossip, and which (praise be
|
||
to All Hallows!) thou hast borne ever since; and she said: 'Now hearken!
|
||
Thou shalt take this pair of beads, and do with them as I bid thee.
|
||
Swear again thereto.' So I swore by All Angels; and she said again:
|
||
'This pair of beads shall one day lead a man unto the Well at
|
||
the World's End, but no woman; forsooth, if a woman have them of
|
||
a woman, or the like of them, (for there be others,) they may serve
|
||
her for a token; but will be no talisman or leading-stone to her;
|
||
and this I tell thee lest thou seek to the Well on the strength of them.
|
||
For I bid thee give them to a man that thou lovest--that thou
|
||
lovest well, when he is in most need; only he shall not be of thine
|
||
own blood. This is all that I lay upon thee; and if thou do it,
|
||
thou shalt thrive, and if thou do it not, thou shalt come to harm.
|
||
And I will tell thee now that this meeting betwixt us is not by
|
||
chance-hap, but of my bringing about; for I have laboured to draw
|
||
thee to me, knowing that thou alone of women would avail me herein.
|
||
Now shalt thou go home to thine hostel, and take this for a token of my
|
||
sooth-saying. The wise merchant who led thee unto me is abiding thine
|
||
homecoming that he may have of thee that which thou promisedst to him.
|
||
If then thou find him at thine hostel, and he take thee by the hand
|
||
and lead thee to bed, whereas Clement is away till to-morrow even,
|
||
then shalt thou call me a vain word-spinner and a liar; but if
|
||
when thou comest home there, the folk there say to thee merchant
|
||
Valerius is ridden away hastily, being called afar on a message
|
||
of life and death, then shalt thou trow in me as a wise woman.
|
||
Herewith depart, and I bid thee farewell.'
|
||
|
||
"So I went my ways to my hostel trembling, and at the door I met
|
||
the chamberlain, who said to me, 'Lady, the merchant Valerius hath
|
||
been here seeking thee, and he said that he would abide thy coming;
|
||
but amidst of his abiding cometh a man who would speak to him privily;
|
||
whereof it came that he called for his horse and bade me tell thee,
|
||
Lady, that he was summoned on a matter of life and death, and would
|
||
return to kiss thine hands in five days' space.'
|
||
|
||
"So I wotted that the woman had spoken sooth, and was wise
|
||
and foreseeing, and something of a dread of her came upon me.
|
||
But the next even back cometh Clement, and the day after we rode
|
||
away from Sarras the Holy, and Valerius I saw never again.
|
||
And as to the beads, there is nought to tell of them till they
|
||
came into thine hands; and something tells me that it was the will
|
||
of the Wise Woman that to no other hands they should come."
|
||
|
||
Here Katherine made an end, and both the men sat pondering her tale a little.
|
||
As for Ralph, he deemed it certain that the Wise Woman of Sarras would
|
||
be none other than she who had taught lore to the Lady of Abundance;
|
||
but why she should have meant the beads for him he wotted not.
|
||
Again he wondered how it was that the Lady of Abundance should have given
|
||
the beads to Ursula, and whether she knew that they had no might to lead
|
||
her to the Well at the World's End. And yet further he wondered how it
|
||
was that Ursula, unholpen by the talisman, should have done so much to bring
|
||
him to the Well; yea, and how she was the first to see it while he slept.
|
||
But his heart told him that whereas he was seeking the Well with her,
|
||
she must needs come thither with him, unless they were both cast away;
|
||
withal Katherine looked at him and said: "Yea, dear lord, I wot what
|
||
thou art thinking of; but couldest thou have left her, when thou hadst
|
||
once found her again, Well or no Well?" "Sooth is that," said Ralph,
|
||
"yet for all that she hath done without help of talisman or witchcraft
|
||
is she the more worshipful and the dearer."
|
||
|
||
Then speech came into Clement's mouth, and he said: "Wife, it
|
||
is as I said before, when thy gossip had just departed from us.
|
||
It was meet enough that thou shouldst have loved him better than me;
|
||
but now it is even less to be undone than ever, when he has come back
|
||
bringing with him a woman so valiant and lovely as is my Lady Ursula.
|
||
So thou must e'en take the life that fate hath sent thee."
|
||
Katherine laughed through her tears, and said: "Withal, goodman,
|
||
I have been no bad wife to thee. And moreover, look thou, gossip dear:
|
||
when I was wandering about with Clement amongst many perils, when our
|
||
need seemed sorest, then would I think to give the beads to Clement;
|
||
but so soon as I began to speak to him of the Well at the World's
|
||
End he would belittle the tale of it, and would bid me look to it
|
||
if it were not so, that where the world endeth the clouds begin."
|
||
|
||
As she spoke, Ralph lifted up his hand and pointed to the window, and said:
|
||
"Friends, as we were speaking of all these marvels we were forgetting the need
|
||
of Upmeads and the day of battle; and lo now! how the dawn is widening
|
||
and the candles fading."
|
||
|
||
Scarce were the words out of his mouth, when on the quietness of the
|
||
beginning of day brake out the sound of four trumpets, which were sounding
|
||
in the four quarters of the town, and blowing men to the gathering.
|
||
Then rose up both Ralph and Clement and took their weapons, and they
|
||
kissed Katherine and went soberly out-a-doors into the market-place,
|
||
where already weaponed men were streaming in to the muster.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 29
|
||
|
||
They Go Down to Battle in Upmeads
|
||
|
||
|
||
Before it was light were all men come into the market-place,
|
||
and Ralph and Richard and Clement and Stephen a-Hurst fell to and
|
||
arrayed them duly; and now, what with the company which Ralph
|
||
had led into Wulstead, what with the men of the town, and them
|
||
that had fled from Upmeads (though these last were mostly old
|
||
men and lads), they were a thousand and four score and three.
