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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Both Sides the Border, by G. A. Henty</title>
+<style type="text/css">
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+<body>
+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Both Sides the Border, by G. A. Henty,
+Illustrated by Ralph Peacock</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Both Sides the Border</p>
+<p> A Tale of Hotspur and Glendower</p>
+<p>Author: G. A. Henty</p>
+<p>Release Date: August 17, 2006 [eBook #19070]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOTH SIDES THE BORDER***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3 class="pg">E-text prepared by Martin Robb</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h1>Both Sides the Border:</h1>
+
+<h2>A Tale of Hotspur and Glendower<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+By G. A. Henty.</h2>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>Illustrated by Ralph Peacock</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="Table of Contents">
+<caption>Contents<br />&nbsp;</caption>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"></td>
+<td class="rtoc"><a href="#Preface">Preface</a>.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch1">Chapter&nbsp;1</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">A Border Hold.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch2">Chapter&nbsp;2</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Across The Border.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch3">Chapter&nbsp;3</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">At Alnwick.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch4">Chapter&nbsp;4</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">An Unequal Joust.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch5">Chapter&nbsp;5</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">A Mission.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch6">Chapter&nbsp;6</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">At Dunbar.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch7">Chapter&nbsp;7</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Back To Hotspur.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch8">Chapter&nbsp;8</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Ludlow Castle.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch9">Chapter&nbsp;9</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Welsh Rising.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch10">Chapter&nbsp;10</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">A Breach Of Duty.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch11">Chapter&nbsp;11</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Bad News.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch12">Chapter&nbsp;12</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">A Dangerous Mission.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch13">Chapter&nbsp;13</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Escape.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch14">Chapter&nbsp;14</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">In Hiding.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch15">Chapter&nbsp;15</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Another Mission To Ludlow.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch16">Chapter&nbsp;16</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">A Letter For The King.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch17">Chapter&nbsp;17</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Knighted.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch18">Chapter&nbsp;18</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Glendower.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch19">Chapter&nbsp;19</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Battle Of Homildon Hill.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch20">Chapter&nbsp;20</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Percys' Discontent.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch21">Chapter&nbsp;21</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Shrewsbury.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<br />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table summary="Illustrations">
+<caption>Illustrations<br />&nbsp;</caption>
+
+<tr><td><a href="#PicA">
+"This is the nephew of Alwyn Forster"
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicB">
+It was with the greatest difficulty that he guarded his head
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicC">
+They journeyed pleasantly along
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicD">
+"Who is going to teach me?"
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicE">
+Oswald threw his arms round two of them
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicF">
+To Oswald's astonishment, two young women stood before him
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicG">
+Armstrong took his place by his son's pallet
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicH">
+"Let the rope pass gradually through your hands"
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicI">
+"I am well pleased with you, Oswald"
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicJ">
+"Now, I think we shall do, Roger"
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicK">
+"How glad I am to have an opportunity of thanking you"
+</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#PicL">
+"Do not speak of such a thing, I pray you, master"
+</a></td></tr>
+
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Preface">Preface</a>.</h2>
+
+<p>The four opening years of the fifteenth century were among the
+most stirring in the history of England. Owen Glendower carried
+fire and slaughter among the Welsh marches, captured most of the
+strong places held by the English, and foiled three invasions, led
+by the king himself. The northern borders were invaded by Douglas;
+who, after devastating a large portion of Northumberland,
+Cumberland, and Durham, was defeated and taken prisoner at the
+battle of Homildon, by the Earl of Northumberland, and his son
+Hotspur. Then followed the strange and unnatural coalition between
+the Percys, Douglas of Scotland, Glendower of Wales, and Sir Edmund
+Mortimer--a coalition that would assuredly have overthrown the
+king, erected the young Earl of March as a puppet monarch under the
+tutelage of the Percys, and secured the independence of Wales, had
+the royal forces arrived one day later at Shrewsbury, and so
+allowed the confederate armies to unite.</p>
+
+<p>King Henry's victory there, entailing the death of Hotspur and
+the capture of Douglas, put an end to this formidable insurrection;
+for, although the Earl of Northumberland twice subsequently raised
+the banner of revolt, these risings were easily crushed; while
+Glendower's power waned, and order, never again to be broken, was
+at length restored in Wales. The continual state of unrest and
+chronic warfare, between the inhabitants of both sides of the
+border, was full of adventures as stirring and romantic as that in
+which the hero of the story took part.</p>
+
+<p>G. A. Henty.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch1">Chapter 1</a>: A Border Hold.</h2>
+
+<p>A lad was standing on the little lookout turret, on the top of a
+border fortalice. The place was evidently built solely with an eye
+to defence, comfort being an altogether secondary consideration. It
+was a square building, of rough stone, the walls broken only by
+narrow loopholes; and the door, which was ten feet above the
+ground, was reached by broad wooden steps, which could be hauled up
+in case of necessity; and were, in fact, raised every night.</p>
+
+<p>The building was some forty feet square. The upper floor was
+divided into several chambers, which were the sleeping places of
+its lord and master, his family, and the women of the household.
+The floor below, onto which the door from without opened, was
+undivided save by two rows of stone pillars that supported the
+beams of the floor above. In one corner the floor, some fifteen
+feet square, was raised somewhat above the general level. This was
+set aside for the use of the master and the family. The rest of the
+apartment was used as the living and sleeping room of the
+followers, and hinds, of the fortalice.</p>
+
+<p>The basement--which, although on a level with the ground
+outside, could be approached only by a trapdoor and ladder from the
+room above--was the storeroom, and contained sacks of barley and
+oatmeal, sides of bacon, firewood, sacks of beans, and trusses of
+hay for the use of the horses and cattle, should the place have to
+stand a short siege. In the centre was a well.</p>
+
+<p>The roof of the house was flat, and paved with square blocks of
+stone; a parapet three feet high surrounded it. In the centre was
+the lookout tower, rising twelve feet above it; and over the door
+another turret, projecting some eighteen inches beyond the wall of
+the house, slits being cut in the stone floor through which
+missiles could be dropped, or boiling lead poured, upon any trying
+to assault the entrance. Outside was a courtyard, extending round
+the house. It was some ten yards across, and surrounded by a wall
+twelve feet high, with a square turret at each corner.</p>
+
+<p>Everything was roughly constructed, although massive and solid.
+With the exception of the door, and the steps leading to it, no
+wood had been used in the construction. The very beams were of
+rough stone, the floors were of the same material. It was clearly
+the object of the builders to erect a fortress that could defy
+fire, and could only be destroyed at the cost of enormous
+labour.</p>
+
+<p>This was indeed a prime necessity, for the hold stood in the
+wild country between the upper waters of the Coquet and the Reed
+river. Harbottle and Longpikes rose but a few miles away, and the
+whole country was broken up by deep ravines and valleys, fells and
+crags. From the edge of the moorland, a hundred yards from the
+outer wall, the ground dropped sharply down into the valley, where
+the two villages of Yardhope lay on a little burn running into the
+Coquet.</p>
+
+<p>In other directions the moor extended for a distance of nearly a
+mile. On this two or three score of cattle, and a dozen shaggy
+little horses, were engaged in an effort to keep life together,
+upon the rough herbage that grew among the heather and blocks of
+stones, scattered everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the lad caught sight of the flash of the sun, which
+had but just risen behind him, on a spearhead at the western edge
+of the moor. He ran down at once, from his post, to the principal
+room.</p>
+
+<p>"They are coming, Mother," he exclaimed. "I have just seen the
+sun glint on a spearhead."</p>
+
+<p>"I trust that they are all there," she said, and then turned to
+two women by the fire, and bade them put on more wood and get the
+pots boiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Go up again, Oswald; and, as soon as you can make out your
+father's figure, bring me down news. I have not closed an eye for
+the last two nights, for 'tis a more dangerous enterprise than
+usual on which they have gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Father always comes home all right, Mother," the boy said
+confidently, "and they have a strong band this time. They were to
+have been joined by Thomas Gray and his following, and Forster of
+Currick, and John Liddel, and Percy Hope of Bilderton. They must
+have full sixty spears. The Bairds are like to pay heavily for
+their last raid hither."</p>
+
+<p>Dame Forster did not reply, and Oswald ran up again to the
+lookout. By this time the party for whom he was watching had
+reached the moor. It consisted of twelve or fourteen horsemen, all
+clad in dark armour, carrying very long spears and mounted on
+small, but wiry, horses. They were driving before them a knot of
+some forty or fifty cattle, and three of them led horses carrying
+heavy burdens. Oswald's quick eye noticed that four of the horsemen
+were not carrying their spears.</p>
+
+<p>"They are three short of their number," he said to himself, "and
+those four must all be sorely wounded. Well, it might have been
+worse."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald had been brought up to regard forays and attacks as
+ordinary incidents of life. Watch and ward were always kept in the
+little fortalice, especially when the nights were dark and misty,
+for there was never any saying when a party of Scottish borderers
+might make an attack; for the truces, so often concluded between
+the border wardens, had but slight effect on the prickers, as the
+small chieftains on both sides were called, who maintained a
+constant state of warfare against each other.</p>
+
+<p>The Scotch forays were more frequent than those from the English
+side of the border; not because the people were more warlike, but
+because they were poorer, and depended more entirely upon plunder
+for their subsistence. There was but little difference of race
+between the peoples on the opposite side of the border. Both were
+largely of mixed Danish and Anglo-Saxon blood; for, when William
+the Conqueror carried fire and sword through Northumbria, great
+numbers of the inhabitants moved north, and settled in the district
+beyond the reach of the Norman arms.</p>
+
+<p>On the English side of the border the population were, in time,
+leavened by Norman blood; as the estates were granted by William to
+his barons. These often married the heiresses of the dispossessed
+families, while their followers found wives among the native
+population.</p>
+
+<p>The frequent wars with the Scots, in which every man capable of
+bearing arms in the Northern Counties had to take part; and the
+incessant border warfare, maintained a most martial spirit among
+the population, who considered retaliation for injuries received to
+be a natural and lawful act. This was, to some extent, heightened
+by the fact that the terms of many of the truces specifically
+permitted those who had suffered losses on either side to pursue
+their plunderers across the border. These raids were not
+accompanied by bloodshed, except when resistance was made; for
+between the people, descended as they were from a common stock,
+there was no active animosity, and at ordinary times there was free
+and friendly intercourse between them.</p>
+
+<p>There were, however, many exceptions to the rule that
+unresisting persons were not injured. Between many families on
+opposite sides of the border there existed blood feuds, arising
+from the fact that members of one or the other had been killed in
+forays; and in these cases bitter and bloody reprisals were made,
+on either side. The very border line was ill defined, and people on
+one side frequently settled on the other, as is shown by the fact
+that several of the treaties contained provisions that those who
+had so moved might change their nationality, and be accounted as
+Scotch or Englishmen, as the case might be.</p>
+
+<p>Between the Forsters and the Bairds such a feud had existed for
+three generations. It had begun in a raid by the latter. The
+Forster of that time had repulsed the attack, and had with his own
+hand killed one of the Bairds. Six months later he was surprised
+and killed on his own hearthstone, at a time when his son and most
+of his retainers were away on a raid. From that time the animosity
+between the two families had been unceasing, and several lives had
+been lost on both sides. The Bairds with a large party had, three
+months before, carried fire and sword through the district
+bordering on the main road, as far as Elsdon on the east, and
+Alwinton on the north. News of their coming had, however, preceded
+them. The villagers of Yardhope had just time to take refuge at
+Forster's hold, and had repulsed the determined attacks made upon
+it; until Sir Robert Umfraville brought a strong party to their
+assistance, and drove the Bairds back towards the frontier.</p>
+
+<p>The present raid, from which the party was returning, had been
+organized partly to recoup those who took part in it for the loss
+of their cattle on that occasion, and partly to take vengeance upon
+the Bairds. As was the custom on both sides of the border, these
+expeditions were generally composed of members of half a dozen
+families, with their followers; the one who was, at once, most
+energetic and best acquainted with the intricacies of the country,
+and the paths across fells and moors, being chosen as leader.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, Oswald Forster saw one of the party wave his hand;
+and at his order four or five of the horsemen rode out, and began
+to drive the scattered cattle and horses towards the house. Oswald
+at once ran down.</p>
+
+<p>"Father is all right, Mother. He has just given orders to the
+men, and they are driving all the animals in, so I suppose that the
+Bairds must be in pursuit. I had better tell the men to get on
+their armour."</p>
+
+<p>Without waiting for an answer, he told six men, who were eating
+their breakfast at the farther end of the room, to make an end of
+their meal, and get on their steel caps and breast and back pieces,
+and take their places in the turret over the gate into the yard. In
+a few minutes the animals began to pour in, first those of the
+homestead, then the captured herd, weary and exhausted with their
+long and hurried journey; then came the master, with his
+followers.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Forster and her son stood at the top of the steps, ready to
+greet him. The gate into the yard was on the opposite side to that
+of the doorway of the fortalice, in order that assailants who had
+carried it should have to pass round under the fire of the archers
+in the turrets, before they could attack the building itself.</p>
+
+<p>She gave a little cry as her husband came up. His left arm was
+in a sling, his helmet was cleft through, and a bandage showed
+beneath it.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not be afraid, wife," he said cheerily. "We have had hotter
+work than we expected; but, so far as I am concerned, there is no
+great harm done. I am sorry to say that we have lost Long Hal, and
+Rob Finch, and Smedley. Two or three others are sorely wounded, and
+I fancy few have got off altogether scatheless.</p>
+
+<p>"All went well, until we stopped to wait for daybreak, three
+miles from Allan Baird's place. Some shepherd must have got sight
+of us as we halted, for we found him and his men up and ready. They
+had not had time, however, to drive in the cattle; and seeing that
+we should like enough have the Bairds swarming down upon us, before
+we could take Allan's place, we contented ourselves with gathering
+the cattle and driving them off. There were about two hundred of
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"We went fast, but in two hours we saw the Bairds coming in
+pursuit; and as it was clear that they would overtake us, hampered
+as we were with the cattle, we stood and made defence. There was
+not much difference in numbers, for the Bairds had not had time to
+gather in all their strength. The fight was a stiff one. On our
+side Percy Hope was killed, and John Liddel so sorely wounded that
+there is no hope of his life. We had sixteen men killed outright,
+and few of us but are more or less scarred. On their side Allan
+Baird was killed; and John was smitten down, but how sorely wounded
+I cannot say for certain, for they put him on a horse, and took him
+away at once. They left twenty behind them on the ground dead; and
+the rest, finding that we were better men than they, rode off
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"William Baird himself had not come up. His hold was too far for
+the news to have reached him, as we knew well enough; but doubtless
+he came up, with his following, a few hours after we had beaten his
+kinsmen. But we have ridden too fast for him to overtake us. We
+struck off north as soon as we crossed the border, travelled all
+night by paths by which they will find it difficult to follow or
+track us, especially as we broke up into four parties, and each
+chose their own way.</p>
+
+<p>"I have driven all our cattle in, in case they should make
+straight here, after losing our track. Of course, there were many
+who fought against us who know us all well; but even were it other
+than the Bairds we had despoiled, they would hardly follow us so
+far across the border to fetch their cattle.</p>
+
+<p>"As for the Bairds, the most notorious of the Scottish raiders,
+for them to claim the right of following would be beyond all
+bearing. Why, I don't believe there was a head of cattle among the
+whole herd that had not been born, and bred, on this side of the
+border. It is we who have been fetching back stolen goods."</p>
+
+<p>By this time, he and his men had entered the house, and those
+who had gone through the fray scatheless were, assisted by the
+women, removing the armour from their wounded comrades. Those who
+had been forced to relinquish their spears were first attended
+to.</p>
+
+<p>There was no thought of sending for a leech. Every man and woman
+within fifty miles of the border was accustomed to the treatment of
+wounds, and in every hold was a store of bandages, styptics, and
+unguents ready for instant use. Most of the men were very sorely
+wounded; and had they been of less hardy frame, and less inured to
+hardships, could not have supported the long ride. John Forster,
+before taking off his own armour, saw that their wounds were first
+attended to by his wife and her women.</p>
+
+<p>"I think they will all do," he said, "and that they will live to
+strike another blow at the Bairds, yet.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Oswald, unbuckle my harness. Your mother will bandage up
+my arm and head, and Elspeth shall bring up a full tankard from
+below, for each of us. A draught of beer will do as much good as
+all the salves and medicaments.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you take the first drink, Jock Samlen, and then go up to the
+watchtower. I see the men have been posted in the wall turrets. One
+of them shall relieve you, shortly."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the wounds were dressed, bowls of porridge were
+served round; then one of the men who had remained at home was
+posted at the lookout; and, after the cattle had been seen to, all
+who had been on the road stretched themselves on some rushes at one
+end of the room, and were, in a few minutes, sound asleep.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder whether we shall ever have peace in the land, Oswald,"
+his mother said with a sigh; as, having seen that the women had all
+in readiness for the preparation of the midday meal, she sat down
+on a low stool, by his side.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see how we ever can have, Mother, until either we
+conquer Scotland, or the Scotch shall be our masters. It is not our
+fault. They are ever raiding and plundering, and heed not the
+orders of Douglas, or the other Lords of the Marches."</p>
+
+<p>"We are almost as bad as they are, Oswald."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, Mother, we do but try to take back our own; as father well
+said, the cattle that were brought in are all English, that have
+been taken from us by the Bairds; and we do but pay them back in
+their own coin. It makes but little difference whether we are at
+war or peace. These reiving caterans are ever on the move. It was
+but last week that Adam Gordon and his bands wasted Tynedale, as
+far as Bellingham; and carried off, they say, two thousand head of
+cattle, and slew many of the people. If we did not cross the border
+sometimes, and give them a lesson, they would become so bold that
+there would be no limit to their raids."</p>
+
+<p>"That is all true enough, Oswald, but it is hard that we should
+always require to be on the watch, and that no one within forty
+miles of the border can, at any time, go to sleep with the surety
+that he will not, ere morning, hear the raiders knocking at his
+gate."</p>
+
+<p>"Methinks that it would be dull, were there nought to do but to
+look after the cattle," Oswald replied.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to him, bred up as he had been amid constant forays
+and excitements, that the state of things was a normal one; and
+that it was natural that a man should need to have his spear ever
+ready at hand, and to give or take hard blows.</p>
+
+<p>"Besides," he went on, "though we carry off each others' cattle,
+and fetch them home again, we are not bad friends while the truces
+hold, save in the case of those who have blood feuds. It was but
+last week that Allan Armstrong and his two sisters were staying
+here with us; and I promised that, ere long, I would ride across
+the border and spend a week with them."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but that makes it all the worse. Adam Armstrong married my
+sister Elizabeth, whom he first met at Goddington fair; and,
+indeed, there are few families, on either side of the border, who
+have not both English and Scotch blood in their veins. It is
+natural we should be friends, seeing how often we have held
+Berwick, Roxburgh, and Dumfries; and how often, in times of peace,
+Scotchmen come across the border to trade at the fairs. Why should
+it not be so, when we speak the same tongue and, save for the
+border line, are one people? Though, indeed, it is different in
+Kirkcudbright and Wigtown, where they are Galwegians, and their
+tongue is scarce understood by the border Scots. 'Tis strange that
+those on one side of the border, and those on the other, cannot
+keep the peace towards each other."</p>
+
+<p>"But save when the kingdoms are at war, Mother, we do keep the
+peace, except in the matter of cattle lifting; and bear no enmity
+towards each other, save when blood is shed. In wartime each must,
+of course, fight for his nation and as his lord orders him. We have
+wasted Scotland again and again, from end to end; and they have
+swept the Northern Counties well nigh as often.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard father say that, eight times in the last hundred
+years, this hold has been levelled to the ground. It only escaped,
+last time, because he built it so strongly of stone that they could
+not fire it; and it would have taken them almost as long, to pick
+it to pieces, as it took him to build it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that was when you were an infant, Oswald. When we heard
+the Scotch army was marching this way, we took refuge with all the
+cattle and horses among the Pikes; having first carried out and
+burnt all the forage and stores, and leaving nothing that they
+could set fire to. Your father has often laughed at the thought of
+how angry they must have been, when they found that there was no
+mischief that they could do; for, short of a long stay, which they
+never make, there was no way in which they could damage it. Ours
+was the only house that escaped scot free, for thirty miles
+round.</p>
+
+<p>"But indeed, 'tis generally but parties of pillagers who trouble
+this part of the country, even when they invade England. There is
+richer booty, by far, to be gathered in Cumberland and Durham; for
+here we have nought but our cattle and horses, and of these they
+have as many on their side of the border. It is the plunder of the
+towns that chiefly attracts them, and while they go past here empty
+handed, they always carry great trains of booty on their backward
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"Still, it would be dull work if there were no fighting,
+Mother."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no fighting in Southern England, Oswald, save for
+those who go across the sea to fight the French; and yet, I suppose
+they find life less dull than we do. They have more to do. Here
+there is little tillage, the country is poor; and who would care to
+break up the land and to raise crops, when any night your ricks
+might be in flames, and your granaries plundered? Thus there is
+nought for us to do but to keep cattle, which need but little care
+and attention, and which can be driven off to the fells when the
+Scots make a great raid. But in the south, as I have heard, there
+is always much for farmers to attend to; and those who find life
+dull can always enter the service of some warlike lord, and follow
+him across the sea."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald shook his head. The quiet pursuits of a farmer seemed to
+him to be but a poor substitute for the excitement of border
+war.</p>
+
+<p>"It may be as you say, Mother; but for my part, I would rather
+enter the service of the Percys, and gain honour under their
+banner, than remain here day after day, merely giving aid in
+driving the cattle in and out, and wondering when the Bairds are
+coming this way, again."</p>
+
+<p>His mother shook her head. Her father and two brothers had both
+been slain, the last time a Scottish army had crossed the border;
+and although she naturally did not regard constant troubles in the
+same light in which a southern woman would have viewed them, she
+still longed for peace and quiet; and was in constant fear that
+sooner or later the feud with the Bairds, who were a powerful
+family, would cost her husband his life.</p>
+
+<p>Against open force she had little fear. The hold could resist an
+attack for days, and long ere it yielded, help would arrive; but
+although the watch was vigilant, and every precaution taken, it
+might be captured by a sudden night attack. William Baird had, she
+knew, sworn a great oath that Yardhope Hold should one day be
+destroyed; and the Forsters wiped out, root and branch. And the
+death of his cousin Allan, in the last raid, would surely fan the
+fire of his hatred against them.</p>
+
+<p>"One never can say what may happen," she said, after a pause;
+"but if at any time evil should befall us, and you escape, remember
+that your uncle Alwyn is in Percy's service; and you cannot do
+better than go to him, and place yourself under his protection, and
+act as he may advise you. I like not the thought that you should
+become a man-at-arms; and yet methinks that it is no more dangerous
+than that of a householder on the fells. At least, in a strong
+castle a man can sleep without fear; whereas none can say as much,
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"If aught should happen to my father and you, Mother, you may be
+sure that I should share in it. The Bairds would spare no one, if
+they captured the hold. And although Father will not, as yet, take
+me with him on his forays, I should do my share of fighting, if the
+hold were attacked."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure that you would, Oswald; and were it captured I have
+no doubt that, as you say, you would share our fate. I speak not
+with any thought that it is likely things will turn out as I say;
+but they may do so, and therefore I give you my advice, to seek out
+your uncle. As to a capture of our hold, of that I have generally
+but little fear; but the fact that your father has been wounded,
+and three of his men killed, and that another Baird has fallen, has
+brought the possibility that it may happen more closely to my mind,
+this morning, than usual.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, my boy, you had best spend an hour in cleaning up your
+father's armour and arms. The steel cap must go to the armourer at
+Alwinton, for repair; but you can get some of the dints out of his
+breast and back pieces, and can give them a fresh coat of black
+paint;" for the borderers usually darkened their armour so that, in
+their raids, their presence should not be betrayed by the glint of
+sun or moon upon them.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald at once took up the armour, and went down the steps into
+the courtyard, so that the sound of his hammer should not disturb
+the sleepers. As, with slight but often repeated blows, he got out
+the dents that had been made in the fray, he thought over what his
+mother had been saying. To him also the death of three of the men,
+who had for years been his companions, came as a shock. It was
+seldom, indeed, that the forays for cattle lifting had such serious
+consequences. As a rule they were altogether bloodless; and it was
+only because of the long feud with the Bairds, and the fact that
+some warning of the coming of the party had, in spite of their
+precaution, reached Allan Baird; that on the present occasion such
+serious results had ensued.</p>
+
+<p>Had it not been for this, the cattle would have been driven off
+without resistance, for Allan Baird's own household would not have
+ventured to attack so strong a party. No attempt would have been
+made to assault his hold; for he had often heard his father say
+that, even in the case of a blood feud, he held that houses should
+not be attacked, and their occupants slain. If both parties met
+under arms the matter was different; but that, in spite of the
+slaying of his own father by them, he would not kill even a Baird
+on his hearthstone.</p>
+
+<p>Still, a Baird had been killed, and assuredly William Baird
+would not be deterred by any similar scruples. His pitiless
+ferocity was notorious, and even his own countrymen cried out
+against some of his deeds, and the Earl of Douglas had several
+times threatened to hand him over to the English authorities; but
+the Bairds were powerful, and could, with their allies, place four
+or five hundred men in the field; and, in the difficult country in
+which they lived, could have given a great deal of trouble, even to
+Douglas. Therefore nothing had come of his threats, and the Bairds
+had continued to be the terror of that part of the English border
+that was the most convenient for their operations.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was now past sixteen, and promised to be as big a man as
+his father, who was a fine specimen of the hardy Northumbrian
+race--tall, strong, and sinewy. He had felt hurt when his father
+had refused to allow him to take part in the foray.</p>
+
+<p>"Time enough, lad, time enough," he had said, when the lad had
+made his petition to do so. "You are not strong enough, yet, to
+hold your own against one of the Bairds' moss troopers, should it
+come to fighting. In another couple of years it will be time enough
+to think of your going on such an excursion as this. You are clever
+with your arms, I will freely admit; as you ought to be, seeing
+that you practise for two hours a day with the men. But strength
+counts as well as skill, and you want both when you ride against
+the Bairds; besides, at present you have still much to learn about
+the paths through the fells, and across the morasses. If you are
+ever to become a leader, you must know them well enough to traverse
+them on the darkest night, or through the thickest mist."</p>
+
+<p>"I think that I do know most of them, Father."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I think you do, on this side of the border; but you must
+learn those on the other side, as well. They are, indeed, of even
+greater importance in case of pursuit, or for crossing the border
+unobserved. Hitherto, I have forbidden you to cross the line, but
+in future Mat Wilson shall go with you. He knows the Scotch passes
+and defiles, better than any in the band; and so that you don't go
+near the Bairds' country, you can traverse them safely, so long as
+the truce lasts."</p>
+
+<p>For years, indeed, Oswald, on one of the hardy little horses,
+had ridden over the country in company with one or other of the
+men; and had become familiar with every morass, moor, fell, and
+pass, down to the old Roman wall to the south, and as far north as
+Wooler, being frequently absent for three or four days at a time.
+He had several times ridden into Scotland, to visit the Armstrongs
+and other friends of the family; but he had always travelled by the
+roads, and knew nothing of the hill paths on that side. His life
+had, in fact, been far from dull, for they had many friends and
+connections in the villages at the foot of the Cheviots, and he was
+frequently away from home.</p>
+
+<p>His journeys were generally performed on horseback, but his
+father encouraged him to take long tramps on foot, in order that he
+might strengthen his muscles; and would, not infrequently, give him
+leave to pay visits on condition that he travelled on foot, instead
+of in the saddle.</p>
+
+<p>Constant exercise in climbing, riding, and with his weapons; and
+at wrestling and other sports, including the bow, had hardened
+every muscle of his frame, and he was capable of standing any
+fatigues; and although his father said that he could not hold his
+own against men, he knew that the lad could do so against any but
+exceptionally powerful ones; and believed that, when the time came,
+he would, like himself, be frequently chosen as leader in border
+forays. He could already draw the strongest bow to the arrowhead,
+and send a shaft with a strength that would suffice to pierce the
+light armour worn by the Scotch borderers. It was by the bow that
+the English gained the majority of their victories over their
+northern neighbours; who did not take to the weapon, and were
+unable to stand for a moment against the English archers, who not
+only loved it as a sport, but were compelled by many ordinances to
+practise with it from their childhood.</p>
+
+<p>Of other education he had none, but in this respect he was no
+worse off than the majority of the knights and barons of the time,
+who were well content to trust to monkish scribes to draw up such
+documents as were required, and to affix their seal to them. He
+himself had once, some six years before, expressed a wish to be
+sent for a year to the care of the monks at Rothbury, whose
+superior was a distant connection of his father, in order to be
+taught to read and write; but John Forster had scoffed at the
+idea.</p>
+
+<p>"You have to learn to be a man, lad," he had said, "and the
+monks will never teach you that. I do not know one letter from
+another, nor did my father, or any of my forebears, and we were no
+worse for it. On the marches, unless a man means to become a monk,
+he has to learn to make his sword guard his head, to send an arrow
+straight to the mark, to know every foot of the passes, and to be
+prepared, at the order of his lord, to defend his country against
+the Scots.</p>
+
+<p>"These are vastly more important matters than reading and
+writing; which are, so far as I can see, of no use to any fair man,
+whose word is his bond, and who deals with honest men. I can reckon
+up, if I sell so many cattle, how much has to be paid, and more of
+learning than that I want not. Nor do you, and every hour spent on
+it would be as good as wasted. As to the monks, Heaven forfend that
+you should ever become one. They are good men, I doubt not, and I
+suppose that it is necessary that some should take to it; but that
+a man who has the full possession of his limbs should mew himself
+up, for life, between four walls, passing his time in vigils and
+saying masses, in reading books and distributing alms, seems to me
+to be a sort of madness."</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly do not wish to become a monk, Father, but I thought
+that I should like to learn to read and write."</p>
+
+<p>"And when you have learnt it, what then, Oswald? Books are
+expensive playthings, and no scrap of writing has ever been inside
+the walls of Yardhope Hold, since it was first built here, as far
+as I know. As to writing, it would be of still less use. If a man
+has a message to send, he can send it by a hired man, if it suits
+him not to ride himself. Besides, if he had written it, the person
+he sent it to would not be able to read it, and would have to go to
+some scribe for an interpretation of its contents.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, my lad, you have plenty to learn before you come to be
+a man, without bothering your head with this monkish stuff. I doubt
+if Hotspur, himself, can do more than sign his name to a parchment;
+and what is good enough for the Percys, is surely good enough for
+you."</p>
+
+<p>The idea had, in fact, been put into Oswald's head by his
+mother. At that time the feud with the Bairds had burned very
+hotly, and it would have lessened her anxieties had the boy been
+bestowed, for a time, in a convent. Oswald himself felt no
+disappointment at his father's refusal to a petition that he would
+never have made, had not his mother dilated to him, on several
+occasions, upon the great advantage of learning.</p>
+
+<p>No thought of repeating the request had ever entered his mind.
+His father had thought more of it, and had several times expressed
+grave regret, to his wife, over such an extraordinary wish having
+occurred to their son.</p>
+
+<p>"The boy has nothing of a milksop about him," he said; "and is,
+for his age, full of spirit and courage. How so strange an idea
+could have occurred to him is more than I can imagine. I should as
+soon expect to see an owlet, in a sparrow hawk's nest, as a monk
+hatched in Yardhope Hold."</p>
+
+<p>His wife discreetly kept silence as to the fact that she,
+herself, had first put the idea in the boy's head; for although
+Mary Forster was mistress inside of the hold, in all other matters
+John was masterful, and would brook no meddling, even by her. The
+subject, therefore, of Oswald's learning to read and write, was
+never renewed.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch2">Chapter 2</a>: Across The Border.</h2>
+
+<p>A most vigilant watch was kept up, for the next week, at
+Yardhope Hold. At night, three or four of the troopers were posted
+four or five miles from the hold, on the roads by which an enemy
+was likely to come; having under them the fleetest horses on the
+moor. When a week passed there was some slight relaxation in the
+watch, for it was evident that the Bairds intended to bide their
+time for a stroke, knowing well that they would not be likely to be
+able to effect a surprise, at present. The outlying posts were,
+therefore, no longer maintained; but the dogs of the hold, fully a
+dozen in number, were chained nightly in a circle three or four
+hundred yards outside it; and their barking would, at once, apprise
+the watchers in the turrets on the walls of the approach of any
+body of armed men.</p>
+
+<p>Two days later, Oswald started for his promised visit to the
+Armstrongs. It was not considered necessary that he should be
+accompanied by any of the troopers, for Hiniltie lay but a few
+miles across the frontier. In high spirits he galloped away and,
+riding through Yardhope, was soon at Alwinton; and thence took the
+track through Kidland Lee, passed round the head of the Usmay
+brook, along the foot of Maiden Cross Hill, and crossed the
+frontier at Windy Guile. Here he stood on the crest of the Cheviots
+and, descending, passed along at the foot of Windburgh Hill; and by
+noon entered the tiny hamlet of Hiniltie, above which, perched on
+one of the spurs of the hill, stood the Armstrongs' hold. It was
+smaller than that of Yardhope, and had no surrounding wall; but,
+like it, was built for defence against a sudden attack.</p>
+
+<p>Adam Armstrong was on good terms with his neighbours across the
+border. Although other members of his family were frequently
+engaged in forays, it was seldom, indeed, that he buckled on
+armour, and only when there was a general call to arms. He was,
+however, on bad terms with the Bairds, partly because his wife was
+a sister of Forster's, partly because of frays that had arisen
+between his herdsmen and those of the Bairds, for his cattle
+wandered far and wide on the mountain slopes to the south, and
+sometimes passed the ill-defined line, beyond which the Bairds
+regarded the country as their own. Jedburgh was but ten miles away,
+Hawick but six or seven, and any stay after the sun rose would
+speedily have brought strong bodies of men from these towns, as
+well as from his still nearer neighbours, at Chester, Abbotrule,
+and Hobkirk.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald's approach was seen, and two of his cousins--Allan, who
+was a lad of about the same age, and Janet, a year younger--ran out
+from the house to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>"We have been expecting you for the last ten days," the former
+exclaimed, "and had well nigh given you up."</p>
+
+<p>"I hold you to be a laggard," the girl added, "and unless you
+can duly excuse yourself, shall have naught to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>"My excuse is a good one, Janet. My father made a foray, a
+fortnight since, into the Bairds' country, to rescue some of the
+cattle they had driven off from our neighbours, some days before.
+There was a sharp fight, and Allan Baird was killed; and since then
+we have been expecting a return visit from them, and have been
+sleeping with our arms beside us. Doubtless they will come someday,
+but as it is evident they don't mean to come at present, my father
+let me leave."</p>
+
+<p>"In that case we must forgive you," the girl said. "Some rumours
+of the fray have reached us, and my father shook his head gravely,
+when he heard that another Baird had been killed by the
+Forsters."</p>
+
+<p>"It was not only us," Oswald replied. "There were some of the
+Liddels, and the Hopes, and other families, engaged. My father was
+chosen as chief; but this time it was not our quarrel, but theirs,
+for we had lost no cattle, and my father only joined because they
+had aided us last time, and he could not hold back now. Of course,
+he was chosen as chief because he knows the country so well."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, come in, Oswald. It is poor hospitality to keep you
+talking here, outside the door."</p>
+
+<p>A boy had already taken charge of Oswald's horse and, after
+unstrapping his valise, had led it to a stable that formed the
+basement of the house.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, laddie, how fares it with you, at home?" Adam Armstrong
+said, heartily, as they mounted the steps to the main entrance. "We
+have heard of your wild doings with the Bairds. 'Tis a pity that
+these feuds should go on, from father to son, ever getting more and
+more bitter. But there, we can no more change a borderer's nature
+than you can stop the tide in the Solway. I hear that it was well
+nigh a pitched battle."</p>
+
+<p>"There was hard fighting," Oswald replied. "Three of our
+troopers, and eight or ten of the others were killed. My father was
+twice wounded, one of the Hopes was killed, and a Liddel severely
+wounded. But from what they say, the Bairds suffered more. Had they
+not done so, there would have been a hot pursuit; but as far as we
+know there was none."</p>
+
+<p>"The Bairds will bide their time," Armstrong said gravely. "They
+are dour men, and will take their turn, though they wait ten years
+for it."</p>
+
+<p>"At any rate they won't catch us sleeping, Uncle; and come they
+however strong they may, they will find it hard work to capture the
+Hold."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, lad, but I don't think they will try to knock their
+heads against your wall. They are more like to sweep down on a
+sudden, and your watchman will need keen eyes to make them out
+before they are thundering at the gate, or climbing up the wall.
+However, your father knows his danger, and it is of no use talking
+more of it. What is done is done."</p>
+
+<p>"And how is your mother, Oswald?" Mistress Armstrong asked.</p>
+
+<p>"She is well, Aunt, and bade me give her love to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Truly I wonder she keeps her health, with all these troubles
+and anxieties. We had hoped that, after the meeting last March of
+the Commissioners on both sides, when the Lords of the Marches
+plighted their faith to each other, and agreed to surrender all
+prisoners without ransom, and to forgive all offenders, we should
+have had peace on the border. As you know, there were but three
+exceptions named; namely Adam Warden, William Baird, and Adam
+French, whom the Scotch Commissioners bound themselves to arrest,
+and to hand over to the English Commissioners, to be tried as being
+notorious truce breakers, doing infinite mischief to the dwellers
+on the English side of the border. And yet nothing has come of it,
+and these men still continue to make their raids, without check or
+hindrance, either by the Earl of March or Douglas."</p>
+
+<p>"There are faults on both sides, wife," her husband said.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not deny it, gudeman; but I have often heard you say these
+three men are the pests of the border; and that, were it not for
+them, things might go on reasonably enough, for no one counts a few
+head of cattle lifted, now and again. It is bad enough that, every
+two or three years, armies should march across the border, one way
+or the other; but surely we might live peaceably, between times.
+Did not I nearly lose you at Otterburn, and had you laid up on my
+hands, for well-nigh six months?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, that was a sore day, for both sides."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell me about it, Uncle?" Oswald asked. "My father
+cares not much to talk of it; and though I know that he fought
+there, he has never told me the story of the battle."</p>
+
+<p>"We are just going to sit down to dinner, now," Adam Armstrong
+said, "and the story is a long one; but after we have done, I will
+tell you of it. Your father need not feel so sore about it; for,
+since the days of the Bruce, you have had as many victories to
+count as we have."</p>
+
+<p>After dinner, however, Armstrong had to settle a dispute between
+two of his tenants, as to grazing rights; and it was not until
+evening that he told his story.</p>
+
+<p>"In 1388 there were all sorts of troubles in England, and France
+naturally took advantage of them, and recommenced hostilities, and
+we prepared to share in the game. Word was sent round privately,
+and every man was bidden to gather, in Jedburgh forest. I tell you,
+lad, I went with a heavy heart, for although men of our name have
+the reputation of being as quarrelsome fellows as any that dwell on
+the border, I am an exception, and love peace and quiet; moreover,
+the children were but young, and I saw that the fight would be a
+heavy business, and I did not like leaving them, and their mother.
+However, there was no help for it, and we gathered there, over
+40,000 strong. The main body marched away into Cumberland; but
+Douglas, March, and Moray, with 300 spears and 2000 footmen,
+including many an Armstrong, entered Northumberland.</p>
+
+<p>"We marched without turning to the right or left, or staying to
+attack town, castle, or house, till we crossed the river Tyne and
+entered Durham. Then we began the war; burning, ravaging, and
+slaying. I liked it not, for although when it comes to fighting I
+am ready, if needs be, to bear my part, I care not to attack
+peaceful people. It is true that your kings have, over and over
+again, laid waste half Scotland; killing, slaying, and hanging; but
+it does not seem to me any satisfaction, because some twenty of my
+ancestors have been murdered, to slay twenty people who were not
+born until long afterwards, and whose forbears, for aught I know,
+may have had no hand in the slaughter of mine.</p>
+
+<p>"However, having laden ourselves with plunder from Durham, we
+sat down for three days before Newcastle, where we had some sharp
+skirmishes with Sir Henry and his brother, Sir Ralph Percy; and in
+one of these captured Sir Henry's pennant.</p>
+
+<p>"Then we marched away to Otterburn, after receiving warning from
+Percy that he intended to win his pennant back again, before we
+left Northumberland. We attacked Otterburn Castle, but failed to
+carry it, for it was strong and well defended. There was a council
+that night, and most of the leaders were in favour of retiring at
+once to Scotland, with the abundance of spoil that we had gained.
+But Douglas persuaded them to remain two or three days, and to
+capture the castle, and not to go off as if afraid of Percy's
+threats. So we waited all the next day; and at night the Percys,
+with 600 spears and 8000 infantry, came up. Our leaders had not
+been idle, for they had examined the ground carefully, and arranged
+how the battle should be fought, if we were attacked.</p>
+
+<p>"Having heard nothing of the English, all day, we lay down to
+sleep, not expecting to hear aught of them until the morning. It
+was a moonlight night, and being in August, there was but a short
+darkness between the twilights; and the English, arriving, at once
+made an attack, falling first on the servants' huts, which they
+took for those of the chiefs. This gave us time to form up in good
+order, as we had lain down each in his proper position.</p>
+
+<p>"A portion of the force went down to skirmish with the English
+in front, but the greater portion marched along the mountain side,
+and fell suddenly upon the English flank. At first there was great
+confusion; but the English, being more numerous, soon recovered
+their order and pushed us back, though not without much loss on
+both sides.</p>
+
+<p>"Douglas shouted his battle cry, advanced his banner, fighting
+most bravely; as did Sir Patrick Hepburn, but for whose bravery the
+Douglas banner would have been taken, for the Percys, hearing the
+cry of 'a Douglas! a Douglas!' pressed to that part of the field,
+and bore us backwards. I was in the midst of it, with ten of my
+kinsmen; and though we all fought as became men, we were pressed
+back, and began to think that the day would be lost.</p>
+
+<p>"Then the young earl, furious at seeing disaster threaten him,
+dashed into the midst of the English ranks, swinging his battle-axe
+and, for a time, cutting a way for himself. But one man's strength
+and courage can go for but little in such a fray. Some of his
+knights and squires had followed him, but in the darkness it was
+but few who perceived his advance.</p>
+
+<p>"Presently three knights met him, and all their spears pierced
+him, and he was borne from his horse, mortally wounded. Happily the
+English were unaware that it was Douglas who had fallen. Had they
+known it, their courage would have been mightily raised, and the
+day would assuredly have been lost. We, too, were ignorant that
+Douglas had fallen, and still fought on.</p>
+
+<p>"In other parts of the field March and Moray were holding their
+own bravely. Sir Ralph Percy, who had, like Douglas, charged almost
+alone into Moray's ranks, was sorely wounded and, being surrounded,
+surrendered to Sir John Maxwell. Elsewhere many captures were made
+by both parties; but as the fight went on the advantage turned to
+our side; for we had rested all the day before, and began the
+battle fresh, after some hours of sleep; while the English had
+marched eight leagues, and were weary when they began the
+fight.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir James Lindsay and Sir Walter Sinclair, with some other
+knights who had followed Douglas, found him still alive. With his
+last words he ordered them to raise his banner, and to shout
+'Douglas!' so that friends and foes should think that he was of
+their party. These instructions they followed. We and others
+pressed forwards, on hearing the shout; and soon, a large party
+being collected, resumed the battle at this point. Moray and March
+both bore their arrays in the direction where they believed Douglas
+to be battling, and so, together, we pressed upon the English so
+hardly that they retreated, and for five miles we pursued them very
+hotly. Very many prisoners were taken, but all of quality were at
+once put to ransom, and allowed to depart on giving their knightly
+word of payment within fifteen days.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a great victory, and in truth none of us well knew how
+it had come about, for the English had fought as well and valiantly
+as we did ourselves; but it is ill for wearied men to fight against
+fresh ones. Never was I more surprised than when we found that the
+battle, which for a time had gone mightily against us, was yet won
+in the end. Methinks that it was, to a great extent, due to the
+fact that each Englishman fought for himself; while we, having on
+the previous day received the strictest orders to fight each man
+under his leader, to hold together, and to obey orders in all
+respects, kept in our companies; and so, in the end, gained the day
+against a foe as brave, and much more numerous, than
+ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Uncle Armstrong. I have often wondered how it was
+that the Percys, being three to one against you, were yet defeated;
+fighting on their own ground, as it were. 'Tis long, indeed, since
+we suffered so great a reverse."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true enough, Oswald. In the days of Wallace and Bruce,
+we Scots often won battles with long odds against us; but that was
+because we fought on foot, and the English for the most part on
+horseback--a method good enough on an open plain, but ill fitted
+for a land of morass and hill, like Scotland. Since the English
+also took to fighting on foot, the chances have been equal; and we
+have repulsed invasions not so much by force, as by falling back,
+and so wasting the country that the English had but the choice of
+retreating or starving.</p>
+
+<p>"There is reason, indeed, why, when equal forces are arrayed
+against each other, the chances should also be equal; for we are
+come of the same stock, and the men of the northern marches of
+England, and those of Scotland, are alike hardy and accustomed to
+war. Were we but a united people, as you English are, methinks that
+there would never have been such constant wars between us; for
+English kings would not have cared to have invaded a country where
+they would find but little spoil, and have hard work to take it.
+But our nobles have always been ready to turn traitors. They are
+mostly of Norman blood and Norman name, and no small part of them
+have estates in England, as well as in Scotland. Hence it is that
+our worst enemies have always been in our midst.</p>
+
+<p>"And now it is time for bed, or you will be heavy in the
+morning; and I know that you intend starting at dawn, with the
+dogs, and have promised to bring in some hares for dinner."</p>
+
+<p>Not only Oswald and Allan, but Janet also was afoot early; and,
+after taking a basin of porridge, started for the hills,
+accompanied by four dogs. They carried with them bows and arrows,
+in case the dogs should drive the hares within shot.</p>
+
+<p>Six hours later they returned, carrying with them five hares and
+a brace of birds. These had both fallen to Oswald's bow, being shot
+while on the ground; for in those days the idea that it was
+unsportsmanlike to shoot game, except when flying, was unknown.</p>
+
+<p>For a week they went out every day, sometimes with the dogs, but
+more often with hawks; which were trained to fly, not only at birds
+in their flight, but at hares, on whose heads they alighted,
+pecking them and beating them so fiercely with their wings, that
+they gave time for the party on foot to run up, and despatch the
+quarry with an arrow.</p>
+
+<p>Once or twice they accompanied Adam Armstrong, when he rode to
+some of the towns in the neighbourhood, and spent the day with
+friends of the Armstrongs there. For a fortnight, the time passed
+very pleasantly to the English lad; but, at the end of that time,
+Adam Armstrong returned from a visit to Jedburgh with a grave
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"I have news," he said, "that your King Richard has been
+deposed; that Henry, the Duke of Lancaster, having landed in
+Yorkshire, was joined by Percy and the Earl of Westmoreland, and
+has been proclaimed king. This will cause great troubles in
+England, for surely there must be many there who will not tamely
+see a king dethroned by treasonable practices; and another, having
+no just title to the crown, promoted to his place.</p>
+
+<p>"Such a thing is contrary to all reason and justice. A king has
+the same right to his crown as a noble to his estates, and none may
+justly take them away, save for treasonable practices; and a king
+cannot commit treason against himself. Therefore it is like that
+there will be much trouble in England, and I fear that there is no
+chance of the truce that concludes, at the end of this month, being
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>"The fact that the two great northern lords of England are both,
+with their forces, in the south will further encourage trouble; and
+the peace that, with small intermissions, has continued since the
+battle of Otterburn, is like to be broken. Therefore, my lad, I
+think it best that you should cut short your visit, by a week, and
+you shall return and finish it when matters have settled down.</p>
+
+<p>"Here in Scotland we are not without troubles. Ill blood has
+arisen between March and Douglas, owing to the Duke of Ramsay
+breaking his promise to marry the Earl of March's daughter, and
+taking Douglas's girl to wife. This, too, has sorely angered one
+more powerful than either Douglas or March--I mean, of course,
+Albany, who really exercises the kingly power.</p>
+
+<p>"But troubles in Scotland will in no way prevent war from
+breaking out with England. On the contrary, the quarrel between the
+two great lords of our marches will cause them to loose their hold
+of the border men, and I foresee that we shall have frays and
+forays among ourselves again, as in the worst times of old.
+Therefore, it were best that you went home. While these things are
+going on, the private friendship between so many families on either
+side of the border must be suspended, and all intercourse; for
+maybe every man on either side will be called to arms, and
+assuredly it will not be safe for one of either nation to set foot
+across the border, save armed, and with a strong clump of spears at
+his back."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be sorry, indeed, to go," Oswald said, "but I see that
+if troubles do, as you fear, break out at the conclusion of the
+peace, a fortnight hence--"</p>
+
+<p>"They may not wait for that," Adam Armstrong interrupted him. "A
+truce is only a truce so long as there are those strong enough to
+enforce it, and with Douglas and March at variance on our side, and
+Northumberland and Westmoreland absent on yours, there are none to
+see that the truce is not broken; and from what I hear, it may not
+be many days before we see the smoke of burning houses rising, upon
+either side of the border."</p>
+
+<p>"The more reason for my going home," Oswald said. "My father is
+not likely to be last in a fray, and assuredly he would not like me
+to be away across the border when swords are drawn. I am very
+sorry, but I see that there is no help for it; and tomorrow, at
+daybreak, I will start for home."</p>
+
+<p>That evening was the dullest Oswald had spent, during his visit.
+The prospect that the two nations might soon be engaged in another
+desperate struggle saddened the young cousins, who felt that a long
+time might elapse before they again met; and that in the meantime
+their fathers, and possibly themselves, might be fighting in
+opposite ranks. Although the breaches of the truces caused, as a
+rule, but little bloodshed, being in fact but cattle lifting
+expeditions, it was very different in time of war, when wholesale
+massacres took place on both sides, towns and villages were burned
+down, and the whole of the inhabitants put to the sword. Ten years
+had sufficed to soften the memory of these events, especially among
+young people, but each had heard numberless stories of wrong and
+slaughter, and felt that, when war once again broke out in earnest,
+there was little hope that there would be any change in the manner
+in which it would be conducted.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald rode rapidly, until he had crossed the border. The truce
+would not expire for another thirteen days, but the raiders might
+be at work at any moment; for assuredly there would be no chance of
+complaints being made, on the eve of recommencement of general
+hostilities. He met no one on the road, until he reached the first
+hamlet on the English side. Here he stopped to give his horse half
+an hour's rest, and a feed. As he dismounted, two or three of the
+villagers came up.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you heard aught, lad, of any gatherings on the other side
+of the border?"</p>
+
+<p>"None from where I came; but there was a talk that notices had
+been sent, through the southern Scottish marches, for all to be in
+readiness to gather to the banner without delay, when the summons
+was received."</p>
+
+<p>"That is what we have heard," a man said. "We have made
+everything in readiness to drive off our cattle to the fells; the
+beacons are all prepared for lighting, from Berwick down to
+Carlisle; and assuredly the Scotch will find little, near the
+border, to carry back with them.</p>
+
+<p>"You are the son of stout John Forster of Yardhope Keep, are you
+not? I saw you riding by his side, two months since, at Alwinton
+fair."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I was there with him."</p>
+
+<p>"He will have hot work, if a Scotch army marches into Tynedale.
+The Bairds will be sure to muster strongly, and they won't forgive
+the last raid on them; and whichever way they go, you may be sure
+that your father's hold will receive a visit."</p>
+
+<p>"It was but a return raid," Oswald said. "The Bairds had been
+down our way, but a short time before, and lifted all the cattle
+and horses that they could lay hands on, for miles round."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true enough. We all know the thieving loons. But men
+remember the injuries they have suffered, better than those they
+have inflicted; and they will count Allan Baird's death as more
+than a set-off for a score of their own forays."</p>
+
+<p>"If we have only the Bairds to settle with, we can hold our
+walls against them," Oswald said; "but if the whole of the Scotch
+army come our way, we must do as you are doing, drive the cattle to
+the hills, and leave them to do what harm they can to the stone
+walls, which they will find it hard work to damage."</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, I have heard that they are stronger than ordinary; and so
+they need be, seeing that you have a blood feud with the Bairds.
+Well, they are not like to have much time to waste over it, for our
+sheriff has already sent word here, as to the places where we are
+to gather when the beacon fires are lighted; and you may be sure
+that the Percys will lose no time in marching against them, with
+all their array; and the Scots are like to find, as they have found
+before, that it is an easier thing to cross the border than it is
+to get back."</p>
+
+<p>Late that evening, Oswald returned home. After the first
+greetings, his father said:</p>
+
+<p>"It is high time that you were back, Oswald. Rumour is busy, all
+along the border; but for myself, though I doubt not that their
+moss troopers will be on the move, as soon as the truce ends, I
+think there will not be any invasion in force, for some little
+time. The great lords of the Scotch marches are ill friends with
+each other; and, until the quarrel between Douglas and Dunbar is
+patched up, neither will venture to march his forces into England.
+It may be months, yet, before we see their pennons flying on
+English soil.</p>
+
+<p>"My brother Alwyn has been over here, for a day or two, since
+you were away. The Percys are down south, so he was free to ride
+over here. He wants us to send you to him, without loss of time. He
+says that there is a vacancy in Percy's household, owing to one of
+his esquires being made a knight, and a page has been promoted to
+an esquireship. He said that he spoke to Hotspur, before he went
+south, anent the matter; and asked him to enroll you, not exactly
+as a page, but as one who, from his knowledge of the border, would
+be a safe and trusty messenger to send, in case of need. As he has
+served the Percys for thirty years, and for ten has been the
+captain of their men-at-arms; and has never asked for aught, either
+for himself or his relations, Percy gave him a favourable answer;
+and said that if, on his return, he would present you to him, and
+he found that you were a lad of manners that would be suitable for
+a member of his household, he would grant his request; partly, too,
+because my father and myself had always been stanch men, and ready
+at all times to join his banner, when summoned, and to fight
+doughtily. So there seems a good chance of preferment for you.</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother is willing that you should go. She says, and truly
+enough, that if you stay here it will be but to engage, as I and my
+forebears have done, in constant feuds with the Scots; harrying and
+being harried, never knowing, when we lie down to rest, but that we
+may be woke up by the battle shout of the Bairds; and leaving
+behind us, when we die, no more than we took from our fathers.</p>
+
+<p>"I know not how your own thoughts may run in the matter, Oswald,
+but methinks that there is much in what she says; though, for
+myself, I wish for nothing better than what I am accustomed to.
+Percy would have knighted me had I wished it, years ago; but plain
+Jock Forster I was born, and so will I die when my time comes; for
+it would alter my condition in no way, save that as Jock Forster I
+can lead a raid across the border, but as Sir John Forster it would
+be hardly seemly for me to do so, save when there is open war
+between the countries.</p>
+
+<p>"It is different, in your case; You are young, and can fit
+yourself to another mode of life; and can win for yourself, with
+your sword, a better fortune than you will inherit from me.
+Besides, lad, I am like enough, unless a Baird spear finishes me
+sooner, to live another thirty years yet; and it is always sure to
+lead to trouble, if there are two cocks in one farmyard. You would
+have your notions as to how matters should be done, and I should
+have mine; and so, for many reasons, it is right that you should go
+out into the world. If matters go well with you, all the better; if
+not, you will always be welcome back here, and will be master when
+I am gone.</p>
+
+<p>"What say you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It comes suddenly upon me, Father; but, as I have always
+thought that I should like to see something of the world beyond our
+own dales, I would gladly, for a time at least, accept my uncle's
+offer; which is a rare one, and far beyond my hopes. I should be
+sorry to leave you and my mother but, save for that it seems to me,
+as to you, that it would be best for me to go out into the world,
+for a time."</p>
+
+<p>"Then that is settled, and tomorrow you shall ride to Alnwick
+and see, at any rate, if aught comes of the matter.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not cry, Wife. It is your counsel that I am acting upon, and
+you have told me you are sure that it is best that he should go. It
+is not as if he were taking service with a southern lord. He will
+be but a day's ride away from us, and doubtless will be able to
+come over, at times, and stay a day or two with us; and once a
+year, when times are peaceable, you shall ride behind me, on a
+pillion, to see how things go with him at the Percys' castle. At
+any rate it will be better, by far, than if he had carried out that
+silly fancy of his, for putting himself in the hands of the monks
+and learning to read and write; which would, perchance, have ended
+in his shaving his crown and taking to a cowl, and there would have
+been an end of the Forsters of Yardhope.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, put that cold joint upon the table, again. Doubtless the
+lad has a wolf's appetite."</p>
+
+<p>There was no time lost. The next day was spent in looking out
+his clothes and packing his valise, by his mother; while he rode
+round the country, to say goodbye to some of his friends. The next
+morning, at daybreak, he started; and, at nightfall, rode into the
+castle of Alnwick, and inquired for Alwyn Forster. The two
+men-at-arms, who had regarded his appearance, on his shaggy border
+horse, with scarce concealed contempt; at once answered, civilly,
+that the captain would be found in his room, in the north turret.
+They then pointed out to him the stables, where he could bestow his
+horse; and, having seen some hay placed before it, and a feed of
+barley, to which the animal was but little accustomed, Oswald made
+his way up the turret, to the room in which his uncle lodged.</p>
+
+<p>The stately castle, and the beauty, as well as the strength, of
+the Percys' great stronghold, had in no small degree surprised, and
+almost awed the lad, accustomed only to the rough border holds. It
+was situated on rising ground, on the river Aln; and consisted of a
+great keep, which dated back to the times of the Saxons; and three
+courts, each of which were, indeed, separate fortresses, the
+embattled gates being furnished with portcullises and strong
+towers. Within the circuit of its walls, it contained some five
+acres of ground, with sixteen towers, the outer wall being
+surrounded by a moat.</p>
+
+<p>The Percys were descended from a Danish chief, who was one of
+the conquerors of Normandy, and settled there. The Percy of the
+time came over with William the Norman, and obtained from him the
+gift of large possessions in the south of England, and in
+Yorkshire; and, marrying a great Saxon heiress, added to his wide
+lands in the north.</p>
+
+<p>One of the Percys, in the reign of Henry the Second, made a
+journey to Jerusalem, and died in the Holy Land. None of his four
+sons survived him. His eldest daughter Maud married the Earl of
+Warwick; but, dying childless, her sister Agnes became sole heir to
+the broad lands of the Percys. She married the son of the Duke of
+Brabant, the condition of her marriage being that he should either
+take the arms of the Percys, instead of his own; or continue to
+bear his own arms, and take the name of Percy. He chose the latter
+alternative. Their son was one of the barons who forced King John
+to grant the Magna Carta.</p>
+
+<p>The Percys always distinguished themselves, in the wars against
+the Scot; and received, at various times, grants of territory in
+that country; one of them being made Earl of Carrick, when Robert
+the Bruce raised the standard of revolt against England.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the other hand, they not unfrequently took a share in
+risings against the Kings of England; and their estates were
+confiscated, for a time, by their taking a leading part in the
+action against Piers Gaveston, the royal favourite.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the reign of Henry the Second that the Percy of the
+time obtained, by purchase, the Barony of Alnwick; which from that
+date became the chief seat of the family. The present earl was the
+first of the rank, having been created by Richard the Second. He
+was one of the most powerful nobles in England, and it was at his
+invitation that Henry of Lancaster had come over from France, and
+had been placed on the throne by the Percys, and some other of the
+northern nobles; and, as a reward for his service, the earl was
+created High Constable of England.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch3">Chapter 3</a>: At Alnwick.</h2>
+
+<p>"You are rarely changed, Oswald," his uncle said, as the lad
+entered his apartment. "'Tis three years since I last saw you, and
+you have shot up nigh a head, since then. I should not have known
+you, had I met you in the street; but as I was expecting you, it is
+easy to recall your features. I made sure that you would come; for,
+although your father was at first averse to my offer, I soon found
+that your mother was on my side, and I know that, in the long run,
+my brother generally gives in to her wishes; and I was sure that,
+as you were a lad of spirit, you would be glad to try a flight from
+home.</p>
+
+<p>"You are growing up mightily like your father, and promise to be
+as big and as strong as we both are. Your eyes speak of a bold
+disposition, and my brother tells me that you are already well
+practised with your arms.</p>
+
+<p>"You understand that it is Sir Henry, whom they call Hotspur,
+that you are to serve. As to the earl, he is too great a personage
+for me to ask a favour from, but Sir Henry is different. I taught
+him the first use of his arms, and many a bout have I had with him.
+He treats me as a comrade, rather than as the captain of his
+father's men-at-arms, here; and when I spoke to him about you, he
+said at once:</p>
+
+<p>"'Bring him here, and we will see what we can do for him. If he
+is a fellow of parts and discretion, I doubt not that we can make
+him useful. You say he knows every inch of our side of the border,
+and something of the Scottish side of it, his mother's sister being
+married to one of the Armstrongs. There is like to be trouble
+before long. You know the purpose for which I am going away; and
+the Scots are sure to take advantage of changes in England, and a
+youth who can ride, and knows the border, and can, if needs be,
+strike a blow in self defence, will not have to stay idle in the
+castle long. His father is a stout withstander of the Scots, and
+the earl would have given him knighthood, if he would have taken
+it; and maybe, in the future, the son will win that honour. He is
+too old for a page, and I should say too little versed in our ways
+for such a post; but I promise you that, when he is old enough, he
+shall be one of my esquires.'</p>
+
+<p>"So you may soon have an opportunity of showing Hotspur what you
+are made of. And now, I doubt not that you are hungry. I will send
+down to the buttery, for a couple of tankards and a pasty. I had my
+supper two hours ago, but I doubt not that I can keep you company
+in another."</p>
+
+<p>He went to the window, and called out, "John Horn!"</p>
+
+<p>The name was repeated below, and in two minutes a servant came
+up. The captain gave him directions, and they shortly sat down to a
+substantial meal.</p>
+
+<p>"The first thing to do, lad, will be to get you garments more
+suitable to the Percys' castle than those you have on; they are
+good enough to put on under armour, or when you ride in a foray;
+but here, one who would ride in the train of the Percys must make a
+brave show. It is curfew, now; but tomorrow, early, we will sally
+into the town, where we shall find a good choice of garments, for
+men of all conditions. You hold yourself well, and you have
+something of your mother's softness of speech; and will, I think,
+make a good impression on Sir Henry, when suitably clad.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, there are many sons of knights, of good repute and
+standing, who would be glad, indeed, that their sons should obtain
+a post in Hotspur's personal following; and who might grumble, were
+they passed over in favour of one who, by his appearance, was of
+lower condition than themselves.</p>
+
+<p>"John Forster is well known, on the border, as a valiant
+fighter, and a leading man in Coquetdale. It is known, too, that he
+might have been knighted, had he chosen; and doubtless there are
+many who, having heard that his hold is one of the strongest on the
+border, give him credit for having far wider possessions than that
+bit of moor round the hold, and grazing rights for miles beyond it.
+If, then, you make a brave show, none will question the choice that
+Hotspur may make; but were you to appear in that garb you have on,
+they might well deem that your father is, after all, but a moss
+trooper.</p>
+
+<p>"He told me that you had, once, a fancy to learn to read and
+write. What put that idea into your head? I do not say that it was
+not a good one, but at least it was a strange one, for a lad
+brought up as you have been."</p>
+
+<p>"I think, Uncle, that it was rather my mother's idea than my
+own; she thought that it might conduce to my advancement, should I
+ever leave the hold and go out into the world."</p>
+
+<p>"She was quite right, Oswald; and 'tis a pity that you did not
+go, for a couple of years, to a monastery. It is a good thing to be
+able to read an order, or to write one, for many of the lords and
+knights can do no more than make a shift to sign their names. As
+for books I say nothing, for I see not what manner of good they
+are; but father Ernulf, who is chaplain here, tells me that one who
+gives his mind to it can, in a year, learn enough to write down,
+not in a clerkly hand, but in one that can be understood, any
+letter or order his lord may wish sent, or to read for him any that
+he receives.</p>
+
+<p>"In most matters, doubtless, an order by word of mouth is just
+as good as one writ on vellum; but there are times when a messenger
+could not be trusted to deliver one accurately, as he receives it;
+or it might have to be passed on, from hand to hand. Otherwise, a
+spoken message is the best; for if a messenger be killed on the
+way, none are the wiser as to the errand on which he is going;
+while, if a parchment is found on him, the first priest or monk can
+translate its purport.</p>
+
+<p>"The chaplain has two younger priests with him; and, should you
+be willing, I doubt not that one of these would give you
+instruction, for an hour or two of a day. The Percys may not be
+back for another month or two, and if you apply yourself to it
+honestly, you might learn something by that time."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like it very much, Uncle."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, so it shall be, lad. For two or three hours a day you
+must practise in arms--I have some rare swordsmen among my
+fellows--but for the rest of the time, you will be your own master.
+I will speak with father Ernulf, in the morning, after we have seen
+to the matter of your garments."</p>
+
+<p>A straw pallet was brought up to the chamber; and, after
+chatting for half an hour about his visit to the Armstrongs, Oswald
+took off his riding boots and jerkin, the total amount of disrobing
+usual at that time on the border, and was soon asleep.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid, Uncle," he said in the morning, "that the
+furnishment of the purse my father gave me, at starting, will not
+go far towards what you may consider necessary for my outfit."</p>
+
+<p>"That need not trouble you at all, lad. I told your father I
+should take all charges upon myself, having no children of my own,
+and no way to spend my money; therefore I can afford well to do as
+I like towards you. Once the war begins, you will fill your purse
+yourself; for although the peoples of the towns and villages suffer
+by the Scotch incursions, we men-at-arms profit by a war. We have
+nought that they can take from us, but our lives, while we take our
+share of the booty, and have the ransom of any knights or gentlemen
+we may make prisoners."</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly they went into Alnwick, and Alwyn Forster bought for
+his nephew several suits of clothes, suitable for a young gentleman
+of good family; together with armour, of much more modern fashion
+than that to which Oswald was accustomed. When they returned to the
+castle, the lad was told to put on one of these suits, at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Make your old ones up in a bundle," his uncle said. "There may
+be occasions when you may find such clothes useful; though here,
+assuredly, they are out of place. Now, I will go with you to Father
+Ernulf."</p>
+
+<p>The priest's abode was in what was called the Abbots' Tower,
+which was the one nearest to the large monastery, outside the
+walls.</p>
+
+<p>"I told you, father," the captain said, "that belike my nephew
+would join me here, as I was going to present him to Sir Henry
+Percy. The good knight will not be back again, mayhap, for some
+weeks; and the lad has a fancy to learn to read and write, and I
+thought you might put him in the way of his attaining such
+knowledge."</p>
+
+<p>"He looks as if the sword will suit his hand better than the
+pen," the priest said, with a smile, as his eye glanced over the
+lad's active figure. "But surely, if he is so inclined, I shall be
+glad to further his wishes. There is a monk at the monastery who,
+although a good scholar, is fitted rather for the army than the
+Church. He was one of our teachers, but in sooth had but little
+patience with the blunders of the children; but I am sure that he
+would gladly give his aid to a lad like this, and would bear with
+him, if he really did his best. I have nought to do at present, and
+will go down with him, at once, and talk to Friar Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"If the latter would rather have nought to do with it, one of my
+juniors shall undertake the task; but I am sure that the friar
+would make a better instructor, if he would take it in hand.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a stout man-at-arms--for, as you know, when the Scots
+cross the border, the abbot always sends a party of his stoutest
+monks to fight in Percy's ranks; as is but right, seeing that the
+Scots plunder a monastery as readily as a village. Friar Roger was
+the senior in command, under the sub-prior, of the monks who fought
+at Otterburn, and all say that none fought more stoutly, and the
+monks were the last to fall back on that unfortunate day. They say
+that he incurred many penances for his unchurchly language, during
+the fight; but that the abbot remitted them, on account of the
+valour that he had shown."</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, the priest went off with Oswald to the monastery,
+while Alwyn Forster remained, to attend to his duties as captain of
+the men-at-arms. On his saying that he wished to see the friar
+Roger, the priest was shown into a waiting room, where the monk
+soon joined them.</p>
+
+<p>He was a tall, powerful man, standing much over six feet in
+height, and of proportionate width of shoulders. He carried his
+head erect, and looked more like a man-at-arms, in disguise, than a
+monk. He bent his head to the priest, and then said in a hearty
+tone:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Father Ernulf, what would you with me, today? You have no
+news of the Scots having crossed the border, and I fear that there
+is no chance, at present, of my donning a cuirass over my
+gown?"</p>
+
+<p>"None at present, brother, though it may well be so, before
+long. I hope that we shall soon have the earl and his son back
+again, for the Scots are sure to take advantage of their absence,
+now that the truce is expired.</p>
+<a id="PicA" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/a.jpg" alt=
+"This is the nephew of Alwyn Forster"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>"No, I want you on other business. This young gentleman is the
+nephew of Alwyn Forster, whom you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Right well, Father; a good fellow, and a stout fighter."</p>
+
+<p>"He is about to enter Sir Henry's household," the priest went
+on; "but, seeing that the knight is still away, and may be absent
+for some weeks yet, the young man is anxious to learn to read and
+write--</p>
+
+<p>"Not from any idea of entering the Church," he broke off, with a
+smile, at the expression of surprise on the monk's face; "but that
+it may be useful to him in procuring advancement.</p>
+
+<p>"I have, therefore, brought him to you; thinking that you would
+make a far better teacher, for a lad like him, than your brothers
+in the school. I thought perhaps that, if I spoke to the abbot, he
+might release you from your attendance at some of the services, for
+such a purpose."</p>
+
+<p>"That is a consideration," the monk laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, young sir, I tell you fairly that among my gifts is not
+that of patience with fools. If you are disposed to work right
+heartily, as I suppose you must be, or you would not make such a
+request, I on my part will do my best to teach you; but you must
+not mind if, sometimes, you get a rough buffet to assist your
+memory."</p>
+
+<p>"I should doubt whether a buffet, from you, would not be more
+likely to confuse my memory than to assist it," Oswald said, with a
+smile; "but at any rate, I am ready to take my chance, and can
+promise to do my best to avoid taxing your patience, to that
+point."</p>
+
+<p>"That will do, Father," the monk said. "He is a lad of spirit,
+and it is a pleasure to train one of that kind. As to the puny boys
+they send to be made monks because, forsooth, they are likely to
+grow up too weak for any other calling, I have no patience with
+them; and I get into sore disgrace, with the abbot, for my
+shortness of temper."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid, from what I hear," the priest said, shaking his
+head, but unable to repress a smile, "that you are often in
+disgrace, Brother Roger."</p>
+
+<p>"I fear that it is so, and were it not that I am useful, in
+teaching the lay brothers and the younger monks the use of the
+carnal weapons, I know that, before this, I should have been
+bundled out, neck and crop. 'Tis hard, Father, for a man of my
+inches to be shut up, here, when there is so much fighting to be
+done, abroad."</p>
+
+<p>"There is good work to be done, everywhere," the priest said
+gravely. "Many of us may have made a mistake in choosing our
+vocations; but, if so, we must make the best we can of what is
+before us."</p>
+
+<p>"What time will you come?" the monk asked Oswald.</p>
+
+<p>"My uncle said that he would suit my hours to yours; but that,
+if it was all the same to you, I should practise in arms from six
+o'clock till eight, and again for an hour or two in the evening; so
+that I could come to you either in the morning or afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>"Come at both, if you will," the monk said. "If the good father
+can get me off the services, from eight till six, you can be with
+me all that time, save at the dinner hour. You have but a short
+time to learn in, and must give yourself heartily to it.</p>
+
+<p>"There is the chapel bell ringing, now, and I must be off. The
+abbot will not be present at this service, Father; and if you will,
+you can see him now. I doubt not that he will grant your request,
+for I know that I anger him, every time I am in chapel. I am fond
+of music, and I have a voice like a bull; and, do what I will, it
+will come out in spite of me; and he says that my roaring destroys
+the effect of the whole choir."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he strode away.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you wait outside the gates, my son," the priest said. "I
+shall be only a few minutes with the abbot; who, as Friar Roger
+says, will, I doubt not, be glad enough to grant him leave to
+abstain from attendance at the services."</p>
+
+<p>In a short time, indeed, he rejoined Oswald at the gate.</p>
+
+<p>"That matter was managed, easily enough," he said. "The abbot
+has, himself, a somewhat warlike disposition, which is not to be
+wondered at, seeing that he comes from a family ever ready to draw
+the sword; and he has, therefore, a liking for Friar Roger, in
+spite of his contumacies, breaches of regulations, and quarrels
+with the other monks. He is obliged to continually punish him, with
+sentences of seclusion, penance, and fasting; but methinks it goes
+against the grain. He said, at once, that he was delighted to hear
+that he had voluntarily undertaken some work that would keep him
+out of trouble, and that he willingly, and indeed gladly, absolved
+him from attendance in chapel, during the hours that he was
+occupied with you.</p>
+
+<p>"'He is not without his uses,' he said. 'He is in special charge
+of the garden, and looks after the lay brothers employed in it. I
+will put someone else in charge, while he is busy, though I doubt
+if any will get as much work out of the lay brothers as he does;
+and indeed, he himself labours harder than any of them. With any
+other, I should say that tucking his gown round his waist, and
+labouring with might and main was unseemly; but as it works off
+some of his superabundant energy, I do not interfere with
+him.'"</p>
+
+<p>"How ever did he become a monk, Father?"</p>
+
+<p>"It seems that he was a somewhat sickly child, and his father
+sent him to the monastery to be taught, with a view to entering the
+Church. He was quick and bright in his parts, but as his health
+improved he grew restless, and at fifteen refused to follow the
+vocation marked out for him, and returned home; where, as I have
+heard, he took part in various daring forays across the border.
+When he was five-and-twenty, he was wounded well-nigh to death in
+one of these, and he took it as a judgment upon him, for deserting
+the Church; so he returned here, and became a lay brother. He was a
+very long time, before he recovered his full strength, and before
+he did so he became a monk, and I believe has bitterly regretted
+the fact, ever since.</p>
+
+<p>"Some day, I am afraid, he will break the bounds altogether,
+throw away his gown, assume a breast plate and steel cap, and
+become an unfrocked monk. I believe he fights hard against his
+inclinations, but they are too strong for him. If war breaks out I
+fear that, some day, he will be missing.</p>
+
+<p>"He will, of course, go down south, where he will be unknown;
+and where, when the hair on his tonsure has grown, he can well pass
+as a man-at-arms, and take service with some warlike lord. I trust
+that it may not be so, but he will assuredly make a far better
+man-at-arms than he will ever make a good monk."</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, after practising for two hours with sword and
+pike, Oswald went down, at eight o'clock, to the monastery, and was
+conducted to friar Roger's cell. The latter at once began his
+instruction, handing him a piece of blackened board, and a bit of
+chalk.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," he said, "you must learn to read and write, together.
+There are twenty-six letters, and of each there is a big one and a
+little one. The big ones are only used at the beginning of a
+sentence--that is where, if you were talking, you would stop to
+take breath and begin afresh--and also at the first letter of the
+names of people, and places.</p>
+
+<p>"The first letter is 'A'. There it is, in that horn book, you
+see. It looks like two men, or two trees, leaning against each
+other for support; with a line, which might be their hands, in the
+middle.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, make a letter like that, on your board. The little 'a' is
+a small circle with an upright, with a tail to it; you might fancy
+it a fish, with its tail turned up.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, write each of those, twelve times."</p>
+
+<p>So he continued with the first six letters.</p>
+
+<p>"That will be as much as you will remember, at first," he said.
+"Now we will begin spelling with those letters, and you will see
+how they are used. You see, it is a mixture of the sounds of the
+two: 'b a' makes ba, and 'b e' be, 'c a' ca, 'd a' da, 'd e' de, and
+so on. Now, we will work it out."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was intelligent, and anxious to learn. He had been
+accustomed, when riding, to notice every irregularity of ground,
+every rock and bush that might serve as a guide, if lost in a fog,
+and he very quickly took in the instruction given him; and, by the
+time the convent bell rung to dinner, he had made a considerable
+progress with the variations that could be formed with the six
+letters that he had learned; and the friar expressed himself as
+highly satisfied with him.</p>
+
+<p>"You have learned as much, in one morning, as many of the boys
+who attend schools would learn in a month," he said. "If you go on
+like this, I will warrant that, if Percy delays his return for two
+months, you will know as much as many who have been two years at
+the work. I have always said that it is a mistake to teach children
+young; their minds do not take in what you say to them. You may
+beat it into them, but they only get it by rote; and painfully,
+because they don't understand how one thing leads to another, and
+it is their memory only, and not their minds, that are at
+work."</p>
+
+<p>The next day came news that the Scotch had crossed the border,
+and there was great excitement in the castle; but it was soon
+learned that the invasion was not on a great scale, neither the
+Douglases nor the Earl of March having taken part in it.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no fear of our being attacked, here," Alwyn Forster
+said to Oswald. "The sheriffs of the county will call out their
+levies, and will soon make head against them. At the same time, we
+shall make preparations against any chance of their coming
+hither."</p>
+
+<p>This was done. Vast quantities of arrows were prepared, stones
+collected and carried up to the points on the wall most exposed to
+attack; and orders sent out, by the governor of the castle in the
+Percys' absence, to the people for many miles round, that on the
+approach of the Scots all were to retire to refuge, the women and
+children taking to the hills, while the men capable of bearing arms
+were to hasten to the defence of the castle.</p>
+
+<p>For a time, the Scots carried all before them, wasting and
+devastating the country. Oswald heard that they had captured,
+without resistance, his father's hold. He rejoiced at the news, for
+he feared that, not knowing the strength of the invading force,
+resistance might have been attempted; in which case all in the hold
+might have been put to the sword. He had no doubt, now, that his
+father and mother had retired with their followers to the hills, as
+they had always determined to do, in case of an invasion by a force
+too strong to resist.</p>
+
+<p>Had the Percys been at home, they might have held out, confident
+that the Scotch would be attacked before they could effect its
+capture; but as all the northern lords, with their retainers, were
+away in the south, it would be some time before a force could be
+collected that could make head against the Scots.</p>
+
+<p>A portion of the Scottish army laid siege to the castle of Wark,
+on the Tweed. This castle had always played a conspicuous part in
+the border wars. It had been besieged and captured by David of
+Scotland, in the reign of Stephen; and two or three years later was
+again besieged, but this time repulsed all attacks. David, after
+his defeat at the battle of the Standard, resumed the siege. It
+again repulsed all attacks, but at last was reduced to an extremity
+by famine, and capitulated.</p>
+
+<p>The castle was demolished by the Scots, but was rebuilt by Henry
+the Second. In 1215 it was again besieged, this time by King John,
+who resented the defection of the northern barons; and it was
+captured, and again destroyed. In 1318 it was captured and
+destroyed by Robert Bruce. In 1341 it was besieged by David Bruce,
+but held out until relieved by King Edward, himself. In 1383 it was
+again besieged by the Scots, and part of its fortifications
+demolished. On the present occasion it was again captured, and
+razed to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Another portion of the Scottish army, plundering and burning,
+advanced along the valley of the Coquet. As they approached, the
+inhabitants of the district round Alnwick began to pour into the
+castle; but orders were issued that all the fighting men should
+join the force of Sir Robert Umfraville, the sheriff of the
+district, who was gathering a force to give the Scots battle.</p>
+
+<p>"I fear that there is small chance of the Scots making their way
+hither," Oswald's instructor said, in lugubrious tones. "Sir Robert
+is a stout fighter, and the Scots, laden as they must be with
+booty, and having hitherto met with no resistance, will be careless
+and like to be taken by surprise. Methinks the abbot ought to send
+off a contingent, to aid Sir Robert."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose he wants to keep them for more urgent work, and
+thinks that the Church should only fight when in desperate straits.
+However, Father, you may have an opportunity yet; for we cannot
+regard it as certain that Sir Robert will defeat the Scots."</p>
+
+<p>Three days later, however, the news arrived that Sir Robert had
+attacked the Scots, at Fulhetlaw, and utterly defeated them; taking
+prisoner Sir Richard Rutherford and his five sons, together with
+Sir William Stewart, John Turnbull, a noted border reiver, and many
+others; and that those who had escaped were in full flight for the
+border.</p>
+
+<p>The Scotch incursion had made no change in Oswald's work. He
+continued to study hard with the monk. As a rule, he fully
+satisfied his teacher; but at times, when he failed to name the
+letters required to make up a certain sound, the latter lost all
+patience with him; and, more than once, with difficulty restrained
+himself from striking him. Spelling in those days, however, had by
+no means crystallized itself into any definite form, and there was
+so large a latitude allowed that, if the letters used gave an
+approximate sound to the word, it was deemed sufficient.</p>
+
+<p>The consequence was that Oswald's education progressed at a
+speed that would, in these more rigid days, be deemed impossible.
+He was intensely interested in the work, and even his martial
+exercises were, for the time, secondary to it in his thoughts. He
+felt so deeply grateful to his instructor that, even if he had
+struck him, he would have cared but little. In those days rough
+knocks were readily given, and the idea that there was anything
+objectionable, in a boy being struck, had never been entertained by
+anyone. Wives were beaten not uncommonly, servants frequently; and
+from the highest to the lowest, corporal punishment was regarded as
+the only way to ensure the carrying out of orders.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was slower in learning to write down the letters than he
+was to read them. His hands were so accustomed to the rein, the
+bow, and the sword that they bungled over the work of forming
+letters. Nevertheless, by the time the Percys returned, three
+months and a half after his arrival at the castle, he could both
+read and write short and simple words; and as these formed a large
+proportion of English speech, at the time, he had made a
+considerable step in the path of learning, and the monk was highly
+pleased with his pupil.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not be able to come tomorrow, Father," he said to the
+monk, one day. "The earl and Sir Henry will be back tonight, and my
+uncle says that I must keep near him, tomorrow; so that, if
+opportunity offers, he may present me to the knight."</p>
+
+<p>"I feared it would come to that," the monk said. "I wish they
+had all stopped away, another three or four months; then you would
+have got over your difficulty of piecing together syllables, so as
+to make up a long word. 'Tis a thousand pities that you should stop
+altogether, just when you are getting on so well."</p>
+
+<p>"I will come as often as I can, Father, if you will let me."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, lad. I know what it is, when the family are at home. It
+will be, 'Here, Oswald, ride with such a message;' or Hotspur,
+himself, may be going out with a train, and you will have to
+accompany him. There will always be something.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, save but for your teaching, it is high time that the
+Percys were back again; for there has already been a great deal of
+hot work, on the border, and report says that the Scots are
+mustering strongly, and that there is going to be a great raid into
+Cumberland; so you will be busy, and so shall I. The lay brothers
+have made but a poor hand of it, while I have been busy. I went
+down in the evening, yesterday, to see them drill; and it was as
+much as I could do to prevent myself from falling upon them, and
+giving them a lesson of a different sort.</p>
+
+<p>"As it was, I gave it to their instructor heartily, and was had
+up before the abbot on his complaint, this morning; and am to eat
+Lenten fare for the next ten days, which accords but ill either
+with my liking or needs."</p>
+
+<p>In the evening, the courtyard was ablaze with torches as, amid
+the cheers of the garrison, the Earl of Northumberland and his son
+rode in, with a strong body of men-at-arms. The greater portion of
+the following with which they had met Henry of Lancaster on his
+landing, and escorted him to London, had long since returned to
+their homes; being released from service, when it was seen that no
+opposition was to be looked for from the adherents of Richard. The
+followings of the various nobles and knights of the northern
+counties had left the main body on the way home, and Northumberland
+had brought with him, to Alnwick, only the men-at-arms who formed
+the regular force retained under his standard.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was greatly struck with the splendid appearance, and
+appointments, of the earl and the knights who attended him, and
+with the martial array of his followers. Hitherto, he had seen but
+the roughest side of war; the arms and armour carried not for show,
+but for use, and valued for their strength, without any reference
+to their appearance. On the border there was not the smallest
+attempt at uniformity in appearance, polished armour was regarded
+with disfavour, and that worn was of the roughest nature, the local
+armourer's only object being to furnish breast and back pieces
+that would resist the strongest spear thrust. Of missiles they made
+little account, for the Scots had but few archers, and their bows
+were so inferior in strength, to those carried by the English
+archers, that armour strong enough to resist a spear thrust was
+amply sufficient to keep out a Scottish arrow.</p>
+
+<p>There was not, even in the array of the Earl of Northumberland's
+men-at-arms, any approach to the uniformity that now prevails among
+bodies of soldiers. The helmets, breast and back pieces, were,
+however, of similar form, as the men engaged for continued service
+were furnished with armour by the earl; but there was a great
+variety in the garments worn under them, these being of all
+colours, according to the fancy of their wearers. All, however,
+carried spears of the same length, while some had swords, and
+others heavy axes at their girdles. The helmets and armour were all
+brightly polished, and as the lights of the torches flashed from
+them and from the spearheads; Oswald, for the first time, witnessed
+something of the pomp of war.</p>
+
+<p>His uncle, as captain of the men-at-arms left in the castle, was
+invited to the banquet held after the arrival of the force. Oswald,
+therefore, was free to wander about among the soldiers, listening
+to their talk of what they had seen in London, and of the
+entertainments there in honour of the new king; exciting, thereby,
+no small amount of envy among those who had been left behind in
+garrison.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald already knew that the earl had been appointed Constable
+of England, for life, and now heard that the lordship of the Isle
+of Man had since been conferred on him.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch4">Chapter 4</a>: An Unequal Joust.</h2>
+
+<p>"You must don your best costume tomorrow, Oswald," his uncle
+said, when he returned from the banquet. "Sir Henry Percy's first
+question, after asking as to the health of the garrison, was:</p>
+
+<p>"'Has this nephew of yours, of whom you were speaking to me,
+come yet?'</p>
+
+<p>"I told him that you had been here well-nigh four months, that
+you had been practising in arms with my best swordsmen, who spoke
+highly of you, and that the whole of your spare time had been spent
+at the monastery, where you had been studying to acquire the art of
+reading and writing, thinking that such knowledge must be useful to
+you in his service. I told him that brother Roger had reported that
+you had shown marvellous sharpness there, and could already read
+from a missal, barring only some of the long words.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, he had the fighting monk for his master!' Sir Henry said,
+laughing. 'Truly he must have been a good pupil, if he has come out
+of it without having his head broken, a dozen times. The friar is a
+thorn in the abbot's flesh, and more than once I have had to beg
+him off, or he would have been sent to the monastery of Saint John,
+which is a place of punishment for refractory monks. But in truth
+he is an honest fellow, though he has mistaken his vocation. He is
+a valiant man-at-arms, and the abbot's contingent would be of small
+value, without him.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, I will see your nephew in the morning. His perseverance
+in learning, and his quickness in acquiring it, show him to be a
+youth of good parts, and intelligent; but until I see him, I cannot
+say what I will make of him.'"</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, the next morning the lad accompanied his uncle to
+Sir Henry's private apartment, and found the knight alone. Sir
+Henry, Lord Percy, was now about forty years old. He had received
+the order of knighthood at the coronation of Richard the Second,
+when his father was created earl; and, nine years later, he was
+made governor of Berwick and Warden of the Marches; in which office
+he displayed such activity in following up and punishing raiders,
+that the Scots gave him the name of Hotspur. He was then sent to
+Calais, where he showed great valour. Two years later he was made
+Knight of the Garter, and was then appointed to command a fleet,
+sent out to repel a threatened invasion by the French. Here he
+gained so great a success that he came to be regarded as one of the
+first captains of the age.</p>
+
+<p>At Otterburn, his impetuosity cost him his freedom; for,
+pressing forward into the midst of the Scotch army, he and his
+brother Ralph were taken prisoners, and carried into Scotland. He
+had just been appointed, by King Henry, sheriff of Northumberland,
+and governor of Berwick and Roxburgh, and received other marks of
+royal favour.</p>
+
+<p>Although of no remarkable height, his broad shoulders and long,
+sinewy arms testified to his remarkable personal strength. His face
+was pleasant and open, and showed but small sign of his impetuous
+and fiery disposition.</p>
+
+<p>"So this is the young springal," he said, with a smile; as, with
+a quick glance, he took in every detail of Oswald's figure and
+appearance. "By my troth, you have not overpraised him. He bears
+himself well, and is like to be a stout fighter, when he comes to
+his full strength. Indeed, as the son of John Forster of Yardhope,
+and as your nephew, good Alwyn, he could scarce be otherwise;
+although I have not heard that either his father, or you, ever
+showed any disposition for letters."</p>
+
+<p>"No indeed, Sir Henry; nor have we, as far as I have ever seen,
+been any the worse for our lack of knowledge on that head. But with
+the lad here, it is different. Under your good patronage he may
+well hope to attain, by good conduct and valour, a promotion where
+book learning may be of use to him; and therefore, when he
+expressed a desire to learn, I did my best to favour his
+design."</p>
+
+<p>"And you did well, Alwyn. And since he has gained so much, in so
+short a time, it were a pity he should not follow it up; and he
+shall, if it likes him, so long as he is in this castle, have two
+hours every morning in which he can visit the fighting monk, until
+he can read and write freely.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, young sir, the question is, how can we best employ you?
+You are too old for a lady's bower, but not old enough, yet, for an
+esquire."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor could I aspire to such a position, my lord, until I have
+proved myself worthy of it. My uncle told me that he had suggested
+that I might be useful as a bearer of messages, and orders; and as
+I know every foot of the border, from near Berwick to Cumberland,
+methinks that I might serve you in that way. I ride lightly, know
+every morass and swamp, and every road through the fells; and have
+at times, when there was peace, crossed the Cheviots by several of
+the passes, to pay visits to my mother's sister, who is married to
+one of the Armstrongs, near Jedburgh. If your lordship will deign
+to employ me in such service, I can promise to do so safely, and to
+justify my uncle's recommendation; and shall be ready, at all
+times, to risk my life in carrying out your orders."</p>
+
+<p>"Well spoken, lad. I like the tone of your voice, and your
+manner of speech. They are such as will do no discredit to my
+household, and I hereby appoint you to it; further matters I will
+discuss with your uncle."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald expressed his thanks in suitable terms, and then, bowing
+deeply, retired.</p>
+
+<p>"A very proper lad, Alwyn. I would have done much for you, old
+friend, and would have taken him in some capacity, whatever he
+might have turned out; but, frankly, I doubted whether John
+Forster, valiant moss trooper as he is, would have been like to
+have had a son whom I could enroll in my household, where the pages
+and esquires are all sons of knights and men of quality. It is true
+that his father might have been a knight, had he chosen, since the
+earl offered him that honour after Otterburn; for three times he
+charged, at the head of a handful of his own men, right into the
+heart of the Scottish army, to try and rescue me; but he has always
+kept aloof in his own hold, going his own way and fighting for his
+own hand; and never once, that I can recall, has he paid a visit to
+us here, or at our other seats. I feared that under such a training
+as he would be likely to have, the lad would have been but a rough
+diamond. However, from his appearance and bearing, he might well
+have come of a noble family."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis his mother's doing, methinks, Sir Henry. She is of gentle
+birth. Her father was Sir Walter Gillespie. He was killed by the
+Scots, when she was but a girl, or methinks he would scarcely have
+given her in marriage to my brother John. She went with a sister to
+live with an old aunt, who let the girls have their way, without
+murmur; and seeing that they had no dowry, for their father was but
+a poor knight, there were not many claimants for their hands; and
+when she chose John Forster, and her sister Adam Armstrong, she did
+not say them nay. She has made a good wife to him, though she must
+have had many an anxious hour, and doubtless it is her influence
+that has made the lad what he is."</p>
+
+<p>"How think you I had best bestow him, among the pages or the
+esquires?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should say, Sir Henry, as you are good enough to ask my
+opinion, that it were best among the esquires. It would be like
+putting a hunting dog among a lady's pets, to put him with the
+pages. Moreover, boys think more of birth than men do. The latter
+judge by merit, and when they see that the lad has something in
+him, would take to him; whereas were he with the pages there might
+be quarrels, and he might fall into disgrace."</p>
+
+<p>"I think that you are right, Alwyn. He might get a buffet or
+two, from the esquires, but he will be none the worse for that;
+while with the pages it might be bickering, and ill will. He shall
+take his chance with the squires. Bring him to me at twelve
+o'clock, and I will myself present him to them, with such words as
+may gain their goodwill, and make the way as easy as may be for
+him."</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, at twelve o'clock, Oswald went to Hotspur's room,
+and was taken by him to the hall where the esquires, six in number,
+had just finished a meal. They varied in age from eighteen to
+forty. They all rose, as their lord entered.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to present to you this young gentleman, my friends. He
+is the son of John Forster of Yardhope, whose name is familiar to
+you all, as one of the most valiant of the defenders of the border
+against the Scottish incursions. None distinguished themselves more
+at the battle of Otterburn, where he performed feats of prodigious
+valour, in his endeavours to rescue me and my brother from the
+hands of the Scots. The earl my father offered him knighthood, but
+he said bluntly that he preferred remaining, like his father, plain
+John Forster of Yardhope. The lad's mother is a daughter of Sir
+Walter Gillespie, and he is nephew of Alwyn, captain of the
+men-at-arms here.</p>
+
+<p>"He knows every foot of the border, its morasses, fells, and
+passes; and will prove a valuable messenger, when I have occasion
+to send orders to the border knights and yeomen. I have attached
+him to my household. You will find him intelligent, and active. He
+comes of a fighting stock; and will, I foresee, do no discredit to
+them in the future. I hesitated whether I should place him with the
+pages or with you, and have decided that, with your goodwill, he
+will be far more comfortable in your society, if you consent to
+receive him."</p>
+
+<p>"We will do so willingly, on such recommendation," the senior of
+the esquires said; "as well as for the sake of his brave uncle,
+whom we all respect and like, and of his valiant father. The
+addition of young blood to our party will, indeed, not be
+unwelcome; and while, perchance, he may learn something from us, he
+will assuredly be able to tell us much that is new of the doings on
+the border, of which nothing but vague reports have reached our
+ears."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, Allonby," Hotspur said. "I expected nothing less from
+you. He will, of course, practise at arms regularly, when not
+occupied in carrying messages; and you will be surprised to hear
+that he will go for two hours daily to the monastery, where he has,
+for the last three months, been learning reading and writing at the
+hands of Brother Roger, the fighting monk. It is his own desire,
+and a laudable one; and when I say that he has succeeded in giving
+Brother Roger satisfaction, you may well imagine that he must have
+made great progress."</p>
+
+<p>A smile ran round the faces of the esquires, for Brother Roger's
+pugnacious instincts were widely known.</p>
+
+<p>"Truly, Sir Henry, if brother Roger did not lose patience with
+him, it would be hard, indeed, if we could not get on with him; and
+in truth, this desire to improve himself speaks well for the lad's
+disposition."</p>
+
+<p>When Hotspur left, Allonby said, "Take a seat, Master Oswald.
+But first, have you dined?"</p>
+
+<p>"I took my meal an hour since, with my uncle," Oswald
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, I remember that your uncle sticks to the old hours. Tell
+us, were you with your father in that foray he headed, to carry off
+some cattle that had been lifted by the Bairds? We heard a report
+of it, last night."</p>
+
+<p>"I was not with him, to my great disappointment; for he said
+that another year must pass, before I should be fit to hold my own
+in a fray. The affair was a somewhat hot one. Three of my father's
+men were killed, and some ten or twelve of those under other
+leaders; and my father and several of the band were wounded, some
+very sorely. It happened thus."</p>
+
+<p>And he then told the details of the affair.</p>
+
+<p>"It might well have been worse," Allonby said, "for, had the
+Bairds had time to assemble, it would have gone hardly with your
+father's party; especially as there is, as I have heard, a blood
+feud between him and them."</p>
+
+<p>"They have scored the last success," Oswald said, "seeing that
+they accompanied Sir Richard Rutherford in his raid, nigh two
+months ago; and, as I hear, while the rest came on harrying and
+plundering Croquetdale, the Bairds and their gathering remained at
+our hold, which they found deserted, for indeed my father could not
+hope to defend it successfully, against so large a force; and there
+they employed themselves in demolishing the outer wall, and much of
+the hold itself; and would have completed their task, had it not
+been for the defeat inflicted upon the rest of the Scots by Sir
+Robert Umfraville, when they were forced to hasten back across the
+border. My father sent me a message afterwards, saying that he and
+my mother, with their followers, had been forced to take to the
+fells; and that, on their return, they found the place well-nigh
+destroyed; but that he was going to set to work to rebuild it as
+before, and that he hoped, some time, to demolish the Bairds' hold
+in like fashion. It will be some time before the place is restored;
+for, my father's means being limited, he and his retainers would
+have to turn masons; but as the materials were there, he doubted
+not that, in time, they would make a good job of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Truly, it is a hard life on the border," the squire said, "and
+it is wonderful that any can be found willing to live within reach
+of the Scotch raiders. I myself have done a fair share of fighting,
+under our lord's banner; but to pass my life, never knowing whether
+I may not awake to find the house assailed, would be worse than the
+hardest service against an open foe.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Master Oswald, we will go down to the courtyard, and see
+what your instructors have done for you, in the matter of arms.
+With whom have you been practising, since you came here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Principally with Godfrey Harpent, Dick Bamborough, and William
+Anell; but I have had a turn with a great many of the other
+men-at-arms."</p>
+
+<p>"The three men you name are all stout fellows, and good
+swordsmen. As a borderer, I suppose that you have practised with
+the lance?"</p>
+
+<p>"We call it by no such knightly term. With us it is a spear, and
+nought else; but all borderers carry it, both for fighting and for
+pricking up cattle; and from the time that I could sit a horse I
+have always practised for a while, every day, with some of my
+father's troopers, or with himself, using blunt weapons whitened
+with chalk, so as to show where the hits fell. Although in a charge
+upon footmen, our border spearmen would couch their weapons and
+ride straight at their foe; in skirmishes, where each can single
+out an enemy, and there is a series of single combats, they do not
+so fight, but circle round each other, trusting to the agility of
+their horses to avoid a thrust, and to deliver one when there is an
+opening. Our spears are nothing like so heavy as the knightly
+lances, and we thrust with them as with the point of a sword."</p>
+
+<p>"But in that way you can hardly penetrate armour," one of the
+other esquires said.</p>
+
+<p>"No, it is only in a downright charge that we try to do so. When
+we are fighting as I speak of, we thrust at the face, at the
+armpit, the joints of the armour, which in truth seldom fits
+closely, or below the breastplate. The Scotch use even less armour
+than do our borderers, their breast pieces being smaller, and they
+seldom wear back pieces. It is a question chiefly of the activity
+of the horses, as of the skill of their riders, and our little moor
+horses are as active as young goats; and although neither horse nor
+rider can stand a charge of a heavily-armed knight or squire,
+methinks that if one of our troopers brought him to a stand, he
+would get the better of him, save if the knight took to mace or
+battle-axe."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you your horse with you, Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is in the stable. I have gone out with it, every
+morning, as soon as the castle gates were opened, and have ridden
+for a couple of hours before I began my exercises."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you take him in hand first, Marsden," Allonby said to one of
+the younger esquires, a young man of two or three and twenty.</p>
+
+<p>Light steel caps with cheeks, gorgets, shoulder and arm pieces,
+and padded leathern jerkins were put on; and then, with blunted
+swords, they took their places facing each other. The squire took
+up a position of easy confidence. He was a good swordsman, and
+good-naturedly determined to treat the lad easily, and to play with
+him for a time before scoring his first hit.</p>
+
+<a id="PicB" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/b.jpg" alt=
+"It was with the greatest difficulty that he guarded his head"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>He soon, however, found that the game was not to be conducted on
+the lines that he had laid down. Oswald, after waiting for a minute
+or two, finding his opponent did not take the offensive, did so
+himself; and for a time Marsden had all his work to do, to defend
+himself. Several times, indeed, it was with the greatest difficulty
+that he guarded his head. The activity of his assailant almost
+bewildered him, as he continually shifted his position, and with
+cat-like springs leapt in and dealt a blow, leaping back again
+before his opponent's arm had time to fall.</p>
+
+<p>Finding at last that, quick as he might be, Marsden's blade
+always met his own, Oswald relaxed his efforts, as he was growing
+fatigued; and as he did so Marsden took the offensive, pressing him
+backwards, foot by foot. Every time, however, that he found himself
+approaching a barrier, or other obstacle, that would prevent his
+further retreat, Oswald, with a couple of springs, managed to shift
+his ground. When he saw that Marsden was growing breathless from
+his exertions, he again took the offensive, and at last landed a
+blow fairly on his opponent's helm.</p>
+
+<p>"By my faith," the squire said, with a laugh that had
+nevertheless a little mortification in it, "I would as soon fight
+with a wildcat; and yet your breath scarce comes fast, while I have
+not as much left in me as would fill an eggshell."</p>
+
+<p>"It was an excellent display," Allonby said.</p>
+
+<p>"Truly, lad, your activity is wonderful, and you might well
+puzzle the oldest swordsman, by such tactics. Marsden did
+exceedingly well, too. Many times I thought that your sword would
+have gone home, but up to the last, his guard was always ready in
+time. As for yourself, we had scarce the opportunity of seeing how
+your sword would guard your head, for you trusted always to your
+legs, rather than your arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, lad, you will do. Your arm is like iron, or it would have
+tired long before, with that sword, which is a little over heavy
+for you. As to your wind, you would tire out the stoutest swordsman
+in the Percys' train. I do not say that, in the press of a battle,
+where your activity would count for little, a good man-at-arms
+would not get the better of you; but in a single combat, with
+plenty of room, it would be a good man, indeed, who would tackle
+you; especially were he clad in armour, and you fighting without
+it. His only chance would be to get in one downright blow, that
+would break down your guard. As Marsden says, you fight like a
+wildcat, rather than as a man-at-arms; but as the time may come
+when you will ride in heavy armour, and so lose the advantage of
+your agility, you had best continue to practise regularly with us,
+and the men-at-arms, and learn to fight in the fashion that would
+be needed, were you engaged in a pitched battle when on horseback,
+and in armour."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be glad, indeed, to do so," Oswald said modestly. "I
+know that I am very ignorant of real swordsmanship, and the
+men-at-arms have me quite at their mercy, when they insist upon my
+not shifting my ground. At home, I have only practised with my
+father's troopers, and we always fight on foot, and with stout
+sticks instead of swords, and without defences save our head
+pieces; but fighting in knightly fashion I knew nothing of, until I
+came here."</p>
+
+<p>"You will soon acquire that, lad. With your strength of arm,
+length of wind, quickness of eye, and activity, you will make a
+famous swordsman, in time.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! Here is Sir Henry."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been trying the lad's metal?" Hotspur asked, as he saw
+Oswald in the act of taking off his steel cap. Marsden had already
+done so.</p>
+
+<p>"That have we, Sir Henry, and find it as of proof. Marsden here,
+who is no mean blade, has taken him in hand; and the lad has more
+than held his own against him, not so much by swordsmanship as by
+activity, and wind. It was a curious contest. Marsden compared
+Oswald to a wildcat, and the comparison was not an ill one; for,
+indeed, his springs and leaps were so rapid and sudden that it was
+difficult to follow him, and the fight was like one between such an
+animal, and a hound. Marsden defended himself well against all his
+attacks, until his breath failed him, and he was dealt a downright
+blow on his helm, on which I see it has made a shrewd dent. As for
+his blows, they fell upon air, for the lad was ever out of reach
+before the ripostes came. In his own style of fighting, I would
+wager on him against any man-at-arms in the castle."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to hear it," Hotspur said. "I shall feel the less
+scruple, in sending him on missions which are not without danger.
+He will need training, to fit him for combat in the ranks. No doubt
+he has had no opportunity for such teaching, and would go down
+before a heavy-armed man, with a lance, like a blade of grass
+before a millstone."</p>
+
+<p>"He thinks not, Sir Henry, at least not in a single combat, for
+by his accounts his horse is as nimble as himself; but of course,
+in charges he and his horse would be rolled over, as you say."</p>
+
+<p>"He thinks not? Oh, well, we will try him! I have an hour to
+spare.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you put on a suit of full armour, Sinclair, and we will ride
+out to the course beyond the castle.</p>
+
+<p>"What will you put on, lad?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will put on only breast piece and steel cap; but I only said
+I should have a chance against a lance, Sir Henry. I do not pretend
+that I could stand against any man-at-arms, armed with sword and
+mace; but only that I thought that, with my horse, I could evade
+the shock of a fully-accoutred man, and then harass and maybe wound
+him with my spear."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we will try, lad. Put on what you will, and get your
+horse saddled. It will be rare amusement to see so unequal a
+course. We shall be ready in a quarter of an hour."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald went up to his uncle, and told him what was proposed.
+Alwyn, who had witnessed his exercises with the rough riders of his
+father, smiled grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"If you can evade his first charge, which I doubt not that you
+can, you will have him at your mercy, with your light spear against
+his lance, and your moor horse against his charger; but put on the
+heaviest of your two steel caps, and strong shoulder pieces. 'Tis
+like enough that, in his temper, he may throw away his lance and
+betake him to his sword. I will demand that he carries neither mace
+nor battle-axe, and that you should only carry sword and spear.
+Your horse's nimbleness may keep you out of harm, which is as much
+as you can expect, or hope for. Put on a light breast plate, too,
+for in spite of the wooden shield to his lance head, he may hurt
+you sorely if he does chance to strike you."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald saw that his horse was carefully saddled. He procured
+from his uncle a piece of cloth; and, removing the spearhead,
+wrapped this round the head of the shaft, until it formed a ball
+the size of his fist. This he whitened thickly with chalk.</p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes Sinclair, who was the heaviest and strongest of
+the esquires, rode out into the courtyard in full armour. Sir
+Henry, with his own esquires, and several of the gentlemen of the
+earl's household, came down; and Hotspur laughed at the contrast
+presented by the two combatants: the one a mass of steel, with
+shield and lance, on a warhorse fully caparisoned; the other a
+slight, active-looking figure, with but little defensive armour, on
+a rough pony which had scarce an ounce of superfluous flesh.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, gentlemen," he said, "we may be engaged in warfare with
+the Scots, before long; and you will here have an opportunity of
+seeing the nature of border fighting. The combat may seem to you
+ridiculously unequal, but I know the moss trooper, and I can tell
+you that, in a single combat like this, activity goes far to
+counterbalance weight and armour. You remember how Robert Bruce,
+before Bannockburn, mounted on but a pony, struck down Sir Robert
+Bohun, a good knight and a powerful one."</p>
+
+<p>As the party went out, through the gates, to the tilting ground
+outside the walls, the men-at-arms, seeing that something unusual
+was going to take place, crowded up to the battlements, looking
+down on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, gentlemen," Percy said, "you will take your places at
+opposite ends of the field; and when I drop my scarf, you will
+charge. It is understood that you need not necessarily ride
+straight at each other; but that it is free, to each of you, to do
+the best he can to overthrow his opponent."</p>
+
+<p>As he gave the signal, the two riders dashed at full speed at
+each other; and, for a moment, the spectators thought that Oswald
+was going to be mad enough to meet his opponent in full course.
+When, however, the horses were within a length of each other, the
+rough pony swerved aside with a spring like that of a deer; and,
+wheeling round instantly, Oswald followed his opponent. The latter
+tried to wheel his charger, but as he did so, Oswald's spear struck
+him in the vizor, leaving a white mark on each side of the slit;
+and then he too wheeled his horse, maintaining his position on the
+left hand, but somewhat in rear, of his opponent; who was, thereby,
+wholly unable to use his lance, while Oswald marked the junction of
+gorget and helmet with several white circles. Furious at finding
+himself incapable of either defending himself, or of striking a
+blow, the squire threw away his lance, and drew his sword.</p>
+
+<p>Hotspur shouted, at the top of his voice:</p>
+
+<p>"A breach of the rules! A breach of the rules! The combat is at
+an end."</p>
+
+<p>But his words were unheard, in the helmet. Making his horse
+wheel round on his hind legs, Sinclair rode at Oswald with uplifted
+sword. The latter again couched his spear under his arm and,
+touching his horse with his spur, the animal sprung forward; and
+before the sword could fall, the point of the spear caught the
+squire under the armpit, and hurled him sideways from his
+saddle.</p>
+
+<p>Hotspur and those round him ran forward. Sinclair lay without
+moving, stunned by the force with which he had fallen. Oswald had
+already leapt from his horse, and raised Sinclair's head, and began
+to unlace the fastenings of his helmet. Hotspur's face was flushed
+with anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not upbraid him, my lord, I pray you," Oswald said. "He
+could scarce have avoided breaking the conditions, helpless as he
+felt himself; and he could not have heard your voice, which would
+be lost in his helmet. I pray you, be not angered with him."</p>
+
+<p>Hotspur's face cleared.</p>
+
+<p>"At your request I will not, lad," he said; "and, indeed, he has
+been punished sufficiently."</p>
+
+<p>By the time that the helmet was removed, one of the soldiers
+from the battlements ran out from the castle, with a ewer of water.
+This was dashed into the squire's face. He presently opened his
+eyes. A heavy fall was thought but little of in those days; and as
+Sinclair was raised to his feet, and looked round in bewilderment
+at those who were standing round him, Hotspur said good
+temperedly:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Master Sinclair, the lad has given us all a lesson that
+may be useful to us. I would scarce have believed it, if I had not
+seen it; that a stout soldier, in full armour, should have been
+worsted by a lad on a rough pony; but I see now that the advantage
+is all on the latter's side, in a combat like this, with plenty of
+room to wheel his horse.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he would have slain you a dozen times, Sinclair. Look at
+your vizor. That white mark is equal on both sides of the slit, and
+had there been a spear head on the shaft, it would have pierced you
+to the brain. Every joint of your armour, behind, is whitened; and
+that thrust, that brought you from your horse, would have spitted
+you through and through.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, let there be no ill feeling over this. It is an
+experiment, and a useful one; and had I, myself, been in your
+place, I do not know that I could have done aught more than you
+did."</p>
+
+<p>Sinclair was hot tempered, but of a generous disposition, and he
+held out his hand to Oswald, frankly.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a fair fight," he said, "and you worsted me, altogether.
+No one bears malice for a fair fall, in a joust."</p>
+
+<p>"The conditions were not at all even," Oswald said. "On a pony
+like mine, unless you had caught me in full career, it was
+impossible that the matter could have turned out otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"I often wondered," Hotspur said, as they walked towards the
+gate, "that our chivalry should have been so often worsted by the
+rough Scottish troopers; but now I understand it. The Scotch always
+choose broken ground, and always scatter before we get near them;
+and, circling round, fall upon our chivalry when their weight and
+array are of no use to them. Happily, such a misadventure has never
+happened to myself; but it might well do so. The Scotch, too, have
+no regard for the laws of chivalry; and once behind will spear the
+horse, as indeed happened to me, at Otterburn. 'Tis a lesson in war
+one may well take to heart; and when I next fight the Scots, I will
+order that on no account, whatever, are the mounted men to break
+their ranks; but, whatever happens, are to move in a solid body, in
+which case they could defy any attacks upon them by light-armed
+horse, however numerous."</p>
+
+<p>At the gate of the castle, Alwyn Forster met them.</p>
+
+<p>"You have given me a more useful addition to my following than I
+dreamt of, Alwyn," Hotspur said. "Did you see the conflict?"</p>
+
+<p>"I watched it from the wall, Sir Henry. I felt sure how the
+matter would end. The lad is quick and sharp at border exercises. I
+have seen him work with his father's troopers. There were not many
+of them who could hold their own against him, and in fighting in
+their own way, I would back the moss troopers against the best
+horsemen in Europe. They are always accustomed to fight each man
+for himself, and though a score of men-at-arms would ride through a
+hundred of them, if they met the charge; in single combat their
+activity, and the nimbleness of their horses, would render them
+more than a match for a fully-caparisoned knight."</p>
+
+<p>"So it seems," Hotspur said; "and yet, if Sinclair had but known
+that the lad was about to swerve in his course, which indeed he
+ought to have known--for it would have been madness to meet his
+charge--he too should have changed his course to his left, when a
+couple of lengths away; for he might be sure that the lad would
+turn that way, so as to get on his left hand, and in that case he
+would have ridden over him like a thunderbolt."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sir Henry, but Oswald would have had his eye on knee and
+bridle; and the moment the horse changed his direction, he would
+have been round the other way, like an arrow from a bow; and would
+have planted himself, as he did, in the squire's rear."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps so," Hotspur said thoughtfully. "At any rate, Alwyn,
+the boy has given us all a lesson, and you have done me good
+service, by presenting him to me."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch5">Chapter 5</a>: A Mission.</h2>
+
+<p>For the next three or four months, Oswald was but little at the
+castle; Percy utilizing his services, in the manner most agreeable
+to him, by sending him on errands to various knights and gentlemen,
+in different parts of Northumberland, and to the fortified places
+held by the English across the Border. A fortnight after his
+contest with Sinclair, Sir Henry formally appointed him one of his
+esquires.</p>
+
+<p>"You are young," he said, "for such a post; but as you have
+shown that you are well able to take care of yourself in arms, and
+as I perceive you to be shrewd and worthy of confidence, your age
+matters but little. As my messenger, you will be more useful
+travelling as one of my esquires, than as one without settled rank;
+and I can not only send written communications by you, but can
+charge you to speak fully in my name, and with my authority."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was not slow in finding out the advantages that the
+position gave him. On the first errands on which he had been sent,
+he had been treated as but an ordinary messenger, had been placed
+at dinner below the salt, and herded with the men-at-arms. As an
+esquire of Lord Percy, he was treated with all courtesy, was
+introduced to the ladies of the family, sat at the high table, and
+was regarded as being in the confidence of his lord. His youth
+excited some little surprise, but acted in his favour, because it
+was evident that Percy would not have nominated him as one of his
+esquires, had he not shown particular merit. In his journeys, he
+often passed near Yardhope, where the rebuilding of the wall and
+keep was being pushed on with much vigour; the inhabitants of the
+villages in the valley lending their assistance to restore the
+fortalice, which they regarded as a place of refuge, in case of
+sudden invasion by the Scots. His parents were both greatly pleased
+at his promotion, especially his mother, who had always been
+anxious that he should not settle down to the adventurous, and
+dangerous, life led by his father.</p>
+
+<p>"By our Lady," John Forster said, "though it be but six months
+since you first left us, you have changed rarely. I speak not of
+your fine garments, but you have grown and widened out, and are
+fast springing from a boy into a man; and it is no small thing that
+Percy should have thought so well of you as to make you one of his
+esquires, already."</p>
+
+<p>"It was from no merit of mine, Father, but because he thought
+that, as his messenger, I should be able to speak in his name with
+more authority than had I been merely the bearer of a letter from
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis not only that," his father replied. "I received a letter
+but two days since from my brother Alwyn, written by the hand of a
+monk of his acquaintance, telling me that Lord Percy was mightily
+pleased with you; not only because you had set yourself to read and
+write, but from the way in which you had defeated one of his
+esquires in a bout at arms. Alwyn said that he doubted not that you
+would win knightly spurs, as soon as you came to full manhood. So
+it is clear that merit had something to do with your advancement,
+though this may be also due, to some extent, to the cause you
+assign for it. The monk who wrote the letter added, on his own
+account, that he had been your preceptor; and that, though he had
+often rated you soundly, you had made wonderful progress."</p>
+
+<p>"The monk is a good teacher," Oswald laughed; "but he would have
+made a better man-at-arms than he will ever make a monk. I believe
+it pleased him more that I worsted Sinclair--which indeed was a
+small thing to do, seeing that he had no idea of fighting, save of
+charging straight at a foe--than at the progress I made at my
+books. He commands the contingent that the monastery sends, when
+Percy takes the field to repel an invasion; and, could he have his
+own will, would gladly exchange a monk's robes for the harness of a
+man-at-arms. I would wish for no stouter companion in the
+fray."</p>
+
+<p>The speed with which he had performed his journeys, and the
+intelligence which he showed in carrying out his missions and
+reporting on their issue, earned for the lad an increasing amount
+of liking and confidence, on the part of his lord. It was not only
+that he delivered the replies to Hotspur's messages accurately; but
+his remarks, upon the personal manner and bearing of those to whom
+he was sent, were of still greater value to Percy. Naturally, all
+had promised to have their contingent of fighting men ready, in
+case of serious invasion by the Scots; but Oswald was able to
+gather, from their manner, whether the promises would surely be
+fulfilled; or whether, in case of trouble, the knights were more
+likely to keep their array for the defence of their own castles
+than to join Percy in any general movement.</p>
+
+<p>One day, when Oswald had been engaged six months at this work,
+which had taken him several times into Cumberland and Westmoreland,
+as well as the north, Lord Percy summoned him to his private
+apartment.</p>
+
+<p>"Hitherto you have done well, Oswald, and I feel now that I can
+trust you with a mission of far higher importance than those you
+have hitherto performed. 'Tis not without its dangers, but I know
+that you will like it none the less for that reason. You are young,
+indeed, for business of such importance; but it seems to me that,
+of those around me, you would be best fitted to carry it out. Your
+manner of speech has changed much, since you came here; but
+doubtless you can fall at will into the border dialect, which
+differs little from that on the other side; and you can pass, well
+enough, as coming from Jedburgh, or any other place across the
+border.</p>
+
+<p>"All the world knows, lad, that George, Earl of March and
+Dunbar, was mightily offended at Rothesay breaking off the match
+with his daughter, and marrying the child of his rival Douglas; but
+now I am going to tell you what the world does not know, and which
+is a secret that would cost many a life, were it to be blabbed
+abroad, and which I should not tell you, had I not a perfect
+confidence in your discretion. The anger of March--as he is mostly
+called on this side of the border, while in Scotland they more
+often call him Earl of Dunbar--goes beyond mere displeasure with
+the Douglas, and sullen resentment against Rothesay. He has sent a
+confidential messenger to me, intimating that he is ready to
+acknowledge our king as his sovereign, and place himself and his
+forces at his disposal.</p>
+
+<p>"I see you are surprised, as is indeed but natural; but the
+Marches have ever been rather for England than for Scotland,
+although they have never gone so far as to throw off their
+allegiance to the Scottish throne. It is not for us to consider
+whether March is acting treacherously, to James of Scotland; but
+whether he is acting in good faith, towards us.</p>
+
+<p>"It was easy for him to send a messenger to me, since Scotland
+trades with England, and a ship bound for London might well touch
+at one of our ports on the way down; but the presence of an
+Englishman, at Dunbar, would not be so readily explained. His
+messenger especially enjoined on me not to send any communication
+in writing, even by the most trustworthy hand; since an accident
+might precipitate matters, and drive him to take up arms, before we
+were in a position to give him aid. Therefore, in the first place,
+I wish you to journey to Dunbar, to see the earl, and deliver to
+him the message I shall give you, and endeavour to inform yourself
+how far he is to be trusted. Say what he will, I can scarce bring
+myself to believe that he will really throw off his allegiance to
+Scotland; save in the event of a great English army marching north,
+when doubtless he would do what most Scotch nobles have always
+done, namely, hasten to give in his submission, and make the best
+terms he can, for himself. 'Tis a business which I like not,
+although it is my duty to accept a proposal that, if made in good
+faith, would be of vast value to the king.</p>
+
+<p>"You must, after seeing the earl, return here with all speed, to
+bear me any message March may give you, and to report your
+impressions as to his sincerity, and good faith. 'Tis a month since
+I received his message. Since then, I have communicated with the
+king, and have received his authority to arrange terms with March,
+to guarantee him in the possession of his lordships, to hand over
+to him certain tracts of the Douglas country which he bargained
+for, and to assure him of our support. But he must be told that the
+king urges him to delay, at present, from taking any open steps;
+as, in the first place, he is bound by the truce just arranged, for
+the next two years; and in the second because, having no just cause
+of quarrel with Scotland, and being at present but newly seated on
+the throne, he would have difficulty in raising an army for the
+invasion of that country. The king is ready to engage himself not
+to renew the truce, and to collect an army, in readiness to act in
+concert with him, as soon as it is terminated.</p>
+
+<p>"The earl has sent, by his messenger, a ring; which, on being
+presented at Dunbar, will gain for the person who carries it
+immediate access to him; and I shall also give you my signet, in
+token that you are come from me. You will carry, also, a slip of
+paper that can be easily concealed, saying that you have my full
+authority to speak in my name. You yourself can explain to him that
+I have selected you for the mission because of your knowledge of
+border speech, and because a youth of your age can pass unobserved,
+where a man might excite attention and remark, and possibly be
+detained, until he could render a satisfactory account of
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Here are the conditions, set down upon paper. Take it, and
+commit them to heart, and then tear the paper into shreds, and burn
+them. As far as Roxburgh you can, of course, ride as my squire; but
+beyond, you must travel in disguise. This you had better procure
+here, and take with you; for although the Governor of Roxburgh is a
+trusty knight, it were best that no soul should know that you go on
+a mission to March; and I shall simply give you a letter to him,
+stating that you are engaged in a venture in my service, and that
+your horse and armour are to be kept for you, until your
+return."</p>
+
+<p>Thanking Lord Percy for the honour done him, in selecting him
+for the mission, and promising him to carry it out, to the best of
+his power, Oswald retired and, making his way up to an inner room,
+set about learning the contents of the paper given him, which was,
+indeed, a copy of the royal letter to Percy. When he had thoroughly
+mastered all the details, and could repeat every word, he followed
+Sir Henry's instructions, tore the letter up, and carefully burned
+every fragment. Then he went out into the town, and bought garments
+suited for travelling unnoticed in Scotland, the dress being almost
+identical on both sides of the border, save for the lowland Scotch
+bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>On his return, he found that Lord Percy had sent for him during
+his absence, and he at once went to his apartments.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been thinking over this matter further," Sir Henry said.