|
||
Ralph would go afoot as he went yesterday; but today he bore
|
||
in his hand the ancient staff of war, the gold-written guisarme;
|
||
and he went amongst the Shepherds, with whom were joined
|
||
the feeble folk of Upmeads, men whom he had known of old
|
||
and who knew him, and it was as if their hearts had caught
|
||
fire from his high heart, and that whatever their past days
|
||
had been to them, this day at least should be glorious.
|
||
Withal anon comes Ursula from St. Austin's with the Sage
|
||
of Swevenham, whose face was full smiling and cheerful.
|
||
Ursula wore that day a hauberk under her gown, and was helmed
|
||
with a sallet; and because of her armour she rode upon
|
||
a little horse. Ralph gave her into the warding of the Sage,
|
||
who was armed at all points, and looked a valiant man of war.
|
||
But Ralph's brother, Hugh, had gotten him a horse, and had fallen
|
||
into the company of the Champions, saying that he deemed they
|
||
would go further forth than a sort of sheep-tending churls
|
||
and the runaways of Upmeads.
|
||
|
||
As for Ralph, he walked up and down the ranks of the stout men of
|
||
the Down-country, and saw how they had but little armour for defence,
|
||
though their weapons for cutting and thrusting looked fell and handy.
|
||
So presently he turned about to Giles, who, as aforesaid, bore a
|
||
long hauberk, and said: "Friend, the walk we are on to-day is a long
|
||
one for carrying burdens, and an hour after sunrise it will be hot.
|
||
Wilt thou not do with thy raiment as I do?" And therewith he did off
|
||
his hauberk and his other armour save his sallet. "This is good,"
|
||
said he, "for the sun to shine on, so that I may be seen from far;
|
||
but these other matters are good for folk who fight a-horseback or on a wall;
|
||
we striders have no need of them."
|
||
|
||
Then arose great shouting from the Shepherds, and men stretched
|
||
out the hand to him and called hail on his valiant heart.
|
||
|
||
Amidst of which cries Giles muttered, but so as Ralph might hear him:
|
||
"It is all down hill to Upmeads; I shall take off my iron-coat coming
|
||
back again." So Ralph clapped him on the shoulder and bade him come back
|
||
whole and well in any case. "Yea, and so shalt thou come back," said he.
|
||
|
||
Then the horns blew for departure, and they went their ways
|
||
out of the market-place, and out into the fields through the new
|
||
wooden wall of Wulstead. Richard led the way with a half score
|
||
of the Champions, but he rode but a little way before Ralph,
|
||
who marched at the head of the Shepherds.
|
||
|
||
So they went in the fresh morning over the old familiar fields, and strange it
|
||
seemed to Ralph that he was leading an host into the little land of Upmeads.
|
||
Speedily they went, though in good order, and it was but a little after
|
||
sunrise when they were wending toward the brow of the little hill whence they
|
||
would look down into the fair meads whose image Ralph had seen on so many days
|
||
of peril and weariness.
|
||
|
||
And now Richard and his fore-riders had come up on to the brow
|
||
and sat there on their horses clear against the sky;
|
||
and Ralph saw how Richard drew his sword from the scabbard
|
||
and waved it over his head, and he and his men shouted;
|
||
then the whole host set up a great shout, and hastened up the bent,
|
||
but with the end of their shout and the sound of the tramp
|
||
of their feet and the rattle of their war-gear was mingled
|
||
a confused noise of cries a way off, and the blowing of horns,
|
||
and as Ralph and his company came crowding up on to the brow,
|
||
he looked down and saw the happy meadows black with
|
||
weaponed men, and armour gleaming in the clear morning,
|
||
and the points of weapons casting back the low sun's rays
|
||
and glittering like the sparks in a dying fire of straw.
|
||
Then again he looked, and lo! the High House rising over
|
||
the meadows unburned and unhurt, and the banner of the fruited
|
||
tree hanging forth from the topmost tower thereof.
|
||
|
||
Then he felt a hand come on to his cheek, and lo, Ursula beside him,
|
||
her cheeks flushed and her eyes glittering; and she cried out:
|
||
"O thine home, my beloved, thine home!" And he turned to her
|
||
and said; "Yea, presently, sweetheart!" "Ah," she said, "will it
|
||
be long? and they so many!" "And we so mighty!" said Ralph.
|
||
"Nay, it will be but a little while. Wise man of Swevenham,
|
||
see to it that my beloved is anigh me to-day, for where I am,
|
||
there will be safety."
|
||
|
||
The Sage nodded yeasay and smiled.