+"The abbot came in, just as you left me; and, among other things,
+he mentioned that friar Roger had again fallen into disgrace,
+having gone so far as to strike the sub-prior on the cheek, almost
+breaking the jaw of that worthy man; and that, finding discipline
+and punishment of no avail with him, he was about to expel him, in
+disgrace, from the community. He said that he had only retained him
+so long on account of my goodwill for the fellow, and from the fact
+that he would, as I had often urged, be most valuable as leader of
+the abbot's forces, in case of troubles with the Scots, but that
+his last offence has passed all bearing.</p>
+
+<p>"For the time I could say nothing, for discipline must be
+maintained, in a monastery as well as in the castle; but after the
+abbot had left me, and I was walking up and down in vexation over
+the affair--for I like the rascal, in spite of his ways, and there
+is no one else who could so well lead the contingent of the
+monastery--a thought occurred to me. I like not your going
+altogether alone, for the times are lawless, and you might meet
+trouble on the road; and yet I did not see whom I could send with
+you. Now it seems to me that this stout knave would make an
+excellent companion for you.</p>
+
+<p>"In the first place, you like him, and he likes you; secondly, a
+monk travelling north on a mission, say from the abbot to the prior
+of a monastery near Dunbar, could pass anywhere unheeded; and in
+the third place, although as a peaceful man he could carry no
+military arms, he might yet take with him a staff, with which I
+warrant me he would be a match for two or three ordinary men; and
+lastly, I may be able to convince the abbot that he can thus get
+rid of him from the monastery, for some time, and avoid the
+scandals he occasions, and yet hold him available on his return for
+military service.</p>
+
+<p>"What say you, lad?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should like it much, Sir Henry. I could wish for no stouter
+companion; and although he may be quarrelsome with his fellows, it
+is, methinks, solely because the discipline of the monastery frets
+him, and he longs for a more active life; but I believe that he
+could be fully trusted to behave himself discreetly, were he
+engaged in outdoor work, and there can be no doubt that he is a
+stout man-at-arms, in all ways."</p>
+
+<p>"I should not trust him, in any way, with the object of your
+mission. If I obtain the abbot's consent, I shall simply send for
+him, rate him soundly for his conduct, but telling him I make all
+allowances for his natural unfitness for his vocation; and that I
+have, as a matter of grace, obtained from the abbot permission to
+use his services for a while, and to suspend his sentence upon him,
+until it be seen how he comports himself; and, with that view, I am
+about to send him as your companion, on a commission with which I
+have intrusted you, to the town of Dunbar. I shall hint that, if he
+behaves to my satisfaction, I may persuade the abbot to allow him
+to remain in my service, until the time comes when he may be useful
+to the convent for military work; he still undertaking to drill the
+lay brothers, and keep the abbot's contingent in good order; and
+that, when the troubles are at an end, I will obtain for him full
+absolution from his vows, so that he may leave the monastery
+without the disgrace of being expelled, and may then take service
+with me, or with another, as a man-at-arms.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you to be frank with me. If you would rather go alone,
+matters shall remain as they are."</p>
+
+<p>"I would much rather that he went with me, my lord. From the
+many conversations that I have had with him, I am sure that he is
+shrewd and clever, and that, once beyond the walls of the monastery
+and free to use his weapon, he would be full of resource. There is
+doubtless much lawlessness on both sides of the border, and
+although I should seem but little worth robbing, two travel more
+pleasantly than one; and the monk has taken such pains with me, and
+has been so kind, that there is no one with whom I would travel,
+with greater pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will go across to the monastery, at once, and see the
+abbot; and I doubt not that he will grant my request, for, much and
+often as brother Roger has given him cause for anger, I know that
+he has a sort of kindness for him, and will gladly avoid the
+necessity for punishing and disgracing him. If all is arranged, the
+monk shall come over here, and see you."</p>
+
+<p>An hour later, Brother Roger came in to the captain's
+quarters.</p>
+
+<p>"So you have been in trouble again, Brother Roger," Alwyn
+Forster said with a laugh, as he held out his hand to him.</p>
+
+<p>"That have I, and an hour ago I was lying in a prison cell,
+cursing my hot temper; and with, as it seemed, the certainty of
+being publicly unfrocked, and turned out like a mangy dog from a
+pack. It was not, mind you, that the thought of being unfrocked was
+altogether disagreeable; for I own that I am grievously ill fitted
+for my vocation, and that fasts and vigils are altogether hateful
+to me; but it would not be a pleasant thing to go out into the
+world as one who had been kicked out, and though I might get
+employment as a man-at-arms, I could never hope for any promotion,
+however well I might behave. However, half an hour ago the cell
+door was opened, and I was taken before the abbot, whom I found
+closeted with Hotspur.</p>
+
+<p>"The latter rated me soundly, but said that, for the sake of
+Otterburn, he had spoken for me to the abbot; and that as he would,
+for the present, be able to make use of me in work that would be
+more to my liking, the abbot had consented to reconsider his
+decision, and would lend me to him for a time, in hopes that my
+good conduct would, in the end, induce him to overlook my offences;
+and that, in that case, he might even be induced to take steps, of
+a less painful description than public disgrace, for freeing me of
+my gown.</p>
+
+<p>"I naturally replied that I was grateful for his lordship's
+intercession; and that, outside monkish offices, there was nothing
+I would not do to merit his kindness. He told me that I was to
+report myself to your nephew, who would inform me of the nature of
+the service upon which I was, at first, to be employed."</p>
+
+<p>"It is to undertake a journey with me," Oswald said. "I am going
+on a mission for our lord, to Dunbar. The object of my mission is
+one that concerns me only, but it is one of some importance; and as
+the roads are lonely, since March and Douglas quarrelled, and order
+is but badly kept on the other side of the border, he thought that
+I should be all the better for a companion. Assuredly, I could wish
+for none better than yourself, for in the first place you have
+proved a true friend to me; in the second, you have so much
+knowledge, that we shall not lack subjects for conversation upon
+the journey; and lastly, should I get into any trouble, I could
+reckon upon you as a match for two or three border robbers."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing could be more to my taste," the monk said joyfully. "I
+did not feel quite sure, before, whether I was glad or sorry that
+my expulsion was put off, for I always thought that it would come
+to that some day; but now that I learn for what service Hotspur
+intends me, I feel as if I could shout for joy.</p>
+
+<p>"Get me a flagon of beer, good Alwyn. I have drunk but water for
+the last twenty-four hours, and was in too great haste, to learn
+what was before me, even to pay a visit to brother Anselm, the
+cellarer, who is a stanch friend of mine.</p>
+
+<p>"And do I go as a man-at-arms, Master Oswald? For, as your
+mission is clearly of a private character, disguise may be
+needful."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Roger, you will go in your own capacity, as a monk,
+journeying on a mission from the abbot to the head of some
+religious community, near Dunbar. I doubt not that Lord Percy will
+obtain a letter from the abbot, and though it may be that there
+will be no need to deliver it, still it may help us on the way. As
+you are going with me, I shall attire myself as a young lay
+servitor of the convent."</p>
+
+<p>"I would that it had been otherwise," the monk said, with a
+sigh. "I should have travelled far more lightly, in the heaviest
+mail harness, than in this monk's robe. Besides, how can I carry
+arms, for use in case of necessity?"</p>
+
+<p>"You can carry a staff," Oswald said, laughing; "and being so
+big a man, you will assuredly require a long and heavy one; and,
+even if it is heavily shod with iron, no one need object."</p>
+
+<p>"That is not so bad, Master Oswald. A seven-foot staff, of the
+thickness of my wrist; with an iron shoe, weighing a pound or two,
+is a carnal weapon not to be despised. As you doubtless know, our
+bishops, when they ride in the field, always carry a mace instead
+of a sword, so that they may not shed blood; though I say not that
+the cracking of a man's skull is to be accomplished, without some
+loss thereof. However, if a bishop may lawfully crack a man's head,
+as an eggshell, I see not that blame can attach to me, a humble and
+most unworthy son of the church, if some slight harm should come to
+any man, from the use of so peaceful an instrument as a staff. And
+how about yourself, young master?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can carry a sword," Oswald replied. "In times like these, no
+man travels unarmed; and as I go as a servitor, and an assistant to
+your reverence, there will be nothing unseemly in my carrying a
+weapon, to defend you from the attack of foes."</p>
+
+<p>"You can surely take a dagger, too. A dagger is a meet companion
+to a sword, and is sometimes mighty useful, in a close fight. And,
+mark me, take a smaller dagger also, that can be concealed under
+your coat. I myself will assuredly do the same. There are many
+instances in which a trifle of that kind might come in useful, such
+as for shooting the lock of a door, or working out iron bars."</p>
+
+<p>"I will do so," Oswald said, "though I hope there will be no
+occasion, such as you say, for its use."</p>
+
+<p>"When do we start, Master Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tomorrow, at daybreak. We shall ride as far as Roxburgh. I
+shall go on my own horse, which, though as good an animal as was
+ever saddled, has but a poor appearance. You had best purchase a
+palfrey, as fat and sleek as may be found, but with strength enough
+to carry your weight. I shall be amply provided with money; and if
+you find a bargain, let me know, and I will give you the means.
+Mind, buy nothing that looks like a warhorse, but something in
+keeping with your appearance."</p>
+
+<p>That evening, Oswald had another interview with Percy, and
+received his final instructions, and a bag of money.</p>
+
+<p>"Be careful with it, lad," he said; "not so much because of the
+use that it may be to you, but because, were you seized and
+searched by robbers, and others, the sight of the gold might awake
+suspicions that you were not what you seemed, and might lead to a
+long detention. Keep your eye on Brother Roger, and see that he
+does not indulge too much in the wine cups, and that he comports
+himself rather in keeping with his attire, than with his natural
+disposition; and if you have any difficulty in restraining him, or
+if he does not obey your orders, send him back, at once. Will you
+see him again this evening?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is waiting for me in my apartment, now, my lord, having come
+for the money for the purchase of a palfrey, which I bade him
+get."</p>
+
+<p>"Send him to me, when you get there."</p>
+
+<p>When the monk appeared before Hotspur, the latter said, "See
+here, monk, I have saved you from punishment, and become, as it
+were, your surety. See that you do not discredit me. You will
+remember that, although my young esquire may ask your advice, and
+benefit by your experience, he is your leader; and his orders, when
+he gives them, are to be obeyed as promptly as if it were I myself
+who spoke, to one of my men-at-arms. He is my representative in the
+matter, and is obeying my orders, as you will obey his. The mission
+is one of importance, and if it fails from any fault of yours, you
+had better drown yourself in the first river you come to, than
+return to Northumberland."</p>
+
+<p>"I think that you can trust me, my lord," the monk said, calmly.
+"I am a very poor monk, but methinks that I am not a bad soldier;
+and although I go in the dress of the one, I shall really go as the
+other. I know that my duty, as a soldier, will be to obey. Even as
+regards my potations, which I own are sometimes deeper than they
+should be, methinks that, as a soldier, I shall be much less
+thirsty than I was as a monk. If the enterprise should fail from
+any default of mine, your lordship may be sure that I shall bear
+your advice in mind."</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt not that you will do well, Roger. I should not have
+sent you with my esquire, on such a business, had I not believed
+that you would prove yourself worthy of my confidence. I know that
+a man may be a good soldier, and even a wise counsellor, though he
+may be a very bad monk."</p>
+
+<p>The next morning the pair rode out from the castle, at daybreak.
+Roger was dressed in the usual monkish attire of the time, a long
+loose gown with a cape, and a head covering resembling a small
+turban. He rode a compactly built little horse, which seemed scarce
+capable of carrying his weight, but ambled along with him as if it
+scarcely felt it. Oswald was dressed as a lay servitor, in
+tightly-fitting high hose, short jerkin girt in by a band at the
+waist, and going half-way down to the knee. He rode his own
+moorland horse, and carried on his arm a basket with provisions for
+a day's march. He wore a small cloth cap, which fell down to his
+neck behind. His uncle accompanied him to the gate, which was, by
+his orders, opened to give them egress.</p>
+
+<p>"Goodbye, lad," he said. "I know not, and do not wish to know,
+the object of your journey. It is enough for me that it is a
+confidential mission for Hotspur, and I am proud that you should
+have been chosen for it, and I feel convinced that you will prove
+you have merited our lord's confidence.</p>
+
+<p>"Goodbye, friend Roger! Don't let your love of fisticuffs and
+hard knocks carry you away, but try and bear yourself as if you
+were still in the monastery, with the abbot keeping his eye upon
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Brother Roger laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"You make a cold shiver run down my back, Alwyn. I was feeling
+as if I had just got out of a cold cellar, into the sunshine, and
+could shout with very lightness of heart. I am not in the least
+disposed to quarrel with anyone, so let your mind be easy as to my
+doings. I shall be discretion itself; and even if I am called upon
+to strike, will do so as gently as may be, putting only such
+strength into the blow as will prevent an opponent from troubling
+us further."</p>
+
+<p>So, with a wave of the hand, they rode on.</p>
+
+<p>"I had better strap that staff beside your saddle, and under
+your knee," Oswald said, when they had ridden a short distance.
+"You carry it as if it were a spear, and I have seen already three
+or four people smile, as we passed them."</p>
+
+<p>Roger reluctantly allowed Oswald to fasten the staff beside
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"One wants something in one's hands," he said. "On foot it does
+not matter so much, but now I am on horseback again, I feel that I
+ought to have a spear in hand, and a sword dangling at my
+side."</p>
+
+<p>"You must remember that you are still a monk, Roger, although
+enlarged for a season. Some day, perhaps, you will be able to
+gratify your desires in that way. You had best moderate the speed
+of your horse, for although he ambles along merrily, at present, he
+can never carry that great carcase of yours, at this pace, through
+our journey."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like one good gallop," Roger sighed, as he pulled at
+the rein, and the horse proceeded at a pace better suited to the
+appearance of its rider.</p>
+
+<p>"A nice figure you would look, with your robes streaming behind
+you," Oswald laughed. "There would soon be a story going through
+the country, of a mad monk.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, we take this turning to the right, and here leave the main
+north road, for we are bound, in the first place, to Roxburgh."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought that it must be that, or Berwick, though I asked no
+questions."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall not travel like this beyond Roxburgh, but shall
+journey forward on foot."</p>
+
+<p>"I supposed that we should come to that, Master Oswald, for
+otherwise you would not have told me to provide myself with a
+staff."</p>
+
+<a id="PicC" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/c.jpg" alt=
+"They journeyed pleasantly along"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>They journeyed pleasantly along. Whenever they approached any
+town or large village, Oswald reined back his horse a little, so
+that its head was on a level with Roger's stirrup. They slept that
+night at Kirknewton, where they put up at a small hostelry. Oswald
+had intended going to the monastery there, but Roger begged so
+earnestly that they should put up elsewhere, that he yielded to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"I should have no end of questions asked, as to our journey
+across the border, and its object," Roger said; "and it always goes
+against my conscience to have to lie, unless upon pressing
+occasions."</p>
+
+<p>"And, moreover," Oswald said, with a laugh, "you might be
+expected to get up to join the community at prayers, at midnight;
+and they might give you a monk's bed, instead of a more comfortable
+one in the guest chambers."</p>
+
+<p>"There may be something in that," Roger admitted, "and I have so
+often to sleep on a stone bench, for the punishment of my offences,
+that I own to a weakness for a soft bed, when I can get one."</p>
+
+<p>However, Oswald was pleased to see that his follower behaved, at
+their resting place, with more discretion than he could have hoped
+for; although he somewhat surprised his host, by the heartiness of
+his appetite; but, on the other hand, he was moderate in his
+potations, and talked but little, retiring to a bed of thick
+rushes, at curfew.</p>
+
+<p>"In truth, I was afraid to trust myself," he said to Oswald, as
+they lay down side by side. "Never have I felt so free, since
+Otterburn--never, indeed, since that unfortunate day when I was
+wounded, and conceived the fatal idea of becoming a monk. Two or
+three times, the impulse to troll out a trooper's song was so
+strong in me, that I had to clap my hand over my mouth, to keep it
+in."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis well you did, Roger, for assuredly if you had so committed
+yourself, on the first day of starting, I must have sent you back
+to Alnwick, feeling that it would not be safe for you to proceed
+with me farther. When we get upon the Cheviots, tomorrow, you may
+lift your voice as you choose; but it were best that you confined
+yourself to a Latin canticle, even there, for the habit of breaking
+into songs of the other kind might grow upon you."</p>
+
+<p>"I will do so," Roger said, seriously. "Some of the canticles
+have plenty of ring and go, and the words matter not, seeing that I
+do not understand them."</p>
+
+<p>The next morning they resumed their journey, crossed the
+Cheviots, which were here comparatively low hills; and, after four
+hours' riding, arrived at Roxburgh.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do we come here?" Roger asked. "It would surely have been
+much shorter had we travelled through Berwick, and along the coast
+road."</p>
+
+<p>"Much shorter, Roger; but Sir Henry thought it better that we
+should go inland to Haddington, and thence east to Dunbar; as, thus
+entering the town, it would seem that we came from Edinburgh, or
+from some western monastery; whereas, did we journey by the coast
+road, it might be guessed that we had come from England."</p>
+
+<p>As before, they put up at a hostelry; and Oswald then proceeded,
+on foot, to the governor's house. Some soldiers were loitering at
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want, lad?" one of them asked, as he came up.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a letter, which I am charged to deliver into the
+governor's own hands."</p>
+
+<p>"A complaint, I suppose, from some worthy prior, who has lost
+some of his beeves?"</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe the governor will inform you, if you ask him," Oswald
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall pull your ear for you, when you come out, young
+jackanapes," the soldier said, hotly.</p>
+
+<p>"That danger I must even risk. Business first, and pleasure
+afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>And while the other soldiers burst into a fit of laughter, at
+the astonishment of their comrade at what he deemed the insolence
+of this young servitor of a monastery, he quietly entered. The
+guard at the door, who had heard the colloquy, led him into the
+governor's room.</p>
+
+<p>"A messenger with a letter desires speech with you, Sir Philip,"
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Bid him enter," the knight said, briefly.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald entered, and bowed deeply. He waited until the door
+closed behind the attendant, and then said:</p>
+
+<p>"I am the bearer of a letter, sir, from Lord Percy to you."</p>
+
+<p>The knight looked at him in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Hotspur has chosen a strange messenger," he muttered to
+himself, as he took the missive Oswald held out to him, cut the
+silk that bound it with a dagger, and read its contents. As he laid
+it down, he rose to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse my want of courtesy," he said. "Lord Percy tells me that
+you are one of his esquires--no slight recommendation--and that you
+are intrusted with somewhat important a mission, on his part, to
+Dunbar, a still higher recommendation--for assuredly he would not
+have selected you for such a purpose, had you not stood high in his
+regard. But, indeed, at first I took you for what you seemed, as
+the bearer of a complaint from some abbot; for in truth, such
+complaints are not uncommon, for whenever a bullock is lost, they
+put it down to my men.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are your horses that Percy speaks of? You will, I hope,
+take up your abode here, as long as you stay in the town."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Sir Philip; but I shall go forward in the morning. I
+have already put up at the Golden Rose. It would attract attention,
+were I to come here, and it were best that I remain as I am; and
+indeed, I have brought no clothes with me, save those I stand
+in."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, perhaps, as you do not wish to attract attention, it were
+best so; and I pray you inform Lord Percy of the reason why you
+declined my entertainment."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be glad, Sir Philip, if you will send down a couple of
+your men to fetch the horses up to your stables; as I shall start,
+as soon as the gates are open, tomorrow morning."</p>
+
+<p>"I will do so, at once."</p>
+
+<p>And the governor rang a handbell on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Send two of the men up here," he said, as an attendant
+entered.</p>
+
+<p>A minute later a door opened, and two soldiers came in, and
+saluted. One of them, to Oswald's amusement, was the man with whom
+he had exchanged words, below.</p>
+
+<p>"You will accompany this gentleman to the Golden Rose, and bring
+back two horses, which he will hand over to you, and place them in
+the stables with mine.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you sure, Master Forster, that there is nothing more that I
+can do for you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, whatever, I thank you, sir; and I am greatly obliged
+by your courtesy, and with your permission I will take my leave. I
+hope to return here in the course of a week, or ten days."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, Oswald shook hands with the governor and went
+downstairs, followed by the soldiers, who had not yet recovered
+from their surprise at seeing Oswald seated, and evidently on
+familiar terms with their lord. Oswald said nothing to them, until
+he arrived at the Golden Rose. Then he led the way to the stables,
+and handed the horses over to them.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that that pulling of the ear will be deferred, for a
+time?" he said, with a smile, to the soldier who had made the
+remark.</p>
+
+<p>The man sheepishly took hold of the bridle.</p>
+
+<p>"I could not tell, sir--" he began.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course you could not," Oswald interrupted. "Still, it may be
+a lesson, to you, that it is just as well not to make fun of
+people, until you are quite sure who they are. There, I bear no
+malice; get yourselves a stoup of wine, in payment for your
+services."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought that there was something out of the way about him,"
+the other man said, as they walked up the street with the two
+horses; "or he would never have turned upon you, as he did. It is
+evident that he is someone of consequence, and is here on some
+secret business or other, with Sir Philip. It is well that he did
+not bear malice, for you would have got it hot, from the governor,
+had he reported what you said to him."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch6">Chapter 6</a>: At Dunbar.</h2>
+
+<p>The journey passed without any incident of importance, but
+Oswald had reason to congratulate himself on having taken the monk
+with him. On one occasion, as they were passing over a wild heath,
+a party of eight or ten men, on rough ponies, rode up. They were
+armed with spears and swords. They reined up with exclamations of
+disappointment as Roger, who had rolled up his robe round his
+waist, for convenience of walking, let it fall round him.</p>
+
+<p>"You have played us a scurvy trick, monk," the leader said,
+angrily. "Who was to guess it was a monk, who was thus striding
+along?"</p>
+
+<p>"You would find it difficult to walk, yourself, with this robe
+dangling about your heels," Roger said.</p>
+
+<p>"Whither are you bound, and whence are you going?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are travelling to Dunbar, being sent to the convent of Saint
+Magnus there, and come from Roxburgh."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a shame that so stalwart a fellow as you are should be
+leading a drone's life, in a convent; when every true Scotsman is
+sharpening his spear, in readiness for what may come when the truce
+with England expires."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to hear that you are so well employed," Roger
+replied; "but methinks that, in days like these, it is sometimes
+useful to have a few men of thews and sinews, even in a religious
+house; for there are those who sometimes fail in the respect they
+owe to the Church."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true enough," the men laughed. "Well, go thy way. There
+is naught to be gained from a travelling monk."</p>
+
+<p>"Naught, good friend, save occasionally hard blows, when the
+monk happens to be of my strength and stature, and carries a staff
+like this."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a goodly weapon, in sooth, and you look as if you knew how
+to wield it."</p>
+
+<p>"Even a monk may know that, seeing that a staff is not a carnal
+weapon."</p>
+
+<p>And rolling up his sleeves, Roger took the staff in the middle
+with both hands, in the manner of a quarterstaff, and made it play
+round his head; with a speed, and vigour, that showed that he was a
+complete master of the exercise.</p>
+
+<p>"Enough, enough!" the man said, while exclamations of admiration
+broke from the others. "Truly from such a champion, strong enough
+to wield a weapon that resembles a weaver's beam, rather than a
+quarterstaff, there would be more hard knocks than silver to be
+gained; but it is all the more pity that such skill and strength
+should be thrown away, in a convent. Perhaps it is as well that you
+are wearing a monk's gown, for methinks that, eight to one as we
+are, some of us might have got broken heads, before we gained the
+few pence in your pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, men. Better luck next time. It is clear that this man
+is not the one we are charged to capture."</p>
+
+<p>And, with his followers, he rode off across the moor.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think that they are what they seem," Oswald said, as
+they resumed their journey. "The man's speech was not that of a
+border raider, and his followers would hardly have sat their horses
+so silently, and obeyed his orders so promptly, had they been
+merely thieving caterans; besides, you marked that he said you were
+not the man they were watching for."</p>
+
+<p>"Whom think you that they are, then, Master Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think it possible that they may be a party of Douglas's
+followers, led by a knight. It may be that Douglas has received
+some hint of March's being in communication with England; and that
+he has sent a party to seize, and search, any traveller who looked
+like a messenger from the south. Of course, this may be only fancy.
+Still, I am right glad that you were wearing your monkish robe;
+for, had I been alone, I might have been cross-questioned so
+shrewdly as to my purpose in travelling, that I might have been
+held on suspicion, and means employed to get the truth out of
+me."</p>
+
+<p>At the small town where they stopped, next night, they learned
+that many complaints had been made, by travellers from the south,
+of how they had been stopped by a party of armed men on the border,
+closely questioned, and searched, and in some cases robbed. This
+had been going on for some weeks, and the sheriff of the county had
+twice collected an armed force, and ridden in search of the
+robbers, but altogether without success. It was believed that they
+were strangers to the district, and the description given of them
+had not agreed with those of any noted bad characters, in the
+neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, Master Oswald," the monk said, "all this seems to
+support your idea. Money and valuables are soon found; but by what
+these men say of the way in which the clothes and belongings of
+these travellers were searched, it would seem to show that money
+was not the object of the band, but rather the discovery of
+correspondence, and that money was only taken as a cloak."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no doubt that they were there to intercept someone,
+Roger, though it may not have been Percy's messengers; still, we
+are well rid of them, and I hope that we shall meet no more, on our
+way."</p>
+
+<p>The hope was fulfilled, and they reached Dunbar without further
+interruption. Here they deemed it better to separate. The monk went
+to a convent, and gave out there that he was on the way to
+Edinburgh, being on a journey thither to see his aged father, who
+was in his last sickness. Oswald went to a shop, and bought clothes
+suited for the son of a trader in a fair position; and, changing
+his things at the inn where he had put up, made his way to the
+castle.</p>
+
+<p>"I would have speech with the earl," he said, to the warder at
+the gate. "I have his orders to wait upon him."</p>
+
+<p>"What is your name and condition?"</p>
+
+<p>"That matters not. I am here by the earl's orders. He sent me a
+ring, by which it might be known that I am authorized to have
+access to him."</p>
+
+<p>On seeing the ring, the warder at once called to one of the
+servitors, and bade him conduct Oswald to the earl's apartment.</p>
+
+<p>"Whom shall I say?" he asked, when he reached the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Give this ring to him, and say that the bearer awaits
+admittance to him."</p>
+
+<p>The man entered the room and then, opening the door again,
+motioned to Oswald to enter. The earl, a tall and powerfully-built
+man, looked with a keen scrutiny at him.</p>
+
+<p>"From whom come you, young sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"From the holder of that ring, my Lord Earl," Oswald said,
+presenting the ring that Percy had given him. "My name is Oswald
+Forster, and I have the honour to be one of Lord Percy's
+esquires."</p>
+
+<p>"Come you alone?" the earl asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I came with a companion, a monk. I was in the disguise of a
+young servitor of his convent. We came on foot from Roxburgh."</p>
+
+<p>He then unscrewed the handle of a dagger Percy had given him,
+for the purpose, and pulled out a small roll of paper, which he
+handed to the earl. It contained only the following words:</p>
+
+<p>"Do not intrust undue confidence in the bearer. The matters you
+wot of are in good train; of them my messenger knows nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"This was so writ by Sir Henry Percy," said Oswald, "in order
+that, if I were detained and searched on the way, and this paper
+found on me, I might not be forced, by torture, to say aught of my
+message."</p>
+
+<p>"But this signet ring would have shown to whom you were
+coming."</p>
+
+<p>"It was concealed in my staff, my lord, and could not have been
+discovered, had not that been split open. Had it been so, I should
+have admitted that Lord Percy had indeed committed the signet and
+the writing to me to carry, and had bid me travel as the servitor
+of a monk on his journey north; but that, more than that these were
+to be delivered to you, I knew nothing. Lord Percy selected me as
+his messenger partly because, from my youth, I should not be likely
+to be suspected of being a messenger between two great lords; and
+in the second place because, if arrested, and these matters found
+on me, the statement in the letter would be readily believed. It
+would not be supposed that important state secrets would be
+committed to a lad, like myself."</p>
+
+<p>The earl made no reply, for a time, but sat with his eyes fixed
+on Oswald's face, as if he were reading him thoroughly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you do know the matters in question?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do, my lord. I am the bearer of a further communication to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Say on, then."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Percy bids me say that, on the receipt of your message to
+him, he forwarded it by one of his knights to the king at
+Westminster; and that the matter was discussed, by his majesty,
+with two or three of his most trusted councillors. After full
+consideration, the king has accepted your offer, and will grant all
+its conditions. He sent, my lord, also a document with his royal
+seal attached, engaging to observe all the conditions of the
+compact. This document Lord Percy holds, to be given to you on a
+convenient occasion; but he deemed it of so important a nature that
+it would be too hazardous to send it to you. The king, in a letter
+to Lord Percy, begged him to tell you that, so long as the truce
+continued, he could not collect an army to support you; but that,
+as the time for its termination approached, he would begin to do
+so, and would be in readiness to take the field, in the north,
+immediately you move in the matter."</p>
+
+<p>The earl sat for some time, in thought.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know the conditions of the compact?" he asked,
+suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald had expected this question, and felt sure that the earl,
+who was, when not inflamed by anger, a cool and cautious man, would
+highly disapprove of Hotspur's frankness; and might possibly detain
+him, if he knew that he possessed so important a secret. He
+therefore replied:</p>
+
+<p>"As to such grave matters, it was not necessary that I should
+know more than I have said to you, my Lord Earl. As it is no secret
+that you and the Douglases have personal enmity, I deemed that the
+compact referred to our king giving you aid, should you need it
+against the Douglases."</p>
+
+<p>The answer was apparently satisfactory. The earl asked no
+further questions, on this head.</p>
+
+<p>"Were there other reasons than those you have stated why he
+chose you as his messenger?"</p>
+
+<p>"Another reason he gave me, my lord, was that, as I came of a
+family who reside within a few miles of the border, and had
+relatives on this side whom I sometimes visited, my language was
+similar to that spoken in Roxburghshire; so that I could therefore
+pass as a Lowland Scot, without difficulty. No one, in fact, at the
+various places at which we have stopped, has taken me for aught but
+a countryman; though the monk with me was often taxed with being an
+Englishman, though belonging to a monastery at Roxburgh."</p>
+
+<p>Again the earl was silent for some time.</p>
+
+<p>"I must think over the message that I shall give you, for
+Percy," he said. "I like not the delay, though I see that there is
+good reason for it. As one of Hotspur's esquires, I would fain
+treat you with all courtesy, and lodge you here; but this might
+cause question as to who you are, and it were, therefore, better
+that you should lodge in the town. Have you put up anywhere?"</p>
+
+<p>"I rested for an hour at the sign of the Lion, my lord; engaging
+a room there, in order to effect a change in my clothes. I left by
+the back entrance, in order that the change should not be
+observed."</p>
+
+<p>"It were best that you fetched those you travelled in away, or
+rather that you returned unnoticed; and, as it is getting dark now,
+this can doubtless be managed; and, when you sally out, place that
+cloak over your shoulders to hide your dress as a servitor, and go
+to the other inn, the Falcon. Say, there, that you are staying for
+a few days in Dunbar, having come here on business with me; and
+that I bade you go there, so that I might know where to send for
+you, if necessary. You can pass for what you seem, a young trader
+who has come from Edinburgh to arrange, on the part of your father,
+a cloth merchant there, for a supply of stuffs for the clothing of
+my retainers."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald carried out his instructions, walked about until it was
+quite dark, then entered the inn, made his way unobserved to the
+chamber where he had left his clothes, put these on, made the
+others up into a bundle, and then went downstairs again and paid
+his bill; saying, as he did so, that he had found the friends he
+came to see, and that they had room to take him in. After leaving
+the house he threw the cloak, which he had carried on his arm, over
+his shoulders; and put on the cap that belonged to his other dress,
+and then went to the Falcon Inn, and repeating to the landlord the
+statement the earl had made, was at once shown to a chamber, with
+some deference.</p>
+
+<p>"Will your worship have supper here, or in the room below?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will come down," he said. "It is dull work, sitting
+alone."</p>
+
+<p>Having ordered his supper, with a flask of wine, Oswald again
+donned his attire as a trader, and went downstairs. Just as he
+entered the room, in which several persons were sitting, a soldier
+came in from the outer door. He looked round the room.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a message, from the earl, for the person who was with
+him, this afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald at once rose, and went across to him.</p>
+
+<p>"The earl bade me tell you," the soldier said, in a low voice,
+"that his present furnisher is Robert Micklethwaite, and that his
+place of business is near the castle gate, at Edinburgh."</p>
+
+<p>"Please thank the earl for the information," Oswald replied, and
+then returned to his seat.</p>
+
+<p>He had indeed, while dressing, been wondering what name he
+should give. It was like enough that, in Dunbar, many might know
+the names of the principal traders in Edinburgh; and that, were he
+to give an unknown one, he might be questioned as to his place of
+business. The message, therefore, relieved him of this
+difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>After he had finished his supper, which was an excellent one, he
+beckoned to the landlord.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a stranger here, landlord," he said. "I pray you to drink
+a cup with me, and tell me the news of the place.</p>
+
+<p>"You may know the name of Micklethwaite," he went on, as the
+landlord sat down, "and that he comes, or sends regularly, to
+arrange for the supply of cloth, its quality and price, required
+for the earl's retainers."</p>
+
+<p>"Master Micklethwaite always puts up here, when he visits
+Dunbar," the landlord said. "I must have misunderstood him, for one
+day, when he was talking with me, he said that it was a trouble to
+him that he had no sons."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor has he," Oswald said; "luckily for me, who am but a
+nephew."</p>
+
+<p>"He is a good customer," the landlord went on, "and good
+company, too; but he cares not for French wines, and does not
+trouble my cellarer, much."</p>
+
+<p>"He is a careful man," Oswald said, with a smile; "and though he
+is a good trencherman, he does not waste his money on such matters.
+However, he lets me have a freer hand than he uses himself; and
+asks not, when I return, for a close account of my outgoings.</p>
+
+<p>"What do they say, here, as to the chances of another war with
+England?"</p>
+
+<p>"I fear the worst," the landlord replied. "These wars are ruin
+to us, and we have had the English at the gates of Dunbar over many
+times, already; and the town sacked, and burnt over our heads, more
+than once. Though I do not say that it might not have been worse,
+for our earls have ever stood aloof, as much as possible, and have
+often inclined towards the English side. Still, even then it is bad
+enough, for the whole country, from Berwick, has often been wasted
+to check the progress of the armies, and our trade well-nigh
+ruined. A pest on all wars, say I!"</p>
+
+<p>"And which way, think you, that the present earl's leanings
+would go?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think not about it, one way or the other. My business is to
+sell food and liquor, the earl's to take part in affairs of state.
+In days like these, it is quite enough for each man to attend to
+his own business, without troubling about that of other people;
+more especially when that other is a powerful noble, who thinks
+little enough of slitting a tongue that wags too freely.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, lad; John Sanderson is no fool, and knows better than
+to open his mouth, touching the affairs of great nobles. I know not
+how it may be with you, and the burghers of Edinburgh, but here we
+are content to cool our own porridge, and let others take their
+food hot or cold, as they choose."</p>
+
+<p>"I was not wishing you to give me so much your own ideas, as the
+common talk of the town; but I see that my question was indiscreet,
+and I ask your pardon."</p>
+
+<p>"I know you meant no harm, lad, and that your question was just
+one that any young man of your age might ask, without thinking that
+there was harm in it, or that the answering of it might lead to
+harm. I can tell you that, whatever folk may think here in Dunbar,
+they say naught about it to their nearest neighbour. We can talk of
+war with England, that is too common a thing for there to be harm
+in it; and as no one knows aught, one man's opinion is as good as
+another's; but the talk is general, and assuredly no man asks his
+neighbour what this great lord will do, or how matters will go.
+There is no harm in two gossips wondering whether, if the English
+come, the town will hold out till help comes, or whether they will
+batter down the walls first.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a kind of riddle, you see, and all the more that no one
+knows who may be by the king's side, when the storm breaks. A
+generation back, men might make a fair guess; but now it were
+beyond the wisest head to say and, for my part, I leave the
+thinking to those whom it concerns. You from Edinburgh ought to
+know more than we do, for in great cities men can talk more freely,
+seeing that no one lord has the place in his hands, and that the
+citizens have rights, and hold to them.</p>
+
+<p>"The general thought is that we shall have war, directly the
+truce is over. Among us who live by peaceful trade, we still hope
+for peace; for we see not what good comes of war, save to those who
+make raids in England, and as often as not these get more hard
+knocks than plunder; but to the quiet trader it means loss, and may
+well mean ruin, if the English army again marches through Scotland.
+We can discover no reason why the two countries should not live
+peaceably together, each going about its own business. I have heard
+it said, before now, that it would be a good thing for both
+countries if the border districts on both sides were stripped
+altogether of their people, and allowed to lie desolate.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, it would be a rare thing, that. It is thieving loons, on
+both sides of the border, that keep up the ill feeling; and the
+loss would not be great, seeing that there are plenty of waste
+tracts where the people might be bestowed, and pass their time more
+profitably, in raising crops and cattle, than in destroying or
+carrying off those of their neighbours. However, young sir, that is
+not like to be, in our time."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid not, Sanderson, and we must needs make the best we
+can of things, as they stand. I think that 'twould be well, if the
+English do come north again and capture Edinburgh, and ruin trade
+for years, to cross the seas to France, and take service
+there."</p>
+
+<p>"Scarce spoken like a peaceful trader," the landlord laughed;
+"but I doubt not you would make a good soldier, and that a sword
+would suit your hand to the full as well as a yard measure.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it makes not so much difference, to me. Men must eat and
+drink, and though my wine would be drunk up without payment, and I
+should have to run the risk of being killed on the walls, if the
+English came; I should know that, in a short time, men would come
+and go as before, and that they will drink good wine if they have
+money to pay for it, and in six months my trade would be as brisk
+as ever; but men seem to think that, this time, it will be the
+Scots who will invade England, for the English barons have had
+enough of wars in France, and will be slow in furnishing their
+quota when called on; and that we shall carry fire and sword
+through the northern counties."</p>
+
+<p>"That we may do, though Northumberland and Hotspur will
+doubtless have something to say to it. I fear it will be as it has
+been, many a time before. Our armies will march back with their
+plunder, the news of the damage done will inflame all England, and
+then a great army will march north. The nobles will hasten to make
+terms for themselves, and the harm and damage will fall upon quiet
+people, who had nought whatever to do with the invasion."</p>
+
+<p>"True enough, young sir, true enough, though it is a shame that
+it should be said. Had the cities a voice in the matter of peace
+and war, you may be right sure that we should hear no more of
+invasions and troubles, from this side of the Border. I say not
+that there would be peace, for the claims of the English kings to
+authority in Scotland, although we have not heard so much of them
+since Bannockburn, are but in abeyance; and the first time that
+there is really peace, between them and France, you may be sure
+that we shall hear of them again, and then the towns as well as the
+country would join, heartily, in repelling an invasion."</p>
+
+<p>"They never did so in the past time, Sanderson. They generally
+opened their gates at once, or if they closed them, it was because
+there was a strong garrison, under some knight or noble who, and
+not the townspeople, had the say in the matter. Now, methinks I
+will to bed, for I have had a long day's travel."</p>
+
+<p>The next day passed without any message from the earl, but on
+the following morning one of the retainers from the castle came in,
+with the message that the earl desired the presence of Mr.
+Micklethwaite.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald went up, at once. The earl was, as before, alone.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been thinking, Master Forster, that it would be safer,
+both for you and for me, were you to tarry here for a while. You
+came through safely, it is true, but you might not have such good
+fortune on your return; and even though I sent no written answer,
+it would be enough, were Percy's signet found upon you, to ensure
+your imprisonment, and perhaps death. At any rate, they would have
+the means of wringing from you the mission of which you were in
+charge; while I could send equally well a message by sea, as I did
+before."</p>
+
+<p>"I see that there might be some slight danger, my Lord Earl,"
+Oswald said quietly; "but I, as well as another, might take passage
+down by ship touching at Berwick, or other port."</p>
+
+<p>The earl's brow clouded.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a matter to be thought over," he said, moodily. "A ship
+might be captured, seeing that there are often French freebooting
+vessels on the coast. And what were your orders from Lord
+Percy?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I was to return, immediately I had conveyed his message to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I would gladly hasten your departure," the earl said, after a
+moment's pause, "but you see, great issues hang upon this affair.
+However, I will think the matter over again, and will see how it
+can be best managed."</p>
+
+<p>After leaving the castle, Oswald went to the convent where the
+monk was lodged, and asked for speech with Brother Roger. In a
+minute or two the latter came out.</p>
+
+<p>"Are we off, young master?" he asked. "In truth, it is as bad
+here as at Alnwick; and, after a taste of liberty, I am longing to
+be out again; and indeed, I have had some trouble in accounting for
+my stay here, instead of continuing my journey to see my aged
+father."</p>
+
+<p>"If it depended upon me, I would say that we would start
+forthwith; but what I have somewhat feared, all along, has come to
+pass. I was the bearer of a certain message of much importance,
+from Hotspur to the earl, and I fear that the latter will detain
+me. He thinks that I know more than I have said, which indeed is
+true, and likes not that one who is so entirely cognisant of his
+secret counsels, and intentions, should go free. He put it down to
+the fact that I might be captured, on my way back, and forced to
+confess the whole details of the mission with which I am charged.
+It is possible that this is so, but it is more likely that he
+dislikes that anyone should know secrets that concern his safety;
+and although he has not said as much, at present, I believe that it
+is his intention to hold me here as prisoner; though doubtless with
+due courtesy, as befits Percy's messenger and esquire; until
+affairs come to a head, which may not be for a year or two,
+yet."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there a guard over you, at present?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I know of, Roger, but it may be that the inn is
+watched. At any rate, he would try to overtake me, did I attempt to
+leave without his permission."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Master Oswald, I should say let us be off, at once."</p>
+
+<p>"But how, Roger? On foot we should be speedily overtaken, and if
+not watched at present, doubtless I shall be, after my interview
+with the earl this morning. Were I to try and buy horses, I might
+be arrested at once. However, I have been thinking that the best
+plan would be for you to go round to the port, and to bargain for a
+passage for us to Edinburgh. Then we would slip on board quietly,
+half an hour before she sailed.</p>
+
+<p>"Methinks it were as well that you did not go in your robes. I
+will purchase a dress suitable to a cattle drover, for you, and a
+similar one for myself. I will bring yours for you here, in an
+hour's time, if you will wait a hundred yards from the gate for me.
+Then you can go to some quiet spot and change your garments, and
+then go down to the port. I will be standing at the door of my inn,
+and as you pass say, without checking your pace, the hour at which
+a boat sails, today or tomorrow; and then do you be near the hotel,
+again, an hour before that time.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not speak to me as I come out, but keep a short distance
+behind me; and if you see that I am followed by anyone, you must do
+your best to rid me of him. You had better bring your present
+garments along with you. They may be useful."</p>
+
+<p>Roger assented joyously. The thought that, at any rate for a
+time, he was to get rid of his robes filled him with joy; and the
+possibility that there might be danger in the enterprise only added
+to his pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>Feeling the need for great care, Oswald walked for some little
+time before entering a shop, passing through several quiet streets;
+and, when assured that he was not followed, he went into the booth
+of a clothier.</p>
+
+<p>"I have occasion for two suits of clothes, such as would be worn
+by cattle drovers," he said. "I am about to travel and, having
+money about me, can best do so safely in such a garment. I want one
+suit to fit me, and another for a companion, who is a big stout
+man, a good deal above the ordinary height."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a wise precaution, your honour, for the roads are by no
+means safe, at present. I can fit you, with ease, and will pick out
+the largest clothes I have in stock, for your companion."</p>
+
+<p>The purchase was soon made. It consisted of a rough smock of
+blue cloth, reaching to the knees, and girded in by a strap at the
+waist; and breeches of the same material, reaching below the knees,
+with strips of gray cloth to be wound round and round the leg, from
+the knee to the ankle. In addition, Oswald bought two pairs of
+rough sandals, and two lowland bonnets. Each suit was done up, at
+his request, in a separate parcel; and then, retracing his steps,
+he joined Roger and handed his clothes to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go outside the gates and change my things," Roger said,
+"and then go down to the port. I will then come to your hotel, as
+you said. If no ship sails until tomorrow, I have only to put my
+robe on over these garments, and return to the convent. If there is
+one sailing this evening, I shall not go back there again; but will
+be on the lookout for you, half an hour before the boat leaves the
+port."</p>
+
+<p>"The nearer the time of sailing, the better, Roger; for if I am
+watched, and there is any trouble with the man who follows me, the
+sooner we are on board before any alarm is raised, the better. But
+I should hardly think a boat would start, in the evening."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, Master Oswald. I was down at the port, yesterday,
+and the tide was high at three o'clock; and methinks that a boat
+would put out an hour or two before low tide, so as to take the
+water with it as far as New Berwick, and there catch the flood
+flowing into the Firth. In that case, the boat would put out at
+six, or maybe seven o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>"I would that it had been two hours later, Roger. After dark, it
+were easy enough to silence a man without attracting much
+attention; but in broad daylight, it would not be so easily
+done."</p>
+
+<p>"Not if we went straight from the inn to the port, Master, but
+there is no need for you to take that route."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Roger. Indeed, it would be better not to do so,
+for were they to have an idea that we had escaped by water, the
+earl might send a fast boat after us. Therefore, when I come out I
+will turn off and go, by unfrequented streets and lanes, in the
+opposite direction. In that way you will be better able to see if I
+am followed, and may find some quiet place, where you can give a
+man a clout on the head that will rid us of him."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you come out, Master Oswald, in your present attire, or in
+your disguise?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will wear this cloak and headgear, and will put these
+leggings over the others, so that I shall have but to take them off
+and fling them aside, and to throw off my cloak and cap and put on
+this bonnet, all of which will not take a minute and can be done in
+a doorway or passage without attracting observation. I should be
+afraid to go out, in the drover's attire. The servants at the inn
+know me, now; and moreover, a man of such condition would not think
+of going to the Falcon. Were I to be noticed, coming out, it might
+be thought that I had entered it for some evil purpose."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be on hand, master. I had thought of not returning to
+the monastery, but I must do so, for I have left my staff there,
+and it will be as suitable for a drover as a monk. I shall go to
+the harbour, as soon as I have seen you; and if it is this evening
+a boat sails, I shall go back at once and bid them farewell, saying
+that a ship is sailing for Leith, and that I have taken passage in
+her."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald returned to the inn and, half an hour later, went down to
+the doorway, where he stood as if idly watching the flow of
+traffic. A quarter of an hour later, he saw Roger approaching. He
+looked the character that he had assumed, to the life. He had
+dirtied his hands and face, and smudged his smock with stains of
+mud. He strolled along, with a free step and head erect. He did not
+look at Oswald as he passed, but said, "Boat sails at seven,
+tonight."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald stood for some time longer. A short distance down the
+street, he observed two of the earl's retainers. They were
+standing, apparently looking at the goods in a mercer's window.
+After a time, they moved on a short distance, passed the inn, and
+stopped again to look in another shop, twenty or thirty yards
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Then Oswald left the door. The landlord was standing in the
+passage, and beckoned to him to enter his private room.</p>
+
+<p>"Young sir," he said, "I know not whether you have done anything
+that has displeased the earl, nor is it any business of mine; but
+you are a fair-spoken young gentlemen, and I would not that any ill
+came to you. I like not to meddle in the earl's affairs, for he
+would think nothing of ordering my house to be burnt over my head.
+However, I may warn you that he is making inquiries about you. One
+of his retainers has been here, two hours ago, with a confidential
+message from the earl, to inquire whether you had said anything
+about leaving, and to bid me send a message to him, secretly,
+should you do so."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you warmly, my good host," Oswald replied. "I have had
+no quarrel with the earl, but we have differed as to the value of
+the goods he requires. He would fain have them at last year's
+prices; but wool has gone up, and we could not sell them, save at a
+loss. It may be that he thinks I shall go away, and that if he
+finds I am about to do so he will send for me, and agree to my
+terms, which indeed are so low that they leave but little profit.
+However, it were well that you should let me know how much I owe
+you, and I will pay that, at once. Do not make up the account, but
+tell me roundly there or thereabouts; and then, should I leave
+suddenly, you can say truly that I had not asked for my bill, and
+that you were altogether ignorant of my intention of leaving."</p>
+
+<p>"There can be no occasion for that," the host said. "You can pay
+me the next time you come, should you decide to leave
+suddenly."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, I would rather settle obligations, for if I do not do
+business with the earl, it may be some time before I return."</p>
+
+<p>The landlord made rapid calculations, and named a sum, which
+Oswald at once handed to him, with warm thanks for the warning he
+had given him.</p>
+
+<p>"I may stay here three or four days longer," he said meaningly,
+"as the earl may, at the last moment, come to an agreement as to
+the price of the goods. I should be sorry to return to my uncle
+without getting an order, for the earl has, for years, been one of
+our best customers."</p>
+
+<p>The landlord nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I understand," he said. "It would be as well, perhaps, that you
+should say as much in the hearing of one of the drawers; so that,
+if questioned, I shall have a witness who can bear me out."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch7">Chapter 7</a>: Back To Hotspur.</h2>
+
+<p>It was still broad daylight when, at half-past six, Oswald left
+the inn and sauntered, at a leisurely pace, down the street. His
+eye at once fell on Roger's tall figure, and he also saw two
+retainers of the earl, loitering about. They were not the same men
+he had seen in the morning, but doubtless had relieved those on
+watch.</p>
+
+<p>He took the first turning off the main street and, after passing
+through several lanes, found himself at the foot of the town wall.
+A narrow lane ran between it and a row of small houses. No one was
+about, and he thought that Roger would take advantage of the
+loneliness of the spot, to endeavour to rid him of his followers,
+whose footsteps he could hear some distance behind him. Presently,
+he glanced carelessly round. The men were some thirty or forty
+yards behind him; and coming up with them, at a rapid step, was
+Roger. A minute later, he heard a voice raised in anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going, fellow? There is plenty of room to pass,
+without pushing between us. You want teaching manners."</p>
+
+<p>Roger gave a loud laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is going to teach me?" he said.</p>
+
+<a id="PicD" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/d.jpg" alt=
+"Who is going to teach me?"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>"I will!" one of the men said, angrily placing his hand upon his
+sword hilt.</p>
+
+<p>As he did so, he was levelled to the ground by a tremendous blow
+from Roger's staff. With a shout, the other soldier drew his sword;
+but, before he could guard himself, the staff again descended, and
+he fell senseless beside his comrade.</p>
+
+<p>Roger at once knelt beside them, tore off strips of their
+garments and, rolling them up, pressed them into their mouths; and,
+with string which he had brought for the purpose, tied them in
+their place. Then, taking out a few pieces of cord he tied their
+hands behind them, and their ankles together; dragged them into a
+dark entry, and left them lying there.</p>
+
+<p>The whole transaction had occupied but two or three minutes, and
+had attracted no attention, whatever. The soldiers' shout might
+have been heard; but there was no clashing of weapons, and a shout
+was too unimportant a matter for anyone within hearing to take any
+trouble about.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald, seeing that Roger needed no assistance, had occupied
+himself with stripping off the outer pair of leggings; and had made
+these, with his cloak and cap, into a bundle; and, pressing the
+drover's cap down over his eyes, was ready by the time Roger came
+up to him.</p>
+
+<p>"It was splendidly managed, Roger."</p>
+
+<p>"It did well enough," the other said, carelessly. "It may be an
+hour before anyone stumbles over them; and, long before that, we
+shall be at sea."</p>
+
+<p>They made their way back through quiet lanes until near the
+port, and then boldly went down to the side of a small craft.</p>
+
+<p>"You are just in time, my men," the skipper said. "In another
+five minutes, we should be throwing off the ropes and hoisting
+sails. Now that you have come, we shall do so, at once. The tide is
+just right for us, and we have nothing further to stop for."</p>
+
+<p>The boat was a large fishing smack, and had put into Dunbar but
+that afternoon, with the intention of disposing of the catch. Two
+others had, however, come in still earlier. The market being
+glutted, the skipper had determined to take his catch, which was a
+heavy one, on to Leith; and had agreed, for a very small sum, to
+carry the two drovers to that port.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald and Roger aided in getting up the sails, and in a few
+minutes the smack was at sea. The wind was from the southwest, and
+the boat ran rapidly up the coast.</p>
+
+<p>"The earl will be in a nice way, when he finds that you have
+gone," Roger said, as he stood in the stern to watch the rapidly
+receding towers of Dunbar. "There will be a hot hue and cry for
+you. The earl is not accustomed to be thwarted, and they say that
+he is a mighty hot-tempered man. I have no doubt that, as soon as
+his fellows bring him word of what has happened to them, and he
+finds that you have quitted the inn, he will send parties of horse
+out to scour the roads to Berwick and Haddington; and to search the
+country, far and near."</p>
+
+<p>"He is welcome to do that," Oswald said. "My fear is that he
+will send down to the port, to inquire if any craft put out about
+the hour at which his men were attacked. But even if he does so,
+there is no great chance of our being overtaken. We are travelling
+fast, and in another hour it will be dark; and long before daybreak
+we shall reach Leith, having both wind and tide in our favour, all
+the way."</p>
+
+<p>They kept an anxious watch, as long as there was light enough
+for them to make out if a vessel left Dunbar. Both fancied that
+they could see a sail, just as twilight was falling, but neither
+could be sure that it was not the effect of imagination. They were
+already ten miles away, and as the tide had now begun to make along
+the shore, it was certain that for some time, at least, a ship,
+however fast she might be, would gain but little upon them, until
+she had fairly entered the Firth. There would be no moon and, even
+should she overtake them, she might well pass them in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>When they lay down, they agreed that they would keep awake in
+turns; and that, if they made out a ship apparently pursuing them,
+they would offer the skipper the full value for his boat, and
+betake themselves to it, and row for shore.</p>
+
+<p>"The greatest danger," Roger said, "would be of their passing
+us, unseen; and then lying-to near the entrance of the port, and
+overhauling us as we came in."</p>
+
+<p>"That is a danger that we cannot guard against. Can you swim,
+Roger?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is years since I have done so," the monk replied, "but I
+used to do so, in the old days."</p>
+
+<p>"There is an empty cask here, by my side," Oswald went on. "If
+we are challenged, the best plan would be to lower it down,
+quietly, into the water; and to hold on by it. The boat would
+certainly go some distance, before she had lost her way and brought
+up; and we should be out of sight of both ships, before they came
+together."</p>
+
+<p>"That is a good idea. If we hear a hail, I will at once cut a
+good length of rope, and twist it round a barrel for us to hold on
+by. But I don't think there is any chance of our being
+overhauled."</p>
+
+<p>"I agree with you in that respect; still, it is just as well to
+have our plans prepared, in case it should happen."</p>
+
+<p>They kept a vigilant watch through the night, without catching
+sight of any craft proceeding in the same direction as
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>It was still dark when the helmsman hailed the skipper: "I see
+the lights of Leith ahead," and later they passed the beacon fire
+that marked the entrance to the port. Five minutes later Oswald and
+his companion, after paying the sum agreed on, stepped on
+shore.</p>
+
+<p>"That danger is over. I did not think that there was any real
+cause for fear. I should like to see the earl, as his bands of
+horsemen ride in, today, with the news that they can hear nothing
+of us."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to hit him just such a clout, with my staff, as I
+gave his two retainers," Roger said. "Earl as he is, it was
+scandalous, and contrary to all usages, to arrest a messenger;
+especially when that messenger is an esquire of one of equal rank
+to himself, and his message, as I suppose, a friendly one."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't so much blame him. He had no means of judging my
+discretion; and the consequences, to him and others, had I fallen
+into the hands of Douglas, or those of a marauding leader, might
+have been serious, indeed. I doubt not that, had I been content to
+stay with him, he would have treated me with all honour. I might
+even have done so, and have got him to send another messenger to
+Percy; but the latter bade me to return at once, and moreover said
+that he had another mission, as soon as I had carried the present
+one to a successful termination."</p>
+
+<p>"And have you done so, Master Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I think so, Roger. I was to ascertain the earl's real
+intentions regarding certain matters, and I think that he means
+honestly to adhere to an offer he made. The very fear that he has
+shown, lest his intentions should be betrayed, seems to prove that
+he is most anxious that naught should occur to interfere with his
+plans."</p>
+
+<p>"The Earls of Dunbar have ever been a treacherous race," Roger
+said earnestly, "and ready to betray their own countrymen, in order
+to curry favour with England, and continue in possession of their
+estates. However, as we have benefited from it, we need not
+grumble, if the Scots are contented.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Master Oswald, what are we to do next?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should say that we had better find a corner to lie down,
+until daybreak. I don't think that either of us have slept. Then we
+will go into a tavern and breakfast, and afterwards go on to
+Edinburgh. I should like to see the town and castle, and the chance
+may never come again to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, tomorrow morning, we will start in earnest. We shall have
+plenty of opportunities to talk over our plans, so let us lose no
+time, now, in looking for a bed."</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, they soon came upon some fishing nets, carelessly
+piled under the lee of a stack of timber. Here they threw
+themselves down, and were soon fast asleep.</p>
+
+<p>When they woke, the sun was well up. Fishermen were preparing to
+get up sail; and those who had, like themselves, come in during the
+night, were commencing to unload their cargoes.</p>
+
+<p>"Look there!" Oswald exclaimed, as he pointed to a vessel, from
+whose masthead floated a flag with the arms of the Earl of March.
+"She is just entering the port. They did chase us after all, you
+see, but they did not gain on our fishing boat."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, methinks that we had better be off, at once," Roger said.
+"They will soon learn which boat has come from Dunbar, and find out
+from the men what were the disguises worn by us. So we had best
+lose no time in getting out of Leith."</p>
+
+<p>"They would never dare to seize us, here," Oswald said.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know that. If they have strict orders to bring us back,
+they would not feel much hesitation in seizing us, wherever they
+found us; knowing well enough that the burghers of Leith would not
+concern themselves greatly about the capture of two drovers, who
+would probably be charged with all sorts of crime. Were it one of
+their own citizens, it would be different; but it is scarce likely
+that the burghers would care to quarrel, with a powerful noble, for
+the sake of two strangers of low degree. The gates will be open
+before this, and we shall be safer in Edinburgh than we are
+here."</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, they postponed their breakfast and, passing through
+the town without a pause, issued out by the south gate, and walked
+briskly to Edinburgh. As soon as they arrived, they found a small
+tavern, and partook of a hearty meal. Listening while they ate to
+the conversation going on around them, they found that the young
+Duke of Rothesay was, at present, staying at the castle.</p>
+
+<p>"Men say that the disputes between him and his uncle, the Duke
+of Albany, have of late grown hotter."</p>
+
+<p>"That might well be," another said. "Rothesay is a man, now. He
+has shown himself a brave soldier, and it is not likely that he
+would support, with patience, the haughtiness and overbearing
+manner of Albany. It was an evil day for Scotland when our good
+king, who was then but prince, lamed himself for life; and so was
+forced, on his accession, to leave the conduct of affairs to
+Albany, then Earl of Fife. The king, as all men know, is just and
+good, and has at heart the welfare of his subjects; but his
+accident has rendered him unfit to take part in public affairs, and
+he loves peace and quiet as much as Albany loves intrigues, and
+dark and devious ways. 'Tis a sore pity that the king cannot make
+up his mind to throw himself into the arms of Douglas, and call
+upon the nobility to join in expelling Albany from his councils;
+and to give the charge of affairs into the hands of Rothesay, or
+even to bestow upon him the kingly dignity, while he himself
+retires to the peaceful life he loves."</p>
+
+<p>"That would have been better done," the other said, "before the
+young duke married; for many of the nobles, who would have
+otherwise supported him, would hold aloof, seeing that the
+accession of Rothesay would be but handing over the real power of
+the state from Albany to Douglas. Men say that the feud between
+March and Douglas grows hotter and hotter, and that the boldness
+with which March upbraided the king, for the breaking off by
+Rothesay of his marriage with Elizabeth of Dunbar, has so angered
+him, Rothesay, and Albany, who had aided in bringing about the
+match with Elizabeth Douglas, that 'tis like that March will, ere
+long, be arraigned for his conduct, and the threats that he uttered
+in his passion."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, gossips, it matters little to us," an elderly man said.
+"Whether king or prince or duke is master, we have to pay; and
+assuredly, were Rothesay king, our taxes would not abate; seeing
+that he is extravagant and reckless, though I say not that he has
+not many good qualities. But these benefit, in no way, men like
+ourselves; while the taxation to support extravagance touches us
+all."</p>
+
+<p>There was a murmur of assent from the little group who were
+talking, who struck Oswald as being farmers, who had come in from
+the country to sell cattle to the butchers of the town. They were
+interrupted in their talk by the landlord, who came across to
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"My good friends," he said, "I pray you talk not so loudly
+concerning princes and nobles. It is true that we are a royal city,
+and that the burghers of Edinburgh have their rights and their
+liberties; nevertheless, it were dangerous to talk loud concerning
+nobles. We are quiet people all, and none here wear the cognizance
+of Douglas or Albany. Still, it would do me much harm, were it
+reported that there had been talk here concerning such powerful
+nobles; and though the Douglas might care little what was said of
+him, methinks that there are others--I name no names--who would
+spare neither great nor small who incurred their resentment."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew not that we were talking loudly, John Ker; and methinks
+that none, save the two men at the near table, have heard our
+words; and they look honest fellows enough. Still, what you say is
+right, and while we may talk of these things by our firesides, 'tis
+best to keep a silent tongue, while abroad."</p>
+
+<p>"You need not disquiet yourself about us," Roger broke in. "We
+have no communion with lords or princes; and, so that we can drive
+our herds safely down into Cumberland, we care not whether one
+noble or another has the king's ear. We have but just returned,
+from England."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, man, I may put you in the way of getting a job, if you
+want one," the eldest of the party said. "I myself have a small
+farm, near Lavingston, and but breed cattle for the Edinburgh
+market; but I have a brother, at Lanark, who buys cattle up in the
+north; and, when there is peace between the countries, sends the
+droves down to Carlisle, and makes a good profit on their sales. I
+saw him but two hours ago, and he told me that he was daily
+expecting a lot of cattle from the north; and that he intended to
+send them on, without delay, to Carlisle. If you say to him that
+you have seen me, and that I recommended you to call on him, and
+see if he wanted any drovers to aid in taking them down; I doubt
+not he will take you on, unless he has already engaged men."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you for the offer," Roger said, "but our home lies near
+Roxburgh, and we intend to abide there for a time; for the roads
+are by no means safe, at present. Douglas is thinking more of his
+quarrel with Dunbar than of keeping down border freebooters. We
+escaped them this time; but we heard of their taking heavy toll
+from some herds that followed us, and of their killing two or three
+drovers who offered objection; so we have determined to abide at
+home, for a time, to see how matters go."</p>
+
+<p>After taking a brief view of the town they started, in the
+afternoon, to walk to Dalkeith, where they slept; and, leaving
+there at daybreak, crossed a lofty range of hills, and came down
+into Lauderdale. They had no fear of any interruption such as they
+had experienced before--as, had Douglas news of negotiations going
+on between March and England, he would not think it necessary to
+watch the road between Edinburgh and the border--and late in the
+evening they arrived at Ancrum, on the Teviot, having done fully
+fifty miles, since starting.</p>
+
+<p>Ten miles in the morning took them to Roxburgh. Here they put up
+at a small tavern, and Oswald donned the servitor's suit that he
+had brought with him from Dunbar; while Roger, to his great
+disgust, resumed his monk's gown, which he put on over the drover's
+suit.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald then went to the governor's. His former acquaintance
+happened to be at the door, and endeavoured to atone for his former
+rudeness, by at once ushering him to the governor's room.</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome back, Master Forster!" the latter said. "Your mission,
+whatever it was, is speedily terminated. From what you said, I had
+not looked for you for another fortnight."</p>
+
+<p>"If I had not come when I did," Oswald said, "my absence might
+have been prolonged, for months. However, all has gone well, and I
+purpose starting at once for Alnwick, and would fain reach Wooler
+by nightfall."</p>
+
+<p>"That you can do, easily enough. I will order the horses to be
+saddled, at once."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you, Sir Philip. I will mount here in the courtyard. I
+care not, now, what notice may be taken of me; seeing that there is
+but some ten miles to be ridden, to the frontier."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor, I warrant me, will you meet with interference on the
+road," the knight said. "I have not heard of anyone being stopped
+for toll, for the past year, between this and the border."</p>
+
+<p>A quarter of an hour later they left Roxburgh; and, travelling
+at an easy pace, arrived at Wooler before sunset; and on the
+following evening entered Alnwick. They could have reached it
+earlier, but Oswald thought it as well not to enter the castle
+until after dark, as he did not wish to be noticed in his present
+attire.</p>
+
+<p>Fastening the horses to hooks in the courtyard, Oswald ran up to
+his apartment, which was next to that of his uncle.</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome back, Oswald!" the latter said, as he opened his door
+on hearing his footsteps. "I had thought that you would be longer
+away."</p>
+
+<p>"I am back sooner than I expected, Uncle. Will you order supper
+to be brought up here, for Roger and myself? We are both hard set;
+though, indeed, we had a meal of bread and cheese, at noon, at a
+wayside tavern."</p>
+
+<p>"Brother Roger has behaved well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Excellently. He has cracked but two sconces since we left, and
+these were on my behalf. He will sleep on some rushes in my room,
+tonight. He hates the thought of returning to the monastery, and
+has begged me, most earnestly, to ask Percy to continue him in his
+employment."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Oswald had donned his ordinary attire, he went to
+Lord Percy's quarters.</p>
+
+<p>"You are back sooner than I had expected, Oswald," Hotspur said,
+as he entered. "Nothing has gone wrong, I hope?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, my lord, but I was forced to leave Dunbar, after but
+three days' stay there; for the earl was so fearful that I might be
+detected, on my way back, that he would have retained me with him
+until the time for action came; sending down another messenger, by
+sea, to you. As your orders were to return with all speed, I gave
+him the slip, and made my way back as quickly as possible."</p>
+
+<p>"And March?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think that the earl is in earnest in his professions, my
+lord; and that you can rely upon him for such aid as he can render.
+But, from what I heard in Edinburgh--"</p>
+
+<p>"In Edinburgh!" Hotspur said, in surprise; "what took you
+there?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you, my lord; but the point is that men said
+openly, there, that there was a report that he would be attainted,
+and deprived of his land, for treasonable words spoken by him to
+the king, the Duke of Albany, and the Duke of Rothesay. If this is
+so, he will have to fly; for assuredly he has, at present, no force
+gathered that could resist those of the king and Douglas."</p>
+
+<p>"Give me an account of what has happened," Hotspur said,
+frowning. "I feared that March's impetuous temper would lead him
+into trouble, before we were in a position to march to his
+assistance; and I heard rumours of a stormy scene between him and
+Rothesay, when he learned that he had been fooled; but I knew not
+that the king, himself, was present."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald related the story of his journey, and the interruption on
+the moor; and the reports, that he had afterwards heard, of the
+stoppage of all travellers coming from the south, by the same
+band.</p>
+
+<p>"The leader was evidently above the rank of an ordinary
+marauder, and his followers obeyed him as men-at-arms would obey an
+officer; and it seemed to me, my lord, that Douglas must have heard
+a vague report that the earl was in communication with England; and
+sought to intercept some messenger, on whom he might find a letter,
+or from whom he could extract proofs of the earl's treachery."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis like enough," Hotspur said. "When a man is so rash as to
+upbraid the king, and still more Albany, he must needs fall under
+suspicion. Now, go on with your story."</p>
+
+<p>When Oswald had brought his narration to an end, Percy said:</p>
+
+<p>"You have done very well, Oswald, and have deserved the
+confidence that I placed in you. You have shown much
+circumspection, and you did well in escaping from Dunbar, as you
+did. The mad monk, too, seems to have behaved well. I doubted your
+wisdom in taking him, but he has certainly proved a useful
+fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"I would petition, my lord, that you should continue him in your
+service; and that, should you employ me upon another mission, you
+will again allow me to take him with me. He is a shrewd fellow, as
+well as a stout one, and I could wish for no better companion;
+though I own that, since he put on his gown again at Roxburgh, and
+rode hither, his spirits have greatly failed him."</p>
+
+<p>"I will arrange that with the abbot," Hotspur said; "but tell
+him that, while he is here, he must continue to wear his robe. His
+face is too well known for him to pass as a man-at-arms, without
+being recognized by half the garrison. The Lord Abbot would well
+object to one of his monks turning into a swaggering man-at-arms,
+at his very door.</p>
+
+<p>"At any rate, I shall tell the abbot that, if he will consent
+quietly to the monk's unfrocking himself, until he can obtain for
+him release from his vows; I will scud him away to one of the other
+castles, whence I can fetch him, if you need him to accompany you
+on any errand, and where he can form part of the regular garrison.
+But the knave must be informed that it were best that he say nought
+about his former profession, and that he comport himself as quietly
+as is in his nature.</p>
+
+<p>"I will give him a small command, as soon as may be; for
+although a very bad monk, he has proved himself to be a good
+soldier."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you greatly, my lord," Oswald said; "and will talk
+seriously to the monk, who will be delighted when he hears that the
+abbot will take steps to allow him to lay aside his gown."</p>
+
+<p>Roger was, indeed, delighted when he heard the news; and still
+more so when, three days later, Oswald informed him that Hotspur
+had obtained, from the abbot, what was practically a release from
+his vows. The good abbot said that he felt that harm, rather than
+good, would ensue from keeping the monk a member of the
+monastery.</p>
+
+<p>"He infects the lay brothers, with his talk," he said. "He is a
+good instructor in arms, but he teaches not as one who feels that
+it is a dire necessity to carry arms, but as one who delights in
+it. Moreover, he causes scandals by his drinking bouts, and does
+not add to the harmony of the place. At a time like this, when the
+Scots may, at any moment, fall across the border, such a fellow may
+do good service to his country; and it is surely better that a man
+should be a good soldier, than that he should be a bad monk.
+Therefore I will let him go, my lord; but keep him away from here.
+It would be a grave scandal, were he to be brawling in the town
+where he is known. Therefore, I pray you, take him elsewhere. I
+have striven long to make him a worthy member of his order, but I
+feel that it is beyond me; and it would be best, therefore, that he
+should go his own way. He may come to be a worthy soldier, and so
+justify me in allowing him to unfrock himself.</p>
+
+<p>"As he is abiding in your castle, I pray you bid him present
+himself here, tomorrow. I would fain speak to him, and give him
+such advice, concerning his future conduct, as may be of benefit to
+him."</p>
+
+<p>When Roger returned from the monastery, the next day, he wore a
+much more serious face than usual.</p>
+
+<p>"The abbot has done me more good, by his talk this morning," he
+said to Oswald, "than by all the lectures and penances he has ever
+imposed on me. In truth, he is a good man, and I had half a mind to
+say that I would return to the convent, and do my best to comport
+myself mildly and becomingly.</p>
+
+<p>"But I felt that it would not do, Oswald. The thing is too
+strong for me and, however I might strive, I know that when the
+temptation came I should break out again; and so, I held my
+peace."</p>
+
+<p>"What did he say to you, Roger?"</p>
+
+<p>"He said many things, but the gist of it was that there were as
+good men outside the walls of a monastery as there were within it,
+and that a soldier has as many opportunities--indeed many more
+opportunities--of showing himself a good man as a monk has. In
+battle, he said, a soldier must act as such, and fight stoutly
+against the enemy, and take life as well as risk his own; but after
+the fight is over he should show himself merciful, and if he cannot
+follow out the precept to love his enemies, he should at least be
+compassionate and kind to them. But above all, he should never
+oppress the helpless, should comport himself honourably and kindly
+to women and children, and, if necessary, draw sword in their
+defence against those who would ill use them. And, though the
+spoils of war were honourable and necessary, when captured in fair
+fight, yet the oppression and robbery of the poor were deadly
+crimes.</p>
+
+<p>"'Comport yourself always, Roger, as if, though a soldier in
+arms, you were still a monk at heart. You are brave and strong, and
+may rise to some honour; but, whether or no, you may bear yourself
+as if you were of gentle blood, and wore knightly spurs. Not all
+who are so are honourable and merciful, as they have vowed to be.
+Remember, I shall hear of you from time to time, through my Lord
+Percy; and that it will gladden me to have a good account of you,
+and to feel that I have not done wrong in letting you go forth,
+from this house of rest, to take part in the turmoil and strife of
+the world.'</p>
+
+<p>"He said more than this, but this is the pith of it. I knelt
+down, and swore that I would strive, to the utmost in my power, to
+do as he bade me; and he put his hands on my head, and bade me go
+in peace; and I tell you, I mean to prove to him that his words
+have not been in vain."</p>
+
+<p>Two days later, Oswald started with Roger, and rode to Warkworth
+Castle, some ten miles away; bearing an order to the governor to
+add Roger to the strength of the garrison, telling him that he had
+shown himself to be a brave soldier, and a skilful one, and that he
+could place confidence in him, and appoint him to any sub-command
+that might become vacant.</p>
+
+<p>On the way, they entered a wood. Here Roger took off his
+monastic garb, and clad himself in armour such as was worn by the
+garrison of Alnwick. The monk's clothes were made up into a bundle,
+and left in the wood, Oswald saying:</p>
+
+<p>"I will carry them back with me, on my return, Roger. It may be
+that they may come in useful, yet, if you and I travel together
+again in the Percys' service."</p>
+
+<p>A month passed, and then the Earl of March came, by sea, to
+Alnwick. Douglas and the regent had marched against him with an
+overwhelming force; and, as they were both personal enemies, he
+knew that his fate would be sealed if he fell into their hands, and
+he had therefore been driven to declare himself, openly, as a
+vassal of the English king.</p>
+
+<p>On the day after his arrival he happened to be in Hotspur's
+room, when Oswald entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! ah!" he said, "This is your messenger, Percy.</p>
+
+<p>"You left me with scant notice, sir."</p>
+
+<p>And he smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I was forced to do so, my lord earl; for, in truth, I was not
+sure that you would not prevent me from following my lord's orders,
+to return after seeing you."</p>
+
+<p>"You were right. In the first place, I was not sure that you
+were a true messenger; and in the second place, I feared that you
+might, on return, fall into the hands of the Douglases; who would
+speedily find means to wring from you an account of your mission.
+Therefore, I thought that it were best that you should tarry a
+while with me, at Dunbar.</p>
+
+<p>"The young fellow has a good head, Lord Percy, and is as hard to
+hold as a wildcat. I put the matter of watching him into the hands
+of two or three of my men, whose wits I have tried more than once,
+and know them to be among the most trustworthy of my followers.
+This lad, however, outwitted them. How, they have never been able
+to explain; but my fellows were found, trussed up like fowls for
+roasting, in an alley into which they had been thrown; having, as
+they declared, been knocked down by a giant fellow, who sprung from
+they knew not where, just as they were about to lay hands upon your
+messenger. After they had vanished, none had seen him pass the
+walls, and we judged that he must have started in a craft that
+sailed up the Forth. Fearing that, if they landed, he might
+speedily fall into the hands of Douglas, I sent a vessel in chase;
+but they missed him, and indeed, from that time to this I knew not,
+save by your letter to me, whether he had reached here safely."</p>
+
+<p>After a short stay, the Earl of March was about to return to
+Dunbar; when he heard that the king, himself, was coming north with
+an army for the invasion of Scotland, and would then confer with
+him, and consider the terms on which he proposed to transfer his
+allegiance to him. A month later the king arrived at Alnwick, and
+there George Dunbar, Earl of March, entered into an agreement with
+him; in which he renounced all fealty to the King of Scotland, in
+consideration for which he was granted an estate in Lincolnshire,
+and other revenues. It was also agreed that the subjects of the
+King of England should support the earl, in time of necessity; and
+should be supported by him, and received into his fortresses.</p>
+
+<p>He was not, now, in a position to render any very efficient aid
+to the king; for Robert Maitland, his nephew, to whom he had
+committed the castle of Dunbar, had been summoned by Douglas, who
+had marched there with a strong force, by order of the king, and
+had surrendered the stronghold to him. However, he brought Dunbar's
+wife and family, and a considerable force of his retainers, safely
+across the border.</p>
+
+<p>He and Percy, together, then made a raid into the Douglas
+territory; and penetrated as far as Haddington, and collected much
+spoil from the country round. Douglas, however, came suddenly upon
+them in great force, and they were obliged to retreat hastily
+across the frontier again, abandoning their baggage and booty.</p>
+
+<p>The king's invasion was no more satisfactory. The Earl of March
+was unable to place Dunbar in his hands; and, as the Scots declined
+battle in the open, he laid siege to Edinburgh, but without
+success. Dunbar being closed to him, he was unable to obtain
+provisions, and was forced to fall back to England, having
+accomplished nothing.</p>
+
+<p>During his invasion, he had shown much more leniency than had
+been the custom with his predecessors. He had taken what was
+necessary to support the army, but had abstained from wasting the
+country, destroying villages and towns, and slaughtering the
+country people; and, so far from embittering the animosity between
+the two nations, he had produced a better state of feeling; and a
+truce was, in consequence, concluded for a year, at Kelso, by
+special commissioners from both kings, on the 21st of December,
+1400.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch8">Chapter 8</a>: Ludlow Castle.</h2>
+
+<p>Oswald Forster had not been present when, in June, 1400, the
+king arrived at Alnwick. A few days after the coming of the Earl of
+March, Hotspur received a letter from Sir Edmund Mortimer, the
+brother of his wife; asking him to send a body of men-at-arms,
+under an experienced captain who could aid him to drill
+newly-raised levies; for that one Owen Glendower had taken up arms
+against the Lord Grey de Ruthyn, and that turbulent men were
+flocking to his standard, and it was feared that serious trouble
+might ensue. Percy was in a position to send but few men, for with
+war with the Scotch imminent, he could not weaken himself by
+sending off a large force. However, he sent for Alwyn Forster.</p>
+
+<p>"I need twenty picked men, for the service of Sir Edmund
+Mortimer, Alwyn. I would send more, were it not for the position of
+affairs here. What say you to taking the command of them?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would gladly do so, my lord, if it be that there is a chance
+of something more lively than drilling hinds, and turning them into
+men-at-arms, which has been my business for years now, without a
+chance of striking a blow in earnest."</p>
+
+<p>"I think that there will be a certainty of fighting, Alwyn. The
+Welshmen are growing troublesome again, and Sir Edmund thinks that
+there may be tough work, on the Welsh marches, and has written to
+me for aid.</p>
+
+<p>"With the king coming hither, there is a chance that the Earl of
+March, and myself, will open the war by harrying the Douglas's
+lands. I can spare no great force, but even twenty tried
+men-at-arms would, no doubt, be welcome. As the king is going to
+march into Scotland, there is no fear that there will be any
+serious invasion by the Scots, and therefore you can be spared for
+a while. I think not that any of my knights would care to go in
+command of so small an array, but I thought that you might like to
+take it."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be right glad to do so, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall send your nephew with you. He is a shrewd and gallant
+young fellow, and I know he would far rather be taking part in
+active service, against the Welsh, than spending his time in
+idleness, here. He has been too long used to a life on horseback to
+rest contented to be cooped up in a castle. Besides, there will be
+a good opportunity of distinguishing himself, and of learning
+something of a warfare even wilder, and more savage, than that in
+these northern marches."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like much to have him with me, my lord. Methinks that
+he has the making of a right good knight; and, young as he is, I am
+sure that his head is better than mine, and I should not be too
+proud to take counsel of him, if needs be."</p>
+
+<p>"That is settled then, Alwyn. Choose your men, and set off
+tomorrow morning. Ralph Peyton, your lieutenant, shall take the
+command of the garrison until you return."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was delighted when his uncle told him of the mission with
+which he was charged, and that he himself was to accompany him.</p>
+
+<p>"You are to have the choice of the men-at-arms, Uncle?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Oswald. I know what you are going to say. You would like
+to have that mad monk of yours, as one of them."</p>
+
+<p>"That should I, Uncle. You have no stouter man-at-arms in all
+your band, and he has proved that he can be discreet when he
+chooses, and did me good service in my last expedition."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, lad, we will take him. I will send one of the men
+over, at once, for him to join us on the road tomorrow. I shall
+choose young and active fellows, of whom we have plenty. I have
+never fought against the Welsh; but they are light footed, and
+agile, and their country is full of hills and swamps. The older men
+would do as good service here, were the castle besieged in our
+absence; of which, however, there is but slight chance; but for
+work against the Welsh, they would be of little use."</p>
+
+<p>Hotspur himself spoke to Oswald, that evening.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is a missive to give to Sir Edmund Mortimer. I have
+commended you to him, telling him that, though young, there is not
+one of my squires in whom I could more implicitly trust; and that
+you had carried out a delicate mission for me, with rare discretion
+and courage. Your uncle, as an old retainer, and a good fighter,
+and the captain of my garrison, goes in command of the men-at-arms,
+and in regular fighting one could need no better officer; but in
+such warfare as that against the Welsh is like to be, yours will be
+the better head to plan, and as my squire you will represent me. I
+have specially commended you to him, as one always to be depended
+upon."</p>
+
+<p>"I am greatly beholden to your lordship," Oswald said, "and will
+try to justify the commendations that you have given me."</p>
+
+<p>At daybreak on the following morning, the little party rode out
+from the castle. Oswald with his uncle rode in front; the former in
+the highest spirits, while the sturdy old soldier was himself
+scarce less pleased, at this change from the monotony of life in
+garrison.</p>
+
+<p>"Years seem to have fallen off my shoulders, lad," he said, "and
+I feel as young as I did when I fought at Otterburn."</p>
+
+<p>"That was a bad business, Uncle; and I trust that no such
+misfortune as that will befall us, this time."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope not, indeed, Oswald. It was a sore fight, and we are
+scarce likely to have a pitched battle with these Welsh carls. They
+fight not much in our fashion, as I have heard; but dash down from
+their hills, and carry fire and sword through a district, and are
+off again before a force can be gathered to strike a blow. Then
+there are marches to and fro among their hills, but it is like
+chasing a will-o'-the-wisp; and like enough, just when you think
+you have got them cooped up, and prepare to strike a heavy blow,
+they are a hundred miles away, plundering and ravaging on our side
+of the frontier. They are half-wild men, short in stature, and no
+match for us when it comes to hand-to-hand fighting; but broad in
+the shoulder, tireless, and active as our shaggy ponies, and
+well-nigh as untamable. 'Tis fighting in which there is little
+glory, and many hard knocks to be obtained; but it is a good school
+for war. It teaches a man to be ever watchful and on his guard,
+prepared to meet sudden attacks, patient under difficulties; and,
+what is harder, to be able to go without eating or drinking for a
+long time, for they say that you might as well expect to find corn
+and ale on the crest of the Grampians, as you would on the Welsh
+hills."</p>
+
+<p>"The prospect doesn't look very pleasant, Uncle," Oswald
+laughed. "However, their hills can scarcely be more barren than
+ours, nor can they be quicker on the stroke than the border
+raiders; and for such work, we of the northern marches have proved
+far more useful than the beefy men of the south."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt, no doubt; and maybe that, for that reason, Sir Edmund
+prayed Hotspur to send a detachment to his aid; for he would know
+that we are accustomed to a country as rough, and to a foe as
+active as he has now to meet.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder what has stirred up the Welsh now, knowing as they do
+that, although they may gain successes at first, it always ends in
+the harrying of their lands, and the burning of their castles and
+villages. They have been quiet for some years. But they are always
+like a swarm of bees. They will work, quietly enough, till they
+take offence at something; then they will pour out in a fury,
+attacking all they come across, and caring nothing about death, so
+that they can but prick an enemy with their stings. Maybe it is the
+report that the king is engaging in another Scotch war, and they
+think that it is a good time to gather spoil from their neighbours.
+They used to be mightily given to warring among themselves, but of
+late I have heard but little of this.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a hundred years, now, since they were really troublesome,
+and rose under Morgan ap Madoc; and Edward the Second had himself
+to reduce them to submission, and build strong castles at Conway,
+Beaumaris, and other places. There have been one or two partial
+risings, since then, but nothing of much consequence. It may well
+be that the present generation, who have not themselves felt the
+power of English arms, may have decided to make another stroke for
+independence; and if so, it will need more than Mortimer's force,
+or that of the other border barons, to bring them to reason; and as
+for our little detachment, it will be but a drop in the ocean.
+However, it may be that this is a mere quarrel, between Mortimer
+and some of his neighbours.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard somewhat of the Welshman Owen Glendower, who lives
+in those parts. He has a grievance against Lord Grey of Ruthyn;
+who, as he says, unjustly seized a small estate of his. I know that
+he petitioned Parliament for redress, but that his petition was
+lately refused."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis strange that such a man should have known enough of
+English law to have made a petition to our parliament."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but he is no common man. He went to England and studied at
+our universities, and even lived in the inns of court, and learned
+the laws of this country. Then, strangely enough, he became an
+esquire in the household of King Richard, and did good service to
+him; and when the court was broken up, on Richard being dethroned,
+he went away to his estate in Wales. Since then I have not heard of
+him, save as to this dispute with Lord Grey and his petition to
+Parliament thereon; but men who were at Richard's court have told
+me that he was a courteous gentleman, of excellent parts and, it
+was said, of much learning."</p>
+
+<p>"Such a man might be a formidable enemy," Oswald said; "and if
+he has been robbed by Lord Grey, he might well head an
+insurrection, to recover his estates from that noble."</p>
+
+<p>In the course of their ride they were joined by Roger, who
+warmly thanked Alwyn for having selected him as one of his band.
+The other soldiers received him heartily, for the fighting monk had
+been a familiar personage at Alnwick, and his mighty strength and
+jovial disposition rendered him very popular among the soldiers of
+the garrison. There had been general satisfaction among them, when
+it was known that he had laid aside his monk's gown, and had become
+one of the Percys' men-at-arms; and there had been many expressions
+of regret that he had been sent off, instead of forming one of the
+garrison of Alnwick. Two or three of them addressed him, as usual,
+as monk, but he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, comrades, I have been a monk, and a bad one, and the
+less said about it the better. I am no longer a monk, but a
+man-at-arms; and as I am not proud of my doings as a monk, I have
+given up the title, as I have given up the garb. Therefore I give
+fair notice that whosoever, in future, shall address me as monk,
+will feel the weight of my arm. My name is Roger, and as Roger let
+me be called, henceforth."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he fell into his place in the line, when the
+cavalcade continued their way.</p>
+
+<p>The journey was a long one. Oswald had been well supplied with
+funds, and seldom found difficulty in obtaining lodgings for the
+party. The sight of an esquire, with a small troop of men-at-arms
+wearing the Percy cognizance, excited no curiosity as they rode
+south; but when they turned westward it was otherwise, and at their
+halting places Oswald and his uncle, who dined apart from the
+others, were always questioned as to their destination.</p>
+
+<p>But when it was known that they were travelling to the castle of
+Mortimer, whose sister was the wife of their lord, none were
+surprised; for rumours were already current of troubles on the
+Welsh border; and when they entered Shropshire they heard that Owen
+Glendower, with a considerable force, had fallen suddenly upon the
+retainers of Lord Grey de Ruthyn, had killed many, and had
+reoccupied the estates of which he had been deprived by that
+nobleman.</p>
+
+<p>On the fifteenth day after leaving Alnwick they arrived at
+Ludlow Castle, of which Mortimer was the lord. Oswald was at once
+conducted to the hall where the knight was sitting.</p>
+
+<p>"I am bearer of a message from Sir Henry Percy," he said; "he
+has sent hither a party of twenty men-at-arms, under the command of
+the captain of his garrison, at Alnwick."</p>
+
+<p>"I had hoped for more," the knight said, taking the missive and
+opening it; "but I can understand that, now the king is marching
+against Scotland, Percy cannot spare troops to despatch so long a
+distance. I trust that he and my sister, his wife, and the earl are
+in good health?"</p>
+
+<p>"I left them so, sir."</p>
+
+<p>The knight read Hotspur's letter.</p>
+
+<p>"He speaks in terms of high commendation of you, young sir," he
+said, as he laid the letter down on the table. "Such commendation
+is rarely bestowed on one so young. I marvelled somewhat, when you
+entered, that Sir Henry Percy should have sent so young a squire;
+but from what he says, I doubt not that his choice is a good one;
+and indeed, it is plain that your muscles have had rare exercise,
+and that you can stand fatigue and hardship better than many older
+men. It is like that you will have your share, for the whole border
+seems to be unsettled. You have heard that this Glendower has
+boldly attacked, and driven out, Lord Grey's retainers from the
+estates he had taken.</p>
+
+<p>"As to the rights of that matter, I have nought to say. Lord
+Grey manages the affairs with the Welsh in his own county of
+Denbighshire, and along the north; and I keep their eastern border,
+and I meddle not with his affairs, nor he with mine. I know that
+this Glendower is a supporter of King Richard, of whom there are
+many tales current; some saying that he escaped from Pomfret, and
+is still alive, though I doubt not that the report that he died
+there is true. We know that there is, in Scotland, a man whom it
+pleases Albany to put forward as Richard; but this, methinks, is
+but a device to trouble our king. Whether this Glendower believes
+in this man, or not, I know not; but certain it is that he would
+embrace any opportunity to prove his hostility to Henry, whom he
+professes to regard as a usurper. Whether it is on account of his
+holding such opinions, and foolishly giving expression to them,
+that Lord Grey thought fit to seize his estates I know not; nor,
+indeed, do I care. Now, however, that the man has taken up arms,
+and by force has dispossessed Lord Grey, the matter touches all of
+us who are responsible for the keeping of peace in the Welsh
+marches.</p>
+
+<p>"Were it only a quarrel between Lord Grey and this man, it would
+matter but little; but, from all I hear, he exercises a strange
+influence over his countrymen, who deem that he has mysterious
+powers, and can call up spirits to aid him. For myself, I have
+never known an instance where necromancy or spirits have availed,
+in any way, against stout arms and good armour; but such is not,
+assuredly, the opinion of the unlearned, either in this country or
+in Wales. But these mountaineers are altogether without learning,
+and are full of superstitions. Even with us, a man more learned
+than the commonalty is deemed, by them, to dabble in the black art;
+and it may well be that this reputation Glendower has obtained is
+altogether due to the fact that he has much knowledge, whereas the
+people have none. However that may be, there is no doubt that the
+Welsh people are mostly ignorant; and that, at the call of this
+Glendower, men from all parts are hastening to join his banner.
+Even on this side of the border there are complaints that the Welsh
+servants are leaving, not openly and after a due termination of
+service, but making off at night, and without a word of
+warning.</p>
+
+<p>"All this would seem to show that there is trouble on hand, and
+it behoves us to be watchful, and to hold ourselves in readiness;
+lest at any time they should, as in the days of old, cross the
+border, and carry fire and sword through Shropshire and Hereford.
+The royal castles in Wales could, doubtless, hold out against all
+attacks; but the garrisons would have to remain pent up within
+their walls, until succour reached them. Fortunately, most of them
+are situated near the sea, and could be relieved without the troops
+having to march through places where a heavily armed man can scarce
+make his way, and where these active and half-clad Welshmen can
+harass them, night and day, without ever giving them a chance of
+coming to close quarters.</p>
+
+<p>"A messenger from Lord Grey arrived here, yesterday. Indeed,
+since the attack on his retainers, we have been in constant
+communication. At first he made light of the matter, and said that
+he should like to have the Welshman hanging from the battlements of
+his castle; but, during the last week, his messages have been less
+hopeful. Glendower had disappeared from the neighbourhood
+altogether, leaving a sort of proclamation to Lord Grey affixed to
+the door of his house; saying that, next time he heard of him, no
+mercy would be shown, and every man would be slain. He now says
+that rumours reach him of large gatherings, and that there are
+bonfires, nightly, on the hilltops. He doubts not that the troubles
+will soon be suppressed, but admits that much blood may have to be
+spilt, ere it is done.</p>
+
+<p>"I can bear testimony to the bonfires, for from the top of the
+keep a dozen can be seen, any night, blazing among the hills."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, sir, your messenger, asking Lord Percy to send a
+body of men-at-arms here, was despatched before Glendower's attack
+on Lord Grey?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly; but it is three months, now, since Parliament
+refused Glendower's appeal for justice against Lord Grey; and
+rumours have been busy, ever since. Some said that he was
+travelling through the valleys, accompanied by some of the harpers,
+who have always taken a leading part in stirring up the Welsh to
+insurrection. Some avow that he has retired to a fortress, and was
+there weaving designs for the overthrow of Lord Grey, and even of
+the whole of the English castles. Some say that he claims to be a
+descendant of Llewellyn, and the rightful king of Wales.</p>
+
+<p>"There is some foundation for this, for I have talked to some of
+the better class of Welsh; who have, like Glendower, studied in our
+universities. The Welsh are, above all things, fond of long
+pedigrees, and can trace, or pretend to trace, the lineage of all
+their principal families up to Noah; and some of them admit that
+there is some ground for the claim Glendower is said to have
+made.</p>
+
+<p>"Still, all these rumours make me feel uneasy. As we have had
+many years of quiet here, it has not been necessary to keep up more
+than a sufficient number of men-at-arms for the defence of this
+castle. I might have increased the force, for the people of these
+parts bear a deep animosity against the Welsh, and dread them
+greatly; as they may well do, from the many wrongs and outrages
+they have suffered at their hands. One reason why I have not taken
+on many men, since the talk of coming troubles began, is that,
+close to the border as we are, many have connections with the Welsh
+by business or marriage; and these, if enrolled in the garrison,
+might serve as spies, and give warning of any movement we might
+undertake. I had hoped that Percy could have spared me a hundred
+good men-at-arms. I would rather have had his men than others,
+because they have been trained in border warfare, by the constant
+troubles in Scotland; and would, moreover, come to me with a better
+heart than others, since Sir Henry's wife is my sister, and it is,
+therefore, almost a family quarrel upon which they have
+entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Had I known, when I wrote, that the king was on his way north,
+I should have taken steps to raise my strength elsewhere, as of
+course Percy would have occasion to use every lance he could
+muster. Lord Grey has sent off a messenger to the king, begging him
+to denounce this fellow as an outlaw; and should he be troublesome,
+he himself may, after he has done with the Scots, send hither a
+force; for although we may hope, with the aid of the levies of the
+border counties, to drive back the Welsh in whatever force they may
+come, 'tis another thing to march into the mountains. The matter
+has been tried, again and again, and has always taxed the power of
+England to the utmost.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis of no use lamenting over spilt milk but, for my part, I
+regret that Parliament did not give a fair hearing to Glendower's
+complaint against Lord Grey. The refusal to do so was a high-handed
+one. It has driven this man to desperation, and has enlisted the
+sympathies of all Welshmen who have English neighbours; for they
+cannot but say, among themselves, 'If he is to be plundered and
+despoiled, and his complaints refused a hearing, what is to prevent
+our being similarly despoiled? 'Tis surely better to take up the
+sword, at once, and begin again the fight for our
+independence.'</p>
+
+<p>"As it is, it may cost thousands of lives, immense efforts, and
+vast trouble before things are placed on their former footing.</p>
+
+<p>"Doubtless, the captain of the men-at-arms you have brought is a
+good soldier, since Percy says that he is captain of his garrison
+at Alnwick!"</p>
+
+<p>"He bears a high reputation in Northumberland, Sir Edmund. I may
+say that he is my uncle, and 'tis from his recommendation that Lord
+Percy, in the first place, took me into his household."</p>
+
+<p>"I will go down and speak with him," the knight said. "I gave
+orders, as soon as I heard who had arrived, that proper
+entertainment should be given to all; yet it is but right that I
+should, myself, go down to thank them for having come so far; and
+to welcome their captain, whose experience will be of no small use
+to my own men, who have never been engaged in border war. Some have
+fought in France, but under conditions so different that their
+experience will aid them but little; save, indeed, if the Welsh
+grow so strong and so bold that they venture to attack this
+castle."</p>
+
+<p>Percy's men, when the knight descended, had indeed sat down to
+supper with the retainers of the castle, while Alwyn was being
+entertained by the captain of his men-at-arms. All rose to their
+feet when Sir Edmund entered, but he waved his hand to them, to be
+seated.</p>
+
+<p>"Finish your meal," he said, "and afterwards, if you will muster
+in the courtyard, I will inspect you, and see what stout
+Northumberland men Lord Percy has sent me."</p>
+
+<p>He then went up to the top of the keep with Oswald, pointed out
+the distant hills, and told him what valleys and villages lay among
+them, and the direction in which such roads as there were ran. By
+the time they had descended, Percy's men were drawn up in the
+courtyard.</p>
+
+<p>"This is my uncle, Captain Alwyn Forster," Oswald said, "of whom
+Lord Percy has written to you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to see so stout a soldier here," the knight said,
+holding out his hand to Alwyn; "and I am grateful to Lord Percy for
+sending, in answer to my request, one in whom he has such perfect
+confidence; and I specially thank you for having willingly
+relinquished so important a post, to head so small a
+following."</p>
+
+<p>"I was glad to come, Sir Edmund, for I had rested so long, at
+Alnwick, that I longed for some brisk action, and fell gladly into
+my lord's view, when he requested me to come hither. I can answer
+for my men, for they are all picked, by myself, from among the
+stoutest of Sir Henry's following."</p>
+
+<p>"That I can well believe," the knight said, as he looked at the
+twenty troopers. "Tall, strong men all; and as brave as they are
+strong, I doubt not. I shall be glad to have so stout a band to
+ride behind me, if these Welshmen break out.</p>
+
+<p>"You are all accustomed to border warfare, but this differs a
+good deal from that in Northumberland. While the northern forays
+are mostly made by horsemen, it is rare that your Welshman
+adventures himself on horseback. But they are as active as your
+wild ponies, and as swift; and, if the trouble increases, they will
+give you plenty to do.</p>
+
+<p>"I learn from your lord's letter that you will be, as usual,
+under pay from him while you are with me. I shall pay you as much
+more. 'Tis meet that, if you render me service, I should see that
+you are comfortable, and well contented."</p>
+
+<p>There was a murmur of satisfaction among the men and, after
+recommending them to the care of the captain of the garrison, and
+bidding Alwyn speak in the name of his men, fearlessly, for
+anything that should be lacking, Sir Edmund left the courtyard.</p>
+
+<p>The seneschal of the castle, Sir John Wyncliffe, requested
+Oswald to follow him. He first showed him the chamber, in one of
+the turrets, that he was to occupy; and then took him down to the
+hall, where two other knights, four esquires, and two or three
+pages were assembled, in readiness for the supper.</p>
+
+<p>Mortimer, with his wife and two daughters, presently came down
+and took his place at the head of the table; at which the others
+sat down, in order of their rank. As a guest, Oswald was placed
+among the knights. Before sitting down, Sir Edmund presented him to
+his wife and daughters.</p>
+
+<p>"This is one of Sir Henry Percy's esquires," he said, "and can
+give you more news of Sir Percy's wife; of whom, beyond saying that
+she sends her greetings to you all, Hotspur tells us nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been long a member of Sir Henry Percy's
+household?"</p>
+
+<p>"But a year, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Hotspur speaks of him in very high terms, and says that he has
+rendered him great services, and that he has the highest confidence
+in him."</p>
+
+<p>"To what family do you belong, sir?" the dame asked. "From my
+husband's sister, who was staying here some months since, I learned
+much of your northern families."</p>
+
+<p>"I am the son of John Forster of Yardhope, who has the
+reputation of being as hard a fighter as any on the border. He is
+not a knight, though of fair estates; for, although Earl Percy
+offered him knighthood, for his services at the battle of
+Otterburn, he said that he preferred remaining plain John Forster,
+as his fathers had been before him. My mother was a daughter of Sir
+Walter Gillespie, and my uncle is captain of the garrison of
+Alnwick; and it was for his goodwill towards him, and my father,
+that Sir Henry appointed me one of his esquires, thinking,
+moreover, that I might be more useful than some, because I know
+every foot of the border, having relations on the Scottish side of
+it."</p>
+
+<p>They now sat down to supper. After it was over, Sir Edmund took
+Oswald with him to his wife's bower.</p>
+
+<p>"There," he said, "you can talk at your ease, and tell us how my
+sister, your mistress, is, and the children."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not say, Sir Edmund," his wife asked, "that it was the
+captain of his men-at-arms that Sir Hotspur sent hither, in command
+of the band?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is so, dame."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, surely, he should have been at our table."</p>
+
+<p>"I asked him," Sir Edmund replied, "but he said that he would
+rather, with my permission, lodge with John Baldry; who is, like
+himself, a stout soldier, but who likes better his own society than
+that of the high table. He said that, except upon rare and special
+occasions, he always has been accustomed to take his meals alone,
+or with some comrades whom he could take to his room. As this is
+also John Baldry's habit, he prayed me to allow him to accept his
+invitation to share his room."</p>
+
+<p>"What he says about his habits is true, my lady. I can well
+understand my uncle cares not for company where it would not be
+seemly for him to raise his voice, or to enter into a hot argument,
+on some point of arms."</p>
+
+<p>"What were the services of which Sir Henry speaks?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was a mission with which he charged me, and which involved
+some danger."</p>
+
+<p>"By the way," Dame Mortimer said, "my sister-in-law wrote to me,
+some time since, telling us of a strange conflict that was held
+between one of the squires, and another who had been newly
+appointed; and who, on one of the mountain ponies, worsted his
+opponent, although the latter was much older, and moreover clad in
+full armour, and riding a heavy warhorse. Was it you who were the
+victor on that occasion?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can scarce be said to have been the victor, my lady. It was,
+indeed, hardly a combat. But I maintained that one accustomed to
+the exercises in use among our border men, and mounted on one of
+our ponies, accustomed to move with great rapidity, and to turn and
+twist at the slightest movement of the rider's knee, would be a
+match for a heavy-armed knight in single combat; although a number
+would have no chance, against the charge of a handful of mailed
+knights; and Sir Henry put it to the proof, at once."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch9">Chapter 9</a>: The Welsh Rising.</h2>
+
+<p>For a time the garrison at the castle had but little to do. Lord
+Grey had taken no steps to recover the estates from which his
+retainers had been so unceremoniously ejected. He had, indeed,
+marched a strong force through them; but the Welsh had entirely
+withdrawn, and it would be necessary to keep so large a force
+unemployed, were he to reoccupy the land, that he abstained from
+taking any decisive action, prior to the return of the messenger
+whom he had despatched to inform the king of the forcible measures
+that Glendower had taken to recover the estate. It would have been
+no trifling step to take, to carry his arms into Wales, and so
+bring on a fresh struggle after so many years of peace; and he
+would not move in the matter, until he had the royal authority.</p>
+
+<p>Henry lost no time in replying. Glendower had been an open
+supporter of Richard, and had retired from court rather than own
+his successor as king. He had made his complaints against Lord Grey
+before Parliament, and his appeal had been rejected by an
+overwhelming majority. His attack upon Lord Grey was, therefore,
+viewed in the light of an insult to the royal power; and, a
+fortnight after Oswald and his party arrived at Sir Edmund's, a
+messenger arrived with a royal order, to all barons holding castles
+on the border, to proclaim Owen Glendower an outlaw, and to take
+all measures necessary to capture him.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Edmund shook his head, as he read the proclamation, copies
+of which were to be fixed to the castle gate, and in other
+conspicuous places.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Grey has stirred up a fire that it will be difficult to
+extinguish. It were as wise to kick over a hive of bees, when naked
+to the waist, as to set Wales in a ferment again. Had this
+proclamation been sent to me, only, I would have taken it upon
+myself to hold it over until I had, myself, made a journey north to
+see the king, and to submit to him my views on the subject; and to
+point out how dire might be the consequences, to the inhabitants of
+our marches, and how great would be the effort required, if
+Glendower should be supported by the whole of his countrymen, as I
+believe he will be. However, as it has been sent to all the keepers
+of the marches this cannot be done; and I shall, at once, send
+orders to the sheriffs of Shropshire, and Hereford, to warn the
+militia that they may be called out at any moment, and must hold
+themselves in preparedness, having every man his arms and
+accoutrements in good condition, and fit for service, according to
+the law. I shall also issue orders to my own tenants to be ready to
+take up arms, and to drive their herds away, and bring their wives
+and families into the castle, as soon as the beacon fire is lighted
+on the summit of the keep."</p>
+
+<p>This was said to Oswald, to whom Sir Edmund had taken a strong
+liking, and to whom he spoke more freely than he might have done to
+his own knights and officers, as being in Earl Percy's service, and
+having no personal interest in the matters in debate.</p>
+
+<p>"You yourself have heard the tales that have been brought in to
+me, showing how greatly the people have been stirred by the belief
+in Glendower's powers of necromancy; how blue flames have been seen
+to issue from every window and loophole of his house; how red
+clouds, of various strange shapes, hover over it; and mysterious
+sounds are heard throughout the night. For myself, I believe not
+these tales, though I would not take upon myself to say they are
+false, since everyone knows that there are men who have dealings
+with the powers of darkness. Still, I should have, myself, to see
+these things, before I gave credence to them. That, however, makes
+no difference in the matter; true or not, they seem to be believed
+by the Welsh, and cannot but increase his power.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we shall soon hear what reply he makes to the
+proclamation, of which he will certainly hear, within a few hours
+of its posting."</p>
+
+<p>The answer, indeed, was not long in coming; for, within a week,
+a copy of the reply sent by Glendower to the king appeared, side by
+side with every proclamation put up, none knowing who were daring
+enough to affix them. In this, Glendower no longer spoke of his
+grievance against Lord Grey; but declared that, with the will of
+the people, he had assumed the sovereignty of Wales, to which he
+was legally entitled, by his descent from her kings. He called upon
+every Welshman in England to resort, at once, to his standard.</p>
+
+<p>"The die is cast, now," Sir Edmund said, as he read the paper
+affixed to the castle gate. "It is no longer a question whether
+Glendower is wrongfully treated by Lord Grey; it is a matter
+touching the safety of the realm, and the honour of our lord the
+king. There is, I have now learned, some foundation for Owen's
+claim to be the representative of the kings of Wales, through his
+mother, Elinor. She was the eldest daughter of Elinor the Red, who
+was daughter and heiress of Catharine, one of the daughters of
+Llewellyn, the last Prince of Wales. For aught I know, there may be
+others who have a better claim than he; but at least he has royal
+blood in his veins.</p>
+
+<p>"At present, that matters little. He has usurped the title of
+King of Wales, and is evidently a most ambitious and dangerous
+fellow; and none can doubt that this scheme has not just sprung
+from his brain, but has long been prepared, and that his quarrel
+with Lord Grey has but hastened the outbreak.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall myself ride to Ruthyn, and consult with Lord Grey as to
+the measures to be taken. It may be that our forces may be
+sufficient to crush the movement, ere it gains strength; though I
+greatly doubt it. Still, it would be well that we should act in
+concert.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir John Burgon and Sir Philip Haverstone, do you take half a
+dozen men-at-arms, and ride through the country, bidding all the
+tenants assemble here, next Saturday, in their arms and harness,
+that I myself may inspect them. You may tell them that a third of
+their number must be in readiness tonight, and must ride hither by
+morning. The others must, on an alarm being given, gather in strong
+houses, selected by themselves as the most defensible in their
+district, with their wives and families, so as to repel any attack
+the Welsh may make; leaving behind them the boys and old men, to
+drive out their flocks and herds, either towards the nearest
+castle, or to Hereford or Shrewsbury, as may be nearest to
+them."</p>
+
+<p>When the knights had left, messengers were sent out to all the
+owners of castles in Radnor, Hereford, and Shropshire; bidding them
+assemble, in four days' time, at Ludlow. On the day of the meeting,
+nearly three hundred tenants and vassals presented themselves. To
+them Sir Edmund, having first inspected them and their arms,
+explained the situation. Then, each man was asked how many he could
+bring into the field, in accordance with the terms of his holding,
+and it was found the total amounted to nigh eight hundred men.</p>
+
+<p>"I know not when the affair is likely to begin; and will,
+therefore, call only for a quarter of your force. Send your sons
+and unmarried men. At the end of a month they can return to you
+and, if needs be, you can send as many more in their places. It may
+be that I shall not require these; but, possibly, every man may
+have to come out; but you must bear in mind it is not for the
+defence of this town and castle that men are required, for the
+garrison and burghers can hold out against any attack, but to save
+your homesteads from destruction."</p>
+
+<p>The news had created a deep sensation. Although none of those
+present had experienced the horrors of border warfare, there was
+not one but had heard, from their fathers, tales of burning,
+massacre, and wholesale destruction by the Welsh forays. But so
+long a time had passed, since the last serious insurrection, that
+the news that Wales might shortly be in arms, again, came as a
+terrible blow to them. All agreed to send in their proportion of
+men, at once, and to see that the rest were all ready to assemble,
+immediately the summons came.</p>
+
+<p>The next day some forty knights, owners of the castles thickly
+scattered through the border counties, assembled in Ludlow Castle.
+There was a long consultation. Arrangements were made for the
+despatch of messengers, by those nearest to the frontier, with news
+of any Welsh raid. Points were fixed upon where each should
+assemble, with what force he could gather; thence to march to any
+threatened place, or to assemble at Ludlow Castle, Mortimer being
+the warden of the marches along that line of the border.</p>
+
+<p>On the following day Sir Edmund rode, with two of his knights,
+to hold council with Lord Grey, at Ruthyn. The distance was
+considerable, and he was absent six days from his castle. Before he
+returned, an event happened that showed Glendower was in earnest,
+and intended to maintain his pretensions by the sword.</p>
+
+<p>At daybreak, on the third day after Mortimer had left, a
+messenger arrived at the castle; with news that a large body of
+Welsh had, the evening before, entered Radnor by the road across
+the hills from Llanidloes, and were marching towards Knighton,
+burning the villages as they went, and slaying all who fell into
+their hands.</p>
+
+<p>The horn was at once sounded, and Sir John Wyncliffe and the
+other knights hastily assembled in the courtyard. Here, after a
+short consultation, it was determined that a mounted party should
+be, at once, despatched to endeavour to harass the advance of the
+Welsh; the troop consisting of Alwyn's men-at-arms, twenty men of
+the garrison, and fifty mounted men who formed part of the new
+levy. Four hundred footmen were to follow, at once.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John Wyncliffe at first thought of taking the command
+himself, but it was pointed out to him that his presence would be
+required, in Ludlow, to marshal the forces that would speedily
+arrive from all the country round. Sir John Burgon, therefore, a
+valiant knight, who had greatly distinguished himself against the
+French, was unanimously chosen by his companions as leader of the
+whole party; while with him rode Sir Philip Haverstone, and Sir
+William Bastow.</p>
+
+<p>"This reminds one of one's doings at home, Oswald," his uncle
+said, as he formed up his little troop. "I trust the Welsh will not
+retreat, until we have had a taste of their quality; but I doubt
+much if they will prove as formidable foes as the Scotch
+borderers."</p>
+
+<p>For a considerable portion of the distance, the roads led
+through forests, which at that time covered the greater part of the
+country. Oswald, at the invitation of the knights, rode with them
+at the head of the cavalcade. The way was beguiled by anecdotes,
+that had been passed down from mouth to mouth, of the last Welsh
+war.</p>
+
+<p>They reached Knighton by nine o'clock. The enemy had not, as
+yet, come within sight of the town; but, throughout the night, the
+sky to the west had been red with the flames of the burning
+villages and homesteads.</p>
+
+<p>The male inhabitants were all under arms. Many had already sent
+their wives and children, in waggons, towards Ludlow; but, as the
+town had a strong wall, the men were determined upon making a stout
+defence.</p>
+
+<p>They crowded round the newly arrived troops, with loud cheers;
+which were raised, again and again, when they heard that, by
+midday, four hundred footmen would arrive to their assistance. It
+had been arranged that Sir Philip Haverstone should remain in the
+town, to take charge of the defence; and that the mounted men
+should, under Sir John Burgon, endeavour to check the Welsh
+plundering parties in the open. Sir William Bastow was to remain,
+to assist Haverstone in the defence of the town. There was no great
+fear of this falling; as, before the day was out, four or five
+thousand men would be assembled at Ludlow, and would be able to
+march to its relief. These matters being arranged, Sir John Burgon
+led his little troop out of the town.</p>
+
+<p>The accounts of the Welsh forces were very conflicting, but the
+balance of opinion was that there were not less than four or five
+thousand of them. Beyond the fact that they were skirting the
+hills, and advancing towards Knighton, the terrified fugitives
+could say nothing, save of their own experiences. It was evident,
+however, that the Welsh force was not keeping together; but, after
+crossing the border, had broken up and scattered over the country,
+burning and slaying. Some of the bands had approached to within
+five miles of the town; and they might, not improbably, come in
+contact with fresh bands of the enemy, crossing the hills near the
+source of the Severn. As soon as they had sallied from the castle,
+and left the town behind them, Sir John halted his party.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, men," he said, "there is one thing that you should
+remember--these Welshmen are not to be despised. Doubtless you will
+be able to ride over them, but do not think that, when you have
+done so, you have defeated them. They will throw themselves down on
+the ground, leap up as you pass over them, stab your horses from
+below, seize your legs and try to drag you from your saddles, leap
+up on to the crupper behind you, and stab you to the heart. This is
+what makes them so dangerous a foe to horsemen, and at Crecy they
+did terrible execution among the French chivalry.</p>
+
+<p>"Therefore be careful, and wary. Spit all you see on the ground,
+with your lances; and hold your swords ever in readiness, to strike
+them down as they rise up beside you. Keep in as close order as you
+can, for thus you will make it more difficult for them to rise from
+the ground, as you pass over."</p>
+
+<p>He then formed his troop into two lines. In the centre of the
+front line he placed the twenty men-at-arms from the castle, with
+fifteen of the tenants on either hand. Oswald's troop formed the
+centre of the second line, with ten of the tenants on either flank.
+Another of the knights was in command in this line. They were to
+ride some fifty paces behind the first, to cut down all who rose to
+their feet after the first line had passed; and if the resistance
+were strong, and the first line brought to a stand, they were to
+ride up and reinforce them.</p>
+
+<p>They had ridden some three miles, when they saw a column of
+smoke rise, half a mile away. The pace was quickened, and they had
+gone but a short distance when some panic-stricken men came running
+down the road.</p>
+
+<p>"How many Welshmen have attacked your village?" Sir John
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Hundreds of them, Sir Knight," one of the men panted out; "at
+least, so it seemed to me; but indeed, we were this side of the
+village when they rushed into it; and, seeing that nought could be
+done to resist them, we fled at once."</p>
+
+<p>When within three hundred yards of the village they entered open
+ground, and at once formed up in the order the knight had directed.
+Oswald took his place by the side of his uncle, a couple of lengths
+in advance of their own troop.</p>
+
+<p>Scarce a word was spoken in the ranks. Here and there dead
+bodies were scattered over the ground, showing that the pursuit of
+the fugitives had been maintained thus far. From the village the
+wild shouts of the triumphant Welsh sounded plainly; but mingled
+with these came, occasionally, a cry of pain, that seemed to show
+that either the work of slaughter was not yet completed, or that
+some of the villagers still held one of the houses, and were
+defending themselves until the last.</p>
+
+<p>Every face was set and stern. The tenants knew that, at any
+moment, similar scenes might be enacted in their own villages;
+while the men-at-arms were eager to get at the foe, and take
+vengeance for the murders they had perpetrated.</p>
+
+<p>"Be sure you keep your ranks," Sir John said; "remember that any
+who straggle may be attacked by a score of these wild men, and
+slain before others can come to their help. Ride forward in perfect
+silence, till we are within striking distance."</p>
+
+<p>At a gallop, the troop swept down upon the village. As they
+reached the first houses, they saw that the road was full of wild
+figures. Some were emerging from the houses, laden with such spoil
+as could be gathered there, chiefly garments; others, with torches,
+were setting fire to the thatched roofs; while, in the middle of
+the village, a number were attacking a house somewhat larger and
+more massively built than the rest.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John raised his sword, with the shout of "A Mortimer! A
+Mortimer!"</p>
+
+<p>The shout was re-echoed by his followers, and a moment later
+they dashed into the midst of the Welsh. At first they swept all
+before them; but speedily the mountaineers, running out from the
+houses, gathered thickly on each side of the road and, as the first
+line passed, closed in behind it; and, running even more swiftly
+than the charging horses, strove to leap up behind. Some struck at
+the horses with their swords, hamstringing several of them, and
+slaying their riders as they fell.</p>
+
+<p>"Ride, ride!" the knight in command of the second line shouted,
+and at even greater speed than before his followers rode hotly
+forward; and came, ere long, on the struggling mass, for the first
+line were now endeavouring to turn, so as to face their
+assailants.</p>
+
+<p>With a great shout, the second line fell upon them, the war
+cries of "A Percy! A Percy!" being mingled with those of "A
+Mortimer!" Their approach had been unnoticed by the Welsh, and
+their onslaught was irresistible. The Welsh were hurled to the
+ground by the impetus of the charge, and the two lines joined
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Forward again!" Sir John shouted, and the troop, dashing
+forward, were soon hotly engaged with the enemy, who were in strong
+force at the point where they were attacking the house. The orders
+of their commander were now impossible to follow. It was a fierce
+melee, where each fought for himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Face round!" Oswald shouted. "Now, men, lay about you.</p>
+
+<p>"A Percy! A Percy!"</p>
+
+<p>The active little horses swung round instantly, and faced the
+crowd surging up against them. This was the style of fighting to
+which the border men were accustomed. Active as the Welsh were, the
+border ponies were as quick in their movements, wheeling and
+turning hither and thither, but keeping ever within a short
+distance of each other. The troopers hewed down the foe with their
+heavy swords; and, being partly protected by their armour, they
+possessed a great advantage over their opponents.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald and his uncle fought slightly in advance of the others,
+lending a helping hand to each other, when the pressure was
+greatest. On one occasion a Welshman seized Alwyn's leg, while he
+was engaged with a foeman on the other side, and strove to throw
+him from his horse. Oswald wheeled his pony, and with a sweeping
+blow rid his uncle of his foe; but, at the same moment, a man leapt
+up behind him, while two others assailed him in front.</p>
+
+<p>The Welshman's sinewy arms prevented him from again raising his
+sword, and he would have been slain by those in front, had he not,
+at the moment, slipped his right foot from his stirrup and thrown
+himself from his horse, his leg sweeping off the man who held him
+behind, and hurled him to the ground beneath him.</p>
+
+<a id="PicE" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/e.jpg" alt=
+"Oswald threw his arms round two of them"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>The Welshman's grasp instantly relaxed; but, as Oswald tried to
+rise, a blow fell upon his helmet, and four Welshmen threw
+themselves upon him. He threw his arms around two of them, and
+rolled over and over with them, thereby frustrating the efforts of
+their companions to strike or stab him, through some unguarded
+point in his armour; when suddenly there was a mighty shout, two
+tremendous blows were struck in quick succession, then there was a
+shout, "Hold them still, Master Oswald, hold them still!"</p>
+
+<p>Oswald tightened his grasp on his assailants, who were now
+striving to rise. There was another crashing blow, and then his
+last opponent slipped from his grasp, and fled.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, Roger," he said, as he leapt to his feet, "you were but
+just in time; another minute, and those fellows would have got
+their knives into me."</p>
+
+<p>"I have had my eye upon you, master, all the time; and while
+doing a little on my own account, have kept myself in readiness to
+come to your aid, if need be."</p>
+
+<p>Roger was fighting with a heavy mace, and the number of men
+lying round, with their skulls crushed in, showed with what
+terrible effect he had been using it. Oswald again leapt on to his
+horse, which had been too well trained to leave his master's side;
+and had indeed in no small degree aided him, by kicking furiously
+at the Welsh, as they strove to aid their comrades on the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>By this time the combat was well-nigh over. The protection
+afforded by Alwyn's band, against any attack on their rear, had
+enabled Sir John's men-at-arms and the tenants to clear the street
+in front of them; but the Welsh, though unable to hold their own in
+open fight, had now betaken themselves to their bows and arrows,
+and from behind every house shot fast.</p>
+
+<p>The door of the house that had still resisted had been thrown
+open, and eight men had come out, followed by some twenty women and
+children.</p>
+
+<p>"Do each of you leap up behind one of us!" Sir John shouted.</p>
+
+<p>"Help the women up, men, then right-about, and ride out of the
+village. It is getting too hot for us, here."</p>
+
+<p>The order was quickly obeyed and, placing the horses carrying a
+double burden in the centre, the troop rode out in a compact body.
+The Welsh poured out into the road behind them.</p>
+
+<p>"Level your spears!" Alwyn shouted to his men; who had, by his
+orders, fallen in in the rear of the others.</p>
+
+<p>The long spears were levelled and, with a shout, the twenty men
+rode down on their pursuers, bursting their way through them as if
+they had been but a crowd of lay figures; then, wheeling, they
+returned again, none venturing to try to hinder them, and rejoined
+the main body.</p>
+
+<p>"Well done, indeed!" Sir John Burgon exclaimed, "and in knightly
+fashion. Verily, those long border spears of yours are right good
+weapons, when so stoutly used."</p>
+
+<p>Once outside the village, the troop rode quietly on to the spot
+at which they had first charged. Then the villagers dismounted.</p>
+
+<p>"You made a stout defence, men," Sir John said. "It was well
+that you had time to gain that house."</p>
+
+<p>"It was agreed that all should take to it, Sir Knight," one of
+the men said; "but the attack was so sudden that only we, and these
+women, had time to reach it before they were on us; and, had it not
+been for your arrival, they must soon have mastered us, for they
+were bringing up a tree to burst in the door; and as none of us had
+time to catch up our bows and arrows, we had no way of hindering
+them. Still, methinks many would have fallen, before they forced
+their way in."</p>
+
+<p>The men now fell in again. Their numbers were counted. The
+losses were by far the heaviest in the front line. Five of the
+castle men-at-arms, and fourteen of the levy were killed. Several
+others had gashes from the long knives and light axes of the Welsh.
+Five of the tenants in the second line had fallen, but none of
+Alwyn's band, although most of the latter had received wounds, more
+or less serious, in their combat with the Welsh.</p>
+
+<p>"The loss is heavy," Sir John said, "but it is as nought to that
+inflicted upon the Welsh. I did not count them, as we rode back,
+but assuredly over a hundred have fallen, not counting those who
+were slain in that last charge of yours, Alwyn. Truly your men have
+fought gallantly, as was shown by the pile of dead, where your
+men-at-arms defended our rear.</p>
+
+<p>"The Welsh will be moving, ere long. Half the village is already
+burning, and you may be sure that there is nothing left to sack, in
+the other houses. If they come this way we must fall back, for in
+the forest we shall be no match for them. If they move across the
+open country, we may get an opportunity of charging them,
+again."</p>
+
+<p>He told two of his men to dismount, and to crawl cautiously
+along, one on each side of the burning village; and to bring back
+news, the moment the Welsh began to leave it. In twenty minutes
+both returned, saying that the enemy were streaming out at the
+other end of the village, laden with plunder of all kinds. There
+seemed to be no order or discipline among them, each trooping along
+at his pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>"Good!" the knight said. "We will give them another lesson, and
+this time on more favourable terms than the last."</p>
+
+<p>The troops formed into column, and galloped at a canter through
+the burning village. At the other end they came upon a number of
+stragglers, who were at once killed. Then they emerged into the
+fields beyond, and formed line. The plain was dotted with men, the
+nearest but a hundred yards away, the farthest nearly half a
+mile.</p>
+
+<p>In a single line the horsemen swept along. The rearmost Welshmen
+turned round at the tramp of the horses, and at once, throwing to
+the ground the bundles that they carried, took to their heels with
+shouts of warning. As these were heard, the alarm spread among the
+rest, who, believing that their foes had ridden away through the
+forest, were taken completely by surprise.</p>
+
+<p>A panic seized them. Leaders in vain shouted orders, their
+voices were unheard among the cries of the men. Some, indeed,
+gathered together as they ran; but the greater portion fled in
+various directions, to escape the line of spears vengefully
+following them.</p>
+
+<p>Those unable to avoid the charge stood at bay, like wild
+animals. First shooting their arrows, they drew their short axes or
+their knives, as the horsemen came within a short distance of them.
+Few had a chance of striking, most of them falling, pierced through
+and through by the spears. Those who, by swiftness of eye, escaped
+this fate, sprung at the horses like wildcats, clinging to the
+saddles, while they strove to bury their knives in the riders'
+bodies.</p>
+
+<p>Their back pieces now served the troopers in good stead, as did
+their superior personal strength. Some beat their assailants down
+on to the pommel of their saddles, and throttled or stabbed them;
+while in many cases, where they were hard pressed, the sword of a
+comrade rid them from their foes.</p>
+
+<p>So the line held on its way, until they reached the head of the
+body of fugitives. Then in obedience to the shout of Sir John
+Burgon they turned, broke up into small bodies, and scoured the
+plain, cutting down the flying foe; and did not draw bridle, until
+what remained of the enemy had gained the shelter of the wood.
+Then, at the sound of their leader's trumpet, they gathered around
+him in the centre of the plain.</p>
+
+<p>Two or three had fallen from the Welsh arrows, and not a few had
+received ugly slashes from their knives; but, with these
+exceptions, all had come scatheless through the fray. At least two
+hundred dead Welshmen were scattered on the plain.</p>
+
+<p>"You have done your work well, men," Sir John said, "and taught
+them a lesson that they will not forget. Now, let us ride back to
+Knighton, and see how matters go there."</p>
+
+<p>On arriving at the little town, they found that all was quiet,
+and that no bodies of Welsh had approached the town. The party of
+horse were again sent out, in various directions, the smoke serving
+them as a guide. The villages were found to be entirely deserted;
+but, pushing farther on, many fugitives came out from hiding
+places.</p>
+
+<p>Their reports were all of the same character. The Welsh were in
+full retreat for their own country.</p>
+
+<p>By the time the troops returned with the news to Knighton, the
+footmen from Ludlow had marched in, and were being entertained by
+the inhabitants; who, now that the danger had passed, had
+returned.</p>
+
+<p>"Retired have they, Sir John?" his two fellow knights said, as
+he arrived with his following. "It was but a raid for plunder,
+then, and not an invasion. Doubtless, Glendower merely wished to
+warm their blood, and to engage them so far in his enterprise that
+they could no longer draw back. They must have carried off some
+hundreds of cattle and sheep, to say nothing of other plunder; and,
+had it not been for our having the news soon enough to get here
+before they retired, they would have got off scatheless. As it is,
+they have learned that even a well-planned foray cannot be carried
+out with impunity; but the loss of three hundred lives will not
+affect them greatly, when it is clear that they have murdered twice
+that number, as well as enriched themselves with plunder."</p>
+
+<p>"I think not that we shall hear of them, again," Sir John said.