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph looked along the ridge to right and left of him,
|
||
and saw that all the host had come up and had a sight of the foemen;
|
||
on the right stood the Shepherds staring down into the meadow
|
||
and laughing for the joy of battle and the rage of the oppressed.
|
||
On the left sat the Champions of the Dry Tree on their horses, and they
|
||
also were tossing up their weapons and roaring like lions for the prey;
|
||
and down below the black crowd had drawn together into ordered ranks,
|
||
and still the clamour and rude roaring of the warriors arose thence,
|
||
and beat against the hill's brow.
|
||
|
||
Now so fierce and ready were the men of Ralph's company that it
|
||
was a near thing but that they, and the Shepherds in especial,
|
||
did not rush tumultuously down the hill all breathless and in ill order.
|
||
But Ralph cried out to Richard to go left, and Giles to go right, and stay
|
||
the onset for a while; and to bid the leaders come to him where he stood.
|
||
Then the tumult amidst his folk lulled, and Stephen a-Hurst and Roger
|
||
and three others of the Dry Tree came to him, and Giles brought
|
||
three of the Shepherds, and there was Clement and a fellow of his.
|
||
So when they were come and standing in a ring round Ralph,
|
||
he said to them:
|
||
|
||
"Brothers in arms, ye see that our foes are all in array to meet us,
|
||
having had belike some spy in Wulstead, who hath brought them the tale
|
||
of what was toward. Albeit methinks that this irks not either you nor me;
|
||
for otherwise we might have found them straggling, and scattered
|
||
far and wide, which would have made our labour the greater.
|
||
Now ye can see with your eyes that they are many more than we be,
|
||
even were Nicholas to issue out of the High House against them,
|
||
as doubtless he will do if need be. Brethren, though they be so many,
|
||
yet my heart tells me that we shall overcome them; yet if we leave
|
||
our strength and come down to them, both our toil shall be greater,
|
||
and some of us, belike many, shall be slain; and evil should I deem
|
||
it if but a score of my friends should lose their lives on this
|
||
joyous day when at last I see Upmeads again after many troubles.
|
||
Wherefore my rede is that we abide their onset on the hillside here; and needs
|
||
must they fall on us, whereas we have Wulstead and friends behind us,
|
||
and they nought but Nicholas and the bows and bills of the High House.
|
||
But if any have aught to say against it let him speak, but be speedy;
|
||
for already I see a stir in their array, and I deem that they will send
|
||
men to challenge us to come down to them."
|
||
|
||
Then spake Stephen a-Hurst: "I, and we all meseemeth,
|
||
deem that thou art in the right, Captain; though sooth to say,
|
||
when we first set eyes on these dogs again, the blood so stirred
|
||
in us that we were like to let all go and ride down on them."
|
||
|
||
Said Richard: "Thou biddest us wisdom of war; let them have the hill
|
||
against them." Said Clement: "Yea, for they are well learned and well armed;
|
||
another sort of folk to those wild men whom we otherthrew in the mountains."
|
||
|
||
And in like wise said they all.
|
||
|
||
Then spake Stephen again: "Lord, since thou wilt fight
|
||
afoot with our friends of the Shepherds, we of the Dry Tree
|
||
are minded to fare in like wise and to forego our horses;
|
||
but if thou gainsay it----"
|
||
|
||
"Champion," said Ralph, "I do gainsay it. Thou seest how many of them
|
||
be horsed, and withal ye it is who must hold the chase of them;
|
||
for I will that no man of them shall escape."
|
||
|
||
They laughed joyously at his word, and then he said:
|
||
"Go now, and give your leaders of scores and tens the word
|
||
that I have said, and come back speedily for a little while;
|
||
for now I see three men sundering them from their battle,
|
||
and one beareth a white cloth at the end of his spear;
|
||
these shall be the challengers."
|
||
|
||
So they did after his bidding, and by then they had come
|
||
back to Ralph those three men were at the foot of the hill,
|
||
which was but low. Then Ralph said to his captains:
|
||
"Stand before me, so that I be not seen of them until one of you
|
||
hath made answer, 'Speak of this to our leader and captain.'"
|
||
Even so they did; and presently those three came so nigh
|
||
that they could see the whites of their eyes. They were all
|
||
three well armed, but the foremost of them was clad in white
|
||
steel from head to foot, so that he looked like a steel image,
|
||
all but his face, which was pale and sallow and grim.
|
||
He and his two fellows, when they were right nigh,
|
||
rode slowly all along the front of Ralph's battles thrice,
|
||
and none spake aught to them, and they gave no word to any;
|
||
but when they came over against the captains who stood before
|
||
Ralph for the fourth time, they reined up and faced them,
|
||
and the leader put back his sallet and spake in a great
|
||
and rough voice:
|
||
|
||
"Ye men! we have heard these three hours that ye were coming,
|
||
wherefore we have drawn out into the meads which we have taken,
|
||
that ye might see how many and how valiant we be, and might fear us.
|
||
Wherefore now, ye broken reivers of the Dry Tree, ye silly
|
||
shepherds of silly sheep, ye weavers and apprentices of Wulstead,
|
||
and if there by any more, ye fools! we give you two choices this morn.
|
||
Either come down to us into the meadow yonder, that we may slay
|
||
you with less labour, or else, which will be the better for you,
|
||
give up to us the Upmeads thralls who be with you, and then turn
|
||
your faces and go back to your houses, and abide there till we
|
||
come and pull you out of them, which may be some while yet.
|
||
Hah! what say ye, fools?"
|
||
|
||
Then spake Clement and said: "Ye messengers of the robbers and oppressors,
|
||
why make ye this roaring to the common people and the sergeants?
|
||
Why speak ye not with our Captain?"
|
||
|
||
Cried out the challenger, "Where then is the Captain of the Fools?
|
||
is he hidden? can he hear my word?"
|
||
|
||
Scarce was it out of his mouth ere the captains fell away
|
||
to right and left, and there, standing by himself, was Ralph,
|
||
holding the ancient lettered war-staff; his head was bare,
|
||
for now he had done off his sallet, and the sun and the wind
|
||
played in his bright hair; glorious was his face, and his grey
|
||
eyes gleamed with wrath and mastery as he spake in a clear voice,
|
||
and there was silence all along the ranks to hearken him:
|
||
|
||
"O messenger of the robbers! I am the captain of this folk.