+"Glendower has shown us, without doubt, what are his intentions;
+and he may now wait to see what comes of last night's work. I
+expect that he will keep among the hills, where he can fight to
+better advantage; for horsemen are of little use, where there are
+mountains and forests."</p>
+
+<p>After a consultation between the knights, it was agreed that two
+hundred of the footmen were to remain, for two or three days, at
+Knighton; in case the retreat of the Welsh might be a feigned one,
+intended to lull the inhabitants into a state of security, and then
+to make a sudden night attack upon the walls. The whole force
+remained until the next morning, and then, leaving Sir Philip
+Haverstone in command of the party remaining at Knighton, the rest,
+horse and foot, marched back to Ludlow.</p>
+
+<p>"Your band have indeed distinguished themselves, Oswald," Sir
+John had said, on the previous evening, as they talked on the
+events of the day. "Truly they are as stout men as I have ever seen
+fighting. And you have escaped without a wound, though I marked
+that your armour and clothes were covered with mire, as if you had
+been rolling in the road."</p>
+
+<p>"That is just what I have been doing, Sir John. One of them
+leaped on to the horse behind me, and pinioned my arms; while two
+or three others made at me, with axes and staves. The clasp of the
+fellow was like an iron band and, seeing that my only chance was to
+rid myself of him, I slung my leg over my horse, and we came down
+together, he undermost. Whether the fall killed him or not, I
+cannot say, but his arms relaxed. Half a dozen sprang on me, and in
+another minute I should have been killed, had not that big trooper
+of mine come to my aid, and with a mighty mace dashed out their
+brains, well-nigh before they knew that they were attacked."</p>
+
+<p>"A stout fellow, indeed," Sir John said, "and one I should like
+to have to ride behind me, on the day of battle. I had marked him
+before, and thought that I had never seen a more stalwart knave;
+though methinks that he would look better, did he not crop his hair
+so wondrously short."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"He does it not to beautify himself, Sir John, but to hide the
+fact that the hair on his crown is but of six weeks' growth."</p>
+
+<p>And then he related the circumstances under which Roger came to
+be a member of his troop.</p>
+
+<p>"By my faith, he has done well!" Sir John said. "A man with such
+sinews as that is lost in a cloister. He is a merry fellow, too. I
+have often marked him at the castle, and his laugh is a veritable
+roar, that would sound strange echoing along the galleries of a
+monastery. The abbot did well to let him go, for such a fellow
+might well disturb the peace and quiet of a whole convent.</p>
+
+<p>"You say that he has skill in war?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sir John. He has been the instructor in arms of the lay
+brothers, and of some of the monks, too; and he led the contingent
+of the abbey at Otterburn; and, although the day went against the
+English, he and his followers greatly distinguished
+themselves."</p>
+
+<p>"If you would part with him, I would better his condition,
+Master Oswald; for, on my recommendation, Sir Edmund would, I am
+sure, make him captain of a company."</p>
+
+<p>"I should be sorry, indeed, to part with him, Sir John, and the
+more so since he has saved my life today; but, even were I willing,
+I feel sure he would not leave me, as we have gone through some
+adventures together, and he believes that it is to me that he owes
+his escape from the convent."</p>
+
+<p>"What were these adventures, Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was a matter touching the Earl of March--not Sir Edmund's
+nephew, now in the care of the king, but the Scottish earl, George,
+Earl of Dunbar, also bearing the title of Earl of March. Now that
+he has taken the oath to King Henry, there is no reason why I
+should not speak of it."</p>
+
+<p>And he then gave them an account of his visit to Dunbar, and of
+his escape.</p>
+
+<p>"And why did the earl wish to keep you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe, sir, that he had not then made up his mind, and thought
+that affairs might yet have been accommodated between himself,
+Douglas, and the Scottish king."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps that was so," Sir John agreed. "He is a crafty, as well
+as a bold man. However, you were well out of Dunbar, and you and
+your monk managed the affair well. Think you that the earl is to be
+trusted?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should say so. These great Scottish nobles deem themselves
+well-nigh the king's equal, and carry on their wars against each
+other as independent lords. His castle of Dunbar is in the hands of
+his bitterest enemy, and Douglas will come into no small portion of
+his estates. Without the aid of England he could not hope to
+recover them, and his interests, therefore, are wholly bound up
+with ours."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis strange that there should be two Earls of March, of
+different families and names; and, now that Dunbar has become a
+vassal of the king, it will make the matter stranger. However, at
+present no mistakes can arise, seeing that the one is an able
+warrior, and the other a mere boy. But in the future, were the two
+Earls of March at the same time at the court of our king, mistakes
+might well be made, and strange complications take place.</p>
+
+<p>"Doubtless you are aware that Sir Edmund's nephew is, by right
+of birth, King of England. He was, you know, sprung from the Duke
+of Clarence, the elder brother of the Duke of Lancaster. The duke
+died without male issue, and his rights fell to Edmund Mortimer,
+Earl of March, the husband of his daughter Philippa. From their
+marriage was born the Roger Mortimer who was lord lieutenant of
+Ireland, during a part of King Richard's reign, and was killed in
+the wars of that country. He left two sons, of whom the elder was
+but eight or nine years old, when Richard was dethroned; and he and
+his brother are now living at Windsor, and are well treated there
+by the king.</p>
+
+<p>"Had my lord's nephew attained the age of manhood, at the
+deposition of Richard, many would doubtless have supported his
+right to the throne; but for a child of eight to rule this realm,
+and keep in check the turbulence of the great lords, would be so
+absurd that no one even mentioned his name; and Henry, of course,
+ascended the throne as if by right of conquest."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard something of this before, Sir John; but as the
+Percys were among the chief supporters of Henry, the fact that
+there was one who had greater rights to the throne was never talked
+of, at Alnwick; although, by Percy's marriage with Sir Edmund's
+sister, he became uncle of the young Earl of March."</p>
+
+<p>"I can understand that, and indeed Sir Edmund himself has never,
+in the most intimate conversation with us, expressed any opinion
+that the young earl would, if he had his rights, be King of
+England."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch10">Chapter 10</a>: A Breach Of Duty.</h2>
+
+<p>Two or three hours after the return of the force to Ludlow, Sir
+Edmund Mortimer returned, having ridden almost without a halt,
+since be received the news of the Welsh incursion. His knights met
+him in the courtyard.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my friends, I hear you have sent the Welsh back again, as
+fast as they came."</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot say that, Sir Edmund," Sir John Wyncliffe replied.
+"Sir John Burgon went out, with ninety horse; and, coming upon a
+party of five or six hundred of them, killed half their number, and
+put the rest to flight; but their main body left of their own free
+will, and without any urging. 'Tis a pity that they were so
+hurried, for in another twenty-four hours we should have had some
+four thousand men on the march against them, besides those who
+first went on."</p>
+
+<p>"Have they done much damage?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is scarce a house left standing, between the hills on
+this side of Llanidloes, and Knighton. From what we can gather,
+they must have slain three or four hundred, at least. At first the
+total was put much higher; but, as soon as they retired, many
+fugitives made their way into Knighton; having slipped away in the
+darkness, when their villages were attacked, and concealed
+themselves in the woods, or among the rocks."</p>
+
+<p>"There has been fighting up in the north, too," Sir Edmund said.
+"When I got to Ruthyn, I found that Lord Grey was away; but I
+talked over matters with his knights. I was to have left on the
+morning of the fifth day after leaving here, but at night
+Glendower's men raided almost up to the gates of the castle. Their
+plans were well laid; for, just at midnight, an alarm was given by
+a sentry on the walls. Everyone ran to arms, the instant the
+warder's horn was sounded; but when I reached the top of the walls,
+fires were bursting out in twenty places. It was not long before
+the knights rode out, with a hundred and fifty men-at-arms, but the
+Welsh were already gone. It seems that they had laid an ambuscade
+round every village and, on the signal being given, fell at once
+upon the sleeping inhabitants, put all to the sword, fired the
+houses; and in ten minutes from the first alarm made off, driving
+horses, cattle, and sheep before them.</p>
+
+<p>"I was with the party, and we rode hard and fast, but we came up
+with none of them. Each party must have gone its own way, striking
+off into the hills. As soon as we returned to the castle I started,
+with my four men-at-arms, and we have lost no time on the road;
+especially after the rumour reached us that there had been a Welsh
+raid here, also.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Sir John Burgon, will you give me an account of the doings
+of your party?"</p>
+
+<p>The knight reported their proceedings, after leaving Ludlow, and
+concluded:</p>
+
+<p>"It is like that the story would not have so run, Sir Edmund,
+had it not been for the bravery shown by the northern men, under
+the young squire Oswald and his captain, Alwyn. So furiously did
+the Welsh assail us, in rear, that we should have suffered heavily,
+indeed, even if we had not met with a grave disaster; had it not
+been that this band covered our rear, while we charged forward,
+fighting so stoutly that the spot where they posted themselves was
+thickly covered with dead. I found time to look round, now and
+then, for they made but a poor resistance to our advance. Never did
+I see stronger fighting.</p>
+
+<p>"I have questioned the men. All say that none fought more
+bravely than young Oswald, and his uncle gives him warm praise. The
+lad, however, would have lost his life, had it not been for that
+stout fellow, who stands half a head above his comrades, and is a
+very giant in strength. Oswald, himself, told me how it came
+about," and he repeated the account of the incident.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a quick thought, to throw himself and the fellow who
+held him off the horse; though it would not have availed him, much,
+had not this stout man-at-arms been at hand. Still, in no case
+could he have defended himself, single handed, against five of
+these knaves; though doubtless he would have given a good account
+of some of them, had not his arms been held.</p>
+
+<p>"Alwyn said that, three times during the fray, the young esquire
+saved his life, by cutting down men who were attacking him from
+behind, while he was occupied by other opponents in front."</p>
+
+<p>"He will make a valiant knight, some day, Sir John. Sir Henry
+Percy would not have written so strongly about him, had he not good
+reason for feeling that he would not do discredit to his
+recommendation.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Sir Knights, you have all merited my thanks, for the
+manner in which you have discharged your duties, during my
+absence.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, you were perfectly right, Wyncliffe, in remaining
+here; until, at any rate, the knights brought in their following
+from the country round. It was important to save Knighton, but
+vastly more so to prevent their overspreading the whole country;
+which might, for aught we can tell, have been Glendower's object;
+and it is as well that Haverstone and Bastow should have remained
+at Knighton.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, as I have not broken my fast, and have ridden since
+midnight without a stop, I will breakfast; and we can then talk
+over the plans to be pursued, for there is no disguising the fact
+that the Welsh are up in arms, and that we have long and heavy work
+before us.</p>
+
+<p>"However, it is a matter too serious for us to undertake by
+ourselves, but is for the king himself to take in hand. A raid can
+be punished by a counter-raid; but now that Glendower has declared
+himself sovereign of Wales, and that everything points to the fact
+that the men of his nation are all ready to support him, it is a
+matter that touches his majesty very closely; and I doubt not that,
+as soon as he has finished this war with the Scots, he will march
+hither, at the head of his army.</p>
+
+<p>"However, I shall send out a summons to the tenants of all my
+nephew's estates, in Herefordshire, and order them to hold
+themselves in readiness, should Glendower venture to invade us. But
+I think not that he will do so. He knows that these counties
+bristle with castles, in which the people could find refuge; and
+that, if he undertook to besiege them, he would speedily lose the
+best part of his army.</p>
+
+<p>"None of his people have experience of war, and to besiege a
+strong place needs machines of all kinds, and of these Glendower
+has none, nor is it likely that he can construct them. Besides,
+while marching out he would be exposed to an attack, by the
+garrisons of these castles sallying out in his rear. Therefore, I
+think not that he will be foolish enough to undertake any great
+enterprises; though he may make raids, and carry off booty and
+cattle, as he has now done.</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, I cannot keep the vassals in the field longer than
+their feudal obligations compel them to stay, unless I pay and feed
+them; which might be done readily enough, for two or three months.
+But the war may last for years, and I must reserve my means, and
+strength, till they are urgently needed.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Grey will doubtless be of my opinion, but is sure to do
+what he can to capture Glendower; as he will consider him, not only
+as an enemy of the king, but as a personal foe. However, powerful
+as he is, I think not that he will venture, alone, to lead an army
+into the Welsh hills; until he receives assistance from the
+king."</p>
+
+<p>Two days later, news came that the king, as soon as he heard of
+Glendower's proclamation, had sent orders to Lord Grey and Lord
+Talbot, to punish him.</p>
+
+<p>"They will reach Chester, two days hence," Sir Edmund said.
+"After the raid they made here, I would gladly take some small
+share in punishing this rebel.</p>
+
+<p>"You, Sir John Burgon, have had a full share of honour, by your
+defeat of him, the other day; therefore, I will send Sir William
+Bastow.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you, Sir William, take thirty of the best mounted men of the
+garrison, together with Lord Percy's troop, and ride to Chester. I
+will give you a letter to Lord Talbot, saying that, being anxious
+to aid in the punishment of the rebel who has just raided my
+marches, I have sent you in all haste, with fifty stout men, to aid
+him in striking a blow; and, if possible, in effecting Glendower's
+capture, before he can do further harm to the king's loyal
+subjects."</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later, the troop mounted. Oswald was in high
+spirits, for Sir Edmund had spoken a few words to him, when telling
+him of the service to which he had appointed him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sending your troop with Sir William Bastow," he said,
+"chiefly in order that I may give you another opportunity of
+distinguishing yourself; and also because I am sure that Percy
+would be glad that his men should take part in an enterprise in
+which there may be honour, and credit. Lastly, because I would that
+my party should do me credit; and the fighting, the other day,
+showed me that your followers better understand warfare, of this
+kind, than do mine."</p>
+
+<p>The troop arrived at Chester the second day after leaving, and
+rested their horses for twenty-four hours. On the arrival of the
+Earl of Talbot, and Lord Grey, Sir William Bastow called, at the
+inn where they put up, and delivered the letter from Sir Edmund
+Mortimer.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis well done of Sir Edmund," the Earl of Talbot said; "and
+although Ruthyn lies beyond his government of the marches, he is
+defending his own command, by aiding Lord Grey and myself against
+this presumptuous traitor. I will gladly take your clump of spears
+with me, among whom are, I see, a small party of Lord Percy's
+men-at-arms.</p>
+
+<p>"I hear that Sir Edmund's men inflicted a sharp blow upon the
+Welsh, near Knighton. I met his messenger, bearing his report to
+the king, as we came along; and he gave me the particulars, from
+which it seems that the fight was, for a time, a hard one, and that
+the Welshmen fought, as they used to do, with much bravery."</p>
+
+<p>"They did, my lord. I was not with the party that defeated them,
+having been left at Knighton to aid in the defence there, should
+the Welsh attack the town; but Sir John Burgon, who commanded, said
+that, in the village, they fought as if they cared not for their
+lives; though they made scarce any defence, when he fell upon them
+as they retired, in disorder. The success he gained he attributes,
+in no small degree, to Percy's little troop; led by their captain,
+a stout soldier who commands the garrison of Alnwick, and by a
+young squire of Sir Henry Percy, who, though but a lad, fought with
+extreme bravery.</p>
+
+<p>"He is with me now. Sir Henry places great trust in him, and
+wrote most warmly, concerning him, to Sir Edmund Mortimer."</p>
+
+<p>"We are just going to supper, sir," the earl said. "I hope that
+you will join us. And I pray you, tell me where this young squire
+is lodging, that I may send for him, at once; as I would fain
+learn, from his lips, some closer account of the fighting, which
+may be of utility to us, in our adventure."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald arrived just as supper was brought in, and was introduced
+to the earl, and Lord Grey, by Sir William Bastow.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down with us, young sir," the earl said, kindly. "You are
+an esquire, I hear, of my good friend Sir Henry Percy. As you eat,
+I pray you tell me about this fight with the Welsh. Sir Edmund
+himself was not in command, I hear."</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lord, he was away at the time, having ridden to Ruthyn,
+to hold council with Lord Grey."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! I had not heard that he had been there," Earl Grey
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"He arrived the day before the Welsh raid on your estate, sir.
+Finding that you were absent, he intended to return home the next
+morning; but the matter delayed him, for a day, as he rode out with
+your knights to punish the marauders; who, however, made off before
+they could be overtaken."</p>
+
+<p>"When you see him, I pray you give him my thanks, for so doing;
+and now, tell us what happened."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir William Bastow can better inform you, sir, of what took
+place until we rode away from Knighton; where he remained, with Sir
+Philip Haverstone, to take command of the townspeople, in case the
+Welsh should arrive before strong aid should come."</p>
+
+<p>Sir William then related the measures that had been decided
+upon, and the steps taken to call out the levies; and how he and
+his brother knights had ridden to Knighton, with the intent to
+hinder, as far as possible, the Welsh advance; until the footmen
+could reach the town, to be followed, shortly afterwards, by the
+troops that would come in from the castles of Radnor.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald then continued the story, and gave an account of the
+fight in the village, and the manner in which the Welsh were
+attacked, while retiring with their booty, and completely
+routed.</p>
+
+<p>"Their tactics have in nowise changed, then," the earl said,
+"since the days of Griffith and Llewellyn. Against a direct charge
+they were unable to stand; but they attacked, with fury, whenever
+there was an opportunity of fighting under circumstances when our
+weight and discipline gave us little advantage. I hear, from Sir
+William Bastow, that your little band covered the rear of Sir John
+Burgon's troop, and succeeded in keeping them at bay, until he had
+broken the resistance in front, and carried off a small party of
+villagers who were still defending themselves."</p>
+
+<p>"That was so, my lord. Our men were all accustomed to border
+warfare; and had for the most part, before entering Percy's
+service, been often engaged in border forays; and had taken to
+soldiering after their own homes had been burnt, and their cattle
+driven off, by Scottish raiders. Therefore they were accustomed to
+fight each for himself, instead of in close order. Their horses,
+too, bred on the moors, are far more active and nimble than are the
+heavier horses of the south; and enter heart and soul into a fray,
+kicking and plunging and striking with their forelegs at any who
+approach to assail their riders. Thus it was that they were able to
+hold the Welsh carles at bay, far better than men otherwise trained
+and mounted would have been. Another thing is, that in these Border
+conflicts each man is accustomed to keep his eye on his neighbour;
+and, if he sees him hard pressed, to give him aid. Therefore it is
+not surprising that, while the men slew many of the Welsh, they
+themselves escaped with but a few cuts from blows and
+hatchets."</p>
+
+<p>"But you yourself were unhorsed, Sir William tells me, and were
+in great peril. How did that come about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Both my unhorsing, sir, and my rescue, were the result of what
+I just said, our habit of keeping an eye on our neighbours. A
+Welshman was on the point of attacking Captain Alwyn, when he was
+engaged with two others in front. I struck the man down but, as I
+did so, a Welshman sprang on to my horse, behind, and pinned my
+arms to my side; while four others rushed at me."</p>
+
+<p>He then related how he had thrown himself and his assailant off
+his horse, and had been saved by Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a good device, and quickly carried into effect," Earl
+Talbot said; "though it was well that the man-at-arms next to you
+was watching you, just as you had watched his captain; else it must
+have gone hard with you. It is evident that, if you continue as you
+have begun, you will turn out a right valiant knight.</p>
+
+<p>"Your narrative is useful, and I see that, when we fall in with
+the Welsh, it will be necessary to have a picked body of
+men-at-arms, whose duty shall be to cover the rear of the main
+attack; for it seems that this is the real point of danger. Should
+we come into conflict with them, I will assign to you a body of
+men-at-arms, who with Percy's men shall, under your command, fulfil
+that duty. This would at once be of signal benefit to us, and will
+give you another opportunity of distinguishing yourself, and
+winning your spurs when the time comes."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you greatly, my lord, and trust that I may so bear
+myself as to merit your approbation."</p>
+
+<p>The next morning the force mounted, at daybreak. It consisted of
+two hundred horse, that the earl had brought with him; and which
+was to be joined, at Chirk, by a hundred and fifty of Lord Grey's
+men from Ruthyn, orders having been already sent on for them to
+hold themselves in readiness. This was to be done quietly, and
+without stir, as word would be sure to be sent to Glendower, were
+it to be known in the town that preparations had been made for an
+expedition. They were to start from the castle at ten o'clock at
+night, when the town would be wrapped in sleep, and would arrive at
+Chirk before daybreak.</p>
+
+<p>On arriving at the castle, it was found that the troops from
+Ruthyn had duly come in. They were received by the seneschal of
+William Beauchamp, Lord of Abergavenny. Chirk Castle had passed
+through many hands, having been several times granted to royal
+favourites; being a fine building, standing on a lofty eminence,
+which afforded a view of no less than seventeen counties. It was
+square and massive, with five flanking towers, and its vast
+strength was calculated to defy the utmost efforts of the Welsh to
+capture it. It was but a short distance thence to the valley of the
+Dee, in which was the estate of Glendower, extending for some eight
+miles north, into what is now the neighbourhood of Llangollen.</p>
+
+<p>As one of the detachments had arrived before daybreak, and the
+other two hours after dark, it was improbable that their advent had
+been noticed; and, at the request of the knight who commanded the
+troop from Ruthyn, the gates of the castle had been kept closed all
+day, no one being allowed to enter or leave.</p>
+
+<p>At daybreak the next morning, the whole force sallied out.
+Three-quarters of an hour later, they dashed down into the valley
+at a point about half a mile distant from Glendower's dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>This was a very large and stately building. Near it stood a
+guest house and a church, and all the appurtenances of a man of
+high rank. It was called Sycharth. Here Glendower maintained an
+almost princely hospitality; for, in addition to this estate, he
+possessed others in South Wales.</p>
+
+<p>More especially bards were welcomed here. Some resided for
+months; others, who simply paused on their rambles through the
+country, remained but for a few days; but all were received with
+marked honour by Glendower, who was well aware of the important
+services that they could render him. Indeed, it was on them that he
+relied, to no small extent, to arouse the feelings of the populace;
+and his hospitality was well repaid by the songs they sung, in hall
+and cottage, in his praise; and by their prophecies that he was
+destined to restore the ancient glories of the country.</p>
+
+<p>The house was surrounded by a moat and wall, but had otherwise
+no defensive works; as, for a hundred years, the English and Welsh
+had dwelt peaceably, side by side. Many of the castles were,
+indeed, held by Welshmen, and there were few garrisons but had a
+considerable proportion of Welsh in their ranks.</p>
+
+<p>It was singular that Glendower should, after his defiance of the
+king, and the raids that had lately been made, have continued to
+dwell in a spot so open to attack, and within striking distance of
+the three great castles of Ruthyn, Chirk, and Holt. Certain it is
+that he kept no garrison that would suffice to offer a stout
+defence against a strong band, although the precaution was taken of
+keeping a watchman, night and day, in one of the turrets. The sound
+of his horn was heard by the horsemen, as soon as they began to
+descend the hill.</p>
+
+<p>"A pest on the knave!" Lord Grey exclaimed. "He will slip
+through our fingers, yet."</p>
+
+<p>It was scarce a minute later when a mounted man was seen to dash
+out, at full speed, from the other side of the building. He was
+evidently well mounted; and although the pursuit was hotly kept up,
+for two miles, he gained the forest while they were still a quarter
+of a mile behind him, and was lost to view; for although they beat
+the wood for some distance, they could find no traces of him.</p>
+
+<p>When passing by the house, a detachment of a hundred men were
+ordered to surround it, and to suffer none to enter or leave it. On
+the return of the pursuing party the house was entered, and
+ransacked from end to end. The male retainers found in it were
+ruthlessly killed. The furniture, which showed at once the good
+taste and wealth of the owner, was smashed into pieces, the
+hangings torn down, and the whole place dismantled. Only two female
+attendants were found, and these were suffered, by Earl Talbot's
+orders, to go free.</p>
+
+<p>"This is evidently the ladies' bower, when they happen to be
+here," Lord Grey said; as, an hour later, he entered a room in one
+of the turrets, which had been already plundered by the soldiers.
+"'Tis a pity that we did not find one or two of Glendower's
+daughters here. They would have been invaluable as hostages.</p>
+
+<p>"We were too hasty, Talbot. We should have closely questioned
+some of the men, or those two women, and should have found means to
+learn whether they were staying here. It may be that it was so, and
+that they are, even now, concealed in some secret hiding place,
+hard by."</p>
+
+<p>He at once called up several of his men, and set them to search
+every room in the turret, for some sign of an entrance to a secret
+chamber; but although the walls were all tapped, and the floors
+examined, stone by stone, no clue was found to such an entrance, if
+it existed.</p>
+
+<p>The house, which was built entirely of stone, offered no
+facilities for destroying it by fire. The doors were all hewn down;
+the gates in the wall taken off their hinges, and thrown into the
+moat, being too massive to be destroyed by the arms of the
+soldiers. The outlying buildings were all burned down, the vineyard
+rooted up, and the water turned out of the fish pond. Then, greatly
+vexed at their failure to seize Glendower himself, the two nobles
+rode back to Chirk; leaving a hundred men, of whom the band from
+Ludlow formed part, under two of Earl Talbot's knights, to retain
+possession of the house, until it should be decided whether it
+should be levelled stone by stone; or left standing, to go, with
+the estate, to whomsoever the king might assign it.</p>
+
+<p>By Lord Grey's advice, sentries were posted outside the walls,
+from nightfall till daybreak, to prevent any risk of surprise by
+Glendower, whose spies might take him word that the main body of
+the assailants had left. One of the great halls had been left
+untouched, to serve for the use of the garrison; and as an
+abundance of victuals were found in the house, and the cellar was
+well stocked with wines, it was but a short time before the
+garrison made themselves thoroughly comfortable.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as it became dark, twenty men were placed on watch.
+Oswald, with his party, were to take the third watch, at midnight;
+and Mortimer's men-at-arms the second. The captain of each band was
+to place the men, at such points as he might select. Alwyn talked
+the matter over with his nephew.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me," the former said, "that there is but a small
+chance of anyone trying to leave the castle; and at any rate, if
+they did so, it would scarcely be over the wall, for a splash in
+the moat would at once betray them. Moreover, I love not killing in
+cold blood, and should any poor fellows be stowed away somewhere, I
+should be willing enough to let them go free."</p>
+
+<p>"I agree with you altogether, Alwyn," Oswald, who had not heard
+the talk between Grey and Talbot, concerning Glendower's daughters,
+replied heartily. "I would have gladly saved the men who were
+killed today. It is one thing to slay in battle, but to slaughter
+unresisting men goes altogether against my grain."</p>
+
+<p>"Then as we are agreed on that, Oswald, I should say that we had
+best place the greater portion of our men well away from the wall.
+We can leave two at the gate, and set two others to march round and
+round the moat. I should say we had best plant the others, in
+pairs, a quarter of a mile round the house. It is vastly more
+important to prevent Glendower from recapturing his house, by
+surprise, than it is to take prisoners two or three fellows making
+their escape."</p>
+
+<p>"I agree with you, Alwyn."</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, when they filed out from the gate, four were posted
+as Alwyn had suggested. The rest were disposed, in pairs, in a
+circle at a distance round the house.</p>
+
+<p>"I will keep watch with Roger," Oswald said. "'Tis some time
+since I have had an opportunity for a talk with him. I will take
+the next post, if you like. The wood comes closer to the house,
+there, than at any other point; and there are patches, behind which
+an enemy might creep up. My eyes and ears are both good; and as for
+Roger, if he lifts that mighty voice of his in tones of alarm, it
+will reach the ears of all the others, and be the signal for them
+to run back to the gate, at the top of their speed."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, Oswald. I shall walk round the ground, and see that
+all are vigilant. We know not where Glendower's men were lying. It
+may hap they were twenty miles away, but even so he would have had
+plenty of time to have brought them up, by now. I don't think there
+is much chance of any of our men being surprised; most of them
+having, in their time, been so used to midnight rides across moor
+and hill, and so accustomed to see in the dark that, crafty as the
+Welshmen may be, I do not think there is a chance of their getting
+within a hundred yards of any of our posts, without being seen;
+especially as the moon is still half full."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think that there is any chance of our being disturbed,
+Master Oswald?" Roger said, as they took up their post under a low,
+stunted tree.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think so. If Glendower's spies have told him that the
+main body, of those who surprised him this morning, have returned
+to Chirk; he may be sure that enough have been left, to hold the
+place successfully against him and his wild followers, till
+assistance can reach us; and he would have nothing to gain by
+recapturing his house, for he could not hold it long against the
+force assembled at Chirk. Besides, he must know, well enough, that
+if he is to fight successfully, it must be in the woods. Whether he
+has studied the black art, or no, there is little doubt that he has
+turned his attention greatly to military matters, and that he is a
+foe who is not to be despised. He is playing a deep game, and will
+give us a deal of trouble, unless I am greatly mistaken, before we
+have done with him."</p>
+
+<p>"I hear all sorts of strange stories of his powers, Master
+Oswald."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but you see, Roger, the spirits who, as they say, serve
+him, cannot be of much use; or they would have warned him of the
+coming of Talbot, and we should not have taken him unawares, this
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true enough," Roger said, in a tone of relief. "For my
+part, I am not greatly alarmed at spirits. The good abbot used to
+threaten me that I should be carried off by them, unless I mended
+my ways; but I always slept soundly enough, and never saw aught to
+frighten me. They used to say that the spirits of some of the dead
+monks used to walk in the convent garden, but though my cell looked
+down upon it, and I have often stood there by the hour, never did I
+see anything to frighten me.</p>
+
+<p>"If the Welsh do come, what are we to do, master--fight
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"By no means, Roger. Our duty is to watch, and not to fight. You
+must lift up your voice, and shout as loud as you can, and then we
+must run to the gate. There we can make a fight, till the rest join
+us. But, whatever you do, do not shout until I tell you. A false
+alarm would raise the whole garrison; and, if naught came of it,
+would make us a laughing stock."</p>
+
+<p>While they were talking, both were keeping a close lookout on
+the ground in front of them, and also to the right and left, for
+the watches were two hundred yards apart, and they had to make sure
+that no party of the enemy slipped unseen between them. Suddenly
+Roger plucked Oswald's sleeve, and said in a whisper:</p>
+
+<p>"Unless my eyes deceive me, master, I saw two dark figures flit
+from that clump of bushes, some forty yards away, to those next to
+them. There they go again!"</p>
+
+<p>"I see them, Roger. It may be that they are spies, who have
+crept up close. Let us give chase to them."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I shout, master?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no. This is not an attack. Stoop as low as you can or, if
+they look back, they will see that great figure of yours, and be
+off like hares. Run as softly as you can."</p>
+
+<p>Stooping low, they set off at a run and, being certain that the
+figures were making straight for the forest, they did not pause to
+get another glimpse of them, but ran straight on. They had gone
+some seventy or eighty yards, when they heard a stifled
+exclamation; and then, without further attempt at concealment, two
+figures rose from a bush twenty yards ahead, and fled for the
+forest. There was no more occasion for stooping and, at the top of
+their speed, Oswald and Roger pursued the fugitives.</p>
+
+<p>These ran fast, but Oswald, who had outpaced his heavier
+companion, came up to them when within fifty yards of the edge of
+the forest; and, passing them, drew his sword and faced them.</p>
+
+<p>"Surrender," he said, "or I will cut you down."</p>
+
+<a id="PicF" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/f.jpg" alt="
+To Oswald's astonishment, two young women stood before him"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>Instead of the fierce spring that he had anticipated, the two
+figures stopped suddenly, exchanged a word in Welsh, and then
+dropped their cloaks. To Oswald's astonishment, two young women
+stood before him. They evidently belonged to the upper class. Both
+were richly dressed. They wore heavy gold chains round their necks,
+and bracelets of the same metal; set, as Oswald noticed by the
+reflection of the moon, with jewels. They had also brooches, and
+their girdles were held in with massive gold clasps.</p>
+
+<p>By this time Roger had come up, and stood staring with
+astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"Take these, good fellows," the girl said in English, as she
+began to unfasten her necklace. "Take these, and let us go. They
+will make you rich."</p>
+
+<p>"I am an esquire of Sir Henry Percy," Oswald said, "and I rob
+not women. By your appearance, I should judge you to be daughters
+of Glendower."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be useless to deny it," one of the girls said,
+proudly.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you come spying here?" Oswald said. "Surely, among your
+father's warriors, others better suited for such work might have
+been found."</p>
+
+<p>"We were not spying," the girl replied. "We have lain hidden all
+day, and were but making our escape."</p>
+
+<p>"How can that be, madam? We had a guard all round the castle,
+and know that none can have escaped."</p>
+
+<p>"Being an esquire, you are a gentleman, sir, and will not
+disclose what I am about to tell you; though, indeed, now that our
+father's house is in your hands, it boots not much whether the
+secret is known. There is a secret passage from the castle that
+opens into these bushes, and it was through that that we issued
+out; having been in hiding all day, in the secret chamber from
+which it leads.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, we are your prisoners; and shall, I suppose, be sent
+to London, there to be held until our father is in the usurper's
+hands, which will not be, believe me, for years yet."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was silent. The two girls, some seventeen or eighteen
+years of age, both possessed singular beauty they had inherited
+from their father; and bore themselves with an air of fearlessness
+that won his admiration. He was still but a lad and, thinking of
+the years these fair girls might pass in a prison, he felt a deep
+pity for them. He drew Roger aside.</p>
+
+<p>"What think you, Roger? Must we send these fair young girls to
+prison?"</p>
+
+<p>"In faith, I know not, master. Having been shut up many a time
+in a cell, I have a sort of fellow feeling for prisoners; and
+indeed, two fairer maidens I have never seen. Our orders were to
+look after Welshmen, and see that they did not attack us. No word
+was said of Welsh women. And besides, they were running away, and
+not thinking of attacking us."</p>
+
+<p>"That is all very well, Roger, but I cannot deceive myself.
+There is no doubt that it is our duty to take these two maidens
+prisoners, but my heart aches at the thought that they might pass
+years of their lives in a prison. They are not responsible for
+their father's misdeeds and ambition, and it may be that, if they
+are restored, Glendower may be induced to treat those who fall into
+his hands mercifully. None but ourselves know of this, and no one
+need ever know.</p>
+
+<p>"I will risk it, anyhow," he said after a short pause. "I know
+that I am not doing my duty in letting them go; and that, were it
+ever known, I should lose all chance of further advancement, if
+indeed I did not lose my life. However, it need never be known, and
+my conscience would sorely trouble me, whenever I thought of them
+shut up in one of King Henry's prisons."</p>
+
+<p>He turned to the girls again.</p>
+
+<p>"Think you, ladies," he asked, "that were you in the king's
+hands, your father would make terms and submit himself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not," the one who had spoken before said. "He has
+other children--sons and daughters--and he would not dream of
+abandoning his rights, and betraying his country, to obtain the
+liberty of two of us."</p>
+
+<p>"In that case, then, your imprisonment would in no degree stop
+this war, or bring about a renewal of peace between the two
+countries?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not; and as for us, we would strangle ourselves in
+prison, did we think that any thought of us would turn our father
+from his noble purpose."</p>
+
+<p>"Then in that case," Oswald said quietly, "it is clear that your
+captivity would do nought to bring about peace, or to allay the
+troubles that have now begun. Therefore I will take on me to let
+you go, though in so doing I may be failing somewhat in my duty.
+Only promise me that, in the future, you will use what influence
+you may possess with your father, to obtain kind treatment for
+prisoners who may fall into his hands."</p>
+
+<p>The expression of haughty defiance, that they had hitherto worn,
+faded from the girls' faces.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall never forget your kindness, sir," one said, in a low
+voice. "We thank you, with all our hearts; not so much for our own
+sake, as for our father's. He has been cruelly ill used. He has
+much to trouble him, and although I know that our captivity would
+not turn him from his purpose, it could not but greatly grieve and
+trouble him, and he has already troubles enough on his
+shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you accept one of these jewels, as a token only of our
+gratitude for your kindness, shown this night to us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, lady, but no gift will I take. I am failing in my duty,
+but at least it shall not be said that I received aught for doing
+so."</p>
+
+<p>"Then at least--" the girl began, turning to Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"No, lady," the man-at-arms said. "I am neither knight nor
+esquire, but a simple soldier; but I take no presents for saving
+two maidens from capture and captivity. I have been a monk all my
+life, though now a man-at-arms. Never before have I had an
+opportunity of doing aught of kindness for a woman, and I am glad
+that the chance has fallen in my way."</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask the name of one who has done us such kindness?" the
+girl said, turning to Oswald.</p>
+
+<p>"It were best not, lady. It is a service that might cost me my
+head, were it to be bruited about. 'Tis best, then, that even you
+should not know it. I doubt not that you would preserve the secret;
+but you would perhaps mention it to your father, and it were best
+that it were known to none."</p>
+
+<p>The girls were silent for a minute.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," the elder said, after exchanging a word or two with her
+sister, "we would ask a boon of you. The successes in a war are not
+always on one side. My sister and I will think often of one who has
+so greatly befriended us; and were you, by any accident of war, to
+fall into the Welsh hands, and should evil befall you, it would be
+a deep grief to us. We pray you then, sir, to accept this little
+gold necklet. Its value is small, indeed, but it was given to me
+when a child by my father. My name and his are engraved on the
+clasp. Should you, at any time of stress, send this to my father;
+right sure am I that, on recognizing it, he would treat as dear
+friends those who have done so much for his daughters. I pray you
+to accept it, and to wear it always round your neck or wrist; and
+if it should never prove useful to you, it will at least recall us
+to your thoughts."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot be so churlish, lady, as to refuse your token so
+offered; and though I hope that it will not be needful to use it as
+you say--for, indeed, I expect to return very shortly to my lord in
+Northumberland--it will be a pleasant remembrance of the service
+that a good fortune has enabled me to render, to two fair maidens.
+Be assured that I shall ever keep your necklet, for the sake of the
+givers.</p>
+
+<p>"And now, farewell! We must be back at our post, for the captain
+of the guard will be going his round, and we might be missed."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall never forget you, sir. May the blessing of God fall on
+you, for your kind deed!"</p>
+
+<p>"May all good fortune attend you!" Oswald answered; and then,
+with Roger, he made his way back to his post; while the girls
+hurried on, and entered the forest.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch11">Chapter 11</a>: Bad News.</h2>
+
+<p>"This has been a strange adventure, Roger."</p>
+
+<p>"A very strange one, master. Lord Grey would tear his hair, if
+he knew that those two pretty birds had been hiding in the cage all
+day, and he never knew it. However, I see not that it can do us
+harm. Nay, more, there is a probability that it may even benefit
+us, for if it should happen, by ill fortune, we should ever fall
+into the hands of the Welsh, and they should abstain from cutting
+our throats then and there, perchance these young ladies would
+repay the service we have rendered them, by taking us under their
+protection."</p>
+
+<p>"It may be so, indeed, Roger, though I hope that I shall never
+hear more of tonight's adventure. We may reason as we will, but
+there is no doubt that, although we had no instructions touching
+the capture of women, we have failed in our duty."</p>
+
+<p>"That will in no way trouble me, Master Oswald. When I was a
+monk, I failed in my duty scores of times, and am no whit the worse
+for it; rather the better, indeed, since it is owing to my failures
+that I am now a free man-at-arms, instead of being mewed up for
+life in a convent. I shall not sleep one wink less, for having
+saved two of the prettiest girls I ever saw from having been shut
+up, for years, in a prison."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid your sense of duty is not strong, Roger."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid not, master, saving in the matter of doing my duty
+in face of an enemy."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean, Roger, that you will do your duty when it so pleases
+you, and not otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"I expect that is the way with a good many of us," Roger
+laughed. "I wonder whether Lord Grey had any idea that Glendower's
+daughters were in the house when we arrived there?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know not, but I remember now that they had men searching, for
+some time, for signs of secret passages. Whether it was from any
+idea that Glendower's daughters might be hidden away, I know
+not."</p>
+
+<p>"Truly it might have been," Roger said, "for I saw, among the
+spoil that was carried off when the others rode for Chirk, some
+silks and stuffs that looked like feminine garments.</p>
+
+<p>"There is somebody coming across from the next post," he broke
+off. "Doubtless it is the captain. You would not tell him what we
+have done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not, Roger. My uncle is an old soldier, and though he
+would not, for my sake, say anything about it, I think not that he
+would approve of what has been done. 'Tis best, at any rate, to
+keep it entirely to ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"All quiet here, as elsewhere?" Alwyn asked as he came up.</p>
+
+<p>"All quiet, Uncle."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis well; for although methinks that we could hold the place
+against the Welshmen, we could hardly hope that some of our posts
+would not be cut off, before they could reach the house. It is well
+to keep watch, but the more I think of it, the more I feel that
+Glendower will scarce attack us. He could not hold the place, did
+he gain it; and it might well be that, after we were turned out
+again, the place would be destroyed, seeing that it would need two
+or three hundred men to be shut up here, in garrison."</p>
+
+<p>After waiting half an hour, Alwyn again made the round of the
+posts, and then went in to rouse the party that were to relieve
+them. As soon as these issued out, the sentries were called in, and
+stretched themselves for three hours' sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Before day dawned, a messenger rode in from Chirk, bearing Earl
+Talbot's orders for the evacuation of the house, as there could be
+no advantage in retaining it; and, were it empty, Glendower might
+return there, and afford them another opportunity for capturing
+him.</p>
+
+<p>On the following day the party broke up. Lord Grey rode with his
+men to Ruthyn, and the forty men-at-arms from Ludlow returned to
+that town; where, a few days later, the news arrived that
+Glendower, with a large following, had established himself on the
+rugged height of Corwen, and was engaged in strengthening the
+ancient fortifications on its summit.</p>
+
+<p>For a time there was quiet on the border, and then came the
+startling news that Glendower had suddenly surprised, plundered,
+and burnt to the ground the town of Ruthyn, where a fair was being
+held at the time. Then, having obtained great booty, and greatly
+injured his enemy Lord Grey, he again retired. It was evident that
+no local force of sufficient strength could be found to pursue
+Glendower into his fastnesses on the ranges of Berwyn and Snowdon,
+and nothing was done until, three months later, the king, on his
+return from Scotland, marched into Wales with the levies of
+Warwickshire, Leicestershire, and eight other adjacent counties,
+while orders were issued to the people of Shrewsbury, and other
+towns on the eastern border, to hold themselves in readiness to
+repel any movement of the Welsh in that direction.</p>
+
+<p>The king, however, accomplished nothing. Glendower, with his
+following, took refuge among the forests of Snowdon; and the
+English army marched along the north coast, putting to the sword a
+few bands of peasantry, who ventured to oppose them; crossed to the
+Isle of Anglesey and, entering the Franciscan monastery of
+Llanfaes, slew some of the monks and carried the rest to England,
+and established a community of English monks in the convent. This
+was done because the Franciscans had been supporters of the late
+king, and were believed to have given aid and encouragement to
+Glendower.</p>
+
+<p>The Welsh expedition was, therefore, no more successful than the
+Scotch had been.</p>
+
+<p>For a time, matters settled down. Glendower was occupied in
+strengthening his position. So much had his reputation spread, that
+large numbers of Welshmen who had settled in England now sold their
+property, gave up their positions and abandoned their careers, and
+made their way across the border to join him. Still, for some
+months no operations were undertaken, on either side; and, a week
+after the return of the king and his forces, Sir Edmund Mortimer
+said to Oswald:</p>
+
+<p>"I will no longer keep you and your following from your lord's
+side. I have largely strengthened my garrison, and twenty men,
+however valiant, are no longer of importance. As you know, I should
+not have asked Percy to aid me, had I not thought that, perchance,
+he might have come himself, bringing with him two or three hundred
+men; and that my sister might have accompanied him. Maybe, if
+matters go on quietly on the northern marches, he may be able to do
+so yet; but I fear that the Scotch will take advantage of the
+troubles here, and may, for aught I know, have entered into
+communication with Glendower, so that they may together harass the
+kingdom. I have written several times to him, telling him what good
+service you and his men have rendered; and that I would I had five
+hundred such good fighters with me, in which case I would
+undertake, single handed, to bring this fellow to reason.</p>
+
+<p>"I have written a letter which I will hand you to deliver,
+saying that, as at present things are quiet and Glendower is in
+hiding among the mountains, I have sent you back to him; not
+without the hope that, should greater events take place, he himself
+will come hither, for a while, to give me the benefit of his
+knowledge of border warfare, even if he comes accompanied only by
+my sister and a dozen spears. I may tell you that, some two months
+since, he wrote saying that he should be glad to have you, and the
+captain of his garrison of Alnwick, back again; and I then wrote to
+him, saying that while the king was in Wales I would hold you,
+seeing that Glendower might make a great foray here, while the king
+was hunting for him in the north; but that, as soon as he left with
+his army, I would send you home."</p>
+
+<p>Alwyn and the men were all well pleased when they heard that
+they were to return; for, since the raid on Glendower's house,
+their life had been a dull one, to which even the fact that they
+were receiving pay from Sir Edmund, as well as from Percy, was
+insufficient to reconcile them; and it was with light hearts that
+they started, on the following morning, for the north, arriving at
+Alnwick ten days after leaving. Sir Hotspur came down into the
+courtyard, as they rode into the castle.</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome back, Oswald; and you, my trusty Alwyn!</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you all, my men, for the manner in which you have borne
+yourselves, and that you have shown the men of the west how stoutly
+we Northumbrians can hold our own, in the day of battle. I am glad,
+indeed, to find that all that went have returned home; some bearing
+scars, indeed, but none disabled. I will instruct your captain to
+grant all of you a month's leave, to pay a visit to your
+families.</p>
+
+<p>"You must sup with us tonight, Alwyn, and give us a full account
+of your doings, and also your frank opinion as to the state of
+things in the west, and the probability of long trouble with this
+strange Welshman, who has so boldly taken up arms, and defied the
+strength of England."</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly a year since the party had left Alnwick, and
+Oswald had, in that time, greatly increased in height and strength.
+He was now eighteen, and as he was nearly six feet in height, and
+his figure had filled out greatly since he had left his home, he
+might well have passed as three or four years older than his real
+age. That evening, Alwyn gave a full account of their fray with the
+Welsh.</p>
+
+<p>"These men fight stoutly, Alwyn," Percy said, when he had
+concluded his story.</p>
+
+<p>"Right stoutly, Sir Henry, and were their discipline equal to
+their bravery, they would be formidable opponents, indeed; but as
+it is, they are quite unable to stand against men-at-arms in a set
+battle. In this respect they are by no means equal to the Scotch,
+but for surprises, or irregular fighting, I could wish to see no
+better men."</p>
+
+<p>"It is an unfortunate affair," Percy said. "It seemed that we
+had finished with Wales, at Llewellyn's death, and that the two
+nations had become one. In London, and many other places, they were
+settled among us. Numbers of them studied at our universities, and
+in Shropshire, Radnor, Flint, and other border counties I have
+heard that most of the labouring men were Welsh, and have come to
+speak our language; and indeed, they form no small portion of the
+garrisons of the castles; so much so that I fear that, should the
+Welsh really ravage the border counties, 'tis like that not a few
+of the castles will fall into their hands by the treachery of their
+fellow countrymen in the garrisons.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Edmund speaks very highly of you, Oswald, not only for your
+behaviour in the fight, which was reported to him by Sir James
+Burgon, a knight well fitted to judge in such matters, but as an
+inmate of his castle. He said that, from your conversation, he has
+conceived a high opinion of you.</p>
+
+<p>"At present things are somewhat quiet here, and it were well
+that you should, like your uncle, take a holiday for a time, and
+visit your father and mother. They have sent over, several times,
+for news of you."</p>
+
+<p>The next morning Oswald mounted and rode off, attended by Roger,
+who had asked Oswald to take him with him, as he had no relations
+he cared to visit. Alwyn was going for a few days only, and indeed,
+would probably have declined to take a holiday at all, had not
+Oswald earnestly begged him to go with him.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis two years since you have been there," Oswald said.</p>
+
+<p>"That is so, Oswald, but I have often been longer without seeing
+my brother; and, in truth, of late I have had so little to do, with
+but twenty men to look after, that I long for regular work and
+drill again. Still, it were best that I went with you. There are
+turbulent times on hand, both on this border, in Wales, and maybe
+in France. I may get myself killed, and your father's house may be
+harried again by the Bairds, and he may not succeed in getting off
+scatheless, as he did last time; and I should blame myself,
+afterwards, if I had not seen him, and shaken his hand, when I had
+an opportunity such as the present."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald had seen so much, during the two years that had passed
+since he first left the hold that, as he rode towards it, it seemed
+strange that everything should be going on as if it was but the day
+before that he had ridden away--the only difference being that the
+hold looked strangely small, and of little account, after the many
+strong castles he had seen.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as they reached the moor, within sight of the hold, a
+horseman was seen to leave it, and ride at a gallop towards
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"That is ever the way," Oswald said; "we like to know, when a
+visitor is seen, whether he comes as friend or foe."</p>
+
+<p>As the moss trooper rode up, and was about to put the customary
+question, he recognized Oswald; and, wheeling his pony without a
+word, dashed off at full gallop, waving his spear and shouting, as
+he approached the hold.</p>
+
+<p>They rode at a canter after him and, as they reached the
+entrance, his father and mother appeared at the door at the top of
+the steps. The latter ran down the steps and, as Oswald leapt from
+his horse, threw her arms round his neck.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God you are back again, my boy!" she cried; "though as
+yet, I can hardly believe that this tall fellow is my Oswald. But
+otherwise you are in no way changed."</p>
+
+<p>"I think, Mother, that you are looking better than when I saw
+you last."</p>
+
+<p>"I am well, dear," she said. "We have had a quiet year, and no
+cause for anxiety, and things have gone well with us; and it has
+been pleasant, indeed, for us to have received such good news of
+your doings, and to know that you stood so well with Hotspur."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald now ran up the steps to greet his father, who was already
+talking with Alwyn, who had slipped off his horse and run to speak
+to his brother, while Oswald was occupied with his mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, lad," John Forster said, laying his hand upon his
+shoulder, and looking him up and down, "you have grown well nigh
+into manhood. I always said that you would over top me, and though
+methinks that I have still three inches of advantage, you have yet
+time to grow up to look down on me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you have done credit to us, boy, and your monkish reading
+and writing has not harmed you, as I was afraid it would. Alwyn
+tells me that no man of Percy's troop did better than you, in that
+fight with the Welsh; save, mayhap, that big man-at-arms down
+there, who, he tells me, cracked the skulls of four Welshmen who
+were trying to stab you, besides those he disposed of on his own
+account."</p>
+
+<p>"I owe him my life, indeed, Father. He is a man after your own
+heart, strong and brave and hearty, even jovial when occasion
+offers. He can troll out a border lay with the best, and can yet
+read and write as well as an abbot. His name is Roger."</p>
+
+<p>"Come up, Roger," John Forster shouted, "and give me a grip of
+your hand. You have saved my son's life, as he tells me; and, so
+long as you live, there will be a nook by the fire, here, and a
+hearty welcome, when you are tired of soldiering."</p>
+
+<p>"In truth, you are a mighty man," he went on, after he and Roger
+had exchanged a grip that would have well nigh broken the bones of
+an ordinary man. "I have been looked upon as one able to strike as
+hard a blow as any on the border; but assuredly, you would strike a
+heavier one. Why, man, you must be five or six inches bigger, round
+the chest, than I am."</p>
+
+<p>"You have been an active man from your youth," Roger replied,
+"ever on horseback and about, while I spent years with nought to do
+but eat and drink, and build up my frame, in a monastery."</p>
+
+<p>"Oswald told us, in his letters, that you had been a monk; but
+had, with the consent of the abbot, unfrocked yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"It was so," Roger replied, with a laugh. "Methinks that it was
+a happy day for the abbot, as well as for myself, when I laid aside
+my gown; for I fear that I gave him more trouble than all the rest
+of his convent. Besides, it was as if a wolf's cub had been brought
+up among a litter of ladies' lapdogs--it was sure to be an ill time
+for both."</p>
+
+<p>"And for how long are you at home with us, brother Alwyn?" John
+Forster asked, presently.</p>
+
+<p>"I am here for a week only, John; but Oswald has leave for a
+month, seeing that, at present, there is no great chance of Hotspur
+needing his services. The Scotch are quiet since the king returned,
+I hear."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, they are as quiet as is their nature to be, but 'tis not
+likely to last long. I went not with the army, but I hear that
+Henry behaved so gently that the Scotch feel that it would be
+almost an act of ingratitude to meddle with us, for a time.
+However, that will not last long. Next spring they will doubtless
+be storming down over the hills again."</p>
+
+<p>The holiday passed delightfully to Oswald. Roger enjoyed it even
+more. It was so long since the latter had been permitted the
+freedom of riding at will, over mountain and moor, that he was like
+a schoolboy enjoying an altogether unwonted holiday. He and Oswald
+scoured the country, sometimes returning late in the afternoon, but
+often staying for the night at the houses of one or other of
+Oswald's friends. Once they crossed the border, and rode to the
+Armstrongs', where they stopped for a couple of days, bringing
+Allan and Janet back with them; for Roxburgh was still held by the
+English, and unless when hostilities were actively going on, the
+people of the border, save the marauders, who were always ready to
+seize any opportunity that offered of carrying off booty, were on
+friendly terms, and maintained frequent intercourse with each
+other.</p>
+
+<p>Alwyn had returned to Alnwick when his leave was up. He had
+spent his time quietly at the hold. He and his brother had
+discussed many plans by which its defences could be strengthened,
+but arrived at the same conclusion: that it could defend itself, at
+present, against any small party, but must yield, however much its
+defences were increased, at the approach of an invading army;
+since, even with the assistance of the inhabitants of the
+surrounding districts, it could not maintain itself until an army
+was gathered, and the invaders driven out.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally an afternoon was devoted to sports on the moor;
+and, on one occasion, John Forster sent messengers down to
+Yardhope, and other villages on the Coquet, and to the holds of his
+neighbours; inviting them to come to a gathering, at which there
+would be prizes for riding, wrestling, running, shooting, and feats
+of arms on horseback and foot, and at which all comers would be
+entertained.</p>
+
+<p>The result was a gathering such as had not taken place, in that
+part of the country, for years. Over a thousand people assembled,
+comprising women as well as men. The sports began early, and the
+various events were all eagerly contested. Ralph Gray won the horse
+race, a horse which he had brought from the south being far
+superior, in speed, to any of the smaller border horses; although,
+had the trial been for endurance, it would have had but small
+chance with them. The shooting was close, one of Percy Hope's men
+winning at last. The quarterstaff prize was awarded to Long
+Hackett, one of John Forster's retainers. At wrestling Roger bore
+off the palm. Some of his opponents were, in the opinion of lookers
+on, more skilled at the sport; but his weight and strength more
+than counterbalanced this, and one after another tried, in vain, to
+throw him to the ground; succumbing, themselves, as soon as he put
+out his strength, and theirs began to be exhausted; when, drawing
+them up to him with irresistible strength, he laid them quietly on
+the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald himself carried off the palm in a mile foot race.</p>
+
+<p>At one o'clock the sports were concluded. While they had been
+going on, a score of men were attending to the great joints
+roasting over bonfires, six bullocks having been slaughtered the
+day before. Ducks, geese, and chickens innumerable were also
+cooking; while, for the table in the hold, at which the principal
+guests sat down, were trout, game, and venison pasties. Here wine
+was provided, while outside a long row of barrels of beer were
+broached, for the commonalty.</p>
+
+<p>Dinner over, there was singing and dancing. Alwyn had engaged,
+and sent from Alnwick, a score of musicians. These were divided
+into five parties, stationed at some little distance apart, and
+round these the younger portion of the gathering soon grouped
+themselves; while the elders listened to border lays sung by
+wandering minstrels. The days were shortening fast and, as many of
+those present had twenty miles to ride, by six o'clock the
+amusements came to an end, and the gathering scattered in all
+directions, delighted with the day's proceedings; which, although
+they would have been thought of but small account in the southern
+counties, were rare, indeed, in a district so thinly populated, and
+so frequently engaged in turmoil and strife.</p>
+
+<p>Except in the running match, Oswald had engaged in none of the
+contests, he being fully occupied in aiding his mother in welcoming
+the guests, and seeing to their comfort; while his father, assisted
+by his friends, Hope, Gray, and Liddel, superintended the
+arrangements for the sports, and acted as judges. In the afternoon,
+Oswald and his cousins had joined heartily in the dances, and
+enjoyed the day to the full as much as their visitors.</p>
+
+<p>Gatherings of this kind were not uncommon. Shooting, wrestling,
+and sword-playing for the men, and dancing on the green for the
+young people, took place at most of the village fairs; but the
+gathering at Yardhope was long talked about, as a special occasion,
+from the hospitality in which all were included, and the number of
+the heads of the border families who were present, and took part in
+the proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald's mother had been the prime mover in the matter. She was
+proud of her son, and thought that it was a good occasion to
+present him to the countryside, as one who was now arriving at
+manhood, and was likely, in time, to make a figure on the border.
+John Forster had at first declared that it was wholly unnecessary,
+and that such a thing had never taken place in his time, or in his
+father's before him.</p>
+
+<p>"That may be, husband," she said, "but Oswald has been away from
+us for two years, and it may be as much more before he returns. He
+is like to become a knight, before long--Alwyn said that the lad
+was sure to win his spurs--and it would be well that he should not
+slip out of the memory of folks here. Besides, we have his cousins,
+and it is well that they should carry back news that, in spite of
+the troublous times, we can yet be merry on suitable occasions.</p>
+
+<p>"The cost will not be very great. The meat can scarcely be
+counted, seeing that we have as many cattle on the moor as can pick
+up a living there. Moreover, our neighbours all gave us a helping
+hand, to repair the hold after it was sacked last year, and 'tis
+but right that we should hold some sort of gathering, and this will
+do for the two purposes."</p>
+
+<p>The last argument had more weight with John Forster than the
+former ones. Once having consented, he took as much interest in it
+as did his wife; and dug up the pot in which he stowed away any
+sums that remained, at the end of each year, over and above the
+expenses of the hold; and provided all that was required, without
+stinting.</p>
+
+<p>Three days after the gathering, the Armstrongs returned home,
+and Oswald rode with Roger to Alnwick. The next three months passed
+quietly and uneventfully. Snow was lying deep on the Cheviots, and
+until spring there was little chance of the Scotch making a
+foray.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald worked hard in the hall, where the knights kept
+themselves in exercise, practised with the young squires, and
+superintended the drilling and practice of the men-at-arms, of whom
+the number at the castle had been much increased; for none doubted
+that in the spring the Scots would, after Henry's invasion, pay a
+return visit to England, and that the northern counties would need
+a very strong force to hold them in check.</p>
+
+<p>He was, several times, sent by Percy with messages to the
+governors of Roxburgh and Jedburgh, and to other commanders;
+calling upon them to be vigilant, and to send in lists of arms and
+stores required, so that all should be in good order to make a
+stout resistance, when the need came.</p>
+
+<p>When he had received no special orders to return with speed to
+Alnwick, Oswald generally found time to pay a visit of a few hours
+to the Armstrongs. On these excursions Roger and another
+man-at-arms always rode with him, for it would not have been
+becoming for a squire, and messenger of Hotspur, to ride without
+such escort.</p>
+
+<p>Alwyn had picked out, for Roger's use, one of the strongest
+horses in the castle. It was not a showy animal, having a big ugly
+head, and being vicious in temper; therefore, after some trial, it
+had been handed over to the men-at-arms, instead of being retained
+for the service of the knights. It had, at first, tried its best to
+establish a mastership over the trooper; but it soon found that its
+efforts were as nothing against the strength of its rider, and that
+it might as well try to shake off its saddle as to rid itself of
+the trooper, the grip of whose knees almost stopped its breathing.
+Oswald, too, was very well mounted, Sir Edmund Mortimer having
+presented him with one of the best horses in the stable, upon his
+leaving him.</p>
+
+<p>Upon nearing Hiniltie one day, just as the new year had begun,
+Oswald was alarmed at seeing smoke wreaths ascending from the knoll
+behind the village upon which the Armstrongs' hold stood. Galloping
+on, he soon saw that his first impressions were correct, and that
+his uncle's tower was on fire. He found the village in
+confusion.</p>
+
+<p>"What has happened?" he asked, reining in his horse for a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>"The hold was suddenly attacked, two hours ago," a man said. "A
+party of reivers rode through here. None had seen them coming, and
+there was no time for us to take our women and children, and hurry
+to the shelter of the hold. Adam Armstrong is away at Roxburgh.
+Young Allan, with what few men there were at the hold, had but just
+time to shut the gates; but these were hewed down, in a short time,
+by the troopers. There was a stout fight as they entered. Allan was
+cut down and left for dead, and the troopers were all killed. Dame
+Armstrong was slain, and her daughters carried off by the reivers;
+and these, as soon as they had sacked the house, set it alight and
+galloped off. Most of the men here were away in the fields, or with
+the flocks in the valleys, and we were too few to hinder them, and
+could but shut ourselves up in the houses, until they had
+gone."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald had dropped his reins, in speechless dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"It is terrible," he said, at last. "Aunt killed, Janet and
+Jessie carried away, and Allan wounded, perhaps to death!"</p>
+
+<p>"Whence came these villains?" he asked suddenly. "From beyond
+the Cheviots? It can hardly be so, for this part is under the
+governor of Roxburgh, and no English raiders would dare to meddle
+with any here. Besides, my uncle has always been on good terms with
+them, holding himself aloof from all quarrels, and having friends
+and relations on both sides of the border."</p>
+
+<p>"We believe that it was the Bairds," a man said. "There has long
+been a standing quarrel between them and the Armstrongs, partly
+about stolen cattle, but more, methinks, because of the
+relationship between the Armstrongs and your people"--for Oswald's
+visits to his uncle had made his face familiar to the
+villagers--"and they say that the Bairds have sworn that they will
+never rest, until they have slain the last of the Forsters."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Allan Armstrong?"</p>
+
+<p>"They have carried him down to the last house in the village.
+The priest and Meg Margetson, who knows more of wounds and simples
+than anyone here, are with him."</p>
+
+<p>"Has his mother's body been recovered?"</p>
+
+<p>The man shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"The hold was on fire, from roof to cellar, before they left,"
+he said. "I and others ran up there, directly they had galloped
+away. The house was like a furnace. And indeed, we knew not of her
+death until a boy, who had seen her slain, and had dropped from a
+window and hidden himself till they had gone, came out and told us.
+He, and two or three others, are the only ones left alive of those
+in the hold, when we arrived and saved young Allan; and indeed,
+whether he lives now, or not, I know not. The priest said, when we
+carried him in, that his state was almost beyond hope."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald galloped on to the end of the village, leapt from his
+horse, and threw the reins to Roger, who had been muttering words
+that he certainly would not have found in the missals, or the
+books, of the monastery.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there nothing to be done, Master Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at present. We must wait till my uncle returns."</p>
+
+<p>Then he entered the house. He had met the priest frequently,
+during his stay with the Armstrongs; as he entered the room, he was
+standing by a pallet on which Allan was laid, while a very old
+woman was attending to a decoction that was boiling over the
+fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there any hope, father?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know not," the priest replied, shaking his head sorrowfully.
+"We have stanched the wounds, but his head is well nigh cleft open.
+I have some skill in wounds, for they are common enough in this
+unfortunate country, and I should say that there was no hope; but
+Meg here, who is noted through the country round for her knowledge
+in these matters, thinks that it is possible he may yet recover.
+She is now making a poultice of herbs that she will lay on the
+wound; or rather on the wounds, for he has no less than four."</p>
+
+<p>"I think that he will live, young master," the old woman said in
+a quavering, high-pitched voice. "'Tis hard to kill an Armstrong.
+They have ever been a hardy race and, save the lad's father, have
+ever been prone to the giving and taking of blows. I watched by his
+grandfather's bed, when he was in as sore a strait as this; but he
+came round, and was none the worse for it, though the blow would
+have killed any man with a softer skull.</p>
+
+<p>"A curse upon the Bairds, I say. They have ever been a race of
+thieves and raiders, and it is their doings that have brought
+trouble on the border, as long as I can remember."</p>
+
+<p>"Has any gone to bear the news to Adam Armstrong, father?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I sent off a messenger on horseback, as soon as they had
+gone. Adam left early, and the man will meet him on his way
+back."</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later, indeed, Adam Armstrong rode in. Oswald met
+him outside. His face was set and hard, and Oswald would scarce
+have recognized the kindly, genial man who had always received him
+so heartily.</p>
+
+<p>"There are hopes that he will live," Oswald said.</p>
+
+<p>There was a slight change in the expression of Armstrong's
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis well," he said, "that one should be saved, to take revenge
+for this foul business. All the others are gone."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope we may rescue my cousins."</p>
+
+<p>"We might as well try to rescue a young lamb, that had been
+carried off by an eagle," he said bitterly. "Even could an archer
+send a shaft through the bird's breastbone, the lamb would be
+bleeding and injured, beyond all hope, ere it touched the ground.
+We may revenge, Oswald, but I have no hope of rescue."</p>
+
+<p>Then he went into the house, without further word.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch12">Chapter 12</a>: A Dangerous Mission.</h2>
+
+<p>Half an hour later, Adam Armstrong came out of the cottage where
+his son was lying. His mood had changed. He had gathered hope from
+Meg Margetson's confident assurances that there was ground for
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, let us talk of what had best be done, Oswald," he said, as
+he led the way into the next cottage, where the woman at once
+turned her children out, and cleared a room for him.</p>
+
+<p>"What force could you gather, Uncle?"</p>
+
+<p>"In my grandfather's time," he said, "two hundred Armstrongs,
+and their followers, could gather in case of need; but the family
+was grievously thinned, in the days when Edward carried fire and
+sword through Scotland; and for the last fifty years Roxburgh and
+these parts have been mostly under English rule, and in that time
+we have never gathered as a family. Still, all my kin would, I
+know, take up this quarrel; and I should say that, in twelve hours,
+we could gather fifty or sixty stout fighting men.</p>
+
+<p>"But the Bairds would be expecting us, and can put, with the
+families allied to them and their retainers, nigh three hundred men
+under arms. Their hold is so strong a one that it took fifteen
+hundred Englishmen, under Umfraville, three weeks to capture it. It
+was destroyed then, but it is stronger now than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"Could we get aid from Roxburgh, think you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I fear not, Uncle. I know that the governor has strict orders
+not to give Douglas any pretext for invading us, and to hold his
+garrison together; since the earl may, at any moment, endeavour to
+capture the town before help could arrive. And even were he to send
+four or five hundred men, the Bairds could hold out for a
+fortnight, at least; and long before this Douglas would be down,
+with an army, to his rescue.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been talking it over with my trusty companion, here, and
+he agrees with me that, unless a body of men-at-arms that would
+avail to capture the fortalice by a sudden assault can be raised,
+we must trust to guile rather than force; and I propose that he and
+I shall, at once, start for the hold and see how matters stand, and
+where the prisoners are confined, and what hope there is of getting
+them free. I propose to send my other man to Yardhope, to tell my
+father what has happened, and to ask him to warn his friends to be
+ready to cross the border, and to join any force you can gather for
+an attack on the Bairds. It is true that stringent orders have been
+issued that there is to be no raiding in Scotland, but my father
+would not heed that for a moment. The attack that has been made
+upon you, the killing of his wife's sister, the wounding of Allan,
+and carrying off of his nieces would be deemed, by him, a grievance
+sufficient to justify his disregarding all orders. Besides which,
+he has the old grievance against the Bairds, which is all the more
+bitter since they led the Scots to attack Yardhope. I can guarantee
+that, when he gets word from you as to the day and place, he will
+meet you there with at least a hundred spears. It is true that,
+with this force and that which you can bring, he could not hope to
+capture the Bairds' hold; but together you could carry sword and
+fire through his district, before he could gather a force to meet
+you in the field."</p>
+
+<p>"I fear that would not do, Oswald. William Baird would be
+capable of hanging the girls from the battlements, when the first
+fire was lit."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was silent. From the tales he had heard of the ferocity
+of these dreaded marauders, he felt that it was more than probable
+that his uncle was right.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me," he said, after a pause, "that it were best for
+you to send two men to Parton; which is, as I have heard, though I
+have never been there, ten miles south of the Bairds'. Let them
+give the name of Johnstone; and, at the tavern where they put up,
+say they expect a relative of the same name. As soon as I can find
+out how the affair had best be managed, I will give them
+instructions as to the plans I propose. One will carry them to you,
+and the other to my father. Will Parton be a good place for you to
+join forces?"</p>
+
+<p>"As well as any other, Oswald. Your plan seems to me a good one.
+At any rate, I can think of nothing better. My brain is deadened by
+this terrible misfortune. Had I my own will, I would ride straight
+to the Bairds' hold and challenge him and his brothers and sons to
+meet me, one after another, in fair combat; and should be well
+contented if I could slay one or two of them, before being myself
+killed."</p>
+
+<p>"I can quite understand that, Uncle. But your death would be, in
+no way, an advantage to the girls; nay, would rather render them
+more helpless, therefore I pray you to let me carry things out as I
+have planned."</p>
+
+<p>His uncle nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall send out a dozen runners to my friends," he said, "and
+beg them to be here tomorrow morning, early. Then, when I have
+talked matters over with them, I shall ride to Roxburgh and lay the
+matter before the governor. I know that I shall get no help from
+him; but at least, when he hears of a gathering here, he will know
+that 'tis with no evil intention against the English."</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later, Oswald's messenger started for Yardhope, with
+a full account of the step he was taking, and of the arrangements
+that had been made. This done, he had a long talk with Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Roger," he said, "this will be the most dangerous business
+in which we have been concerned; and I should not venture to
+undertake it, did I not know that I could rely, absolutely, upon
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I will do my best, master, and will adventure my life all the
+more willingly, since it is in the service of Allan and Janet
+Armstrong. They were always pleasant and friendly with me, at
+Yardhope, and I like them for themselves, as well as because they
+are your cousins. Now, master, what is to be done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you your gown with you, Roger?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, master. I know you always told me to take it with me,
+thinking that it might come in useful, and I carried it under my
+saddle all the time we were in Wales; but, seeing that this was but
+a ride to Jedburgh and back, I thought that there would be no
+occasion for it."</p>
+
+<p>"That is unfortunate, Roger, for it is upon this that we must
+depend to get an entry into the Bairds' hold."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, master, I can doubtless get some rough cloth of the
+colour, at Jedburgh; and indeed, there is a small monastery about
+three miles hence on the road, and it may be that, if Adam
+Armstrong will go with us and say wherefore it is wanted, the prior
+will let him have one."</p>
+
+<p>"I will see him at once. No time must be lost. While he is away,
+you must shave your head again."</p>
+
+<p>Roger's face fell.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis hard, master, after it has grown so well to match the
+rest. Still, for so good a purpose I must even give in."</p>
+
+<p>On hearing what was wanted, Armstrong mounted and rode off at
+once and, while he was away, one of the villagers shaved the top of
+Roger's head again. In an hour, Armstrong brought back a monk's
+gown.</p>
+
+<p>"He was loath to let me have it even, for such a purpose, though
+I told him that you were once a monk of the order. Finally he said
+that his conscience would not allow him to lend it, but that he
+would sell it to me for six pennies, which I gladly gave him."</p>
+
+<p>"It is dark now," Oswald said, "and I know not the road. Can you
+give me some man to put me on the way? We will not make straight
+for the Bairds', but will strike the road from Glasgow, some ten or
+twelve miles north of his place, so that we can come down from that
+direction. Then our guide, after taking us on to the road, had best
+take charge of the horses and lead them to Parton, there to remain
+with them until your messenger, and the one from Yardhope, arrive.
+It would be as well to have the horses there, for we cannot know
+what need we may have of them."</p>
+
+<p>"That I will arrange at once, Oswald. Is there aught else?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Uncle, I must leave my armour and clothes here, and borrow
+others that will pass as a disguise."</p>
+
+<p>"How would you go, Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"In truth, it is a difficult matter. That of a minstrel would be
+the best passport, but I know nought of harp or other instrument. I
+might go as a vendor of philters and charms, a sort of half-witted
+chap, whose mother concocted such things."</p>
+
+<p>"They would never let you into the Bairds' castle, Oswald."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I must be a rough man-at-arms, one who had been in the
+service of the Earl of March; and who, when he turned traitor and
+went over to the English, found himself without employment; and
+asked nothing better than to enter the service of someone who will
+give him bread and meat, in return for any services that he can
+render, whether in hunting up any cattle among the hills, or
+striking a shrewd blow in the service of his employer, if needs
+be."</p>
+
+<p>"That must do, if we can think of nothing better, Oswald. I will
+speedily bring you the things you require, as they will be found in
+every house in the village; and some, alas! will be needed no more
+by those who wore them."</p>
+
+<p>"They must be of good size, Uncle."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, lad. There must have been some tall fellows, among
+those they slew today."</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later, Roger and Oswald mounted. His uncle sent two
+of his men with them, saying that it would look strange were one
+man to come, with two horses, to Parton; but that two, saying that
+their masters would follow, would seem a more probable tale.</p>
+
+<p>"They will, if they can, find some quiet farmhouse a mile out of
+the village, and there get lodgings for themselves and beasts. You
+can arrange with them to take up their station on the road, so that
+you can, if needs be, find them."</p>
+
+<p>It was with a sigh that Roger flung himself into the saddle. It
+was not the horse on which he had ridden there, but a strong,
+shaggy pony.</p>
+
+<p>"He does not look much," one of the men said, "but there is no
+better horse, of the sort, in the country. He has both speed and
+bottom, and can carry you up or down hill, and is as sure-footed as
+a goat."</p>
+
+<p>Roger had assented to the change, for his own horse was as
+unlike one that a monk would have bestrode as could be well
+imagined. He had obtained a stout staff, to which the village smith
+had added two or three iron rings at each end, rendering it a
+formidable weapon, indeed, in such hands.</p>
+
+<p>"It reminds me of our start for Dunbar, master," he said. "One
+might have a worse weapon than this;" and he swung it round his
+head, in quarterstaff fashion; "still, I prefer a mace."</p>
+
+<p>"That staff will do just as well, Roger. A man would need a hard
+skull, indeed, to require more than one blow from such a
+weapon."</p>
+
+<p>Now that Adam Armstrong had done all that there was to do, he
+went again to the cottage where Allan lay. He had paid several
+visits there, in the afternoon; but there was nought for him to do,
+and no comfort to be gained from the white face of the insensible
+lad. Meg assured him, however, that he was going on as well as
+could be expected.</p>
+
+<p>"He is in a torpor, at present," she said; "and may so lie for
+two or three days; but so long as there is no fever he will, I
+hope, know you when he opens his eyes. There is nought to do but to
+keep wet cloths round his head, and to put on a fresh poultice over
+the wound, every hour."</p>
+
+<a id="PicG" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/g.jpg" alt=
+"Armstrong took his place by his son's pallet"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>Now Armstrong took his place by his son's pallet. For a time,
+the work of making preparations for Oswald's departure, and of
+sending off messages to his friends, had prevented his thoughts
+from dwelling upon his loss. Throughout the night, the picture of
+his home, as he had left it when he rode out that morning; and the
+thought that it was now an empty shell, his wife dead, his
+daughters carried off, and his son lying between life and death,
+came to him with full force, and well nigh broke him down.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, the little party were making across the hills,
+and before morning they came upon the northern road, fifteen miles
+from the Bairds' hold. Here Oswald and Roger dismounted. It was
+arranged that the men should return with the horses into the hills,
+and should there rest until late in the afternoon, and then mount
+and ride for Parton. One or other of them was to come down, at
+seven o'clock each evening, to the road half a mile from the
+village; and was there to watch till nine. If no one came along,
+they were then to return to their lodging.</p>
+
+<p>"I feel stiff in the legs, master," Roger said; "a fifty-mile
+ride, up and down the hills, is no joke after a hard day's
+work."</p>
+
+<p>"They will soon come right again, Roger. I feel stiff, myself,
+though pretty well accustomed to horse exercise. However, when we
+present ourselves at the hold, dusty and footsore, we shall look
+our characters thoroughly."</p>
+
+<p>Neither were sorry when they arrived at a small village, a
+quarter of a mile from the Bairds' hold. They went in together to
+the little ale house, and vigorously attacked the rough fare set
+before them.</p>
+
+<p>"Hast thou travelled far?" their host asked, as he watched them
+eating.</p>
+
+<p>"Indifferently far," the monk said: "'tis five-and-twenty miles
+hence to Moffat, and it would have seemed farther to me, had not
+this good fellow overtaken me, and fell in with my pace. He is good
+company, though monkish gowns have but little in common with steel
+pot and broadsword; but his talk, and his songs, lightened the
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"Whither are you going, father?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am making my way to Carlisle," he said. "I have a brother who
+is prior in a small monastery, there, and it is long since I have
+seen him. Who lives at the stronghold I saw on the hills, but a
+short distance away?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is the hold of William Baird, the head of that family; of
+whom, doubtless, you may have heard."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard his name, as that of a noted raider across the
+border," the monk said; "a fierce man, and a bold one. Has he
+regard for the church? If so, I would gladly take up my abode
+there, for a day or two; for in truth I am wearied out, it being
+some years since my feet have carried me so long a journey."</p>
+
+<p>"As to that, I say nothing," the host said. "It would depend on
+his humour whether he took you in, or shut the gates in your face
+without ceremony; but methinks, at present, the latter were more
+likely than the former; for his hold is full of armed men, and I
+should say it were wisest to leave him alone, even if you had but
+the bare moor to sleep upon."</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, I can but try," the monk said. "He may be in one
+of those good tempers you spoke of. And I suppose he has also a
+priest, in his fortalice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, the Bairds are not--but I would rather not talk of them.
+They are near neighbours, and among my very best customers."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, four armed men came in at the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Good day, Wilson! Whom have you here? An ill-assorted couple,
+surely. A monk, though a somewhat rough one, and a
+man-at-arms."</p>
+
+<p>"Fellow travellers of a day," Roger said calmly. "We met on the
+road, and as I love not solitude, having enough and to spare of it,
+I accosted him. He turned out a good companion."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a man of sinew yourself, monk, and methinks that you
+would have made a better soldier than a shaveling."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so sometime, myself," the monk said; "but my parents
+thought otherwise, and it is too late to take up another vocation,
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that staff yours?" the soldier asked, taking it up, and
+handling it.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my son. In these days even a quiet religious man, like
+myself, may meet with rough fellows by the way; and while that
+staff gives support to my feet, it is an aid to command decent
+behaviour from those I fall in with. I have not much to lose,
+having with me but sufficient to buy me victuals for my journey to
+Carlisle; where, as I have just told our host, I am journeying to
+see a brother, who is prior at a convent there."</p>
+
+<p>"This fellow--where did you fall in with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"He overtook me some twenty miles north, on the road to
+Glasgow."</p>
+
+<p>"And are you travelling to Carlisle, too?" the man said to
+Oswald.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay," he said, "I purpose not going beyond the border. I have
+lost my employment, and have tried, in vain, to find another as
+much to my liking. I have come south to seek service, with one who
+will welcome a strong arm to wield a sword."</p>
+
+<p>"Hast tried the Douglas?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said, "the Douglas has men enough of his own, and
+methinks I should not care to be mewed up in one of his castles. I
+have had enough of that already, seeing that I was a man-at-arms
+with George Dunbar, till he turned traitor and went over to the
+English."</p>
+
+<p>"You look a likely fellow; but, you know, we do not pay men,
+here, to do our fighting for us. 'Tis all very well for great
+nobles, like Dunbar and Douglas, to keep men always in arms, and
+ready to ride, at a moment's notice, to carry fire and sword where
+they will. War is not our business, save when there is trouble in
+the air, or mayhap we run short of cattle or horses, and have to go
+and fetch them from across the border. It is true that there are
+always a score or two of us up there, for somehow the Bairds have
+enemies, but most of the followers of the house live on their
+holdings, raise cattle and mountain sheep, grow oats, and live as
+best they can."</p>
+
+<p>"For myself, I would rather live with others," Oswald said. "I
+am used to it, and to live in a hut on the moors would in no way be
+to my fancy; and if I cannot get a place where I have comrades to
+talk to, and crack a joke with, I would rather cross the seas, take
+service with an Irish chieftain, or travel to Wales, where I hear
+men say there is fighting."</p>
+
+<p>"You need not go very far, if it is fighting that you want," the
+man said. "Those who ride with the Bairds have their share, and
+more, of it. If you like to stop here a day or two, I will take an
+opportunity to talk to William Baird, or to one of his sons, if I
+find a chance; but I cannot take you up there, now. At the best of
+times they are not fond of visitors, and would be less so than
+usual, now."</p>
+
+<p>Other armed men had come in, while the conversation was going
+on. No further attention was paid to the travellers. The others,
+sitting down at a table across the room, talked among
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>"I care not for the work," one said presently, raising his voice
+to a higher pitch than that in which the others had spoken. "Across
+the border, I am as ready for work as another; but when it comes to
+Scot against Scot, I like it not."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, man," another said, "what qualms are these? Isn't Scot
+always fighting against Scot? Ay, and has been so, as far back as
+one has ever heard. It does not take much for a Douglas or a Dunbar
+to get to loggerheads; and as to the wild clans of the north, they
+are always fighting among themselves."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that is all very well," the other said, "and there is no
+reason why neighbours should not quarrel, here; but I would rather
+that they each summoned their friends, and met in fair fight and
+had it out, than that one should pounce upon the other when not
+expected, and slay and burn unopposed."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay," two or three others of the men agreed. "It were
+doubtless better so, when it is Scot against Scot."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis border fashion," another put in. "There is no law on the
+border, and we fight in our own fashion. Today it is our turn,
+tomorrow it may be someone else's. We follow our chiefs, just as
+the northern clansmen do; and whether it is a Musgrave or a Baird,
+a Fenwick or an Armstrong, he is chief in his own hold, and cares
+neither for king nor earl, but fights out his quarrel as it may
+please him. I am one of William Baird's men, and his quarrel is
+mine; and whether we ride against the King of Scotland or the King
+of England, against a Douglas or a Percy, an Armstrong or a
+Musgrave, it matters not the value of a stoup of ale."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so, Nigel, and so say we all. But methinks that one may
+have a preference for one sort of fighting over another; and I,
+myself, would rather fight a matter out, man against man, than fall
+suddenly on a hold, where none are ready to encounter us."</p>
+
+<p>Roger, during a pause in the conversation at the other table,
+got up from his seat and stretched himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, friend," he said to Oswald, "I will go up and see if they
+will make me welcome, at the hold. If they do, I may see you no
+more. If not, I shall return here to sleep. Therefore I bid you
+good day, and hope that you may find such service as will suit you.
+Benedicite!"</p>
+
+<p>And, paying for his refreshment, Roger took his staff from the
+corner, and went out.</p>
+
+<p>"A hearty fellow, and a stalwart one," the man who had spoken to
+him said. "I should not care to have a crack over the crown, with
+that staff of his. You met him coming down from the north,
+comrade?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, some twenty miles away. It was near Moffat that I overtook
+him. I would rather drink with him than fight with him. Seldom have
+I seen a stronger-looking man."</p>
+
+<p>"I am of your opinion, comrade; and some of these monks are not
+bad fighters, either. There have been bishops who have led the
+monks to battle, before now, and they proved themselves stout
+men-at-arms."</p>
+
+<p>After the others had gone out, Oswald strolled through the
+village, and then mounted an eminence whence he could take a view
+across the valley, and of some of the hilltops to the northeast. On
+one of these, two miles away, he could make out a man standing by a
+horse. He watched him for some little time, but beyond taking a few
+steps backwards and forwards, the man did not move.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a lookout," he said to himself, "and is no doubt watching
+some road from Kelso and Jedburgh. Baird will hardly think that the
+Armstrongs can have so soon gathered a force sufficient to attack
+him, but he may have thought it as well to place one of his men on
+the watch.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder how Roger is getting on! I think they must have taken
+him in, or he would have been back before this."</p>
+
+<p>Roger had walked quietly up the hill on which the Bairds' hold
+was perched. A man stepped forward from the gate, as he neared
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"None enter here," he said, "without permission from the
+master."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell him that a poor monk, of the order of Saint
+Benedict, on his way from his convent at Dunbar to one near
+Carlisle, of which his brother is prior, prays hospitality for a
+day or two, seeing that he is worn out by long travel?"</p>
+
+<p>The sentry spoke to a man behind him, and the latter took the
+message to William Baird. The latter was in a good humour. He
+himself had not taken part in the raid on the Armstrongs, which had
+been led by Thomas Baird, a cousin; but the fact that the latter
+had been entirely successful, and had burned down Armstrong's
+house, and brought back his daughters, had given him the greatest
+satisfaction. There was a long-standing feud between the two
+families, and the fact that the Armstrongs were on good terms with
+their English neighbours, and still more that one of them had
+married the sister-in-law of a Forster of Yardhope, had greatly
+embittered the feeling, on his side. He had long meditated striking
+a blow at them, and the present time had been exceptionally
+favourable.</p>
+
+<p>Douglas had his hands full. He was on ill terms with Rothesay,
+whose conduct to his daughter had deeply offended him. The
+newly-acquired land of the Earl of March gave him much trouble. He
+was jealous of the great influence of Albany, at court; and was,
+moreover, making preparations for a serious raid into England. It
+was not likely, then, that he would pay any attention to the
+complaints the Armstrongs might make, of any attack upon them;
+especially as their aid was of small use to him, while the Bairds
+could, at any moment, join him, in an invasion across the border,
+with three hundred good fighting men.</p>
+
+<p>William Baird had not, as yet, even considered what he should do
+with his captives. He might give them in marriage to some of the
+younger men of his family, or he might hold them as hostages. As to
+injuring them personally, he did not think of it. Slaughter in a
+raid was lightly regarded, but to ill-treat female prisoners would
+arouse a general feeling of dissatisfaction along the border.
+Reprisals might be made by the Armstrongs and their friends, and in
+any case, there would be such widespread reprobation excited, as
+William Baird, reckless as he was, could hardly afford to
+despise.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, when Roger's request was brought to him, he said at
+once:</p>
+
+<p>"Take him up to Father Kenelm. Tell him to look after the monk's
+comfort. This evening he can bring him down to the hall, and I will
+question him as to his journey."</p>
+
+<p>Roger followed the man through the courtyard. He paid,
+apparently, no attention to what was going on there, but a quick
+glance enabled him to perceive that the hold was full of men. He
+followed his guide up a winding stair, to a turret on the wall, the
+lower story of which was inhabited by the priest.</p>
+
+<p>The soldier knocked at the door, and on its being opened by the
+priest, he gave Baird's message to him. He was a tall man, spare
+and bony. He himself was a Baird, and report said that, in his
+youth, he had ridden on many a foray in England. But fighting men
+were common in the family, and it had been thought well that one
+should enter the church, as it was always good to have a friend who
+could represent them there and, should any complaint be made,
+explain matters, and show that the family were in no wise to blame.
+And moreover, as it was necessary to have a priest at the chief
+fortalice of the family, it was best that it should be one who
+would not be too strict in his penances, and could be conveniently
+silent as to the doings within its walls.</p>
+
+<p>The priest had accepted the role not unwillingly. He was an
+ambitious man, and saw that, as one of the fighting Bairds, there
+was but small opportunity of rising to aught beyond the command of
+one of the holds. Douglas regarded them with no friendly eye, for
+their breaches of the truces brought upon him constant complaints
+from the English wardens, who might, some day or other, lead a
+force to punish the family, which had been one of the few exempted
+from the general pardon, at the last truce. As a priest he would
+have better opportunities, for the Bairds had much influence along
+the border; and might, some day or other, exert it in his
+favour.</p>
+
+<p>So far, no such opportunity had occurred. It had been a
+disappointment to him that Henry, in his last invasion, had kept
+along the eastern coast; and he hoped that the war, which assuredly
+would, ere long, break out violently, would give him the chance he
+longed for; and he might be sent by his uncle to Douglas, with
+offers of service, or might even go north, and have an interview
+with Albany.</p>
+
+<p>Once fairly away from Liddesdale, he was resolved that it would
+be a long time, indeed, before he returned. He was now some thirty
+years of age, with a hard, keen face.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, brother," he said, "it is not often that any of your
+order sojourn here. I am glad to have one with whom I can converse,
+of other matters than arms and armour, forays and wars."</p>
+
+<p>"These matters are, indeed, too much in men's mouths," Roger
+said; "though I own that I, myself, in some degree am interested in
+them; for, had I had the choice of a vocation, I would rather have
+been a man-at-arms than a monk."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder not at that," the other said, "seeing that nature has
+been bountiful to you, in the matter of height and strength; and I
+doubt not that you could, in case of need, use that staff you carry
+with good effect."</p>
+
+<p>"Methinks that I might do so, but happily none have molested me
+on my way, seeing perhaps that my wallet was not likely to be a
+full one; and that, mayhap, it was hardly worthwhile to meddle with
+me, with so small a prospect of plunder."</p>
+
+<p>"But come in, and sit down," the priest said. "My uncle has
+consigned you to my care. We shall sup in half an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not be sorry," Roger replied, "for though I broke my
+fast on black bread and small beer, down in the village, 'tis but
+poor nourishment for a man who has travelled far, and who has a
+large frame to support."</p>
+
+<p>"But how come you to be here?"</p>
+
+<p>Roger again repeated his story.</p>
+
+<p>"It would have been shorter for you to have travelled down
+through Berwick, brother."</p>
+
+<p>"The difference was not great," Roger replied; "and I had to
+carry a message to Edinburgh, and from there it was shorter to keep
+west of the Pentlands, and come down to Lanark, and thence through
+Moffat."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I suppose it is as short. And you had no trouble on your
+way?"</p>
+
+<p>Roger shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"No; I generally join some traveller or other, and that makes
+the journey pass all the quicker. I came down here today with a
+stout young fellow, who overtook me this side of Moffat. He was
+somewhat out at elbow, and I looked askance at him at first; but he
+turned out a blithe companion, and we got on well together. He
+could troll a good song, and my own voice is not wanting in power.
+It was curious that he also was from Dunbar, though not
+immediately; having, it would seem, wandered for some time, on the
+lookout for service."</p>
+
+<p>"What was he, a cattle drover?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, he had been a man-at-arms, of George of Dunbar--at least,
+so I understood--and when the earl fled, and Douglas took
+possession of Dunbar, he lost his living. He told me that he had
+made his way down here in hopes of finding employment on the
+border, where blows were common, and a good blade was of more use
+than it was farther north. I said that he might have found
+employment under Albany, or under some other great lord; but he
+said that he had seen the Earl of March a fugitive, and that he
+cared not to enter the service of another noble, who might, in
+turn, be ousted from his place and lose his life; but as for
+Albany, he thought, from what he heard, that he would rather serve
+him than any other master.</p>
+
+<p>"I said, 'Why not Rothesay, who would be King of Scotland?'</p>
+
+<p>"He laughed lightly, and said as Rothesay had managed to get
+upon ill friendship, not only with the Earl of March but with
+Douglas, and, as he heard, with Albany, he thought that his chances
+of becoming King of Scotland were not worth considering."</p>
+
+<p>"He must be a bold varlet, thus to speak irreverently of great
+ones."</p>
+
+<p>"I think not that he was bold," Roger said, "but only a merry,
+thoughtless young fellow, who in such company as mine let his
+tongue loose, and said what first came into his head. As to the
+matter, methought he spoke not without warrant."</p>
+
+<p>"And he came from the north, now?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know not whence he came last, but I think that he was at
+Edinburgh, and had taken service there, when the English king sat
+down before it; but, as you know, nought came of the siege."</p>
+
+<p>At this moment a horn blew.</p>
+
+<p>"There is supper," the priest said. "We will go down."</p>
+
+<p>The meal was laid in the hall; which, however, was not large
+enough to contain more than the ordinary retainers of the hold.
+These, and the men who had come in at the summons of Baird, were
+provided for in the courtyard, the table being occupied entirely by
+members of the Baird family, and others who always acted with them.
+These had not yet taken their seats, when the priest entered with
+his companion, whom he at once took up to Sir William Baird.</p>
+
+<p>"By Saint Andrew! Monk, I have seen no finer figure, for many a
+day. A pity that a monk's gown should clothe such limbs as
+yours."</p>
+
+<p>"That has always been mine own opinion," Roger said, with a
+heartiness that raised a smile on the hard faces of the men
+standing round.</p>
+
+<p>"You look as if you had carried arms."</p>
+
+<p>"I did so, in my wild youth," Roger said, "and had no thought of
+ever donning monk's hood; but I was grievously wounded, in a foray
+in Northumberland, and when I reached my home at Lauder, I well
+nigh died of the fever of the wound; and I swore that, if my life
+was saved, I would become a monk. I got well, and I kept my vow;
+but methinks, had I but known how dull the life was, I would rather
+have died of the fever."</p>
+
+<p>As this story was perfectly true, save the name of his
+birthplace, Roger spoke so heartily that no one doubted his
+story.</p>
+
+<p>"And your monastery is at Dunbar?</p>
+
+<p>"You have been at Dunbar, Rotherglen. Ask him where the convent
+stood."</p>
+
+<p>As Roger had stayed there, when with Oswald he was at Dunbar, he
+was able to answer this, and other questions, satisfactorily. The
+party then took their places at table, the priest and Roger sitting
+at the bottom of it. The conversation at the upper end naturally
+turned on the foray, and a general disbelief was expressed, as to
+the chance of the Armstrongs retaliating.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis out of the question," one of the Bairds said, "they could
+not raise fifty men. Doubtless they will send a complaint to
+Douglas, but he has his hands well full; and is not likely to
+quarrel with us about such a trifle, when he may want our aid, at
+any moment, either against Albany or against the English."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you intend to do with the girls?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have not settled yet," William Baird said, shortly. "At any
+rate, for the present I shall hold them as hostages. I don't think
+that anything is likely to come of the affair; but if we should
+hear of any force approaching, likely to give us trouble, we could
+send word to them that, if an arrow is loosened at our walls, we
+will hang the girls out as marks for their archers. I fancy that
+will send them trooping off again, at once."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the meal was over, and the carousal began, the priest
+rose and, accompanied by Roger, retired to his chamber.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch13">Chapter 13</a>: Escape.</h2>
+
+<p>Oswald, who was thoroughly fatigued with the events of the last
+thirty-six hours, slept soundly, on an armful of rushes that his
+host threw down in a corner of the room for him. At eight o'clock,
+the man who had spoken to him on the previous evening came in.</p>
+
+<p>"I have spoken to William Baird," he said. "I told him that you
+seemed a likely fellow. He called down the monk, and asked him
+several questions about you; and he told me, at last, that I could
+bring you up to see him. So come along, at once."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, comrade," Oswald said, as he slung his long two-handed
+sword from his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"A likely-looking young fellow, indeed," Baird said to
+Rotherglen, whom he had sent for to be present; "over six feet and,
+I should fancy, has not attained his full width.</p>
+
+<p>"So you would fain take service with me?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I want a master," Oswald replied, "and from what I hear, I am
+more likely to see fighting, under you, than under any other on the
+border."</p>
+
+<p>"And you were with George Dunbar?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was," Oswald replied. "But indeed, the service was not
+altogether to my taste, for we were always pent up in Dunbar; and,
+save in a street broil, there was no need to draw a sword. I was
+glad enough to leave his service, though in truth, I have fared but
+badly, since."</p>
+
+<p>"Now do you question him, Rotherglen."</p>
+
+<p>A number of questions were put to Oswald, concerning the names
+of the streets, the direction, the name of the principal inns, and
+the approaches to the castle. All these were satisfactorily replied
+to.</p>
+
+<p>"He knows Dunbar, there is no question about that.</p>
+
+<p>"And you can use your arms?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think so."</p>
+
+<p>"We will have a trial," Baird said. "A man is no use to me, who
+cannot use his weapon. Send Robert here."</p>
+
+<p>In a minute, one of the young Bairds entered. He was a man of
+about twenty-five, tall and sinewy, and was accounted the best
+swordsman of his family.</p>
+
+<p>"Cousin Robert," William Baird said, "this young fellow would
+enter our service; but before I take him, I must see that he knows
+his business. Do you take a turn with the sword with him.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, not a two-handed sword; I don't want him to be slain.
+Take a couple of swords from the wall. Give him another steel cap,
+and full body armour. That of his own would not keep out a good,
+downright stroke."</p>
+
+<p>By the time that Oswald was armed, a number of the Bairds and
+their friends had assembled in the hall, hearing of what was going
+to take place.</p>
+
+<p>"A fine young fellow, truly," Rotherglen said. "In height and
+width, he matches Robert well, though of course your cousin must be
+the more powerful, seeing that he is some four or five years older
+than this young fellow; who, when he reaches his age, bids fair to
+be well-nigh as strong a man as that monk."</p>
+
+<p>Roger had just entered, with the priest.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, monk," Baird said, "we are going to try the mettle of
+your companion of yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"I answer not for his mettle," Roger said; "but if he fights as
+well as he talks, he will not do discredit to himself."</p>
+
+<p>As they took their places, facing each other, the lookers on,
+men well qualified to judge of strength and sinew, murmured to each
+other that it would be difficult to find a better-matched pair.
+They were about the same height, both stood lightly on their feet,
+and their figures seemed full of life and activity. Both were
+smiling, Robert Baird with a smile of confidence, and of assurance
+in his skill; while Oswald's face expressed only good temper and,
+as the others took it, a belief that he would, at any rate, be able
+to make such a defence as would assure his being taken into the
+Bairds' service.</p>
+
+<p>The first rally, indeed, proved more than this. Robert Baird had
+at once taken the offensive, and showered his blows heavily down,
+while springing backwards and forwards with wonderful quickness and
+activity; but Oswald's blade ever met his, and he did not give way
+an inch, even when Baird most fiercely attacked him. Then suddenly
+he adopted the same tactics as his opponent, and pressed him so
+hotly that he was, several times, obliged to give ground. Oswald
+could twice have got in a heavy blow, but he abstained from doing
+so. He could see that his antagonist was a favourite among his
+kinsmen, and felt that, were he to discomfit him, he would excite a
+feeling of hostility against himself. Both, panting from their
+exertions, drew a step backwards and lowered their swords.</p>
+
+<p>"Enough!" William Baird said, "The matter need be pushed no
+further. 'Tis long since I have seen so good a bout of swordplay.
+This young fellow has learned his business, and if, in other
+respects, he does as well, he will make a good recruit, indeed.</p>
+
+<p>"What say you, lad? Will you join us for a month, till you see
+whether you like our service, and we can judge how your service
+will suit us? For that time you will have your living here, and
+drink money. After that, if we agree, you can either be a retainer
+here, or we will give you a holding on the moor, build you a
+shelter, give you a horse, and, after our next foray, a clump of
+cattle."</p>
+
+<p>"That will suit me well," Oswald said; "and I like well the
+month of trial you propose."</p>
+
+<p>"I will take him, if you will let me, Uncle, as my own man,"
+Robert Baird said. "If, at the end of the month, he chooses service
+with us, and likes better to follow a master, with half a dozen
+men, than to live alone on the moors. Methinks he would make a
+cheery companion, and one I could take to, heartily; and indeed,
+during the long winters, 'tis no slight thing to have one merry
+fellow, who can keep one alive, and of whose mettle and skill you
+are well assured."</p>
+
+<p>"So let it be, then, Robert. You have tried him, and yours
+should be the advantage. But for the month he shall remain here,
+under Malcolm's eye."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald went down with the man, who was Baird's right hand in the
+hold.</p>
+
+<p>"What will be my duties?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"To keep your arms and armour ready for service."</p>
+
+<p>"That will be an easy task, methinks; for I see that instead of
+being polished and bright, as were ours at Dunbar, the others keep
+their steel caps and back pieces painted a sombre colour."</p>
+
+<p>The other nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, our arms are for use and not for show; and when we ride by
+moonlight, we care not to have our presence shown, miles away, by
+the glint of the moon on our armour.</p>
+
+<p>"You will do your turn of keeping watch and ward. Just at
+present there will be a good deal of that, for we have been
+stirring up a wasps' nest, and mayhap they may come and try to
+sting. When you are off duty, you will be your own master, save
+that you had best be within sound of the warder's horn.</p>
+
+<p>"I will hand over a horse to you. For the present, it is at that
+croft on the opposite hill. Each of the tenants keeps two or three
+at our service. We have only the Bairds' own horses kept in the
+hold. It would be too much trouble to gather forage for those of
+the twenty men who always live here, and indeed, we have no room
+for such number.</p>
+
+<p>"Mind that you drink not too much, over in the village there;
+for though the Bairds care not, on feast days, if the whole
+garrison gets drunk, so that there are enough sober to keep watch
+and ward, they set their faces against it at other times, seeing
+that it leads to broils and quarrels."</p>
+
+<p>"I will take care. I like my cup, occasionally; and can drink
+with others, without my head getting addled, but as a rule I care
+not overmuch for it."</p>
+
+<p>After being roughly introduced to several of the retainers as a
+new comrade, Oswald was left to follow his own devices. Presently,
+Roger came out into the courtyard.</p>
+
+<p>"So you have got service, comrade," he said, in a voice that
+could be heard by any of those standing near. "You had better
+fortune than I had expected."</p>
+
+<p>"That have I," he replied. "Still, I thought that it would be
+hard, if one who could use his sword indifferently well, and puts
+no great value on his life, could not find service on the border.
+How long do you stay here?"</p>
+
+<p>This was a question that had been arranged, for had they been
+seen speaking privately together, it might have aroused
+suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>"Methinks I shall stay here two days, to get rid of my leg
+weariness. I am not so accustomed to long marching as you are."</p>
+
+<p>The real meaning of the question, as arranged, was, "Have you
+found out where the prisoners are kept?"</p>
+
+<p>The answer meant "Yes, and it will not be difficult to get at
+them."</p>
+
+<p>The evening before, indeed, when he returned with the priest to
+his chamber, they had broached a bottle together. The priest, on
+his part, had asked many questions as to the state of things in
+Edinburgh, and Dunbar; what were the opinions of people with regard
+to the Duke of Albany, and the Prince; and what would probably come
+of the coldness that was said to exist between them.</p>
+
+<p>Roger was able to conceal his ignorance of these matters by
+saying that he knew little of what was passing, for that he had
+been the cellarer in the convent, and went out but little.
+Nevertheless, he had kept his ears open; as they rode north to
+Jedburgh, he had heard a good deal of talk and speculation, and was
+able to give various pieces of news that had not before reached the
+ears of the priest. He was not long in discovering that the latter
+was ill satisfied with his present position, and was ambitious to
+take part in more important affairs, and he presently said:</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder, father, that a man of your ability should be content
+to remain as chaplain in a border hold, when there are so many
+opportunities beyond, for one like you, to make his way in the
+church."</p>
+
+<p>"In truth," the priest said, "I have had such thoughts myself;
+and hope, some day, to see a little more of the world.</p>
+
+<p>"By the way, can you read and write, brother?" he asked
+suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Assuredly," Roger replied.</p>
+
+<p>He guessed, at once, that the question had been put at the
+instigation of William Baird; who perhaps still had some doubts
+whether he was really a monk, and an affirmative answer would be an
+almost conclusive proof that he was so, for very few outside the
+walls of the convents, even among the nobles and knights, possessed
+any knowledge of letters.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a missal here," the priest said carelessly, "that has
+somewhat troubled me, being written in a cramped hand. Perhaps you
+could read it for me," and, getting up, he took a roll from a
+closet.</p>
+
+<p>Roger smiled quietly, as he turned it over. By a private mark
+upon it, he knew that it had been written at Alnwick, and was
+doubtless the proceed of some foray upon a monastery across the
+border. He ran his eye over it; and then, in a sonorous voice,
+proceeded to read it aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you," the priest said, when he had finished. "Truly you
+are an admirable reader, and well skilled in deciphering. I wonder
+that you held not some more important post than that of
+cellarer."</p>
+
+<p>Roger laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I might have done so," he said, "but in truth, I am not strict
+enough in matters of discipline to suit our prior, and am somewhat
+over fond of the wine cup. More than once, when it seemed that I
+might have been chosen as reader to the monastery, I fell into
+disgrace, and lost my chance; and indeed, I was far better pleased
+with my post, there, than if they had appointed me sub-prior."</p>
+
+<p>Any vestige of doubt there might have been in the priest's mind
+had vanished, as Roger read; for he was conscious that he, himself,
+could not have picked up a manuscript and have deciphered it so
+easily and fluently.</p>
+
+<p>"It must be trying to you, good father," Roger went on, "to be
+among men who, if reports speak truly, are somewhat lawless, and
+hold even the church in but slight respect. Surely, among them
+there can be but little scope for your abilities?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis true, brother; but they are, you know, kinsmen of mine.
+They have many foes across the border, and some on this side, and
+are forced to hold their own as they may. It was but two days ago
+that they were obliged to punish a family that have long been at
+feud with them, and who might well have fallen upon their holds, if
+they marched into England with Douglas. However, they have brought
+off two hostages for the good behaviour of these people."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I heard a chance word, in the village, that a party had
+just returned from a foray, and had brought back a number of
+prisoners."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a number, brother, but two girls."</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen no women in the castle," Roger said.</p>
+
+<p>"No. William Baird lost his wife years ago, and cares not to
+have women in the hold. There is not a married man among the
+garrison. If a man takes him a wife, he must go and settle on the
+lands.</p>
+
+<p>"The women are in a safe place of keeping. They are overhead.
+There are wild young fellows among the Bairds, and the girls are
+good looking; therefore he thought it best to place them in my
+charge, and that is why you see two sentries marching on the
+battlements, one on each side of this turret. He himself keeps the
+key of their chamber, handing it over to me every morning, and
+receiving it again at night--a precaution wholly unnecessary,
+methinks."</p>
+
+<p>"Surely, surely," Roger said. "I wonder that you are not
+offended."</p>
+
+<p>"I told him that it was strange he could not trust me, a priest,
+with the charge of them; but he laughed and said, 'As a priest you
+are well enough, Father Kenelm, but remember also that you are a
+Baird. Though a priest, I would trust you to ride with me on a
+foray across the border; but as a Baird, I would not entrust you
+with the custody of women. You may take it as a compliment that I
+have trusted you as far as I do.'"</p>
+
+<p>Roger's answer to Oswald had been eminently satisfactory to the
+latter. Still more pleased was he when, later on in the day, Roger
+repeated, as he passed him, "They are lodged in the turret, over my
+chamber."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was scarcely surprised, for he had noticed that two
+sentries were on the wall on that side, although it was the one
+farthest removed from the direction in which any foes were likely
+to appear. He had, moreover, just before dinner, observed one of
+the kitchen men go up, with two dishes in his hand, by the steps
+leading to the top of the wall, on that side. There was no
+hindrance to the men going freely in and out of the hold, and as no
+duty had been assigned to him that evening, he strolled out of the
+gate when it became dusk, soon after six o'clock, for it was now
+the beginning of April, 1401, and walked down through the village;
+and then, taking off his armour and steel cap, and laying them down
+under a bush by the roadside, set off at the top of his speed in
+the direction of Parton. He did the ten miles in under an hour, and
+nearly ran against a man who was standing in the middle of the
+road, a short distance from the little town.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that you, Fergus?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am John, master. Fergus will take the watch tomorrow
+evening."</p>
+
+<p>"Good. Keep the horses saddled at this time, every evening; and
+hold them in readiness all night. Things are going on well, and I
+may be here any night. Which is the house?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is it, master, where you see the light, a quarter of a
+mile farther up the hill."</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you sleeping?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the stables, with the horses. It is some ten yards off the
+right of the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you must keep watch through the night, by turns, and get
+your sleep in the daytime. I hope we shall get them away without
+waiting for a force to come. The hold is a very strong one, and a
+strict watch is kept at night; and, before we could carry it, we
+should have all the Bairds on the countryside down upon us.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you get me a rope? I want a long and a strong one."</p>
+
+<p>"There are some ropes in the stable, master, but they are in
+use, and would be missed."</p>
+
+<p>"Then run, at the top of your speed, down to the town; and buy a
+rope strong enough to hold the weight of half a dozen men. I shall
+want a hundred feet of it. Here is money."</p>
+
+<p>The man shot away into the darkness and, in a little over a
+quarter of an hour, was back again with the rope. Oswald took off
+his doublet.</p>
+
+<p>"Wind it round and round me," he said. "Begin under the arms.
+Wind it neatly, and closely, so that it will make no more show than
+necessary."</p>
+
+<p>This was soon done, and then Oswald started on his way; and an
+hour later entered the tavern, and took his seat with three or four
+of the men from the hold, and called for wine for the party. He sat
+there for some time, and then one said:</p>
+
+<p>"It is half-past eight; we had best be going. At seven o'clock
+the gates are shut; but they are opened, for those who belong to
+the hold, till nine, after which none are admitted till morning,
+and any who come in then are reported to Baird, and they are lucky
+if they get off with half a dozen extra goes of sentry duty. Baird
+is a good master in many things, but he is a bad man to deal with,
+when he is angry; and if anyone was to be out a second time, and he
+did it too soon after the first offence, he would have his skin
+nearly flayed off his back, with a stirrup leather. There is no
+fooling with the Bairds."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald arranged with Roger that, if the latter remained in the
+castle, he should always come down half an hour before the garrison
+were moving, as they might then exchange a word or two unseen; and
+accordingly, he took his place at an angle of a building, where he
+could keep his eye on the steps leading up to the battlements, on
+the north side.</p>
+
+<p>Presently he saw Roger descending. He waved his hand, and caught
+his follower's eye; and the latter, on reaching the courtyard, at
+once joined him.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a rope, Roger," Oswald began, "that will reach from the
+turret to the foot of the craig. I took it off during the night,
+and have just hidden it away behind a pile of rubbish, in the
+stable. Are the girls locked up?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there any getting the key?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, William Baird himself keeps it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then we must have something to force the door open, or to saw
+round the lock."</p>
+
+<p>"The door is studded with iron."</p>
+
+<p>"Are the windows barred?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; but they are mere loopholes, and there is no getting
+through them."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose there are steps from their room on to the platform
+above?"</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt. In fact, there are sure to be."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that you will have no difficulty in silencing the
+priest?"</p>
+
+<p>Roger smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"No; I think I can answer for him."</p>
+
+<p>"Could you speak to the girls through the keyhole, Roger?"</p>
+
+<p>"There would be no difficulty about that, master. I have but to
+choose a time when the priest is out."</p>
+
+<p>"Then tell them that we are here, Roger, and they are to be
+ready to escape, whenever we give the signal. Ask them if the
+trapdoor leading on to the platform is fastened, and whether they
+can unfasten it. If not, we must break it in, from above. We can
+get on to the top of the turret, easily enough, by throwing the
+rope up with a hook attached.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, the two sentries must be first silenced. I would
+wait till I, myself, should be on sentry there; but that might not
+occur for a week, and you cannot prolong your stay here more than
+another day; therefore, we will try it tonight. I have given the
+men with the horses notice.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you get the priest bound and gagged, by ten o'clock;
+everything will be quiet by that time. I will come noiselessly up
+the steps. At that hour, do you be at the door, and on the lookout
+for me. The sentries will have to be silenced--that is the most
+difficult part of the business."</p>
+
+<p>"We can manage that," Roger said, confidently. "One blow with my
+quarterstaff, on the back of the head under the steel cap, will do
+that noiselessly enough."</p>
+
+<p>"That would not do, Roger. The man would go down with such a
+crash, that the fall of his armour on the flags would be heard all
+over the castle. He must be gripped by the throat, so that he
+cannot holloa; and then bound tightly, and gagged before he has
+time to get breath."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that would be the best way," Roger said regretfully;
+"but I should like to have struck two good blows; one for the sake
+of Dame Armstrong, and one for Allan. However, your plan is the
+best. The only difficulty will be the trapdoor."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we must look about today, and get a couple of bits of
+iron that we can use as a prise. Still, I hope that it will not be
+needed. I saw a bit of iron, in the stables, that I think I can
+bend into a hook for the rope; and if I can't, I have no doubt that
+you can.</p>
+
+<p>"That is all. You had better move away now. People will be
+stirring, directly."</p>
+
+<p>That night, at ten o'clock, when all in the hold had been asleep
+half an hour, Oswald rose quietly from the rushes, on which he and
+a dozen of his comrades were sleeping, and made his way noiselessly
+out of the room; went into the stables and fetched the piece of
+iron, which he had, during the day, placed so that he could feel it
+in the dark; took the coil of rope in his hands, and ascended the
+steps. The top was but some ten feet from the turret. He stood
+quiet, until he heard the sentry moving away from him, then he
+mounted the last steps, and in a moment reached the foot of the
+turret stairs. Roger was standing there.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, master!" he whispered. "I took the priest by
+surprise, and he was gagged before he knew what was happening. I
+tore the blanket up into strips, and tied him down onto his pallet
+with them. He is safe enough.</p>
+
+<p>"Now for the sentries. I will take the one to the right, first.
+I will go out and stand in the angle. It is a dark night, and there
+is no chance of his seeing me. When you hear his walk cease, you
+will know that I have got him. I have managed to bring up a rope,
+that I have cut into handy lengths. Here are two of them.</p>
+
+<p>"There, he has just turned, so I will go at once."</p>
+
+<p>"How about the trapdoor?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is all right, master. It is bolted on the inside. They have
+tried the bolts, and find they can move them;" and with these
+words, he at once stepped noiselessly out.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald stood listening. Presently he heard the returning steps
+of the sentry. They came close up to the turret, and then suddenly
+ceased.</p>
+
+<p>He at once hurried round. The sentry hung limp in Roger's grasp.
+Oswald bound his hands tightly, and twisted the rope three or four
+times round his body, and securely knotted it. Then he tied the
+ankles tightly together.</p>
+
+<p>"I will lay him down," Roger whispered, when he had done so.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald bent the man's legs and, trussing him up, fastened the
+rope from the ankles to that which bound the wrists. Roger now
+relaxed his grip of the man's throat, thrust a piece of wood
+between his teeth, and fastened it, by a string going round the
+back of the head. He then took off his steel cap, and laid it some
+distance away.</p>
+
+<p>"That will do for him, master. I reckon that he will be an hour
+or two, before he will get breath enough to holloa, even without
+that gag."</p>
+
+<p>The other man was captured as silently as the former had been.
+When he was bound, Roger said:</p>
+
+<p>"Now for the hook, master."</p>
+
+<p>"Here is the iron. It was too strong for me to bend."</p>
+
+<p>Roger took it and, exerting his great strength, bent it across
+his knee. Then he took the coil of rope, and tied a knot at the
+end, and with some smaller cord lashed it securely along the whole
+length of the hook.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Master, do you get on to my shoulders, and I think you
+will be able to hook it to the battlements. It is not above twelve
+feet. If you find that you cannot, step on my head."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure I can reach it without that, Roger."</p>
+
+<p>And indeed, he found that he could do so easily; and having
+fixed it firmly, he got hold of the rope, and hoisted himself to
+the top of the turret. In a minute, Roger was beside him.</p>
+
+<p>Feeling about, they soon discovered the trapdoor, on which Roger
+knocked three times. Then they heard a grating sound below and,
+shortly, one end of the heavy trapdoor was slightly raised. The two
+men got their fingers under it, and pulled it up, and Janet and
+Jessie ran out, both crying with joy and excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" Oswald whispered. "Do not utter a sound. There are
+sentries on other parts of the walls, and the slightest noise might
+be heard.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, we will knot this rope."</p>
+
+<p>He and Roger set to work, and before long knots were tied, a
+foot apart, along the whole length of the rope.</p>
+
+<p>"I will take you down first, Jessie, for you are the lightest,"
+Oswald said.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Roger, tie us together."</p>
+
+<p>One of the pieces of rope Roger had brought was passed round and
+round them, tying them firmly, face to face.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Jessie, you had best take hold of the rope, too, and take
+as much of your weight off me as you can. It is a long way down;
+and, though I think that I could carry your weight that distance,
+it is best that you should help me as much as you are able."</p>
+
+<p>The rope was shifted to the outside of the turret. Roger, after
+fixing it firmly, helped them over the battlements, holding Oswald
+by the collar, until he had a firm grasp of the rope in his hands,
+and obtained a hold with his feet.</p>
+
+<a id="PicH" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/h.jpg" alt=
+"Let the rope pass gradually through your hands"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>"That is right, Jessie," he whispered, as the girl also took a
+firm hold of the rope. "You are no weight, like that. Now, let the
+rope pass gradually through your hands and, when I tell you, hold
+tight by one of the knots."</p>
+
+<p>After lowering himself forty feet, Oswald found that he was
+standing on a ledge of rock, three inches wide, at the foot of the
+wall.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, dear, it will be more difficult," he said. "You must use
+one of your hands, to push yourself off from any rugged points.
+There are not many of them. I had a look at the rock today, and its
+face is almost smooth. I will do the best I can to keep you from
+it."</p>
+
+<p>In another three minutes, they stood at the foot of the craig.
+Oswald shook the rope violently, to let those above know that they
+were down. Then he untied the cord that bound him to his cousin,
+who at once sat down, sobbing hysterically. Oswald put his hand
+upon her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Steady, Jessie, steady. You have been brave and quiet, coming
+down. The danger is over now, but we have a long walk and a longer
+ride before us, and you will need all your strength."</p>
+
+<p>In a very short time, Roger and Janet joined them. As soon as
+she was untied, Janet threw her arms round Oswald's neck, and spoke
+for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Oswald, from what have you saved us! How brave and good of
+you to risk so much!"</p>
+
+<p>"Tut, tut, Janet, as if we should leave you here, in the hands
+of the Bairds, without making an effort to free you! Now, come
+along, dear. Be very careful how you walk, till we get down to the
+bottom. It is pretty steep and, if you were to set a stone rolling,
+we might have them after us, in no time. As it is, we shall only
+have an hour and a half start, for the sentries will be relieved at
+midnight. However, by that time we shall be on horseback, and of
+course they won't know which road we have taken."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as they came to level ground, they set off at a run.
+They were but a mile from the village when they heard, on the still
+night air, distant shouts, followed half a minute later by the
+winding of a horn; then, almost immediately, a glimmering light
+appeared on the highest turret of the hold, and this rapidly
+broadened out into a sheet of flame.</p>
+
+<p>"They have discovered our escape, by some misfortune or other,"
+Oswald exclaimed, "and they will be after us, before many minutes
+have passed. You must run in earnest now, girls."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you run on, Oswald," Janet said, "you and Roger. We will
+turn and walk back. They will do us no harm."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald thought of the murder of the girls' mother, and knew
+that, in their fury at having been tricked, the Bairds were capable
+of anything.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not to be thought of," he said. "Such a watch would
+henceforth be kept that there would be no possibility, whatever, of
+effecting your rescue. We must take our chance together.</p>
+
+<p>"What think you had best be done, Roger?"</p>
+
+<p>"In sooth, I know not. I am ready to do whatever you think
+best."</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot hope to reach Parton, before they overtake us,"
+Oswald said. "Besides, the Bairds are sure to have many friends
+there, and the lighted beacon will warn all the countryside that
+something unusual has happened. No, we cannot think of going
+there."</p>
+
+<p>"But you said that there were horses," Janet said.</p>
+
+<p>"They are but a short distance on this side of the town. We
+could not hope to get there before the Bairds; and, even if we did,
+it would be a quarter of an hour before we could mount and be
+off."</p>
+
+<p>"Could we not hide and get the horses after they have passed,
+master?" Roger suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"It would be useless, Roger. The road leads up and down this
+valley, and there would be no possibility of riding the horses
+across the hills, at night; so that we should have either to ride
+down through Parton, or up past the Bairds' hold. No, the horses
+must be given up, for the present. The only thing that I can see is
+to cross the Esk, and to take refuge in the hills. I know not if
+there are any fords, or where they are; but, were we to turn to the
+right, we should be getting farther and farther away. The Esk is no
+great width, and we can carry them across it, easily enough."</p>
+
+<p>"The water will be dreadfully cold," Jessie said, with a shiver,
+for it was now the beginning of April.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Jessie!" her sister said. "What matters a little cold,
+when our lives are at stake?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, that is our only hope," Oswald said. "Quick, girls, there
+is no time to lose."</p>
+
+<p>The river was but some fifty yards from the road, and they ran
+down to it.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, girls," Oswald said when they reached it, "you must take
+off your cloaks, and all upper garments. Were you to get these wet
+you would, before morning, die of cold. Don't lose a moment.
+Undress under the shelter of these bushes.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Roger, let us move a few yards away, and then take off our
+doublets and shirts, and swim across, holding them above the water.
+By the time that we are back, the girls will be ready."</p>
+
+<p>"I will carry them across, master. It is of no use two of us
+going, with so light a burden. I shall make nothing of it."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald made no opposition and, a minute later, the shirts and
+doublets were made into a bundle, and bound on Roger's head. He
+waded into the water until it reached his chin, and then swam out.
+The distance to be traversed was but some fifteen yards, and a few
+strokes of his brawny arms brought him to the opposite bank. Having
+laid down his bundle there, he swam quickly back again.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you ready, girls?" Oswald asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Janet replied, and two white figures came out from the
+bushes, each carrying a bundle.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you go into the bushes again, for a minute. We cannot take
+you and the bundles over together; and it is better that you should
+stand here, in dry things, than wait in wet ones, over there."</p>
+
+<p>A minute sufficed to tie the bundles on the heads of the two
+men. They soon swam across to the other side, left them there, and
+returned.</p>
+
+<p>"The water is bitterly cold for the girls," Oswald said, as they
+swam across together.</p>
+
+<p>"It is, master, but they will only be in it for a minute, and
+they will soon be warm again."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, girls."</p>
+
+<p>"We have just heard the sound of horses in the distance,
+Oswald," Janet said.</p>
+
+<p>He listened.</p>
+
+<p>"Sound travels far, this still night," he said; "they can only
+just have started. We shall be across long before they come
+along.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Jessie, we will take you first. The stream runs strongly,
+and it were best that you went over separately. All you have to do
+is to put a hand on a shoulder of each of us. Come along."</p>
+
+<p>"I will carry her till we get into deep water," Roger said,
+catching the girl up in his arms, and running into the stream.</p>
+
+<p>Jessie gasped, as the water reached her.</p>
+
+<p>"It will be over in a minute," Oswald said encouragingly. "Now,
+we are going to swim. Put your hands upon our shoulders. That is
+right."</p>
+
+<p>Striking out strongly, they easily carried her until she was in
+her depth.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, dear, get ashore, and stand behind those bushes, and take
+off your wet things and put on your dry ones. We will have Janet
+across, in no time."</p>
+
+<p>The girl was carried across as easily as her sister had
+been.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is your bundle, dear. Jessie has taken hers. Dress as
+quickly as you can. Stoop down, as soon as you reach the bushes.