|
||
I see that the voice hath died away within the jaws of you;
|
||
but it matters not, for I have heard thy windy talk, and this
|
||
is the answer: we will neither depart, nor come down to you,
|
||
but will abide our death by your hands here on this hill-side.
|
||
Go with this answer."
|
||
|
||
The man stared wild at Ralph while he was speaking, and seemed
|
||
to stagger in his saddle; then he let his sallet fall over
|
||
his face, and, turning his horse about, rode swiftly, he and his
|
||
two fellows, down the hill and away to the battle of the Burgers.
|
||
None followed or cried after him; for now had a great longing
|
||
and expectation fallen upon Ralph's folk, and they abode what shall
|
||
befall with little noise. They noted so soon as the messenger was
|
||
gotten to the main of the foemen that there was a stir amongst them,
|
||
and they were ordering their ranks to move against the hill.
|
||
And withal they saw men all armed coming from out the High House,
|
||
who went down to the Bridge and abode there. Upmeads-water ran through
|
||
the meadows betwixt the hill and the High House, as hath been said afore;
|
||
but as it winded along, one reach of it went nigh to the House,
|
||
and made wellnigh a quarter of a circle about it before it turned
|
||
to run down the meadows to the eastward; and at this nighest point
|
||
was there a wide bridge well builded of stone.
|
||
|
||
The Burg-devils heeded not the men at the Bridge, but, being all arrayed,
|
||
made but short tarrying (and that belike only to hear the tale of
|
||
their messenger) ere they came in two battles straight across the meadow.
|
||
They on their right were all riders, and these faced the Champions
|
||
of the Dry Tree, but a great battle of footmen came against the Shepherds
|
||
and the rest of Ralph's footmen, but in their rearward was a company
|
||
of well-horsed men-at-arms; and all of them were well armed and went
|
||
right orderly and warrior-like.
|
||
|
||
It was but some fifteen minutes ere they were come to the foot
|
||
of the hill, and they fell to mounting it with laughter and mockery,
|
||
but Ralph's men held their peace. The horsemen were somewhat
|
||
speedier than those on foot, though they rode but at a foot's pace,
|
||
and when they were about halfway up the hill and were faltering a little
|
||
(for it was somewhat steep, though nought high), the Champions
|
||
of the Dry Tree could forbear them no longer, but set up a huge roar,
|
||
and rode at them, so that they all went down the hill together,
|
||
but the Champions were lost amidst of the huge mass of the foemen.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph was left at the very left end of his folk, and the foemen came
|
||
up the hill speedily with much noise and many foul mocks as aforesaid,
|
||
and they were many and many more than Ralph's folk, and now that the Champions
|
||
were gone, could have enfolded them at either end; but no man of the company
|
||
blenched or faltered, only here and there one spake soft to his neighbour,
|
||
and here and there one laughed the battle-laugh.
|
||
|
||
Now at the hanging of the hill, whenas either side could see the whites
|
||
of the foemen's eyes, the robbers stayed a little to gather breath;
|
||
and in that nick of time Ralph strode forth into the midst between the two
|
||
lines and up on to a little mound on the hill-side (which well he knew),
|
||
and he lifted up the ancient guisarme, and cried on high: "Home now!
|
||
Home to Upmeads!"
|
||
|
||
Then befell a marvel, for even as all eyes of the foemen were turned
|
||
on him, straightway their shouts and jeering and laughter fell dead,
|
||
and then gave place to shrieks and wailing, as all they who beheld him cast
|
||
down their weapons and fled wildly down the hill, overturning whatever
|
||
stood in their way, till the whole mass of them was broken to pieces,
|
||
and the hill was covered with nought but cravens and the light-footed
|
||
Shepherds slaughtering them in the chase.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph called Clement to him and they drew a stalworth
|
||
band together, and, heeding nought the chase of the runaways,
|
||
they fell on those who had the Champions in their midst,
|
||
and fell to smiting down men on either hand; and every
|
||
man who looked on Ralph crouched and cowered before him,
|
||
casting down his weapons and throwing up his hands.
|
||
Shortly to say it, when these horsemen felt this new onset,
|
||
and looking round saw their men fleeing hither and thither
|
||
over the green fields of Upmeads, smitten by the Shepherds and
|
||
leaping into the deep pools of the river, they turned and fled,
|
||
every man who could keep his saddle, and made for the Bridge,
|
||
the Dry Tree thundering at their backs. But even as they came
|
||
within bowshot, a great flight of arrows came from the further
|
||
side of the water, and the banner of the Fruitful Tree came forth
|
||
from the bridge-end with Nicholas and his tried men-at-arms
|
||
behind it; and then indeed great and grim was the murder,
|
||
and the proud men of the Burg grovelled on the ground and prayed
|
||
for mercy till neither the Champions nor the men of Nicholas
|
||
could smite helpless men any longer.
|
||
|
||
Now had Ralph held his hand from the chase, and he was sitting
|
||
on a mound amidst of the meadow under an ancient thorn,
|
||
and beside him sat the Sage of Swevenham and Ursula.
|
||
And she was grown pale now and looked somewhat scared,
|
||
and she spake in a trembling voice to Ralph, and said:
|
||
"Alas friend! that this should be so grim! When we hear
|
||
the owls a-nighttime about the High House, shall we not
|
||
deem at whiles that it is the ghosts of this dreadful
|
||
battle and slaughter wandering about our fair fields?"
|
||
But Ralph spake sternly and wrathfully as he sat there
|
||
bareheaded and all unarmed save for the ancient glaive:
|
||
"Why did they not slay me then? Better the ghosts of robbers
|
||
in our fields by night, than the over-burdened hapless
|
||
thrall by day, and the scourged woman, and ruined child.
|
||
These things they sought for us and have found death on the way--
|
||
let it be!"
|
||
|
||
He laughed as he spake; but then the grief of the end of battle came
|
||
upon him and he trembled and shook, and great tears burst from his eyes
|
||
and rolled down his cheeks, and he became stark and hard-faced.
|
||
|
||
Then Ursula took his hands and caressed them, and kissed his face,
|
||
and fell a-talking to him of how they rode the pass to the Valley
|
||
of Sweet Chestnuts; and in a while his heart and his mind came back
|
||
to him as it did that other time of which she spake, and he kissed
|
||
her in turn, and began to tell her of his old chamber in the turret
|
||
of the High House.
|
||
|
||
And now there come riding across the field two warriors.
|
||
They draw rein by the mound, and one lights down, and lo! it
|
||
is Long Nicholas; and he took Ralph in his arms, and kissed him
|
||
and wept over him for all his grizzled beard and his gaunt limbs;
|
||
but few words he had for him, save this: "My little Lord, was it thou
|
||
that was the wise captain to-day, or this stout lifter and reiver!"
|
||
But the other man was Stephen a-Hurst, who laughed and said:
|
||
"Nay, Nicholas, I was the fool, and this stripling the wise warrior.
|
||
But, Lord Ralph, thou wilt pardon me, I hope, but we could not kill
|
||
them all, for they would not fight in any wise; what shall we do
|
||
with them?" Ralph knit his brows and thought a little; then he said:
|
||
"How many hast thou taken?" Said Stephen: "Some two hundred alive."
|
||
"Well," quoth Ralph; "strip them of all armour and weapons,
|
||
and let a score of thy riders drive them back the way they came
|
||
into the Debateable Wood. But give them this last word from me,
|
||
that or long I shall clear the said wood of all strong-thieves."
|
||
|
||
Stephen departed on that errand; and presently comes Giles and another
|
||
of the Shepherds with a like tale, and had a like answer.
|
||
|
||
Now amidst all these deeds it yet lacked an hour of noon. So presently
|
||
Ralph arose and took Richard apart for a while and spoke with him a little,
|
||
and then came back to Ursula and took her by the hand, and said:
|
||
"Beloved, Richard shall take thee now to a pleasant abode this side
|
||
the water; for I grudge that thou shouldst enter the High House
|
||
without me; and as for me I must needs ride back to Wulstead to bring
|
||
hither my father and mother, as I promised to do after the battle.
|
||
In good sooth, I deemed it would have lasted longer." Said Ursula:
|
||
"Dear friend, this is even what I should have bidden thee myself.
|
||
Depart speedily, that thou mayst be back the sooner; for sorely do I long
|
||
to enter thine house, beloved." Then Ralph turned to Nicholas, and said:
|
||
"Our host is not so great but that thou mayst victual it well; yet I
|
||
deem it is little less than when we left Wulstead early this morning."
|
||
|
||
"True is that, little lord," said Nicholas. "Hear a wonder amongst battles:
|
||
of thy Shepherds and the other footmen is not one slain, and but
|
||
some five hurt. The Champions have lost three men slain outright,
|
||
and some fifteen hurt; of whom is thy brother Hugh, but not sorely."
|
||
"Better than well is thy story then," said Ralph. "Now let them bring me
|
||
a horse." So when he was horsed, he kissed Ursula and went his ways.
|
||
And she abode his coming back at Richard's house anigh the water.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 30
|
||
|
||
Ralph Brings His Father and Mother to Upmeads
|
||
|
||
|
||
Short was the road back again to Wulstead, and whereas the day
|
||
was not very old when Ralph came there, he failed not to stop at
|
||
Clement's house, and came into the chamber where sat Dame Katherine
|
||
in pensive wise nigh to the window, with her open hands in her lap.
|
||
Quoth Ralph: "Rejoice, gossip! for neither is Clement hurt, nor I,
|
||
and all is done that should be done." She moved her but little,
|
||
but the tears came into her eyes and rolled down her cheeks.
|
||
"What, gossip?" quoth Ralph; "these be scarce tears of joy;
|
||
what aileth thee?" "Nay," said Katherine, "indeed I am joyful
|
||
of thy tidings, though sooth to say I looked for none other.
|
||
But, dear lord and gossip, forgive me my tears on the day of thy triumph;
|
||
for if they be not wholly of joy, so also are they not wholly of sorrow.
|
||
But love and the passing of the days are bittersweet within my heart
|
||
to-day. Later on thou shalt see few faces more cheerful and merry
|
||
in the hall at Upmeads than this of thy gossip's. So be merry now,
|
||
and go fetch thy father and thy mother, and rejoice their
|
||
hearts that thou hast been even better than thy word to them.
|
||
Farewell, gossip; but look to see me at Upmeads before many days
|
||
are past; for I know thee what thou art; and that the days will
|
||
presently find deeds for thee, and thou wilt be riding into peril,
|
||
and coming safe from out of it. Farewell!"
|
||
|
||
So he departed and rode to the House of St. Austin, and the folk
|
||
gathered so about him in the street that at the gate of the Priory
|
||
he had to turn about and speak to them; and he said: "Good people,
|
||
rejoice! there are no more foemen of Wulstead anigh you now;
|
||
and take this word of me, that I will see to it in time to come
|
||
that ye live in peace and quiet here."