+They will be here, directly."</p>
+
+<p>Janet ran to the thicket, and Oswald and Roger threw themselves
+down behind a great stone. Two minutes later, they could hear the
+thunder of hoofs go along the road opposite, but could not make out
+the figures.</p>
+
+<p>"How many are there of them, do you think, Roger?"</p>
+
+<p>"A dozen or so, master."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I should think you are right. However, it makes no
+difference; were there ten times as many, they would not catch us,
+tonight."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch14">Chapter 14</a>: In Hiding.</h2>
+
+<p>The moment the horsemen had gone by, Oswald and Roger hastily
+dressed again. It was three or four minutes before the girls joined
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"We have been a long time, Oswald, but our fingers are so cold
+that we could not tie the strings."</p>
+
+<p>"You will soon be warm. Climbing the hill will set your blood in
+motion."</p>
+
+<p>There was no hurry now. They were safe until the morning.</p>
+
+<p>"We will make up the hill until you are thoroughly warm, and
+then we will discuss matters."</p>
+
+<p>Before they were very far up the ascent, both girls declared
+that they were comfortably warm again.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Roger, what do you think our best course will be? The
+Bairds have, of course, sent horsemen along the other road. They
+will have heard, from the priest, that we have but a few minutes'
+start; and will know that we cannot have gone far. The party who
+passed us will doubtless stop at Parton, the other at the next
+village higher up; and they will be sure that either we concealed
+ourselves as they passed, or have taken to the hills on one side or
+other of the valley. They will naturally suppose that it is this
+side, as it would be madness for us to plunge farther into the
+country to the west; and you may be sure there will be scores of
+men out on these hills, tomorrow, searching for us; and some of
+them may ride nearly to Hiniltie, to cut us off there in case we
+escape the searchers on the hills.</p>
+
+<p>"I think that the only plan will be to hide up for a couple of
+days, or so; then to make our way down again to where the horses
+are, and then make a dash through Parton."</p>
+
+<p>"That would certainly be far the best way," Roger said; "but how
+are we to manage for food for the ladies?"</p>
+
+<p>"We will go on until we get to the top of the hill, Roger, and
+then find a sheltered spot, where they can stop. It is of no use
+trying to go on much farther, for the night is cloudy, and there
+are no stars to be seen, and we should lose our way directly, for
+there is no wind that would serve as a guide as to which way we
+were travelling. When we find a good shelter, we must stop with
+them; and I will make my way down to the place where the horses
+are, and warn the men as to what has happened, and tell them to lie
+quiet till I come again. I will bring back whatever food they may
+have with them, a big jug of water, and the four horse cloths."</p>
+
+<p>"I will go, master."</p>
+
+<p>"I would rather go myself, Roger. I am accustomed to traverse
+the moors at night, and am sure that I can find this place again,
+without difficulty."</p>
+
+<p>On nearing the top of the hill, they came upon a number of rough
+stones.</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot do better than stop here," Oswald said. "It will be
+bare on the top of the hill. Now, Roger, help me to pile a few of
+these stones together, so as to make a sort of shelter."</p>
+
+<p>They set to work at once, Roger's strength enabling him to lift
+stones that ordinary men could scarcely have moved. In a quarter of
+an hour a little inclosure, six feet long by four wide and three
+high, had been constructed. An armful of dry heather was then
+pulled up, and laid on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"There, girls, I think you will be able to manage to keep
+yourselves warm, by lying close together."</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do, Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"We shall be all right; and we can, if we like, make another
+shelter; and, if we feel cold, can walk about to warm ourselves.
+Now, Roger, get half a dozen sticks and lay across the top."</p>
+
+<p>While Roger was away getting the sticks, Oswald helped the girls
+over the wall, for no entrance had been left.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Janet, give me those two wet smocks; I see that you have
+brought them with you."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want them for, Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"I want them for the roof, Janet. It is beginning to freeze
+hard, and it is of no use having walls, if you have not a
+roof."</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you take my cloak, instead?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not, Janet, you will want your cloak for a covering.
+Don't be silly, but hand them over."</p>
+
+<p>By this time, Roger had returned with the sticks. They were laid
+across the top, and the girls' smocks spread over them.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, go to sleep," Oswald said; "we must be on foot, an hour
+before dawn."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald then started down the hill for Parton. When he got within
+a mile of the town, he could see lights moving about on the road;
+and guessed that the Bairds had got torches, and were making sure
+that the fugitives had not hidden themselves anywhere close to the
+road; for they must have felt certain that they could not have
+reached the town, before being overtaken. When the lights had gone
+along the road, he descended to the river, took off his doublet and
+shirt, as before, and swam over; crossed the road, and was not long
+in finding the trees that marked the spot where he was to turn off
+to the farmhouse.</p>
+
+<p>He made his way to the stable, raised the latch, and entered. A
+lamp was burning, and the two men sitting and talking together.
+They leapt up, with an exclamation of pleasure, as Oswald
+entered.</p>
+
+<p>"We were afraid that something might have gone wrong; for, as I
+was waiting for you in the road, I heard a body of horsemen coming
+along, and hid behind the trees. As they went by, one of them said,
+'We must have passed them long ago, if they came by this road. They
+had not more than a quarter of an hour's start.'</p>
+
+<p>"I heard no more, but it suggested that, maybe, you had managed
+to escape with the ladies, and that the Bairds were in pursuit of
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"That was exactly the case. We have got them out of the hold,
+and methought that we should have got two hours' start, at least,
+in which case they would not have overtaken us before we had
+crossed the Liddel, at the ford, six miles above the junction of
+the Esk with it, and were well on our road towards Longtown; but by
+some accident, I know not what, the matter was discovered before we
+have been gone ten minutes. As it was certain that they would
+overtake us, long before we got to Parton, we swam the Esk, and I
+have left the ladies on the hill over there, in charge of Roger,
+while I came here. We know that, by morning, the countryside will
+be up and searching the hills; and that, with the two lasses, it
+would be hopeless for us to try and make our way on to
+Hiniltie.</p>
+
+<p>"Therefore, we decided to hide up for two or three days, then to
+make our way down here at night, mount, and ride through. By that
+time the search down in the valley here will have slackened, and we
+shall get through Parton all right, and our only danger will be at
+the ford across the Liddel; where, possibly, the Bairds may set a
+guard, lest we find our way down there. I had intended that we
+should take the four horses, and that you should make your way to
+Hiniltie across the hills; but as there will now be no great
+occasion for speed, one of you had best ride with us, while the
+other bears the news to Hiniltie that we have carried off the
+girls.</p>
+
+<p>"You had better settle between yourselves which shall go with
+us. You may take it that there is about equal danger, both ways,
+for the one that goes to Hiniltie must travel cautiously, as it
+will be a week before the Bairds give up the search among the
+hills."</p>
+
+<p>"We had best decide by lot."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald picked up a piece of straw, and broke off two fragments,
+one an inch longer than the other; and, closing his hand on them,
+he held the two ends out.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you draw," he said, holding it out to Fergus. "The longest
+straw goes to Hiniltie, and shortest with us."</p>
+
+<p>The man drew.</p>
+
+<p>"I have the longest," he said, "and perhaps it were best that it
+should be so, for I know the way thoroughly, having often been over
+the hills in search of missing cattle."</p>
+
+<p>"You will both remain here, till we come. Now, what food have
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"We bought a supply in Parton, yesterday evening, and have
+enough for a week; for we thought that some might be needed by the
+whole party, on our way; and moreover, we care not to go down often
+to the town, as we might attract attention."</p>
+
+<p>"That is good. Keep enough for tomorrow, for yourselves; I will
+take the rest."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no need for that. We can get what we want from the
+house and, tomorrow evening, one of us will go down into Parton
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"Or better still," Oswald said, "give the money to the hind
+here. I suppose there is one."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; he sleeps in the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Give him money, then, and a present for himself, and get him to
+fetch it for you. Some of the Bairds may remain there, and you may
+be sure that every stranger will be strictly questioned. I want
+also the four horse cloths, which please make into a bundle. Is
+your water skin full?"</p>
+
+<p>"We filled it this afternoon, thinking it possible that we might
+make a hasty start tonight."</p>
+
+<p>"How much does it hold?"</p>
+
+<p>"About two gallons."</p>
+
+<p>"It would have been better had it been four. However, we must
+manage with it. Now, do you know of any ford across the river? for
+I certainly could not swim across, with this load."</p>
+
+<p>"There is one half a mile farther up. We were asking the hind
+about it, the other day, thinking that it might be useful should we
+have to fly suddenly. I will go down with you; and indeed, I shall
+be glad to go the whole way with you, for the provisions and those
+blankets and the skin will be no light weight; and, as I am going
+to Hiniltie, it will cheer Armstrong if I could tell him that I saw
+his daughters."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be a good plan, Fergus, though in truth the weight
+would be no great burden; but certainly, Armstrong would be pleased
+to know that you had seen his daughters."</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes later they set out, forded the river breast high,
+carrying the loads on their heads; and then, climbing the hill,
+made their way to the shelter, whose exact position Oswald had
+marked, on starting, by a huge boulder that stood on the crest of
+the hill, some fifty feet above it.</p>
+
+<p>Roger was on the lookout. Seeing two figures approaching, when
+he expected but one, he grasped his staff firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Who comes there?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It is I, Roger. I have brought one of the men with me, to help
+carry the things. He is going to Hiniltie, and thought that
+Armstrong would be pleased to know he had seen his daughters. I
+have got plenty of food, and a skin of water."</p>
+
+<p>"That is capital," Roger said cheerfully. "I was fearing that,
+having so many things to think of, you might forget water."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald went to the shelter.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you awake, Janet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she replied. "I have been anxious, while you were
+away."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you cold?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not very warm," she answered; "but do not trouble about
+it, we shall do very well."</p>
+
+<p>"I have two blankets here," he said, as he removed the covering.
+"One of these I will put over you both, and tuck it well in, each
+side, to keep out the wind that comes in between the stones. Then I
+will lay your smocks over that. I wrung them well, before putting
+them on the sticks; and although I cannot say they are dry, yet
+they are not damp enough to matter, and will help keep you warm.
+The other blanket I will put over the sticks."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you indeed, Oswald," the girl said, gratefully. "That
+feels very much more comfortable."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Roger, there is a blanket for you, and one for me, to wrap
+round us, plaid fashion."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not need one, master. In faith, I have more respect for
+this gown than I ever had before--it is wondrously warm and, with
+the hood over my head, I want nothing more."</p>
+
+<p>"That is all very well, Roger. If you don't need it for your
+shoulders, you need it for your legs; for being without hose, and
+with nought but those sandals, you must be freezing. We will walk
+up and down here, for a bit, and do you wrap it round your legs,
+like a Highlander's petticoat. When we have tired ourselves, we
+will lie down and try to get a sleep, for an hour or two."</p>
+
+<p>As they walked, they talked over their plans; and Oswald decided
+that, before daybreak, he would set out on the search for a place
+of concealment.</p>
+
+<p>"I will leave my helmet and breast and back piece behind me," he
+said, "and will take your staff. Then, if I am caught sight of by
+any party in the distance, I shall look like a shepherd; while, had
+I on my iron harness, they would at once suspect me of being of the
+party, even though I were alone. As for you, your monk's robe would
+be detected, miles off."</p>
+
+<p>"I could leave it behind me," Roger said.</p>
+
+<p>"You have not much on underneath, Roger; and your bareness, in
+such weather as this, would be as noticeable as your gown. Mind,
+before it gets light, get the ladies up, and carry our bag of
+victuals and the water skin over the crest. You may be sure that,
+as soon as it is light, there will be many sharp eyes watching the
+hillside, all along here."</p>
+
+<p>The man who had come up with them had already wrapped himself in
+the blanket he had brought with him, had crawled in among the
+bushes, and was, as they could hear by his heavy breathing, already
+sound asleep. After a time Oswald said that, as they had nothing
+more to settle, he would try and get a few hours' rest. There was
+not the slightest fear of surprise, and Roger and he were not long
+before they were both sound asleep. Oswald woke two or three times
+and, at first sign of dawn, shook Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"You had better wake the ladies, in a few minutes, Roger, and
+get them over the crest. Let their man, as soon as he has seen
+them, start at once, keeping along behind the ridge, and warn him
+not to go down into the valley until he is fully a mile beyond
+Parton. Tell him to look carefully along the road, before he begins
+to descend, and to see that it is clear. Even then, let him hide as
+much as may be, behind brushwood and rock, until he gets down. When
+he has swum the river, let him make a wide detour round Parton, so
+as to come down to the stables without being noticed.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not be very long away. 'Tis scarce likely, among these
+hills, that I shall find any place that we can crawl into; and I
+think we shall have to content ourselves with lying down among the
+heather. I must find a spot where no one, on any hill above, can
+look down on us. We shall be quite safe from any party moving along
+on the same level as ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald had gone but a little distance, when he determined that
+no better place could be found than the plateau itself. This
+extended, for two or three hundred yards from the edge, looking
+down into the valley. Beyond, the ground sloped sharply down again
+into a deep hollow; and beyond, it was broken into rounded swells,
+rising one above another. A party lying among the heather, where he
+was standing, could not be seen by watchers from any other point.
+Moreover, it was most important that all should be in shelter
+before it was fairly daylight. He therefore, as soon as it was
+light enough to take in the principal features of the scene,
+hurried back to his companions.</p>
+
+<p>"We can do no better, girls, than to lie down together, two
+hundred yards away. Pick your way through the bushes where they are
+thinnest, so as not to disturb them. Please be off at once, and
+choose a spot close to where the ground falls away, on the other
+side. Roger and I must tumble this shelter down, and scatter the
+sticks; for if anyone searching the hillside came along, he would
+guess that we had slept here, and there would be a hue and cry at
+once."</p>
+
+<p>The man had left, sometime before, for the valley; having gone
+off as soon as he had spoken to the girls. Oswald and Roger ran
+down to the shelter, speedily threw the stones into a heap, and
+scattered the sticks; then, after glancing round to see that
+nothing had been left, they collected the blankets, provisions, and
+water skin; and, taking up these and Oswald's armour, ran in the
+direction that Oswald had pointed out to the girls.</p>
+
+<p>The ground was thickly covered with heather, and they had to
+step carefully to avoid pressing it down. They reached the edge of
+the plateau without seeing the girls and, after looking round for a
+minute or two, Oswald called aloud.</p>
+
+<p>He was answered by a merry laugh, and Jessie's head rose above
+the heather. They had, indeed, passed within five or six yards of
+the girls.</p>
+
+<p>"That is good, indeed," Oswald said, as he lay down beside them.
+"If I could not see you, when I was sure that you were quite near,
+there is no fear of any searchers lighting upon you.</p>
+
+<p>"The sun has just risen, and a mist still hangs on the top of
+the hills," he went on; "and I am convinced that we cannot have
+been seen, for men placed on the watch are sure to be high up on
+the hills, and it will be some time yet before the sun rises high
+enough to drive away the mist."</p>
+
+<p>Although it was freezing sharply, they felt by no means cold as
+they lay, wrapped in their blankets, with the heather rising well
+above them, and sheltering them from a light breeze that had sprung
+up at sunrise. After chatting with the girls for a time, Roger and
+Oswald left them and, crawling along on their stomachs, got to the
+edge of the descent.</p>
+
+<p>By this time the sun was well above the hills, the mist had
+cleared off, and they had an extensive view. From time to time they
+caught sight of groups of three or four mounted men moving about,
+searching the valleys; while single men, on foot, rambled over the
+hills.</p>
+
+<p>"They are keeping up an active search, Roger. 'Tis well that we
+went no farther. They will scarce suspect us of lying close to the
+valley we left. I expect the main body has gone much farther. I
+have no doubt the Bairds have a couple of hundred men and boys out.
+They would call out every man and boy from their holdings, and most
+likely get a couple of score of men from their village, and perhaps
+twice as many from Parton. No doubt they will think that, if we
+came in this direction, we should, last night, have found our way
+to one of the tracks across the hills, and it is near these that
+their search will be the keenest. Fortunately, they cannot know
+that I am here, nor guess that it is to Yardhope that we intend to
+take them, and not to Hiniltie. Still, they may expect that we
+shall try to cross the border, and I fancy we shall scarcely get
+through without a fight."</p>
+
+<p>"All the better," Roger grumbled. "My fingers tingle to bring
+down this staff on the head of some of the Bairds, after all the
+trouble they have given us."</p>
+
+<p>They remained watching until it became dusk, except that, twice
+during the day, they crawled back and partook of a meal with the
+girls. The last time they joined them, Oswald said:</p>
+
+<p>"Now, in half an hour it will be quite dark, and then we can
+safely get up and walk about for a bit. I am sure you must feel
+stiff, lying still so long."</p>
+
+<p>"I have never kept quiet for so long a time, since I can
+remember," Jessie said, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"That shows that you have had no illnesses, Jessie. However, I
+shall be glad to get up and stretch my limbs, myself. Half an hour
+will be enough, and then we will have a good, long night. Another
+day of it, and I think it will be safe to start."</p>
+
+<p>The next afternoon they saw a number of parties searching the
+hills, in all directions.</p>
+
+<p>"I expect they have become convinced that we have not tried to
+get straight through, Roger, and are hunting back for us. It is as
+well that it will be dark in another half hour, and they will then
+have to give up their search, for the night. If there were a couple
+of hours more light, I should feel very uneasy."</p>
+
+<p>"So should I, master. You and I would have little chance of
+mercy, if we fell into their hands. It might well be that, in their
+anger, they might slay the ladies, also."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be like enough, Roger. However, there can be no
+chance of their coming here, before it is dark."</p>
+
+<p>At nine o'clock they started, and made their way down, with some
+difficulty and many slips and falls, into the valley. Then they
+kept along near the river, till Oswald was sure they were close to
+the ford. He bade them halt here, and went forward alone. Before he
+had gone fifty yards, he nearly stumbled against a man.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it you, John?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is I."</p>
+
+<p>"Is all well?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is all well, but I had a fright, yesterday morning. The
+Bairds searched every cottage and hut over the hills, on this side,
+and they say their men rode almost as far as Galloway; but they
+gave up the search before they got here, feeling assured that they
+must have passed you, very soon after you left the hold, and you
+could never have got as far down as this."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis well they did not search, indeed," Oswald said. "Your
+story about the horses might do well enough, for those who have no
+interest in the matter, but it would never have done for the
+Bairds. All has been quiet today?"</p>
+
+<p>"They seem to have given up searching on this side. I hear that
+they feel sure, now, the ladies have made for Hiniltie; and they
+have had great forces out among the hills, and feel confident that
+they must catch them soon."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you got the horses saddled?"</p>
+
+<p>"They are saddled, and brought down close to the road. Fergus is
+with them."</p>
+
+<p>"Then bring them across, at once. The sooner we are off now, the
+better. Are there any of the Bairds' men in the town?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are a few of them, but as no one has any idea that you
+are like to pass through there, they will not be on the lookout.
+Besides, all will have been among the hills, from daybreak this
+morning; and I expect, by this time, there is scarce a soul awake
+in Parton."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald returned to the girls, and they went out together to the
+ford. In a couple of minutes the men were seen making their way
+across, riding two horses, and leading the others.</p>
+
+<p>"We thank you heartily," Janet said, "for having so risked your
+lives for us; for, had you been caught with the four horses, they
+would at once have connected you with us, and it would have gone
+hard with you."</p>
+
+<p>"We have been keeping away from the horses, yesterday and today,
+just going to a distance and lying down where, without being seen
+ourselves, we could watch anyone who went up to the farm. We could
+have done no good, and thought that it was better that we should be
+able to warn you, if they had come and taken the horses away."</p>
+
+<p>After crossing the river, Fergus at once started, on foot, for
+Hiniltie.</p>
+
+<p>They had already discussed how they should ride, and it had been
+settled that, at starting, Janet should ride the fourth horse; and
+that Jessie should ride behind the others, by turns. If an attack
+was threatened, Jessie was to mount behind her sister, and they
+were to take their place between Oswald and Roger, while their own
+man rode close behind them.</p>
+
+<p>It was just ten o'clock as they rode through Parton. Not a light
+was to be seen. The whole place appeared wrapt in sleep. They went
+through at a walk, so that, if any heard them, they would suppose
+that it was a belated party of the searchers, and would give the
+matter no further thought.</p>
+
+<p>After riding for a short distance, they put the horses into a
+trot. Four hours later they halted, at the point where the road
+down the Esk valley divided, one going to the ferry a few hundred
+yards farther on, while the other turned to the left, and followed
+the bank of the Liddel.</p>
+
+<p>John had inquired about the ferry, and learned that the
+ferryboat no longer plied, as, since the troubles began, there was
+so little traffic that it did not pay the ferryman to remain there.
+As they had already decided to cross by the ford, four miles higher
+up, this did not matter. As none of them was aware of its exact
+position, they decided to wait where they were, until daylight.</p>
+
+<p>Searching about, they found a deserted hut, with a shed
+adjoining it. The horses were led into this, and the party then
+gathered in the hut, and John struck a light, while Oswald and
+Roger broke up a fallen gate, and the fire was soon blazing.
+Although there was not the slightest chance of anyone travelling
+the road, at this hour, they hung one of the thick blankets across
+the window, thus keeping out the cold air, as well as preventing
+the light from being seen. Then the party lay down, the men taking
+it by turns to stand guard outside, being relieved every two
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as day dawned they again mounted. It was about four
+miles' ride to the point where the road divided, one branch going
+towards the river, some seventy or eighty yards away. Here stood a
+square building of some size, used as a refuge by travellers who
+arrived when the Liddel was swollen, and the ford
+impracticable.</p>
+
+<p>When the riders had come within a few yards of this building,
+two men, hearing the sound of horses' hoofs, came out. As their eye
+fell upon the party they gave a shout, ran out into the road, and
+drew their swords.</p>
+
+<p>Roger and Oswald rode at them. Parrying a thrust of one of the
+men, Oswald cut him down; while Roger, with a tremendous blow from
+his staff, stretched the other man on the road.</p>
+
+<p>"Ride on, girls! We will follow you," Oswald shouted.</p>
+
+<p>Jessie was sitting behind John, and they and Janet dashed
+forward, and rode into the water. Oswald and Roger followed, as six
+men, armed with spear and sword, ran out from the house. Seeing
+that they were too late, the leader shouted to the others: "Fetch
+out the horses, and chase them!" and, before the party had gained
+the opposite bank, their pursuers dashed into the water.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't press your horses too hardly," Oswald said, as they
+galloped along. "They are too close behind us for us to get help
+from any of the small villages, but they dare not follow us into
+Longtown, and we have barely a ten miles' ride."</p>
+
+<p>They had some two hundred yards' start, and for the first four
+miles held their own; then their pursuers began to gain upon them.
+One of the horses was carrying double, and Roger and Oswald were
+both heavier than any of the moss troopers.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall have a fight for it, Roger."</p>
+
+<p>"That is just what I was thinking, master. Well, there are three
+of us; and, as there are only six of them, we ought not to have
+much trouble. John will be a match for one. Methinks you and I can
+each make short work of a man when they first come up; and with but
+three of them against two, it will be mere child's play."</p>
+
+<p>The road was a narrow one, and little used; and, when they came
+to the foot of a sharp rise, Oswald called to those ahead to
+stop.</p>
+
+<p>"Jump down, Jessie, and mount behind Janet, and ride on ahead.
+We will soon get rid of these fellows. Be quick!"</p>
+
+<p>The moss troopers were now but seventy or eighty yards
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall fight on foot," Roger said, as he leapt off his horse.
+"I want both hands, for this staff."</p>
+
+<p>Turning his horse, and bidding John to do the same, Oswald
+reined back his animal three or four lengths; and when the Bairds'
+party were within twenty yards, touched it with his spur and dashed
+at them, meeting them just abreast of Roger. The first man he met
+thrust at him with his spear, but Oswald parried with his sword,
+and with a back-handed blow smote the man just under the chin, and
+he fell with a crash from his horse. At the same moment he heard a
+blow like that of a smith's hammer, as Roger's staff fell upon the
+steel cap of the first who attacked him.</p>
+
+<p>John was less fortunate, for his opponent's spear struck him in
+the throat, and he fell heavily from his saddle.</p>
+
+<p>"Well stricken, Jock!" one of them shouted. "Ride on after the
+women. We will settle with these fellows."</p>
+
+<p>But before the moss trooper could obey the order, Oswald, with a
+touch of the spur and the bridle, caused his horse to curvet round,
+and smote the man so mighty a blow on the shoulder as well-nigh to
+sever his arm from his body. As he wheeled his horse again he was
+nigh unseated, by a spear thrust that struck him on the breast
+piece; but, upon recovering, he struck his opponent, as he passed,
+so heavy a blow in the face, with the pommel of his sword, that he
+sent him senseless to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>The other two men had furiously attacked Roger, but, whirling
+his staff round his head, he had kept them both at bay; then the
+staff descended between the ears of one of the horses, which fell
+headlong; and before the rider could get his foot from the stirrup,
+the staff struck him below the steel cap, just in front of the ear,
+and without a cry he fell dead beside his horse. At that the last
+of the moss troopers turned his horse, and galloped off at full
+speed.</p>
+
+<p>"We have not taken long over that, master," Roger said, with a
+grim smile. "Five men in a minute is not so bad."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid John is killed, Roger. See to him."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, he is sped," Roger replied, as he turned the body over.
+"The spear struck him full in the throat. That is what comes of not
+learning to use your weapons. What shall we do with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was a faithful fellow, Roger, and as there is no need for
+haste now, we will give him some sort of burial, and not let him
+lie here in the road."</p>
+
+<p>"We have nought to dig a grave with," Roger remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"No, but there are plenty of stones about."</p>
+
+<p>He dismounted, and with Roger's help carried the dead man a
+short distance away, laid him down by the side of a great boulder,
+and then piled stones around and over him.</p>
+
+<p>"That will do, Roger. 'Tis not like that anyone will disturb
+those stones, for years to come. He will rest as well there as if
+he lay in a grave. Now, let us look to the others."</p>
+
+<p>The man he had struck across the throat, and the last Roger had
+hit, were both dead. Two of the others were but stunned, while the
+one upon whose shoulder Roger's blow had fallen was lying
+insensible, and evidently was fast bleeding to death.</p>
+
+<p>"We can do naught for him," Oswald said. "Even had we the king's
+leech here, we could not save him. Now let us be off."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall we take the horses, master?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, they will be but an encumbrance; and now that poor fellow
+has gone, we have one apiece. Bring his horse along with you."</p>
+
+<p>Mounting, they rode quickly on, and at the top of the hill came
+up with the girls; who, having seen the result of the combat, had
+waited for them.</p>
+
+<p>"Now we are safe and free, thanks to you both," Janet said.
+"Jessie looked back, and saw the fight as we rode. How quickly it
+was over! But I am grieved, indeed, that John has fallen. We saw
+you carrying off his body, and covering it. Jessie had noticed him
+fall, and we feared 'twas all over with him. He was an old retainer
+of our father's, and a faithful one."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry, indeed, that he has been slain, Janet; but we could
+hardly expect to come out altogether scatheless."</p>
+
+<p>"Are all the others killed?" Jessie asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No. Two of them are but stunned; and will, ere long, be able to
+mount and ride off again."</p>
+
+<p>"Master Oswald has gained the most honours in the fight. I
+killed one, and stunned another. He has stunned one also, but has
+slain two."</p>
+
+<p>"I had a better arm, Roger."</p>
+
+<p>"I know not that," Roger replied. "A quarterstaff, of that
+weight, is a fine weapon. I say not that it is to be compared to a
+mace but, when on foot, I would as lief have it as a sword."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Jessie, do you mount John's horse. We can ride quietly,
+for Longtown is but some three miles ahead."</p>
+
+<p>They rested there for a couple of hours, then mounted again, and
+crossed the Pentlands by a horse track between Cristindury and Gele
+Craigs. Coming down into Tynedale, they put up for the night at the
+first place they came to. At daybreak they set off northwards,
+crossed Reddesdale, and came down, in the afternoon, into the
+valley of the Coquet, within two miles of Yardhope.</p>
+
+<p>Great indeed was the surprise and joy of John Forster and his
+wife, when they made out the two girls riding, with Oswald, towards
+the hold.</p>
+
+<p>"What miracle is this, lad?" the former said, while his wife was
+embracing her nieces. "We heard, but two days since, of the raid on
+the Armstrongs, and how the girls were carried off by the
+Bairds."</p>
+
+<p>Here Oswald put his finger to his lips, to stop him from saying
+aught of Jane Armstrong's death. He had, after dismounting,
+whispered in his mother's ear, before she had time to speak to the
+girls, that as yet they knew nought of their mother's death, and
+that he had left it to her to break it to them.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been, since, scouring the country," his father went on,
+"to try to get my friends to take the matter up; but in truth, they
+were not over willing to do so. All know that it is no slight
+enterprise to attack the Bairds in their stronghold. We fared but
+badly, last time we went there, though that was but a blow and a
+retreat; but all know that the Bairds' hold is not to be taken like
+a country tower. 'Tis greatly bigger and stronger than ours, and
+scarce to be attempted save by a royal army; especially as the
+whole countryside would be swarming round us, in a few hours after
+we crossed the border. This time, too, it is no quarrel of my
+people; and, as they say, the risk would be indeed great, and the
+loss very heavy.</p>
+
+<p>"I sent off a messenger this morning to Armstrong, to tell him
+that I feared I could not raise more than sixty spears; but with
+these I would ride to Hiniltie, and join any force he could
+collect, and try with him to surprise the Bairds' hold and rescue
+the girls, though it seemed to be a mighty dangerous
+enterprise."</p>
+
+<p>"He will have learnt, yesterday morning, Father, that we have
+carried them off. We could have brought you the news last night,
+but to do so we must have ridden fast and, the girls being with us,
+we thought it were better to take two days over the journey. So we
+slept in Tynedale last night."</p>
+
+<p>"And how did you manage it? For unless you and Roger flew into
+the Bairds' hold, and carried them off on your backs, I see not how
+it could be managed. Why, the place is so strong that even the
+Douglases have not cared to carry out the terms of the treaty, for
+the arrest of William Baird as a notorious breaker of the truce
+between the two countries."</p>
+
+<p>"It was because I knew Armstrong deemed that it was scarce
+likely a force could be gathered, by you and his friends, strong
+enough to undertake such an enterprise, that we decided to rescue
+them by strategy. The affair turned out to be easy enough."</p>
+
+<p>And he then related, in detail, the manner in which he and Roger
+had obtained entry into the hold, and had succeeded in rescuing his
+cousins.</p>
+
+<p>"By the bones of Saint Oswald, from whom you got your name,
+lad," John Forster exclaimed, when he had finished his story, "you
+have carried out the matter marvellously well! Hotspur himself
+could not have contrived it better; and I own that I was wrong, and
+that that fancy of yours, to be able to read and write, has not
+done you the damage that I feared it would. Henceforth I will
+maintain, with all my might, that these things in no way tend to
+soften a man; but on the contrary, in some way sharpen his wits,
+and enable him to carry out matters with plans, and contrivances,
+such as would scarce be conceived by men who had not such
+advantage.</p>
+
+<p>"But why do we not go inside?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have been keeping you here, Father, because I doubt not that
+my mother has been breaking the news to the girls, of their
+mother's slaughter. I said nought to them about it. They knew the
+hold was burnt, and I told them that Allan was wounded; but I
+thought that, if I gave them the worst part of the news, it would
+throw them into such deep grief as to unfit them for the journey.
+It might not have been discovered till two hours after we had
+started that they had escaped, and in that case we should have been
+mounted before the Bairds overtook us, and it would have been a
+ride for life, and the girls would have needed all their strength
+and courage to keep them up."</p>
+
+<p>"It was as well so, Oswald, and doubtless your mother will break
+it more easily to them than you could have done. Women are better
+at such things than men, who are given to speak, bluntly and
+straight, what has to be told."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch15">Chapter 15</a>: Another Mission To Ludlow.</h2>
+
+<p>While Oswald was talking with his father, Roger had taken the
+four horses round to the long shed, that ran along one side of the
+wall; and had there been telling the moss troopers the same story
+Oswald had been relating to his father, whom he now joined.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, friend Roger," John Forster said as he came up, shaking
+him heartily by the hand; "by my faith, my son is fortunate in
+having so stout a fellow as his henchman."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis rather that I am fortunate in having him as a master,"
+Roger replied. "I have but to strike as he bids me, and there is no
+need for me to think, for my brain bears no proportion to my bulk;
+and indeed, even in the matter of strength he bids fair to equal
+me, for he seems to me to grow taller and stronger every month;
+which is not surprising, seeing that you are, yourself, much beyond
+the common. In all this matter there is no credit due to me, save
+that I have, as faithfully as I could, carried out his orders."</p>
+
+<p>"All men can try to carry out orders, Roger, but it is not all
+who can do it with intelligence. Doubtless, it has something to do
+with the book learning that you have, and in which you were his
+instructor."</p>
+
+<p>"I think not that it is so, in any way, Master Forster," Roger
+replied quickly, for he liked not the thought that he had gained
+any advantage, whatever, from his stay in the convent. "It might
+likely be useful to a man of small stature, whose thoughts would
+naturally turn to being a scribe, and to making his living by such
+finicking ways instead of by bearing himself as a man should; but
+for one like myself, 'tis but time thrown away. Yet I say not that
+it may not be useful to Master Oswald, who will some day be a
+knight, and go to court, and have occasion to write letters, when
+he has no scribe at hand to do it for him; but a good downright
+blow is more advantage, to the man that strikes it, than all the
+book learning that he can get."</p>
+
+<p>"I have done well enough without it, Roger; but I think that it
+must be of some use, else why is it that Oswald is so good at
+devising plans? Had I been in his place, when he heard the news of
+the harrying of Hiniltie, and the carrying off of Armstrong's
+daughters, I should never have thought of starting on such an
+adventure as he did."</p>
+
+<p>"It may be that it may improve the mind, Master Forster, just as
+wielding a mace strengthens the muscles of the arm. I only speak
+from my own experience; and, so far as I can see, all the hours I
+spent on these matters have been as good as wasted."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, Roger," Oswald, who had been an amused listener to the
+conversation, broke in, "you have had evidence, but lately, that it
+is not so. Had you not been able to read the priest's missal, he
+would have seen, at once, that you were not a monk; but the fact
+that you did so, and that much better and more fluently than he
+could, himself, have read a strange manuscript, was to him a
+confirmation of your story; which not only enabled us to rescue my
+cousins, but probably saved your own skin, to say nothing of mine;
+for had Baird learned that you were deceiving him, he would as
+likely as not have hung us both over the gateway of his hold, as
+spies."</p>
+
+<p>Roger scratched his head, in some embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot gainsay it, Master Oswald, though I did not think of
+it before; and it is certainly a proof that the time I spent in
+learning was not thrown away; for, as you say, had I not been able
+to read that missal, doubtless it would have gone hard with both of
+us. I am not ashamed to own when I am wrong. It would not be
+English, or honest, not to do so. Reading certainly came in
+mightily useful, there."</p>
+
+<p>"And you must also remember, Roger," Oswald said with a smile,
+"that if it had not been that you read and wrote, better than most
+of the other monks, the abbot would not have picked you out as my
+instructor, I should not have asked for you to come with me to
+Scotland, and Sir Henry Percy would never have begged the abbot to
+allow you to go forth into the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Say no more, Master Oswald--never again will I say a word
+against reading and writing--I see that they are excellent things,
+and it never entered my thick head how greatly I have benefited by
+acquiring them--but will maintain, against all who say the
+contrary, that they are of great value; and that they in no way
+tend to soften a man, as I can prove in my own person, and also in
+yours."</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, Mary Forster appeared at the top of the
+steps.</p>
+
+<p>"Supper is ready," she said. "I have broken the news to the
+girls. They are quite broken hearted, poor things, and I have sent
+them to bed.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose you are not leaving us, tomorrow morning,
+Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I shall be off at daybreak, the next day. I must not stay
+longer, for I ought to have been back three days ago, and Sir Henry
+will be wondering what has befallen me."</p>
+
+<p>Talking the matter over, that evening, as to what had best be
+done with the girls, Mary Forster said that they had expressed
+great anxiety to get back, as soon as they could, in order that
+they might try and comfort their father, and nurse Allan; and John
+Forster said that he would ride with them, with four of his men, to
+Hiniltie, in a day or two. The next evening, however, there was a
+knock at the outside gate; and on its being opened, Adam Armstrong
+himself entered.</p>
+
+<p>"I could not rest, for thinking of the girls," he said, as he
+entered the house. "The man arrived safely, yesterday morning,
+after having, with great difficulty, made his way unobserved
+through the Bairds, who had some fifty or sixty men scattered, all
+over the hills."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you go to them, Wife, and tell them that their father has
+arrived.</p>
+
+<p>"They have been terribly upset," John went on, as his wife left
+the room. "They were only told of the loss of their mother after
+they arrived, yesterday. Oswald thought that they would need all
+their strength for the journey, and that it were better that Mary
+should break the news to them, when they got here. We have all felt
+for you sorely, Adam, since your messenger brought the news."</p>
+
+<p>Armstrong pressed his hand, silently.</p>
+
+<p>"She was a good wife to me, John, a right good wife. We buried
+what seemed to be her remains, yesterday morning. It was that, that
+kept me from starting the moment the man came in with the news that
+Oswald had got the girls out of the hands of the Bairds."</p>
+
+<p>"And how is Allan?"</p>
+
+<p>"I trust he will get right, now. He has come partly to his
+senses, though he is still dazed. We had him carried, in a litter,
+to the monastery where I obtained the monk's robe for your man; for
+I feared to leave him in the village, lest the Bairds, furious at
+the escape of the girls, might return to finish their work."</p>
+
+<p>He was about to speak to Oswald, when the door opened, and the
+girls ran in, and it was some time before Adam Armstrong again
+turned to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, lad," he said, "do not think, because I am a long time
+coming to the point, that I think lightly of the service you have
+rendered me. Ah, lad! I could scarce believe my ears, when Fergus
+told me that you and your henchman had got the lasses out of the
+Bairds' hands, and had gone off on horseback with them. I had to
+put the question, again and again, as to whether he was sure that
+it was really the girls you had with you. It seemed to me to be
+altogether impossible; but I had to believe him, at last, though
+how it came about he could not tell me."</p>
+
+<p>"We had no time for talking," Oswald said. "Every moment was of
+importance. But the matter was simple enough, and worth but a few
+words' telling."</p>
+
+<p>And he then related the manner in which he and Roger had
+obtained entrance to the hold, and had succeeded in getting the
+girls away.</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds simple enough, in the telling," Armstrong said; "but
+it needed stout hearts, and good nerves, to enter the Bairds' den
+on such an errand. You carried your lives in your hands, and well
+must you have borne out your story, to have passed without
+suspicion. It was well thought of, indeed, and well carried out,
+and would have done credit to the boldest and craftiest leader on
+the border.</p>
+
+<p>"What say you, John?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am proud of him, Adam. As for myself, I should never have
+thought of such a plan. If I had had the matter in hand, I might
+have taken twenty stout fellows, and tried to scale the walls
+unseen, and to fall upon them with spear and sword, and in the
+confusion carry the girls off; but it would have been a desperate
+plan, with but small hope of success."</p>
+
+<p>"Small indeed, John, small indeed," Armstrong said, shaking his
+head. "With prisoners in the hold, the Bairds were not likely to be
+caught sleeping; and had they been, accustomed to surprises as they
+are, the whole garrison would have been afoot in a minute, and not
+a man of ye would have lived to tell the story. Some such mad
+thought passed through my brain, when I first heard the news, but
+it was not for long. Even with your spears, and others you might
+gather, and all my friends in Tweeddale, we should have had but a
+small chance of capturing the Bairds' hold. We should have had all
+Annandale and Nithsdale down on us, before we could have done it.
+At any rate, we should have had to bide our time, and wait until
+the Bairds were away to England with all their dalesmen; and by
+that time, none could say what would have become of the girls. In
+fact, there was but one way of doing it, and that is the way Oswald
+hit upon.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, lad, I fear I shall never have an opportunity of repaying
+the debt I owe you; but after this, there is not an Armstrong on
+the border, on our side or yours--for we are half English and half
+Scotch--but will hold you as among our closest of kin, and will
+give you welcome and aid, whensoever you may need it. And where is
+your man Roger?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will call him," Oswald said and, stepping to the door, he
+shouted to his follower; who came out, at once, from one of the
+outhouses occupied by the retainers of the hold.</p>
+
+<p>"Come up, Roger!" Oswald said; "Master Armstrong wishes to see
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Roger came up and, as he entered, Adam grasped him by the
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Whenever your time for fighting is over, my brave fellow,
+remember that there is a home for you at Hiniltie, so long as an
+Armstrong dwells there. I thought, when I fetched that monk's gown
+for you, that you and my nephew Oswald might be able to gather some
+news; and let me know, possibly, how the girls were faring; but
+little did I think that, alone and unaided, you would rescue them
+from the hands of the Bairds."</p>
+
+<p>"It was a merry business, Master Armstrong, and pleased me
+hugely, save that it went against my heart to have this bald patch
+on my head again, just when the hair had so well grown and covered
+it; but it was well nigh as good as fighting, to trick the Bairds
+in their own hold, when they, as they thought, were so mightily
+sure that I was but a harmless brother of a monastery. For the
+rest, it was an easy business, and scarce worth talking of."</p>
+
+<p>"It was done easily because it was done well, Roger. It was well
+planned, and well carried out."</p>
+
+<p>"I had nought to do with the planning, and the carrying out was
+simple enough. There were those there who tested me, as to my
+knowledge of Dunbar, and of the monastery I came from, and who
+further tested my knowledge of reading. Once assured that my story
+was true, they paid no further attention to me, believing that I
+should stay but a day or two, to rest myself on my way south."</p>
+
+<p>"You had occasion, however, to use that heavy staff you
+carried."</p>
+
+<p>"Some slight occasion, but I would that I had had the chance to
+have used it on the heads of some of the Bairds. For what little I
+did, master Armstrong, your daughters thanked me very prettily, and
+more than enough; and therefore, I pray thee, say no more of
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"And how is your son?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is going on well, and both Meg Margetson and the monks, in
+whose hands I have put him, say that they hope he is out of
+danger."</p>
+
+<p>The next morning Oswald and Roger mounted, soon after daybreak,
+and rode to Alnwick. It had, the night before, been arranged that
+the girls should, for the present, remain at Yardhope; until the
+hold at Hiniltie was repaired, and put in a state of stronger
+defence. It was agreed, too, that it was as well that no word
+should be said by Armstrong, on his return, as to the whereabouts
+of his daughters, as the Bairds might then, in their anger, make an
+attack on Yardhope; whereas, at present, they could have no reason
+whatever for suspecting that they were there, and, if they obtained
+news that they were not with their father at Hiniltie, would
+suppose that they had been lodged with some of the family
+elsewhere, or perhaps placed for safety in Jedburgh.</p>
+
+<p>"I had wondered what had become of you," Hotspur said, when
+Oswald entered his apartments, to report his return. "I expected
+you two or three days since, and I indeed wanted you, for other
+business."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry, my lord; but after having fulfilled the orders you
+gave me, to the governors of Roxburgh and Jedburgh, I became
+engaged in an affair of my uncle, Adam Armstrong, of so pressing a
+character that I deemed you would excuse me, when you heard its
+nature."</p>
+
+<p>And he then briefly related how he had been occupied, since
+leaving Jedburgh.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a good excuse, indeed," Hotspur said, "and you must tell
+me more of it this evening, when the earl and my wife can also hear
+it. As to the business I spoke of, it is of no consequence at all;
+it was but to carry a message to the Earl of Westmoreland. This I
+have now sent, by another hand."</p>
+
+<p>The winter passed quietly. Oswald's work was light. He more than
+once rode home for a few days, and once paid a visit to
+Hiniltie.</p>
+
+<p>Here a number of men were at work. The exterior walls had in no
+way suffered, and the shell of the central building had so far
+resisted the fire, that it was not necessary to rebuild it. The
+roof and floors had been replaced, and the defences considerably
+strengthened. A portcullis had been placed above the door; so that,
+in case of the outer wall being carried, or the gate forced, it
+could at once be lowered. A projecting battlement had been thrown
+out over this, with openings below, through which boiling lead and
+pitch could be poured on an enemy trying to break in. Flanking
+turrets, for archers, had been built at each corner of the house;
+and the exterior walls had been strengthened by towers, in the
+centre of each face, and on either side of the gateway.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall be safe now, I think, Oswald," said Allan, who had
+almost recovered. "The place can hardly be taken by a sudden
+attack, even by all the forces the Bairds could bring against it;
+and we could get help from Jedburgh, long before they could gain
+even the outside wall. My father and I are going, in a fortnight,
+to fetch the girls. I rode over there a week or two since, and
+found them looking very well and happy, with your people; but of
+course they are anxious to get back again, especially as you are so
+seldom at home."</p>
+
+<p>"If you will fix the day before I go, I will try to be there to
+meet you. I suppose, as soon as spring sets in fairly, we shall be
+having troubles again, and it is certainly as well that Janet and
+Jessie should be at home again before they begin; for although
+Yardhope is strong enough to resist any attack by the Bairds, or
+any other border rangers, it can scarcely hold out against a
+regular invasion."</p>
+
+<p>Four days after his return to Alnwick, Oswald was sent for by
+Percy.</p>
+
+<p>"The Scots do not seem to be moving yet," the latter said, "but
+Glendower is ever increasing in strength, and boldness. I have
+received startling news this morning. A party of Welshmen were seen
+near Ruthyn, and Earl Grey, with a body of mounted men, rode out
+against them. They retired at once, and he, briskly pursuing, fell
+into an ambush and was captured.</p>
+
+<p>"'Twould have been thought that Glendower would have put his
+chief enemy to death, at once, but it was not so, and it is said he
+holds the earl to ransom. Glendower has plenty of men, but no doubt
+needs money sorely. He can draw no revenue from his estates in
+Denbigh, and those in South Wales cannot suffice for the expenses
+of feeding the body of men, always under arms. Doubtless he will
+ask for a great sum, and 'tis like that he will get it. Grey is a
+favourite of the king, and the latter will doubtless aid him, for
+he needs his services to hold Flint and Denbighshire against the
+Welsh.</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, methinks that the king would, for another reason,
+make every effort to buy Lord Grey's freedom; for it is no secret
+that he has no great love for Mortimer; for although he holds the
+young Earl of March a prisoner, at Windsor, he cannot forget that
+the lad is the rightful heir to the throne, and that the friends of
+Richard would place him there, had they the opportunity. Mortimer
+is the boy's uncle and, not only from his own estates, but as
+guardian of the young earl's wide possessions in Hereford and in
+Shropshire, is a very powerful noble.</p>
+
+<p>"The king has no real reason for doubting him, for I know that
+Mortimer has no thought of supporting the Earl of March's claim to
+the throne; having held, with the rest of the kingdom, that Henry,
+who is wise and politic, is a far fitter ruler than the lad could
+be. Doubtless, Henry is well aware of this, but he sees that when
+the young earl grows to manhood he might become dangerous; and
+might supplant him, as he supplanted Richard. Thus, then, I have no
+doubt the king will use every effort to obtain the release of Lord
+Grey, in order that he may act as a counterpoise, in the Welsh
+marches, to the influence of Mortimer.</p>
+
+<p>"However, that is not now the question. It is evident, by this
+daring deed of Glendower, that he will be busy this year; and the
+success of his first attempt will assuredly add to his following.
+Therefore, as the Scots are, at present, quiet, I would that you
+ride again to Ludlow, and sojourn there a while.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Edmund sends me but scant news, and I would fain know more
+closely how matters are going there, and how great this
+insurrection is like to grow. It may well be that the Scots, seeing
+how powerful Glendower is becoming, will enter into agreement with
+him, that while he invades the west country, they shall pour across
+the border with all their forces; in which case we should be hard
+pressed, for the king's power in the south might be fully engaged
+against the Welsh, and we should have to battle with the whole
+strength of Scotland, alone. Therefore, write at length, giving me
+full reports of the talk of the country as to the bearing of the
+Welsh, not only beyond the border, but those settled in the west
+counties.</p>
+
+<p>"You will, of course, take the fighting monk with you; and he
+can aid you in this matter, being a good scholar, though a bad
+monk; so, when you are weary of holding the pen, you can dictate
+the matter to him. I will send two well-mounted couriers with you,
+and will have relays of horses placed on the road, so that you can
+despatch me a letter once a week; and they will also, of course,
+carry any letters Sir Edmund Mortimer may wish to send."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, Sir Henry. Shall I start today?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, the matter is not so urgent as all that."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will ride tomorrow morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Good.</p>
+
+<a id="PicI" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/i.jpg" alt=
+"I am well pleased with you, Oswald"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>"I am well pleased with you, Oswald. That affair, in which you
+rescued your cousins, showed that you have discretion and ability,
+as well as skill and courage; and you see, the knowledge that you
+gained at the monastery is coming in useful to you, now. As a mark
+of my approbation, I will order that one of my warhorses shall be
+saddled, and be in readiness for you, in the morning. The steed
+that Mortimer gave you is a good one, but you have need of another;
+for one may fall lame, or be killed or wounded, and 'tis well to
+have a second string to the bow. Moreover, riding as you do in my
+service, 'tis but meet that I should provide you with
+horseflesh.</p>
+
+<p>"I marked you on your horse today, the one you rode when you
+came here; and in truth, you have outgrown it altogether; and
+though I doubt not that the sturdy little beast would, even yet,
+carry you for a long day's journey, 'tis scarce in accordance with
+your position as our representative."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald thanked Hotspur heartily for the gift, for he, himself,
+had felt that he needed a second charger, but had been reluctant to
+ask his father for the money required to buy one; for the expenses
+of repairing the hold, after the last Scotch invasion, had been
+heavy, and gold was a scarce commodity at Yardhope.</p>
+
+<p>He started at daybreak the next morning, riding the fine horse
+Hotspur had given him. Roger rode behind him, and was followed by
+the two lightly-armed men, who were to act as messengers. One of
+these led Oswald's second horse. As soon as they had left the
+castle, Oswald called Roger up to his side.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Roger, I dare say you are as pleased as I am, that we are
+on the move again. 'Tis nigh five months since we returned from
+Ludlow and, save for our adventure with the Bairds, we have had a
+quiet time, since."</p>
+
+<p>"Think you there will be work with the Welsh again, master?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think so, indeed, Roger. They say that Glendower's forces are
+greatly increasing, and he has captured Lord Grey, and holds him to
+ransom. The king must regret, now, that Parliament refused to
+listen to Glendower's complaints, because he had been one of
+Richard's men, and had perhaps spoken more hotly than was prudent,
+touching the king's murder."</p>
+
+<p>"But they say that Richard is still alive, and that he is with
+the Scots."</p>
+
+<p>"They may say so, Roger, but think you that it is likely? The
+king's figure was well known to hundreds of men. Why does he not
+show himself? Even in Scotland there are many nobles who, during
+the truces between the kingdoms, have been to London, and have
+known King Richard; and had this man been he, they would have
+recognized him, at once. Besides, think you that when the king had
+Richard caged, in Pomfret, there was any chance of his getting free
+again? It may suit Albany, at present, to set up some puppet or
+other, in order to cause uneasiness to Henry, and to render
+Richard's friends here unwilling to obey the orders of the king,
+and to take the field against the Scots; but had he been Richard,
+'tis not in Scotland that he would have shown himself, but in
+France, where he would gladly have been received, as Anne of
+Bohemia's husband, and would have had aid and support to urge his
+claims."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, master, I care not what takes us to Wales. At any rate, I
+am glad to journey thither; for it seems, at present, as if there,
+only, is there a chance of giving and taking hard knocks. How is it
+that you do not take a party of men-at-arms, as you did last
+time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mortimer has plenty of men, without them, and the handful that
+Percy can spare would be of little use. I am going principally
+because Hotspur is anxious to be kept well informed of what happens
+in the west, for he feels sure that, if Glendower's power
+increases, it will be needful to send a strong English army there.
+The Scots will make a great invasion, and it will behove all the
+northern counties, and lords, to hold themselves in readiness."</p>
+
+<p>They travelled fast and, in five days after leaving Alnwick,
+arrived at Ludlow.</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome back again, Master Oswald!" Sir Edmund said, when he
+arrived. "I thought that maybe Sir Henry Percy would send you
+hither. Matters here are becoming serious, and 'tis said that there
+have been Scotch emissaries with Glendower, though for the truth of
+this I cannot answer; but Percy will certainly wish to know, well,
+what passes in the west; and I am but a poor hand with the pen, and
+moreover, too much busied to write often. He knows that right well,
+and I doubt not you are instructed to inform him of all that
+passes."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Sir Edmund. It is for that purpose that he has
+sent me hither, charging me to write to him, frequently, as to the
+situation and the power of Glendower; which must needs be on the
+increase, since nought has been done to bring him to reason. And I
+have also his commands, to place myself at your service, and to
+obey you, in all respects, as if I had been your squire."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be glad for you to ride with my knights," Sir Edmund
+replied, courteously. "I have not forgotten that you did good
+service, last year, and trust that you may find opportunity for
+winning your spurs."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be glad, indeed, to do so, Sir Edmund. May I ask where
+Glendower is supposed to be, at present?"</p>
+
+<p>"He has his headquarters on the summit of Plinlimmon, a great
+hill on the borders of Montgomery; and thence ravages and plunders
+all the country round him, slaying all who are supposed to be
+attached to the English cause. Unfortunately, he meets with but
+little resistance, for the castles have, for the most part, been
+suffered to get into a bad state; since, for a hundred years, it
+has seemed that they would no longer be required against the Welsh,
+who appeared to have become as peaceful as the people in our own
+counties. Many of the knights have built themselves more convenient
+houses, and have let the castles become almost ruins.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, too, the garrisons, where garrisons are kept, are for the
+most part composed of Welshmen. These can be no longer trusted, and
+it is no easy matter to obtain Englishmen in their places, for so
+great is the terror caused by the slaughter, by Glendower, of those
+who fall into his hands, that few even of adventurous spirit would,
+at present, care to leave their homes beyond the Severn, to take up
+such desperate service. Glendower's movements are so rapid that
+there is no notice of his coming, and it is not until he and his
+band suddenly appear, burning and slaughtering, that any know of
+his approach."</p>
+
+<p>"Surely it must be difficult to victual so large a force, on the
+summit of a mountain?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would assuredly be so, only he keeps but a hundred and fifty
+chosen men with him. But, were his beacon fires to be lighted,
+there would in a few hours be ten thousand men on the mountain.
+Then again, as the whole population are with him, were I to start
+with five hundred men from here, the news would reach him, by means
+of smokes on the hills, before I had marched five miles away. 'Tis
+a warfare in which there is no credit to be gained, and much loss
+to be sustained; and I see not that, with anything less than an
+army large enough to march through Wales from end to end, burning
+the towns and villages, and putting to the sword all who resist,
+the affair can be brought to an end.</p>
+
+<p>"It was only thus that Harold brought Wales to reason, and that
+so strongly that it was two generations ere they ventured again to
+cross the border. It was so that Edward finally stamped out their
+rebellions, and methinks that the work will have to be done again,
+in the same manner. So far from doing good, the king's invasion
+last autumn has but encouraged them; for, though so numerous, his
+army effected nothing, and showed the Welsh how powerless the
+troops were to enter the mountains, or to take the offensive
+anywhere save on level ground."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald's life, at Ludlow, differed in no way from that at
+Alnwick. He took his meals at the high table, sitting below the
+knights, with Sir Edmund's squires. He practised arms with them;
+tilted in the courtyard of the castle; occasionally rode out,
+hunting and hawking, with a party of knights and ladies; helped to
+drill the bodies of tenants who, a hundred at a time, came in to
+swell the garrison. Sometimes he carried Mortimer's orders to the
+governors of the castles, or rode with a strong party into Hereford
+or Radnor.</p>
+
+<p>A short time after his arrival, Montgomery was taken by storm by
+Glendower; and all Englishmen, and Welshmen suspected of friendship
+for the English, slain. Shortly afterwards, the suburbs of
+Welshpool were burnt by him, to the great loss of the Earl of
+Powys; whose annoyance was all the greater, since most of his own
+tenants were under arms, with Glendower. Following hard upon these
+pieces of bad news came word that he had fallen upon the Abbey of
+Cwmhir, six miles from Rhayader, in Radnorshire, which he entirely
+destroyed. The news caused great indignation, and the reason for
+this sacrilegious act was warmly discussed at the castle.</p>
+
+<p>"The reason, methinks," Sir Edmund said, after he had listened
+to the knights for some time, "is twofold. In the first place the
+ecclesiastics, for the most part, and the monks of all the orders
+save the Franciscans, favoured King Henry against Richard; but the
+chief reason is the long animosity between the Church and the
+Bards, of whom Glendower is a great patron; and who have done him
+great service, by stirring up the people with their songs. The
+bards have ever been foremost in instigating insurrections in
+Wales. Edward the First attempted to suppress them altogether, and
+his edict for executing them, by martial law, is still unrepealed;
+and they dare not venture to show themselves, in any castle or town
+held by us. But they have, to a man, rallied round Glendower. His
+house was always open to them, and he was even distinguished by
+some Welsh name, meaning the protector of the bards. Now, after
+being hunted fugitives for so many years, they have, no doubt, used
+their influence with him to stir him up against the religious
+houses."</p>
+
+<p>But a heavier blow still was struck by Glendower, and the
+feeling at Ludlow was nothing short of consternation, when a
+fugitive arrived from the town of New Radnor, saying that the
+strong castle there had been carried by assault, the garrison of
+three-score men all beheaded, and the town laid in ashes. This was
+the heaviest blow yet struck by Glendower. The castle was of great
+strength, and the town had been walled by the Lords of the Marches.
+That such a place should have been carried by Welsh kerns seemed
+well-nigh incredible, and the execution of the whole of the
+garrison aroused the most lively indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"This is war to the knife, indeed," Sir Edmund Mortimer said;
+"and yet, abhorrent as is this wholesale murder of the garrison, I
+cannot but own that it is a politic step, on the part of Glendower.
+The news will spread throughout Wales, and if so strong a place as
+New Radnor could not defend itself, how can lesser castles hope to
+do so? Nor, indeed, will garrisons care to man the walls, since
+resistance means death. Doubtless there were many Welsh among these
+men who were murdered, and you may be sure that their compatriots,
+in other castles, will hasten to desert and join Glendower."</p>
+
+<p>This, indeed, proved to be the case, the garrisons of the
+castles dwindled away, and hold after hold fell without resistance.
+Even in Ludlow, every precaution was taken; all Welshmen were
+expelled from the town, and the garrison was also purged of them,
+although some of the men-at-arms had served for many years. These
+men were told that, after the troubles were over, they should again
+be taken into the service if they chose; but that, in the present
+state of things, one traitor might endanger the safety of the
+castle and town; and that, as it was impossible to tell who were
+true men and who had been corrupted by Glendower's agents, it was
+necessary that all should suffer, even if innocent.</p>
+
+<p>Among the tenants of Mortimer's estate, and those of the young
+earl, were many Welsh. Against them no measures were taken. They
+and their fathers, sometimes indeed three generations of them, had
+lived peaceably; and had rendered military service, when required,
+in the troubles of England; and Mortimer was reluctant to treat
+them harshly, especially as all declared their readiness to serve,
+and prove their devotion to their English lord.</p>
+
+<p>"They are not sufficiently numerous," he said, "to be a source
+of any danger. Were Glendower to invade England in great force
+doubtless they would join him, to save their lives and those of
+their families; but being but one to four or five of the English
+tenants, I see not that they can be a source of danger to us."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch16">Chapter 16</a>: A Letter For The King.</h2>
+
+<p>A large number of Flemings had settled in Wales, having left
+their own country in consequence of the constant troubles there;
+and many of these had set up cloth mills, at Welshpool and other
+places. Having suffered great destruction of property at the hands
+of Glendower, and seeing no hope of the insurrection being put down
+by the English, they resolved to take the matter into their own
+hands. Fifteen hundred of them gathered, secretly, and surrounded
+Glendower in one of his mountain intrenchments.</p>
+
+<p>He repulsed their attacks, but the situation was desperate.
+Provisions ran short. He was unable to summon help, and at last
+determined, with his little body of followers, to endeavour to cut
+his way out through the besiegers. The attack was sudden and
+fierce. The Flemings, who, knowing the smallness of his force, had
+made no preparations to repel an attack, were seized with a panic
+at the fierce appearance and the wild cries of the Welsh, who fell
+upon them with such fury that two hundred of the Flemings were
+slain, and the Welsh cut their way through the beleaguering
+line.</p>
+
+<p>The news of this feat was received with immense enthusiasm,
+throughout the principality. Great numbers flocked to Glendower's
+standard; the bards sung songs of his victory, at every village in
+Wales; and so formidable did his position become that the Lords of
+the Marches wrote to the king, saying that the matter had gone
+altogether beyond them, and that his presence, with an army, was
+urgently needed.</p>
+
+<p>Even in Ludlow, extra sentries were placed upon the walls, the
+garrison was kept in a constant state of vigilance, and mounted men
+were stationed, miles out, to bring in the news of the approach of
+any hostile force.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a thousand pities," Sir Edmund said, when the news of the
+defeat of the Flemings reached him, "that these fellows did not
+send news to me, a day or two before they undertook this business;
+for in that case I would have myself headed a force of a couple of
+hundred of my best men-at-arms, and joined them at some spot in the
+mountains; and had we been there, you may be sure that Glendower
+would never have fought his way out. The Flemings are doubtless
+stout fighters, as they have proved over and over again, in their
+own country; but they are all unused to mountain warfare, or to
+fight with wild men, and were doubtless scared by the shrill cries
+with which the Welsh always advance to battle. Doubtless, too,
+these men Glendower keeps with him are his best fighters, and they
+knew that, if they did not succeed in making their way out, no
+mercy would be shown to them, seeing that they have shown none
+themselves. Had the battle been on a plain, I doubt not that the
+Flemings would have stood against many times the number of Welshmen
+that Owen had with him; but this hill warfare was altogether
+strange to them, and of course they had not the habit of quickly
+rallying, and meeting the attack, that is second nature with our
+men-at-arms. The affair is serious, and unless the king comes
+hither with an army, Glendower is likely to have it all his own way
+on his side of the border; and, ere long, there won't be an
+Englishman left west of the Severn."</p>
+
+<p>However Henry, when informed of the danger, lost no time in
+assembling another great army; and in the beginning of June
+advanced into Wales, and ravaged a wide extent of country, carrying
+his arms into Cardiganshire, and destroying the Abbey of Strata
+Florida, one of the most venerable and famous abbeys in Wales.