|
||
|
||
Folk shouted for joy, and the fathers who were standing within
|
||
the gate heard his word and rejoiced, and some of them ran off
|
||
to tell King Peter that his son was come back victorious already;
|
||
so that by then he had dismounted at the Guest-house door,
|
||
lo! there was the King and his wife with him, and both they alboun
|
||
for departure. And when they saw him King Peter cried out:
|
||
"There is no need to say a word, my son; unless thou wouldst
|
||
tell the tale to the holy father Prior, who, as ye see,
|
||
has e'en now come out to us."
|
||
|
||
Said Ralph: "Father and mother, I pray your blessing, and also
|
||
the blessing of the father Prior here; and the tale is short enough:
|
||
that we have overthrown them and slain the more part, and the others
|
||
are now being driven like a herd of swine into their stronghold
|
||
of the Wood Debateable, where, forsooth, I shall be ere the world
|
||
is one month older. And in the doing of all this have but three of
|
||
our men been slain and a few hurt, amongst whom is thy son Hugh,
|
||
but not sorely."
|
||
|
||
"O yea, son," said his mother, "he shall do well enough.
|
||
But now with thy leave, holy Prior, we will depart, so that we
|
||
may sleep in the High House to-night, and feel that my dear
|
||
son's hand is over us to ward us."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph knelt before them, and King Peter and his wife blessed
|
||
their son when they had kissed and embraced each other, and they wept
|
||
for joy of him. The Prior also, who was old, and a worthy prelate,
|
||
and an ancient friend of King Peter, might not refrain his tears
|
||
at the joy of his friends as he gave Ralph his blessing. And then,
|
||
when Ralph had risen up and the horses were come, he said to him:
|
||
"One thing thou art not to forget, young conqueror, to wit,
|
||
that thou art to come here early one day, and tell me all thy tale
|
||
at full length."
|
||
|
||
"Yea, Prior," said Ralph, "or there is the High House of Upmeads for thee
|
||
to use as thine own, and a rest for thee of three or four days while thou
|
||
hearkenest the tale; for it may need that."
|
||
|
||
"Hearken," said King Peter softly to the Dame, "how he reckons it all
|
||
his own; my day is done, my dear." He spake smiling, and she said:
|
||
"Soothly he is waxen masterful, and well it becometh the dear youngling."
|
||
|
||
Now they get to horse and ride their ways, while all folk blessed them.
|
||
The two old folk rode fast and pressed their nags whatever Ralph
|
||
might do to give them pastime of words; so they came into the plain
|
||
field of Upmeads two hours before sunset; and King Peter said:
|
||
"Now I account it that I have had one day more of my life than was
|
||
my due, and thou, son, hast added it to the others whereas thou didst
|
||
not promise to bring me hither till morrow."
|
||
|
||
Ralph led them round by the ford, so that they might not come
|
||
across the corpses of the robbers; but already were the Upmeads
|
||
carles at work digging trenches wherein to bury them.
|
||
|
||
So Ralph led his father and his mother to the gate of the garth
|
||
of High House; then he got off his horse and helped them down,
|
||
and as he so dealt with his father, he said to him:
|
||
"Thou art springy and limber yet, father; maybe thou wilt put
|
||
on thine helm this year to ride the Debateable Wood with me."
|
||
|
||
The old man laughed and said: "Maybe, son; but as now it is time
|
||
for thee to enter under our roof-tree once more."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," said Ralph, "but go ye in and sit in the high-seat and abide me.
|
||
For did I not go straight back to you from the field of battle;
|
||
and can I suffer it that any other hand than mine should lead my wife
|
||
into the hall and up to the high-seat of my fathers; and therefore I go
|
||
to fetch her from the house of Richard the Red where she is abiding me;
|
||
but presently I shall lead her in, and do ye then with us what ye will."
|
||
|
||
Therewith he turned about and rode his ways to Richard's house,
|
||
which was but a half-mile thence. But his father and mother
|
||
laughed when he was gone, and King Peter said: "There again!
|
||
thou seest, wife, it is he that commands and we that obey."
|
||
|
||
"O happy hour that so it is!" said the Lady, "and happy now shall
|
||
be the wearing of our days."
|
||
|
||
So they entered the garth and came into the house, and were welcomed
|
||
with all joy by Nicholas, and told him all that Ralph had said,
|
||
and bade him array the house as he best might; for there was much
|
||
folk about the High House, though the Upmeads carles and queans
|
||
had taken the more part of the host to their houses, which they
|
||
had delivered from the fire and sword, and they made much of them
|
||
there with a good heart.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 31
|
||
|
||
Ralph Brings Ursula Home to the High House
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ralph speedily came to Richard's house and entered the chamber, and found
|
||
Ursula alone therein, clad in the daintiest of her woman's gear of the web
|
||
of Goldburg. She rose up to meet him, and he took her in his arms, and said:
|
||
"Now is come the very ending of our journey that we so often longed for;
|
||
and all will be ready by then we come to the High House."
|
||
|
||
"Ah," she said, as she clung to him, "but they were happy days
|
||
the days of our journey; and to-morrow begins a new life."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," he said, "but rather this even; shall it be loathly to thee, lady?"
|
||
|
||
She said: "There will be many people whom I knew not yesterday."
|
||
"There will be but me," he said, "when the night hath been dark
|
||
for a little."
|
||
|
||
She kissed him and said nought. And therewithal came some of Richard's folk,
|
||
for it was his house, and led with them a white palfrey for Ursula's riding,
|
||
dight all gay and goodly.
|
||
|
||
"Come then," said Ralph, "thou needest not to fear the ancient house,
|
||
for it is kind and lovely, and my father and my mother thou hast seen already,
|
||
and they love thee. Come then, lest the hall be grown too dusk for men to see
|
||
thy fairness." "Yea, yea," she said, "but first here is a garland I made
|
||
for thee, and one also for me, while I was abiding thee after the battle,
|
||
and my love and my hope is woven into it. And she set it on his head,
|
||
and said, "O thou art fair, and I did well to meet thee in the dark wood."
|
||
Then he kissed her dearly on the mouth and led her forth, and none went
|
||
with them, and they mounted and went their ways.
|
||
|
||
But Ralph said: "I deem that we should ride the meadow to the bridge,
|
||
because that way lies the great door of the hall, and if I know my
|
||
father and Nicholas they will look for us that way. Dost thou yet
|
||
fear these dead men, sweetheart, whom our folk slew this morning?"
|
||
"Nay," she said, "it has been a long time since the morning, and they,
|
||
and their fierieness which has so burned out, are now to me as a tale
|
||
that hath been told. It is the living that I am going to, and I hope
|
||
to do well by them."
|
||
|
||
Came they then to the bridge-end and there was no man there, nought but
|
||
the kine that were wandering about over the dewy grass of eventide.
|
||
Then they rode over the bridge and through the orchard, and still
|
||
there was no man, and all gates were open wide. So they came
|
||
into the base-court of the house, and it also was empty of folk;
|
||
and they came to the great doors of the hall and they were open wide,
|
||
and they could see through them that the hall was full of folk,
|
||
and therein by the light of the low sun that streamed in at the
|
||
shot-window at the other end they saw the faces of men and the gleam
|
||
of steel and gold.
|
||
|
||
So they lighted down from their horses, and took hand in hand and entered
|
||
bright-faced and calm, and goodly beyond the goodliness of men; then indeed
|
||
all that folk burst forth into glad cries, and tossed up their weapons,
|
||
and many wept for joy.
|
||
|
||
As they went slowly up the long hall (and it was thirty fathom of length)
|
||
Ralph looked cheerfully and friendly from side to side, and beheld the faces
|
||
of the Shepherds and the Champions, and the men of Wulstead, and his own folk;
|
||
and all they cried hail to him and the lovely and valiant Lady.
|
||
Then he looked up to the high-seat, and saw that his father's throne
|
||
was empty, and his mother's also; but behind the throne stood a knight
|
||
all armed in bright armour holding the banner of Upmeads; but his father
|
||
and mother stood on the edge of the dais to meet him and Ursula;
|
||
and when they came up thither these old folk embraced them and kissed them
|
||
and led them up to the table. Then Ralph bade Ursula sit by his mother,
|
||
and made him ready to sit by his father in all love and duty.
|
||
But King Peter stayed him and said: "Nay, dear son, not there, but here
|
||
shalt thou sit, thou saviour of Upmeads and conqueror of the hearts
|
||
of men; this is a little land, but therein shall be none above thee."
|
||
And therewith he set Ralph down in the throne, and Ralph, turning to his
|
||
left hand, saw that it was Ursula, and not his mother, who sat beside him.
|
||
But at the sight of these two in the throne the glad cries and shouts
|
||
shook the very timbers of the roof, and the sun sank under while yet
|
||
they cried hail to the King of Upmeads.
|
||
|
||
Then were the lights brought and the supper, and all men fell to feast,
|
||
and plenteous was the wine in the hall; and sure since first men met
|
||
to eat together none have been merrier than they.
|
||
|
||
But now when men had well eaten, and the great cup called
|
||
the River of Upmeads was brought in, the cupbearers, being so
|
||
bidden before, brought it last of all to King Peter, and he stood
|
||
up with the River in his hand and spoke aloud, and said:
|
||
"Lords and warriors, and good people all, here I do you to wit,
|
||
that it is not because my son Ralph has come home to-day and
|
||
wrought us a great deliverance, and that my love hath overcome me;
|
||
it is not for this cause that I have set him in my throne this even;
|
||
but because I see and perceive that of all the kindred he is meetest
|
||
to sit therein so long as he liveth; unless perchance this lovely
|
||
and valiant woman should bear him a son even better than himself--
|
||
and so may it be. Therefore I do you all to wit that this man
|
||
is the King of Upmeads, and this woman is his Lady and Queen;
|
||
and so deem I of his prowess, and his wisdom, and kindliness,
|
||
that I trow he shall be lord and servant of other lands than Upmeads,
|
||
and shall draw the good towns and the kindreds and worthy good
|
||
lords into peace and might and well-being, such as they have
|
||
not known heretofore. Now within three days shall mass be sung
|
||
in the choir of St. Laurence, and then shall King Ralph swear
|
||
on the gospels such oaths as ye wot of, to guard his people,
|
||
and help the needy, and oppress no man, even as I have sworn it.
|
||
And I say to you, that if I have kept the oath to my power,
|
||
yet shall he keep it better, as he is mightier than I.
|
||
|
||
"Furthermore, when he hath sworn, then shall the vassals swear to him
|
||
according to ancient custom, to be true to him and hardy in all due service.
|
||
But so please you I will not abide till then, but will kneel to him
|
||
and to his Lady and Queen here and now."
|
||
|
||
Even so he did, and took Ralph's hand in his and swore service
|
||
to him such as was due; and he knelt to Ursula also, and bade
|
||
her all thanks for what she had done in the helping of his son;
|
||
and they raised him up and made much of him and of Ralph's mother;
|
||
and great was the joy of all folk in the hall.
|
||
|
||
So the feast went on a while till the night grew old, and folk
|
||
must fare bedward. Then King Peter and his wife brought Ralph
|
||
and Ursula to the chamber of the solar, the kingly chamber, which was
|
||
well and goodly dight with hangings and a fair and glorious bed,
|
||
and was newly decked with such fair flowers as the summer
|
||
might furnish; and at the threshold King Peter stayed them and said:
|
||
"Kinsman, and thou, dear friend, this is become your due chamber and
|
||
resting-place while ye live in the world, and this night of all others
|
||
it shall be a chamber of love; for ye are, as it were, new wedded,
|
||
since now first ye are come amongst the kindred as lover and beloved;
|
||
and thou, Ursula, art now at last the bride of this ancient house;
|
||
now tell me, doth it not look friendly and kindly on thee?"
|
||
|
||
"O yea, yea," she said. "Come thou, my man and my darling and let
|
||
us be alone in the master-chamber of this ancient House."
|
||
|
||
Then Ralph drew her unto him; and the old man blessed them
|
||
and prayed for goodly offspring for them, that the House
|
||
of Upmeads might long endure.
|
||
|
||
And thus were they two left alone amidst the love and hope of the kindred,
|
||
as erst they lay alone in the desert.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER 32
|
||
|
||
Yet a Few Words Concerning Ralph of Upmeads
|
||
|
||
|
||
Certain it is that Ralph failed not of his promise to the good
|
||
Prior of St. Austin's at Wulstead, but went to see him speedily,
|
||
and told him all the tale of his wanderings as closely as he might,
|
||
and hid naught from him; which, as ye may wot, was more than
|
||
one day's work or two or three. And ever when Ralph thus spoke
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was a brother of the House sitting with the Prior, which brother
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was a learned and wise man and very speedy and deft with his pen.
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Wherefore it has been deemed not unlike that from this monk's
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writing has come the more part of the tale above told.
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And if it be so, it is well.
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Furthermore, it is told of Ralph of Upmeads that he ruled over his
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lands in right and might, and suffered no oppression within them,
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and delivered other lands and good towns when they fell under tyrants
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and oppressors; and for as kind a man as he was in hall and at hearth,
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in the field he was a warrior so wise and dreadful, that oft forsooth
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the very sound of his name and rumour of his coming stayed the march
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of hosts and the ravage of fair lands; and no lord was ever more beloved.
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Till his deathday he held the Castle of the Scaur, and cleansed
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the Wood Perilous of all strong-thieves and reivers, so that no
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high-street of a good town was safer than its glades and its byways.
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The new folk of the Burg of the Four Friths made him their lord
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and captain, and the Champions of the Dry Tree obeyed him in all
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honour so long as any of them lasted. He rode to Higham and offered
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himself as captain to the abbot thereof, and drave out the tyrants
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and oppressors thence, and gave back peace to the Frank of Higham.
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Ever was he true captain and brother to the Shepherd-folk, and in
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many battles they followed him; and were there any scarcity or ill
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hap amongst them, he helped them to the uttermost of his power.
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The Wood Debateable also he cleared of foul robbers and reivers,
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and rooted out the last of the Burg-devils, and delivered three good
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towns beyond the wood from the cruelty of the oppressor.
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Once in every year he and Ursula his wife visited the Land
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of Abundance, and he went into the castle there as into a holy place,
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and worshipped the memory of the Lady whom he had loved so dearly.
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With all the friends of his quest he was kind and well-beloved.
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In about two years from the day when he rode home, came to him the Lord
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Bull of Utterbol with a chosen band, of whom were both Otter and Redhead.
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That very day they came he was about putting his foot in the stirrup
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to ride against the foemen; so Bull and his men would not go into
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the High House to eat, but drank a cup where they stood, and turned
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and rode with him straightway, and did him right manly service in battle;
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and went back with him afterwards to Upmeads, and abode with him there
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in feasting and joyance for two months' wearing. And thrice in the years
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that followed, when his lands at home seemed safest and most at peace,
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Ralph took a chosen band, and Ursula with them, and Clement withal,
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and journeyed through the wastes and the mountains to Utterbol,
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and passed joyous days with his old thrall of war, Bull Nosy, now become
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a very mighty man and the warder of the peace of the Uttermost lands.
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Clement and Katherine came oft to the High House, and Katherine
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exceeding often; and she loved and cherished Ursula and lived
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long in health of body and peace of mind.
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All the days that Ralph of Upmeads lived, he was the goodliest
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of men, and no man to look on him had known it when he grew old;
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and when he changed his life, an exceeding ancient man,
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he was to all men's eyes in the very blossom of his age.
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As to Ursula his wife, she was ever as valiant and true as when they
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met in the dark night amidst of the Eastland wood. Eight goodly
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children she bore him, and saw four generations of her kindred wax up;
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but even as it was with Ralph, never was she less goodly of body,
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nay rather, but fairer than when first she came to Upmeads;
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and the day whereon any man saw her was a day of joyful feast to him,
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a day to be remembered for ever. On one day they two died and were
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laid together in one tomb in the choir of St. Laurence of Upmeads.
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AND HERE ENDS THE TALE OF THE WELL AT THE WORLD'S END.
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End of Project Gutenberg etext of The Well at the World's End by Morris
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