+Founded in 1164, it was burnt down in 1294, during the wars of King
+Edward the First with the Welsh, but was soon rebuilt. Here
+Llewellyn, in 1237, convened all the chieftains of Wales to take
+the oath of allegiance. There were two copies of the national
+records, one of which was kept at this abbey, and the other at that
+of Conway.</p>
+
+<p>The abbey having fallen, Henry's army met with scarcely any
+resistance, Glendower knowing that his wild followers were no match
+for the royal troops. He therefore contented himself with harassing
+them continually, and the army suffered greatly by this continued
+annoyance, as well as from fatigue and famine. Thus the king
+returned across the border without having achieved any success,
+whatever.</p>
+
+<p>The Lords of the Marches were not now ordered to contribute any
+troops, but were to hold their castles strongly; lest, when the
+army was fairly entangled among the mountains, Glendower should
+make a great incursion into England. The only advantage gained by
+the English invasion was that the king, by promises of pardon and
+rewards, drew away a number of the leading men who had hitherto
+acted with Glendower. Their defection, however, was more than made
+up by the enthusiasm excited by the spectacle of the second
+retirement of a great English army, without having effected
+anything of importance.</p>
+
+<p>So evident was this, that in October Henry again advanced, with
+the contingents of no fewer than twenty-two counties. The season,
+however, was already unfavourable for operations and, after
+enduring great hardships and suffering, the army again fell back,
+having effected even less than the two which had preceded it.</p>
+
+<p>Things, however, turned out fortunately for Oswald. The army had
+advanced a week across the border when a messenger arrived at
+Ludlow, with a letter from London for the king.</p>
+
+<p>"It will be no easy matter to forward it," Sir Edmund said, as
+the despatch was handed to him. "Indeed, I see not how it is to be
+done. Beyond the fact that the king intended to march west, I know
+nothing whatever of his intentions, or of the exact road he was
+likely to take. His orders were strict, that we were to keep our
+forces well in hand; and to send the letter forward would need two
+hundred men, at least, as an escort. It places me in an awkward
+position, indeed."</p>
+
+<p>"If it so please you, Sir Edmund," said Oswald, who was one of
+the group standing round, when the messenger handed the letter to
+Mortimer; "I will endeavour to carry the despatch for you. Methinks
+that, while fifty men would not succeed in getting through to the
+army, two might, perchance, manage to do so. I shall, of course,
+ride first to Shrewsbury, through which the king passed; and so
+follow up the course he took. There should be no great difficulty
+in doing that, for the march of so great a body of men must have
+left many traces behind. They will, doubtless, have harried the
+country, for some distance each side of the line they followed; and
+it is not likely that I should meet any of the Welsh, until I was
+near the army. Then, of course, great caution would have to be
+used; for it is like enough that there are parties of Glendower's
+men hanging on its skirts, to cut off stragglers, and plunder any
+waggons whose horses may have fallen by the way."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a terribly dangerous service," Sir Edmund said, gravely;
+"but in truth, I see no other way of forwarding this letter; which,
+for aught I know, may be of high importance. But if this is a
+desperate enterprise, it is also one that will bring you great
+credit, if safely carried through. I will myself, if you go, give
+you a letter to the king, saying that you have volunteered for this
+desperate undertaking, from your loyalty to his person, and because
+it is possible that the letter may contain matter of the highest
+importance, to him and the realm in general. I shall add that you
+have already greatly distinguished yourself, in service against the
+Welsh, and are the trusty esquire of my brother-in-law, Sir Henry
+Percy."</p>
+
+<p>"I quite feel, Sir Edmund, that the enterprise is a dangerous
+one; but I am nevertheless determined, with your permission, to
+undertake it. My henchman and myself have, together, gone through
+dangers as great; and may pass through this, as well."</p>
+
+<p>"I will give you my answer in half an hour, Master Oswald, when
+I have talked it over with my knights, and heard their opinions as
+to whether any better plan can be devised."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald bowed and retired and, seeking out Roger, told him of the
+offer that he had made.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, master, if you are bent upon this enterprise, you will
+not find me backward; and indeed, I am so sick of this six months
+of idleness, and of seeing others marching to Wales to fight, while
+we do nothing here; that, by Saint Bride, were you to ask me to go
+into Glendower's stronghold, and pluck him by the beard, I would
+willingly go with you."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis not so bad as that, Roger, and yet 'tis a service of great
+danger. How think you that we had best set about it, on horse or on
+foot?"</p>
+
+<p>Roger looked surprised at the question.</p>
+
+<p>"It would surely be better to go on horseback, master; for if we
+met too many Welshmen to fight, we might at least ride away from
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"There is truth in that, Roger; but, on the other hand, our feet
+will carry us up and down mountains, and fells, where our horses
+could not go. If mounted, we must travel by beaten tracks, and
+might be seized by parties of Welsh, lurking in the woods, before
+we knew of their presence. Without horses, we could ourselves keep
+within shelter of the trees, and could so evade the observation of
+any who might be stationed on lofty hills, to watch if any body of
+troops were following the track of the army. Moreover, we should
+have no trouble about forage and water for our steeds."</p>
+
+<p>"Enough, master, I see which way your inclinations lie; and as
+my legs have had a long holiday, it is but right that they should
+carry me for a bit; and assuredly, 'tis easier for footmen to hide
+than it is for horsemen."</p>
+
+<p>"I should say, Roger, that it would be best to leave armour, as
+well as horses behind. If we are attacked by numbers, our armour
+will serve us but little; while if without it, we may be able, even
+if chased, to avoid the hands of these Welshmen. They say that they
+are swift of foot; but, as we can hold our own with the
+Northumbrian border men, we ought to be able to do so against these
+Welsh, especially as our legs are nigh a foot longer than those of
+the greater part of them."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, master. I myself have no great love for travelling
+in armour, and would almost as soon march in a monk's gown, again,
+as in breastplate and back piece."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, so we will arrange it. We shall have to carry our
+provisions, for you may be sure that we shall get nothing,
+whatever, while we are following the army. They will strip the
+country clean. You know how terribly they have suffered by famine,
+on the two previous expeditions; and it will assuredly be no
+better, now. Food, however, we can procure at Shrewsbury, from
+which point we shall take our start."</p>
+
+<p>A retainer, at this moment, came out from the hall, and informed
+Oswald that Sir Edmund would speak with him. When he entered,
+Mortimer said:</p>
+
+<p>"My knights and I agree that this letter ought to be sent
+forward to the king; for if it contains matters of importance,
+great harm might result from delay, and the king's anger be excited
+against us, for not having sent it to him. His orders to me were
+strict, that neither I nor any of my force should join him;
+therefore I accept your offer, with thanks. Have you formed any
+plan for your proceeding?"</p>
+
+<p>Oswald repeated the substance of what he had said to Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, perhaps, you are right," Mortimer said, "and that you
+may have more chance of getting safely through, on foot, than if
+you rode with but a small force to escort you. When you are ready
+to start, I will speak to you in private, touching some things
+connected with your journey."</p>
+
+<p>When Oswald returned, Mortimer said to him:</p>
+
+<p>"You see, Master Oswald, the position is by no means simple.
+There can be no doubt that the king regards me with no favourable
+eye. He holds my nephews in his keeping, and doubtless imagines
+that I bear him ill will. As their uncle, he supposes that, should
+at any time a party be formed to place the Earl of March on the
+throne, I should be the leader in the matter; though assuredly I
+have never given him any reason to doubt my loyalty.</p>
+
+<p>"I say not that I approved of the deposition of King Richard;
+and indeed I have not, like Lord Grey and many other nobles, among
+them the Percys, been a warm supporter of King Henry's cause. I
+hold myself altogether neutral, in that matter. I saw that nothing
+would be more ruinous, for the country, than that a boy like my
+nephew should mount the throne; and had a party been formed to make
+him king, instead of Henry, I would have taken no share in it.
+Nevertheless, there is no getting over the fact that, by right, the
+Earl of March is King of England, and there is no saying what may
+come about in the future; but assuredly, at the present time, I am
+as ready to do my duty towards King Henry as are those who are
+louder in their expressions of attachment to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, I am well aware that the king distrusts me. As
+you see, he has not, these three times that he has invaded Wales,
+come near Ludlow. He has not summoned me to join his banner; nay,
+more, has strictly ordered me not to send a man-at-arms to join
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"I own that this letter troubles me, somewhat. Why should it not
+have been carried to Shrewsbury, instead of being brought hither?
+It has, indeed, come from London, and those who sent it may not
+know that the king would move by Shrewsbury, and not by this line;
+which would, indeed, be more direct for him in advancing into
+Montgomery and Cardiganshire. On the other hand, it may be a snare.
+If I send it not forward, he might blame me greatly for holding it
+back. If I send it forward, and perchance it falls, on the way,
+into the hands of the Welsh, he might harbour the thought, even if
+he did not accuse me openly, of conniving with Glendower. One
+pretext is as good as another, however unlikely it may be, when a
+king desires to make a quarrel with one of his vassals. Your offer
+to carry it is, then, a very seasonable one, and goes far to get me
+out of the difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>"In the first place, by sending it by you, I afford no ground
+for him to say that I have disobeyed his orders, to send no one of
+my following to his army; and in the next place, whatever suspicion
+he may have of me, assuredly he can have none of the Percys, to
+whom he so largely owes his crown; and that a trusted squire of
+Hotspur should be the bearer of the letter, is sufficient proof
+that all that could be done, was done, for its safe carriage.
+Should you fail to deliver it, he can, at least, not put it down to
+any fault of mine.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir James Burgon and Sir Philip Haverstone both offered to
+carry it, urging that the danger should fall on them; and not upon
+you, who are still an esquire, and have no duty towards me in the
+affair; and that it were a shame that they should remain here,
+idle, while you rode, perhaps, to your death.</p>
+
+<p>"Assuredly, my feelings were with them and, were it not for the
+circumstances in which I am placed, I should certainly intrust the
+enterprise to them; but on my laying the whole matter before them,
+and pointing out that the coming of two of my knights to him would
+be a breach of the king's orders, they saw that, since you were
+willing to undertake it, it were best that it should be so.</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt not that Henry would, not unwillingly, fasten some
+quarrel on me. He has his army at hand and, did he march hither, he
+could seize my lands, and those of my nephew, and partition them
+out among his friends; for I am in no condition to strike a single
+blow in my defence. We know, well enough, that when a king wishes
+to get rid of one of his nobles, there is never any great
+difficulty in finding a pretext for his arrest, and execution."</p>
+
+<p>"I quite understand, Sir Edmund; and for my part, I will
+assuredly do my best to place this letter in the hands of the king.
+I shall say that, being of Sir Henry Percy's household, and knowing
+that my lord would be glad that I should have the opportunity of
+striking a blow under the king's leading, I volunteered at once,
+when the letter arrived, to bear it to him; and that, seeing his
+majesty had laid his orders on you, to keep all your force in
+readiness to repel Glendower, should he issue out in this quarter,
+you granted my request that I should be its bearer."</p>
+
+<p>"That will do well, Oswald. I know that the danger is by no
+means small, but I trust that you may surmount it. I shall send off
+a letter, today, to Hotspur. Doubtless you will, yourself, be
+writing to him, and explain to him why I have suffered you to
+undertake so dangerous an enterprise."</p>
+
+<p>Two hours later, Oswald, having despatched the messenger to
+Hotspur with his own letter, and that of Mortimer, mounted, and
+with Roger rode to Shrewsbury. Here he was able to gather but
+little news, as to the present position of the army. For four days
+no messengers had arrived from the king.</p>
+
+<p>The last news was to the effect that the army was marching
+forward, through Montgomeryshire. On first starting, they had made
+a long march to Welshpool, and thence had proceeded to Newtown. On
+the way, the Welsh had rushed down from the hills, and had fallen
+on the baggage, slain many of the drivers, and killed so many
+horses that it had been necessary to leave some of the waggons
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>At Newtown they halted, and parties had been sent out in all
+directions to harry the country, while a part of the force left at
+Welshpool marched upon Llanfair. This was the last news that had
+come through from the king.</p>
+
+<p>But from Welshpool they heard, next day, that there had been
+several skirmishes with the Welsh, and that heavy rains had made
+the roads all but impassable. No more messages had come. This was
+not surprising, as it was certain that the Welsh would close in
+behind the army, as it advanced; and as there would be no great
+occasion to send news back, the king would not care to weaken
+himself, by detaching escorts of sufficient strength to make their
+way down.</p>
+
+<p>"If we could have been sure which way the king had been going,
+Roger, it would have been much shorter for us to have made direct
+for Llanidloes."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly it would, Master Oswald; but you see, he might have
+turned more to the north, in which case we should have, perhaps,
+been unable to gather news of his whereabouts, while we should have
+run no small risk of getting our throats cut."</p>
+
+<p>"It is evident, Roger, that the king is marching, at present, in
+the direction of Plinlimmon. No doubt he hopes that Glendower will
+come down and give him battle, but methinks he will not be foolish
+enough to do so. The weather, and the hills, will fight far better
+for him than the Welsh, themselves, can do; and he has but to leave
+the army to wander about through the mountains and forests, as he
+did last time, to ensure that they must, ere long, fall back."</p>
+
+<p>At daybreak the next morning, they set out and rode to
+Welshpool. This being a walled town, and the population almost
+entirely English, they could leave their horses here, in safety.
+They first went to the governor's, and upon Oswald's explaining
+that they were the bearers of a letter for the king, and asking
+whether he could give them any information as to the direction they
+had best take, he shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"No news has come hither, for the last five days," he said. "A
+herd of bullocks arrived here, three days since, and were to have
+been forwarded on to the army; but the Welsh are out in force, and
+every road beset. Parties have come down from the hills overlooking
+us, and have fired several houses, that escaped when they last
+attacked us. My force is sufficient to hold the town against any
+attacks, but I cannot spare so many men as would be required to
+convoy the cattle. I told the king so, before he went on; but he
+said that no Welshman would dare show himself, when the army had
+once passed on; and that every Welsh house and village would be
+destroyed, and all within them put to the sword, so that I should
+have no difficulty in sending forward cattle, and other
+supplies.</p>
+
+<p>"That the villages have been destroyed I have no doubt, for the
+messengers who came in from Llanfair told me that, as they passed
+over the hills, they could see smoke rising from the forests in all
+directions; but whether the inhabitants remained, quietly awaiting
+the arrival of the troops, is more than doubtful. There were beacon
+fires on all the hills, the night before the army left Shrewsbury,
+and again on the next night. Since then, we have seen no more from
+here, but those who came from Llanfair told us that they were
+burning, on every hill, the night they got there; so I have no
+doubt that the old men, women, and children were at once sent off,
+probably to shelter in the Plinlimmon district, or mayhap in the
+forests of Cader Idris. At any rate, we may be sure that very few
+will be found at their villages. It was so the last time the king's
+army marched along, and the same when he made his way through
+Denbigh to Anglesey.</p>
+
+<p>"The Welsh care little for the burning of their houses. It takes
+but two or three days' work to rebuild them. The harrying of the
+villages will not bring the matter a day nearer to a conclusion. It
+is by destroying the castles and houses of the better class that an
+effect will be produced. The peasants have little to lose. The
+Welsh gentry have houses and estates, and the fear of losing these
+may drive them to abandon Glendower, and to come over to us. Many
+did so, after the king's last invasion. Methinks the best policy
+would be to spare the villagers, and give the peasants no cause for
+complaint, and to war only against their leaders.</p>
+
+<p>"But as to yourself, sir, there is not the most remote chance of
+your getting through; and you had best wait here until the army
+returns, or some levies, who may have arrived late at Shrewsbury,
+come up on their way to join the king."</p>
+
+<p>"I inquired at Shrewsbury, last night, sir; but I heard that no
+more parties were expected, the contingents from all the counties
+having joined the king, at Worcester, on the day ordered. My
+intention is that I and my man-at-arms will leave our horses here,
+and go forward on foot. In that way we can travel, for the most
+part, through the forests; and may escape being seen. We have
+already left our armour behind us, at Ludlow, so as to be able to
+move more rapidly. We are both Northumbrians, and are accustomed to
+traverse moors and fells; and, even should we be seen by any
+straggling party of the enemy, we shall have a fair chance of
+outrunning them, and throwing them off our track. At any rate, it
+is my duty to endeavour to carry the letter to the king."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it a matter of life and death?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I know not, sir. A royal messenger brought it, from
+London, to Ludlow. He had ridden with relays of horses, but had no
+means of getting farther, and begged Sir Edmund Mortimer to forward
+it. I myself, an esquire of Sir Henry Percy, was staying as a guest
+with Sir Edmund--who is, as you know, my lord's brother-in-law--and
+I volunteered to carry it, being anxious to have an opportunity of
+doing service to the king."</p>
+
+<p>"It was a bold offer, young man, and doubtless, when you made
+it, you were scarce aware how dangerous was the business that you
+undertook. Did I think that it would be of any use, I would furnish
+you with twenty men-at-arms to ride with you; but I know that such
+a force would, in no way, add to your safety. You might get as far
+as Llanidloes, or Llanfair, whichever route you might choose,
+though I think not that you would do so; but beyond that, it would
+be hopeless for any force, of less than five hundred good fighting
+men, to attempt to make their way through.</p>
+
+<p>"From what I hear, there are at least fifteen thousand Welshmen
+in arms. Many, doubtless, are with Glendower himself. The rest will
+be scattered among the hills, ready to pounce upon any party who
+may be moving up the valleys to join the king; and there are plenty
+of places where a couple of hundred men could check the advance of
+an army."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it is all the more necessary, sir, that we should trust to
+good fortune, and to making our way unseen. May I pray you to take
+care of our horses, till we return to claim them? Should we never
+do so, there are doubtless many upon whom you could bestow them;
+and they are both rarely good animals, for one was presented to me
+by Sir Henry Percy, and the other by Sir Edmund Mortimer."</p>
+
+<p>"I will take care of them, willingly. If you do not return,
+before the king marches back; and I find, when he comes, that you
+did not reach him; I will use the horses myself, holding them
+always as your property should you, at any time, return to claim
+them. Is there aught else that I can do to help you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; what would, of all other things, be most valuable to
+us would be a guide; but, from what I have seen and heard of the
+Welsh, I fear that no reliance, whatever, can be placed on one of
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not at present. Did you take one, he would but slip
+away at the first opportunity; and there is no Englishman, so far
+as I know, who could guide you through the mountains."</p>
+
+<p>"In that case, sir, we must perforce travel close to the roads,
+so as to be sure that we do not wander from the track, but keeping
+in the shelter of the forest."</p>
+
+<p>"That is the only possible course," the governor agreed; "to be
+lost, among those hills, would be certain death. If you failed to
+fall in with anyone, you would die of hunger. If you did meet
+anyone, you would be killed. Glendower spares no Englishman who
+falls into his hands."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know that he can be greatly blamed for that, sir,"
+Oswald said with a smile, "seeing that the Welsh meet with such
+scant mercy, from us."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a savage war," the governor said, shrugging his shoulders,
+"and it seems to me that it will continue, until the last Welshman
+is exterminated."</p>
+
+<p>"That will be a difficult thing, indeed, to effect," Oswald
+laughed; "as difficult as was the extermination of wolves in
+England; but I hope that matters will arrange themselves, long
+before that. Surely, in time, the Welsh leaders will see that the
+struggle is a hopeless one; and that they will lose their homes,
+and their possessions, and their lives, if they continue it.</p>
+
+<p>"Brave as the Welsh may be, they cannot withstand the whole
+strength of England. They may exist in the forests, for a time;
+but, with all the valleys and fertile lands in English hands, they
+will at last be forced to submit."</p>
+
+<p>"It would seem so; but Edward said the same thing, of Scotland.
+He carried fire and sword through it, time after time; and yet
+Scotland has still its king, and holds its own on the border."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so, sir; but Scotland is a large country, whereas Wales
+is a small one; and the towns and castles are English, as are all
+the ports; and the people themselves, although brave, are wholly
+without discipline, and are able to fight only in the mountains;
+while the Scots are strong enough to give battle to us on level
+ground, and have defeated us, more than once."</p>
+
+<p>"My advice to you is to leave the town at night," the governor
+said, as Oswald rose to leave. "There may be many of the Welsh
+lying round us now; and doubtless they learn, from their countrymen
+here, all that is doing. I will give you a scroll, ordering that
+you are allowed to pass out at any time, by night or day."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir. I had intended to start tomorrow morning, two
+hours before daybreak, so as to get well into the forest before
+sunrise. I shall, of course, go first to Llanidloes; where,
+doubtless, a strong guard will have been left. As far as that I
+cannot well miss my way, as I shall have but to keep along the side
+of the valley."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so. Beyond that, the river is a mere streamlet, and you
+will have to make across the hills."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know, sir, whether the force that went to Llanfair was
+to effect a junction with the king?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I believe not; at any rate, not for the present. The party
+was to march west; the king's force was to move south of
+Plinlimmon; Lord Talbot's to cross the range of hills, and come
+down upon the river Dovey and, if possible, prevent Glendower, if
+he is still on Plinlimmon, from making his way to Dinas Mowddwy, or
+Cader Idris, or up to Snowdon again. The plan is doubtless as good
+as another, but I doubt whether Talbot's force, if ten times as
+numerous as it is, could prevent Glendower from slipping away."</p>
+
+<p>That evening Oswald bought a supply of bread and meat,
+sufficient to last Roger and himself for three days. This was
+divided in halves and placed in bags, which would be slung over
+their shoulders. The horses had already been sent up to the castle
+and, after sleeping for a few hours, the two left the town and,
+turning to the right, ascended the hill.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald carried his sword and dagger. Roger, in addition to
+these, had a heavy oaken quarterstaff.</p>
+
+<p>"This," he said, "may be of service in mountain work, and may
+suffice to crack the skulls of any half-dozen Welshmen we may fall
+in with."</p>
+
+<p>Both had put on plain leather jerkins and cloth caps, and wore,
+underneath, their own suits with the Percy cognizance embroidered
+on them, in order that they might present themselves in proper
+attire, should they arrive at the king's camp. The weather was
+already becoming cold, and the double suit was therefore not
+uncomfortable. As the dress of the Welsh, in the towns and valleys,
+was very similar to that worn by English villagers; they would
+attract but little attention, should they have cause to take to the
+road, for any short distance.</p>
+
+<p>Keeping within the edge of the belt of trees, they followed the
+valley down past the ruins of Montgomery, and passed Newtown
+without entering it. Many times during the morning they heard loud
+shouts, from the woods in which they were, answered by similar
+cries from the other side of the valley; and were obliged to move
+with great caution, for it was evident that a considerable number
+of Welsh were in ambush in the woods, in readiness to attack any
+party who might be proceeding up or down the valley.</p>
+
+<p>Towards noon, they were obliged to leave the edge of the forest,
+and to ascend to the brow of the hills; as it was certain that any
+parties of the enemy, who might be in the forest, would be
+assembled near its edge, in readiness to pour suddenly down.</p>
+
+<p>More than once they heard voices, but a short distance away; and
+paused, for a time, to allow parties of men to cross ahead of them.
+Their greatest danger lay in crossing the side valleys, but as the
+Welsh would be expecting no one to come down these, they succeeded
+in crossing without being observed.</p>
+
+<p>They were well content when, just as night was falling, they
+came down upon Llanidloes. Crossing the wooden bridge over the
+stream, they entered the town boldly; for, looking down upon it,
+they had seen many men in armour in the streets, and knew that the
+place was occupied by the English.</p>
+
+<p>At the gate at the end of the bridge they were asked their
+business, but they replied that they could only answer that to the
+officer commanding, and were taken before him.</p>
+
+<p>"Whence come you, friends?" the latter said. "Surely you must be
+English, by your height; but what you are doing here, in times like
+the present, I know not. Come you from the king's army, or from the
+north?"</p>
+
+<p>"We left Welshpool before daybreak," Oswald said, "and have
+travelled through the forest."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you must be as bold as you are tall, sirs, for the woods
+are full of these wild Welsh."</p>
+
+<p>"Of that we are aware, sir, and we had some difficulty in making
+our way through them, unobserved. I would not answer the guard,
+when we entered; for we are going farther, and had it been
+mentioned, in the hearing of a Welshman, news might have been sent
+on ahead."</p>
+
+<p>"I think not that you can reach the king. When we last heard,
+his foremost divisions were marching forward, and devastating the
+country on both sides of their line of march. We have heard reports
+that some of the parties have been attacked, and well-nigh
+destroyed; and certain it is that Glendower's men are scattered all
+over the country.</p>
+
+<p>"We were three days without news, but this morning a strong
+party came, in escorting sick and wounded. They had to fight hard,
+but beat off their opponents, and got in with the loss of a third
+of their number. They had started at night, and fortunately arrived
+within five miles of here, before they were attacked."</p>
+
+<p>"And where is the king now, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"The king himself is at Capel Bangor, and the army lies between
+that place and Yspetty Cynfyn."</p>
+
+<p>"Then 'tis but a day's march from here!"</p>
+
+<p>"It would be but a short day's march, could you follow the road;
+but it would be impossible to do so, for 'tis beset everywhere, and
+'tis so rough and hilly that, in places, the men-at-arms had to
+dismount. You will have to wait here till a large force sets out,
+with provisions; for those who came in declare that they will not
+attempt to return, so great is the number of Welshmen along there,
+and so fierce and reckless are they.</p>
+
+<p>"But you have not yet told me who you are, and why you would
+push on to the army thus rashly."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald opened his jerkin, and showed the handsome attire beneath
+it, embroidered with the Percy cognizance.</p>
+
+<p>"I am an esquire of Sir Henry Percy," he said, "and have been
+staying for a while with Sir Edmund Mortimer, whose sister is my
+lord's wife. A royal messenger arrived at Ludlow, with a letter for
+the king; and as there was no other way of bringing it forward, I
+volunteered to carry it, with my man-at-arms, here."</p>
+
+<p>"It was a brave offer, young sir, but I fear that you will
+scarce be able to carry it into effect. The men who came here
+report that it is unsafe to stir a yard from the camp; for those
+who wander away, for however short a distance, are sure to be slain
+by the lurking Welshmen. No resistance is offered when strong
+parties go out, but less than two hundred men-at-arms cannot hope
+to move, unattacked."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis for that reason that I have come on foot," Oswald said. "I
+saw that it would be hopeless for two horsemen to get through, but
+on foot we may travel through the woods without being discovered;
+while if we are seen, methinks it would need speedy feet to catch
+us."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, since you bear a royal letter I cannot stop you; but it
+seems to me that your chance of getting through is small,
+indeed."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch17">Chapter 17</a>: Knighted.</h2>
+
+<p>Rain was coming down in torrents, when Oswald and Roger started
+the next morning. On leaving the town they turned to the left, with
+the intention of making a considerable detour; keeping well away
+from the road, as it was near this that the Welsh would be most
+likely watching. They chose this side because, to the right of the
+road, the country was more broken, rising swell after swell towards
+Plinlimmon; and it was likely that the largest portion of the Welsh
+would be on that side, so that they could, at any time, retire to
+their fastnesses.</p>
+
+<p>They were soon in the woods. The streams they met with were
+turbid, and full to the brim.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall have trouble with this water, Roger," Oswald said, as
+they waded across one, waist deep. "This is but a little stream,
+but if there are larger ones, as is like enough, we shall have to
+swim before we are done. There is one advantage; in such weather as
+this, even the Welsh will scarce be active."</p>
+
+<p>"They have not got much clothing to wet," Roger said. "Their
+dress is better suited than ours for such weather."</p>
+
+<p>The way was a rough one. Hills, although of no great height, had
+to be crossed, and many streams to be waded. Fortunately, they met
+with few larger than that they had first crossed; for the water
+from that side of the hills made its way, for the most part, direct
+into the Severn; while that which came down from the slopes of
+Plinlimmon, towards the road, fell into a stream; dry in fine
+weather, but now a raging torrent, which ran past Llandulas and
+into the Severn, at Llanidloes.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think that we are going right, Roger?" Oswald said,
+after they had been walking for six or seven hours; "for, what with
+these ups and downs, and turnings and windings, there is no saying
+which is east and which is west. If the sun were shining we should
+be sure of our direction, but with these dull leaden clouds there
+is no saying."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no idea, master. If we were out on a moor we should be
+able to judge, and to make a fairly straight course, keeping the
+wind and rain on one side of us; but in this thick forest, though
+most of the leaves have fallen, those that remain on the branches
+break up the rain, and it seems to come straight down upon us."</p>
+
+<p>Presently they came to another watercourse.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Roger, the water is going in the other direction!"</p>
+
+<p>"So it is, master. How can that be?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is just possible that we have crossed some dividing point,
+and the water is making its way towards the south, and will fall
+into some other river; but I am very much afraid that the real
+explanation is, that we have entirely lost our way, and are going
+in the opposite direction to that in which we started. The question
+is, shall we cross it or shall we follow it down?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just as you like," Roger said. "For myself, I think that the
+best way would be to find some place where we could shelter.
+Tomorrow the sun may be out again, and that will tell us which way
+to go. If we start at daybreak, and keep it to our back, we can't
+go far wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"Except that we may pass the army altogether, Roger. They told
+us that the rearmost division was not more than ten miles
+ahead."</p>
+
+<p>"We must have walked double that already, I should say,
+master."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so much as that. We have been a long time over it, but it
+is slow travelling over this broken ground, and thick wood. I am
+sure I hope that we have not gone twenty miles, or anything like
+it; for in that case, if we have been keeping fairly in the right
+direction, we must have passed the army. If we have been going in
+the wrong direction, there is no saying where we may be.</p>
+
+<p>"Still, I think that your suggestion is a good one. It is of no
+use our going on, when we may be getting farther away at every
+step. It is lucky that we bought these thick cloaks, at Welshpool;
+for without them we should have been soaked to the skin, hours
+ago."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, as we have been wetted to the waist a score of times, in
+the streams, I don't see that it would have mattered much, if the
+rest of us had been wet through."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, now let us look for a shelter."</p>
+
+<p>After searching for half an hour, they found a spot where a wall
+of shaly rock barred their way. At one spot some of this had fallen
+in, forming a sort of shallow cave, some three feet deep.</p>
+
+<p>"This is not a bad beginning, Roger, but we must try and make it
+a great deal more snug."</p>
+
+<p>They first cut down some young fir poles, and placed them so as
+to form a sort of penthouse against the wall. On these they piled a
+number of branches, of the same trees, until it was over a foot in
+thickness.</p>
+
+<p>"So far, so good," Oswald said. "Now, Roger, look about for a
+fallen tree. We have passed scores on our way. You must get a
+thoroughly rotten one, and cut away a portion of the under side; it
+will be dry enough, there."</p>
+
+<p>"You might get a little of that to start with," Roger said; "but
+the ground is covered everywhere with fir cones, and there is no
+better stuff for fires."</p>
+
+<p>Taking off his cloak he laid it down, and they both piled the
+fir cones on this, until a great heap was collected. This they
+carried into their shelter, through an opening they had left in the
+penthouse.</p>
+
+<p>"We must have something dry to start it with. These cones are a
+great deal too wet to burn, without a good heat to start them.
+There is nothing better than the fir needles, master, if we can
+find some dry ones."</p>
+
+<p>After some searching, a considerable number of these needles
+were collected; some lying under fallen trees, and others swept by
+the wind into rocky corners, where the rain had not reached
+them.</p>
+
+<a id="PicJ" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/j.jpg" alt=
+"Now, I think we shall do, Roger"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>"Now I think that we shall do, Roger."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as they were inside, Roger produced a large lump of dry
+fungus he had found, on the other side of the Severn; and, by the
+aid of his flint and steel, soon succeeded in striking sparks upon
+it. As soon as these began to spread, he put a little pile of fir
+needles on it; and, blowing gently, bright flames soon darted up. A
+few more handfuls of fuel were added, and fir cones placed at the
+top; and in a quarter of an hour, a clear, bright fire was
+burning.</p>
+
+<p>The dripping cloaks were hung up to the fir poles, to dry; and
+the jerkins, which were also damp, although the water had not
+penetrated through them, were spread near the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"It was well that I bought this little skin of wine, last
+night," Roger said. "You thought it was better to be without such a
+burden, but the weight of a gallon of wine doesn't count for much,
+and it makes all the difference in our comfort, here."</p>
+
+<p>The rain had soaked through their provision bags, but the bread
+and meat in the centre were dry; and of these they made a hearty
+meal and, laying the wetted food round the fire to dry, they wound
+up the repast with a long draught of wine.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, as soon as our breeches are dry, Master Oswald, we shall
+be thoroughly comfortable."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, one can wish for nothing better. But we must not forget
+that some Welshmen may come along, and if so, will be sure to want
+to know what is inside."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, unless there happen to be more than a dozen of them,
+their curiosity may cost them dear," Roger said grimly. "I don't
+think there is much fear of it. We have neither seen nor heard of
+any, since we started; and it would be evil fortune, indeed, if a
+party happened to come along just at this spot."</p>
+
+<p>"The fact that we have heard no one is a bad sign, Roger; for it
+would seem to show that we must have gone a long way out of our
+course."</p>
+
+<p>The rain continued to fall heavily, all that afternoon and
+throughout the night, and no change of the weather was discernible
+the next morning.</p>
+
+<p>"We had best stop here for another day, Roger, unless the sky
+clears; we are not likely to find so good a place for shelter, and
+it is of no use to wander about, when every step may be taking us
+farther away. However, we can climb up to the top of this hill, at
+whose foot we are, and endeavour to get a view over the
+country."</p>
+
+<p>Roger shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"In this heavy mist we should not see a quarter of a mile away.
+We have got all our clothes dry, now, and it would be a pity to get
+them wet again, without need or profit. Anyhow, we will find some
+more of those fir cones. Our supply is nearly gone."</p>
+
+<p>In half an hour they had got sufficient to last them all day.
+There was nothing for them then to do but sleep, one or other
+keeping watch, so as to prevent the chance of their being
+surprised.</p>
+
+<p>Before lying down for the night, Roger looked out.</p>
+
+<p>"Methinks that the rain has stopped, though it would be
+difficult to say, for the drops keep pattering down from the trees.
+Well, I mightily hope that it will be a fine morning."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was first upon his feet and, on going out, uttered an
+exclamation of satisfaction. The morning was breaking and, though
+light clouds were moving across the sky, glimpses of the blue were
+visible, here and there. Already the light showed where the sun
+would presently rise.</p>
+
+<p>Food was hastily eaten, and they then started on their way
+again. There could be no mistake, now, as to the general direction;
+and, keeping the sun on their right hand, they made their way
+north. From the top of a hill, somewhat higher than the others,
+they caught a view of Plinlimmon.</p>
+
+<p>"If we make straight for it," Oswald said, "we ought to come
+down on the road near the camp. We can go on fearlessly for some
+time, for the Welsh were hardly likely to be moving about,
+yesterday or the day before; and I have no doubt they sheltered
+themselves, as best they could, in arbours like ours."</p>
+
+<p>After walking for another two hours, they heard the distant
+sound of a trumpet.</p>
+
+<p>"That cannot be more than two or three miles away, Roger. Now,
+we shall have to be careful."</p>
+
+<p>They had walked a mile when, as they descended into a glen, they
+came suddenly on a party of twenty Welshmen, sitting round a fire.
+These had been concealed from them by the thick undergrowth, and
+were not twenty yards away, when they first saw them. The Welsh had
+evidently heard them coming, by the rustle of leaves and the
+breaking of twigs; and two or three were standing up, looking in
+their direction, when they caught sight of them. These gave a loud
+yell, which brought the rest to their feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Run, Roger, run. It is a question of legs, now;" and, turning,
+they darted up the hill they had just descended.</p>
+
+<p>Looking back for a moment as, after running for about a mile,
+they reached the crest of a swell; Oswald saw that five of their
+pursuers had distanced their comrades, but were no nearer than when
+they started.</p>
+
+<p>"I think we can hold them, Roger. Take it a little more easily
+now. We are all right as far as speed goes. It is simply a question
+of bottom."</p>
+
+<p>Their pursuers, however, still stuck to them and, after running
+for another half-mile, the five men were still but some thirty
+yards behind; while their comrades' shouts could be heard through
+the forests and, from time to time, the men close behind them
+joined in a loud quavering cry.</p>
+
+<p>"We must stand and rid ourselves of these fellows, Roger; or we
+shall have half the Welsh nation down on us."</p>
+
+<p>"So I have been thinking, for some time."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't stop suddenly. We will slacken our pace, and they will
+think that our strength is failing, and will redouble their
+efforts. Then, when they are close to us, we will turn
+suddenly."</p>
+
+<p>They heard a yell of exultation, as their pursuers found that
+they were gaining upon them.</p>
+
+<p>"Choose a clear space, Roger, with room to swing our
+weapons."</p>
+
+<p>The Welsh were running in a close body, but ten yards behind
+them, when they arrived at a spot clear of trees.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Roger!"</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, Oswald drew his sword and swung round, facing his
+pursuers, while Roger did the same. The Welsh, taken by surprise,
+endeavoured to check themselves; but before they could do so,
+Roger's staff fell upon the head of one of them, while Oswald cleft
+another to the chin. With the quickness of an adroit player with
+the quarterstaff, Roger followed up his blow by almost
+instantaneously driving the other end of the staff, with all his
+force, against the chest of another, who was at the point of
+leaping upon him; and the man fell, as if struck with a
+thunderbolt. So swift had been the movements that the remaining two
+men were paralysed, by the sudden fall of their companions; but
+before they could turn to fly, the weapons descended again, with as
+fatal result as before.</p>
+
+<p>"To the right!" Oswald exclaimed, and he dashed off into the
+forest again, at a right angle to the line that they had before
+taken. A minute later they heard an outburst of yells of fury, from
+the spot they had quitted.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think they will be quite so ready to follow, now,"
+Roger said. "They are like to be some time, before they take up our
+track again."</p>
+
+<p>"We will break into a walk, in a few minutes, Roger; and then go
+along quietly, and keep our ears open. Their yells will be bringing
+others down, from all directions, and we might run right into the
+middle of another party, if we kept on at this rate."</p>
+
+<p>In another five minutes they dashed down a steep descent, at
+whose foot a streamlet, swelled now into a rushing stream, five or
+six feet wide, was running.</p>
+
+<p>"We will follow this down," Oswald said, as he stepped into
+it.</p>
+
+<p>It was a little over two feet deep, and they waded along it for
+a couple of hundred yards, and then stepped out, where some rock
+cropped out by the side of the stream. It had not yet dried after
+the rain, and their feet therefore left no marks on it.</p>
+
+<p>"That was a sharp run, Roger," Oswald said as, with rapid but
+stealthy steps, they strode along.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, it was. My breath was coming short, when you gave the word
+to stop. Another half mile would have finished me. Those Welshmen
+run well."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no doubt we should have beaten them, easily enough, on
+the open ground, Roger; but they are more accustomed to this forest
+work than we are.</p>
+
+<p>"Mind where you tread, and don't put your foot on fallen sticks.
+There must be scores of them in the forest behind, yet, though I
+don't think that they have struck our track. The nearest must be a
+quarter of a mile away. I am not afraid of their overtaking us. It
+is the risk of falling in with other parties that I am afraid
+of."</p>
+
+<p>They now bore away to the right again. More than once they heard
+parties moving near them, and stood quiet until their voices died
+away; which they quickly did, as all were hurrying towards the spot
+whence the shouting still continued.</p>
+
+<p>For an hour they kept straight onward, and then the trees
+thinned; and as they stepped out from the edge of the forest they
+saw, to their delight, a few tents in front of them, and a large
+number of soldiers scattered about. As they were seen, some of the
+soldiers caught up their arms; but when they saw that but two men
+were approaching, they laid them down again, and proceeded with the
+work on which most of them were engaged; in polishing up their arms
+and armour, whose brightness had been grievously dimmed by the
+rain. A sub-officer with four men came up to them, as they reached
+the line.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you, sirs?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I am an esquire of Sir Henry Percy, and have brought hither a
+letter for the king."</p>
+
+<p>The man looked doubtfully at him, and Oswald continued, "I know
+not whether the Earl of Talbot is in the camp, but if so he will, I
+think, recognize me."</p>
+
+<p>"The earl arrived, with five hundred of his men, yesterday," the
+officer said, with a tone of more respect than he had before used.
+"I will take you to his tent;" and he led the way to a tent,
+pitched a short distance away from that before which the royal
+standard waved.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald took off his cloak, which was rolled up over his
+shoulder, and handed it to Roger, and then opened his jerkin. As
+they came up to the tent the front opened, and the earl himself
+came out.</p>
+
+<p>"Whom have we here?" he asked the officer.</p>
+
+<p>"They have just come out of the forest, my lord, and this
+gentleman asked to be taken to you, saying that you would recognize
+him."</p>
+
+<p>The earl looked scrutinizingly at Oswald.</p>
+
+<p>"I seem to know your face, sir," he said, "but I cannot recall
+where I have seen it."</p>
+
+<p>"My name is Oswald Forster, an esquire of Sir Henry Percy. I
+joined you at Chester, my Lord Talbot, with a band of his men; and
+some of Sir Edmund Mortimer's, led by one of his knights."</p>
+
+<p>"I remember now," the earl said. "Yes, I see you wear the Percy
+badge; but how have you got here, and why have you come?"</p>
+
+<p>"I come as a simple messenger, my lord. A royal courier arrived
+at Ludlow, with a letter from London for the king. His majesty had
+laid his commands on Sir Edmund Mortimer, that he was not to weaken
+his force by a single lance; and as, for aught Sir Edmund knew, the
+letter might be of great importance, I volunteered to endeavour to
+carry it through; taking with me only this man-at-arms, on whom I
+could wholly rely, whatever might happen, he having accompanied me
+on more than one dangerous expedition.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Edmund consented. We rode first to Shrewsbury, to obtain
+information as to the course the king had taken. At Welshpool we
+left our horses behind us, thinking it easier to make our way
+through the woods on foot, seeing that the roads were said to be
+beset by the Welsh. So we reached Llanidloes; and then, hearing
+where the king was then posted, from a convoy of wounded that had
+been brought in that day, and who had been attacked and very hardly
+treated as they came along, we thought to make a detour through the
+woods, so as to get behind any Welshmen who might be watching the
+road.</p>
+
+<p>"Unfortunately, in the storm of rain, having no guide, we lost
+our way; and were so detained, near two days, in the forest. This
+morning, the weather having changed and the sun come out, we
+learned the direction that we must take. On the way we fell in with
+a party of some twenty Welshmen, who pursued us hotly. We outran
+all but five. As their shouts would have brought large numbers upon
+us, we stopped and slew them; and though search was hot for us, we
+succeeded in making our way through, without adventure, until we
+came out from the forest, close by."</p>
+
+<p>"Truly it was an adventure of great peril," the earl said, "for
+the Welsh are swarming round us; though we see nought of them, when
+we are once in the saddle. Assuredly you would never have got
+through, even as far as Llanidloes, if you had followed the road on
+horseback; for the last party that came along brought word that the
+Welsh had felled trees across it, in many places, and had broken
+down the bridges.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a gallant exploit, sir. I will, myself, take you in to
+the king."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald took off his jerkin.</p>
+
+<p>"I am but in poor plight to show myself before his majesty," he
+said, as he handed it to Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! I remember this good fellow," the earl said. "He is not one
+easily forgotten, for 'tis seldom one sees so stout a
+man-at-arms.</p>
+
+<p>"As to your dress, 'tis nought; and indeed, it is in better
+order than most in camp, for the soldiers have no tents, and have,
+for the last forty-eight hours, been over their ankles in mud and
+water.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been with Mortimer ever since we harried Glendower's
+valley?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lord. I returned after that to the north, and was at
+Alnwick for nine months. Then Sir Henry sent me back again to
+Ludlow, in order that I might keep him well informed of the extent
+of this rebellion, concerning which but few tidings came to
+him."</p>
+
+<p>They had, by this time, arrived at the entrance of the king's
+tent. The two sentries on duty there stood back and saluted, as the
+earl entered, followed by Oswald.</p>
+
+<p>"This, sire, is a messenger, one Master Oswald Forster, an
+esquire of Sir Henry Percy's. He had been sent by his lord to
+Ludlow, to keep him acquainted with the extent of this rebellion.
+Some few days since, a royal messenger reached the town, with a
+letter for you; as doubtless, in London, they cannot have known
+which way you were marching, and directed it there, so that it
+might be forwarded to you thence. Sir Edmund, having your royal
+order not to send any force away, would have been at a loss how to
+forward it; deeming that it would need a strong body of men-at-arms
+to penetrate to you, as he knew, from what had happened on the two
+last expeditions, that the Welsh, being unable to oppose your
+advance, would swarm behind you, so as to prevent reinforcements or
+convoys of provisions from reaching you. He was, therefore,
+doubtful as to what course to adopt, when this gentleman
+volunteered to carry it to you; and this he has accomplished,
+attended by but a single follower. Knowing that he could only hope
+to reach you on foot, he and his man-at-arms left their horses at
+Welshpool; and have made their way through the woods on foot, not
+without adventure, having lost their way in the storm, and having
+slept in the wood for two days, and killed five Welshmen, scarcely
+escaping a crowd of others as they came in."</p>
+
+<p>"A very gallant deed, sir," the king said to Oswald, as the
+latter bent upon one knee and handed the letter to him. "By Our
+Lady, it was no slight thing to venture through the woods, swarming
+with these wild Welshmen. How long have you been an esquire to
+Percy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Over three years, sire."</p>
+
+<p>"I met Master Forster at Chester," the earl said. "He commanded
+a score of Percy's men, and rode with us when we captured
+Glendower's house. The knights with him told me that he and his
+little band had done excellent service, in the fight when the Welsh
+made their first irruption; and that Sir Henry Percy had written in
+the warmest terms to Mortimer, saying that the gentleman stood high
+in his regard, and that he had the most perfect confidence in him,
+and had selected him for the service since he was able to write
+well, and could, therefore, communicate freely with him as to the
+troubles on the Welsh border."</p>
+
+<p>"And have you been at Mortimer's ever since that time?" the king
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald noticed that each time Mortimer's name was mentioned, the
+king's brow was somewhat clouded.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, your majesty. I returned to the north, with Percy's
+men, a few days after the capture of Glendower's house. I came back
+to Ludlow in the spring."</p>
+
+<p>"Why did Sir Henry Percy despatch you there again?" the king
+asked, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"From what he said, sire, it was because he was anxious to know
+whether the rebellion was growing, fearing that there might be some
+correspondence between Glendower and the Scots; and that, if it
+should come to a point when you might have to lead the whole force
+of the south to put the Welsh down, the Scots might make a great
+irruption into the northern counties, and it would be needful for
+him to keep a larger body of men than usual under arms; as the
+earl, his father, and the Earl of Westmoreland, would have to stand
+the whole brunt of the matter, for a time, without aid from the
+south."</p>
+
+<p>The king's brow cleared.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a thoughtful act of Sir Henry," he said; "and 'tis like
+enough that the Scots will, as you say, take advantage of our
+troubles here; and it is well, therefore, that the Lords of the
+Northern Marches should hold themselves in readiness.</p>
+
+<p>"What think you, Talbot? It seems to me that the bold service
+this esquire has performed merits reward."</p>
+
+<p>"I think so, indeed," the earl said. "It was a singular act of
+courage."</p>
+
+<p>The king drew his sword from his scabbard.</p>
+
+<p>"Kneel, sir," he said.</p>
+
+<p>And, as Oswald knelt, the king laid the sword across his
+shoulder, and said, "Rise, Sir Oswald Forster."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald rose.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you, my Lord King," he said, "and trust that I may live
+for many years to do worthy knightly service to my liege, who has
+so highly honoured me."</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," the king said to Talbot, "I leave it to you to see
+that this young knight is provided with horse and armour.
+Unfortunately there is more than one suit without an owner, at
+present. You will do well to wait with me while I open this letter;
+which, maybe, contains matter of moment."</p>
+
+<p>Feeling that his audience was over, Oswald bowed deeply, and
+left the tent to rejoin Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"What said the king, master?"</p>
+
+<p>"He spoke much more highly of what we had done, Roger, than it
+deserved; and as a reward for the service, he has just knighted
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"I think that he has done well, master!" Roger exclaimed,
+joyously. "I had hoped that Hotspur would have done it, after that
+adventure with the Bairds; of which, as Alwyn told me, he spoke to
+him in tones of wondrous praise."</p>
+
+<p>"That was a private business, Roger, and he would know that I
+would much rather that, when knighthood came, I should receive it
+for service in the field. The king regards our coming here as a
+service to himself, and therefore rewarded me; but I would rather
+that it should have been for service in the field, against the
+enemy, than for tramping through the forest."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but a forest full of Welshmen," Roger said, "who are more
+to be feared, in that way, than when met in open fight."</p>
+
+<p>"Earl Talbot spoke very kindly of me, and said that he had heard
+that, with Percy's men, I had done good service in that fight with
+the Welsh, near Knighton."</p>
+
+<p>"That was certainly pretty hot work, master--I shall get to say
+Sir Oswald, in time; but at present my tongue is not used to it.
+What are we to do now?"</p>
+
+<p>"The king asked Lord Talbot to provide me with armour, and a
+horse; so we must wait until he comes this way."</p>
+
+<p>It was half an hour before the earl came out.</p>
+
+<p>"The letter was of importance," he said, "and it is well that it
+was brought on.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Sir Oswald, let us see to your matter. Two days ago Sir
+William Baxter was killed, by a sudden attack of the Welsh, while
+he was burning a village. His men rallied, beat off the Welsh, and
+brought his body in; and methinks his armour will fit you, though
+he was shorter, by two or three inches, than yourself."</p>
+
+<p>He accompanied Oswald to one of a small group of tents, standing
+a quarter of a mile farther down the road.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Sir William Baxter's squire here?"</p>
+
+<p>A young man at once came up.</p>
+
+<p>"I was his esquire, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"I have the king's orders," the earl said, "that his arms,
+armour, and horses are to be handed over, forthwith, to Sir Oswald
+Forster here, who will take command of his troop. He will take over
+all the other belongings of the knight."</p>
+
+<p>The young squire bowed.</p>
+
+<p>"I will hand them over to you, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"You will, of course, take possession of the tent also, Sir
+Oswald. Sir William was one of my knights. He was unwedded, and has
+no male kin; therefore, you need have no hesitation in taking his
+belongings; which indeed we should, in any case, have little chance
+of taking back with us, for our waggons are but few, and will daily
+become fewer: for on such roads as these, both waggons and horses
+break down, and it will be as much as we can do to carry even
+necessities with us.</p>
+
+<p>"Come to my tent at noon, it lacks but an hour of it, and I will
+present you at dinner to some of my knights; among whom, for the
+present, I shall rank you."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he turned away. The young squire held open the
+entrance of the tent, for Oswald to enter, and followed him in.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems a strange thing to be thus possessed of another man's
+goods," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"It is often so," the squire said, "and sometimes even his
+estates go with them, also. As the earl said, Sir William Baxter
+had none to whom these things could have been given; seeing that he
+had, so far as I know, only one sister, to whom armour and horses
+could be of no use. She is one of the Countess of Talbot's
+ladies."</p>
+
+<p>"And what are you going to do, yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"For the present, I know not," the squire said. "I had been with
+Sir William Baxter but three years. The knight I served with,
+before, was thrown from his horse and killed; and Sir William, who
+had been just knighted, took me into his service."</p>
+
+<p>"How long have you been a squire?"</p>
+
+<p>"Six years, and I hoped that, in this campaign, I might have
+done something to win my spurs."</p>
+
+<p>"I am but a poor knight, Master--" and he paused.</p>
+
+<p>"Henry Pemberton," the squire said.</p>
+
+<p>"And being but knighted today, and having no lands to keep up my
+knighthood, it may be that the earl will appoint you to another of
+his knights; but should he not do so, I shall be glad if, for the
+rest of this campaign, you will ride with me; and trust that you,
+too, may have an opportunity of gaining knighthood, before it is
+over. But whether or no, as soon as we cross the border again, I
+doubt not that you will be able to find some lord under whom you
+may gain advancement."</p>
+
+<p>"I will gladly do so, Sir Oswald. 'Tis strange that I should not
+have seen your face before; for, since we left Worcester, I have
+come to know the greater part of the esquires here."</p>
+
+<p>"I arrived but an hour ago," Oswald replied, "having made my way
+through the Welsh, on foot, with that tall fellow you saw
+without."</p>
+
+<p>"That was a dangerous deed, truly," Pemberton said, in tones of
+surprise. "May I ask why you essayed so perilous a feat?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was the bearer of a despatch for the king. I was an esquire
+to Sir Henry Percy, but have for some time been staying with his
+brother-in-law, Sir Edmund Mortimer.</p>
+
+<p>"Had Sir William a man-at-arms, who served as his servant? For I
+shall make my man-at-arms, who has gone through many adventures
+with me, has fought by my side, and saved my life, my second
+squire."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, a very good and trusty fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"Then of course I shall keep him on. Now, will you tell my man
+to come in?</p>
+
+<p>"Roger," he said, "You doubtless heard the earl's words, and I
+am now master of this tent, together with the armour, horses, and
+clothes of Sir William Baxter. Master Henry Pemberton will act as
+my squire, during the campaign. You will be my second squire."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, master, I never looked so high as to become an esquire;
+and would rather remain a simple man-at-arms, were it not that it
+will keep me near you."</p>
+
+<p>"You will find Roger a good comrade, Master Pemberton. He has
+been a man-at-arms at his own choice; for, as he can read and write
+as well as any clerk, he might have done better for himself."</p>
+
+<p>Pemberton looked, with some surprise, at Roger. He himself had
+not these accomplishments, and he was surprised at finding a
+man-at-arms so well endowed.</p>
+
+<p>"As you may tell by his speech," Oswald went on, "he is, like
+myself, a Northumbrian; and has done good service in the wars with
+the Scots."</p>
+
+<p>"That I can well imagine," the squire said, with a smile. "I
+would certainly wish for no stouter comrade."</p>
+
+<p>"We must see about arms and armour for you, Roger," Oswald
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"There will be no difficulty about that. None whatever, Sir
+Oswald. We have lost fully three hundred men, since we crossed the
+border, and a hundred and fifty since we came here, four days
+since. There is a pile of harness and arms, lying by the roadside;
+and there, methinks, it is likely it will lie. You have but to go
+with him, when you have attired yourself and buckled on spurs, and
+you can pick and choose among it. Assuredly, no one will gainsay
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald now changed his attire. The clothes were handsome, and
+fitted him well. Then he buckled on the golden spurs, put on the
+knightly armour--for he had observed that the earl, and the knights
+that he had seen in the camp, all kept on full armour, being ever
+in expectation of sudden attack.</p>
+
+<p>"Truly you make a handsome figure, Sir Oswald," said Roger, who
+had been assisting him. "Little did I think, when I used to rail at
+you at your books, that you would grow into so stalwart a man; and
+that I should follow you in the field, as your squire. Your armour
+fits you as if made for you, save that these cuishes scarce meet
+your body armour. In truth, though bad for him, it was lucky for
+you that the master of this tent came to his death when he
+did."</p>
+
+<p>"I like a steel cap better than this helmet, though I say not
+that it looks so well."</p>
+
+<p>"Not by a long way," Roger said. "Nought could become you
+better. What cognizance do you mean to take?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have not thought about it, yet. There will be time enough for
+that, after the war is over."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, at any rate, master, I will today set about getting Sir
+William Baxter's off the shield. Methinks that, with some sand from
+the river bed, I shall be able to manage it with an hour's
+rubbing."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, come along, Roger. There is no time to be lost, for I dine
+at midday with the Earl of Talbot. Master Pemberton will show us
+where the armour is lying."</p>
+
+<p>There was, indeed, a large pile.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald then said, "As you are known, Master Pemberton, you had
+better stop here; for it will take some picking before Roger is
+suited. As it is but two minutes to twelve, I must hurry back to
+Lord Talbot's tent."</p>
+
+<p>Some seven or eight knights were already there. Lord Talbot
+introduced him to them and, as they dined, Oswald related, at their
+request, more particularly how he had got through the Welsh--a task
+that seemed to them well-nigh impossible, since the soldiers dared
+not venture even to the edge of the forest, so thickly were the
+Welsh posted there.</p>
+
+<p>"That man-at-arms must be a stalwart fellow, indeed," said one,
+"to kill three Welshmen with nought but a quarterstaff."</p>
+
+<p>"If you had seen the man, and the staff, Sir Victor, you would
+not be surprised," Lord Talbot said. "He stands some six feet four,
+and has shoulders that might rival Samson's. As to his
+quarterstaff, I marked it. It was of oak, and full two inches
+across; and a blow with it, from such arms, would crack an iron
+casque, to say nothing of a Welsh skull."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch18">Chapter 18</a>: Glendower.</h2>
+
+<p>For the next ten days the weather was so bad that no operations
+could be carried on. Every little stream was swollen to a raging
+torrent. Horses, carrying men in full armour, could scarce keep
+their feet on the slippery moor; and even the footmen had the
+greatest difficulty in getting about; and all excursions were given
+up, for the Welsh, barefooted and unweighted with armour, would
+have been able to fall upon them to great advantage, and could then
+evade pursuit, with ease.</p>
+
+<p>The number of sick increased rapidly, and it became necessary to
+send another convoy back to Llanidloes; where the guard were to
+join the force that had gone there, ten days before, and to escort
+some waggons of flour and a number of cattle, that had been brought
+there from Welshpool by a strong levy from Shropshire.</p>
+
+<p>Ten knights, a hundred mounted men-at-arms, as many on foot, and
+fifty archers were considered sufficient to escort the sick; who,
+to the number of two hundred, were closely packed in the ten
+waggons that were to return with flour. Three of Lord Talbot's
+knights were to form part of the escort, and among these Oswald was
+chosen by the earl.</p>
+
+<p>It was hoped that the convoy would reach the town without being
+attacked, for great pains had been taken to prevent the news of its
+approaching departure getting about; for there were many Welshmen
+in the camp, employed in looking after the baggage animals, and in
+other offices. They had all been hired for the service on the other
+side of the border; but it was believed that some of them, at
+least, must be in communication with the enemy; who were thereby
+enabled to gather in force, to oppose any parties who sallied out
+from the camp.</p>
+
+<p>The consequence was that, until half an hour before it left,
+none save a few of the leaders were aware of the starting of the
+convoy. Then orders were rapidly issued. The knights and
+men-at-arms who had been selected for the service had but a few
+minutes to prepare themselves. The horses were harnessed to the
+waggons, and the sick and wounded carried out and placed in them,
+with the greatest expedition, and the party set out in less than
+half an hour after the first order had been given. It had gone but
+a quarter of a mile when the shouts among the woods, on either
+side, showed that the Welsh were vigilant. Horns were blown in all
+directions, the sound growing fainter and fainter, in the
+hills.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall not get through undisturbed," one of the knights said
+to Oswald, who was riding next to him.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I think we shall have fighting. It would have been better
+had we and the men-at-arms been told to leave our horses behind. In
+this deep soil they will be of little use in a fight, and we should
+do better on foot."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be terrible, marching in our heavy armour."</p>
+
+<p>"Doubtless it would have been so, but I should not have minded
+that. The distance is but six miles; and although, in this slippery
+plain, the toil would have been great, methinks that we could have
+made a better fight than on horseback; and as these waggons travel
+but slowly, we could have kept up with them."</p>
+
+<p>"We can dismount, if necessary," the knight said; "but, for my
+part, I would rather ride than tramp through this deep mud."</p>
+
+<p>Their progress was indeed slow, the waggons frequently sank
+almost up to their axles in the mud, and it needed all the efforts
+of the dismounted men to get them out. A deep silence had succeeded
+the outcry in the woods.</p>
+
+<p>"I like not this silence, Sir Oswald," the knight said; when,
+after an hour's hard work, they were still but two miles from the
+camp.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor do I," Oswald said. "It seems unnatural. Do you not think,
+Sir William, that it would be well if all were to take the picket
+ropes from their horses' necks, and knot them two and two,
+fastening one end to a waggon and the other to a horse's girth. In
+that way fifty men-at-arms might be roped on to the waggons, and
+would aid those drawing them, greatly."</p>
+
+<p>"The idea is a very good one," the knight said.</p>
+
+<p>He rode forward to Sir Eustace de Bohun, who was in command, and
+informed him of Oswald's suggestion, which was at once adopted. As
+soon as it was carried out, the dismounted men were ordered to push
+behind the waggons, which now proceeded at a much faster rate than
+before.</p>
+
+<p>They were just half-way to the town, and beginning to entertain
+hopes that they should get through without being attacked, when a
+horn sounded; and from the forest on both sides, a crowd of men
+rushed out, and poured a volley of arrows into the convoy. Hasty
+orders were shouted by Sir Eustace, the ropes were thrown off, and
+the troops formed up in a double line on each side of the
+waggons.</p>
+
+<p>The knights and mounted men formed the outside line, and the
+footmen stood a pace or two behind them; so as to cover them from
+attack, should the Welsh break through. Oswald's esquire was on one
+side of him, Roger on the other.</p>
+
+<p>The waggons continued to move forward, for at this point the
+road was better, running across a bare rock, and the horses were
+therefore able to draw them along without any assistance. Sir
+Eustace therefore gave the order for the escort to continue their
+way, marching on each side of the train.</p>
+
+<p>"We must fight our way through, men," he shouted; "every minute
+will doubtless add to their numbers."</p>
+
+<p>For a short time the arrows flew fast. But the Welsh bows were
+not to be compared, in point of strength, with those used by the
+English archers; and the arrows fell harmlessly upon the armour of
+the men-at-arms, while on the other hand, the English archers shot
+so strongly and truly that, after a short time, the Welsh bowmen
+fell back. As they did so, however, a crowd of footmen poured out
+from the forest; and, with loud shouts and yells, rushed
+forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Halt the waggons!" Sir Eustace cried. "Keep good order, men,
+and we shall soon drive this rabble off."</p>
+
+<p>The archers had time but to send three flights of arrows among
+their assailants, when these threw themselves upon the line. They
+were armed with short axes, heavy clubs, and other rough weapons;
+and for a time, the horsemen kept their order and beat them back;
+but as the horns continued to sound, the Welsh swarmed down in such
+numbers that they broke in between their mounted foes; some trying
+to tear them from their saddles, while others crept beneath the
+horses and drove their long knives into their stomachs, or tried to
+hamstring them with their axes.</p>
+
+<p>Then the dismounted men-at-arms joined in the fight, and drove
+the enemy back beyond the line. Many of the horsemen were, however,
+dismounted. These joined their mounted comrades when Sir Eustace
+gave the word to charge the multitude, before they could rally for
+a fresh attack.</p>
+
+<p>The Welsh went down in numbers before their lances, but so close
+was the throng that the horsemen were brought to a stand and,
+slinging their spears behind them, betook themselves to sword and
+mace. Great was the slaughter of their opponents, but these pursued
+their former tactics. Horse after horse rolled over in mortal agony
+and, as they fell, the riders were stabbed before they could
+recover their feet. Soon they were broken up into knots; and their
+dismounted companions, with one accord, left the waggons and rushed
+into the fray, for a time beating back the Welsh.</p>
+
+<p>"It were best to dismount," Oswald cried, and he swung himself
+from the saddle, just as one of the enemy hamstrung his horse.
+Roger and the squire did the same, and joined the ranks of the
+footmen.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep together!" Oswald shouted, to those within hearing; "we
+can cut ourselves a passage through, in that way, while separately
+we shall perish."</p>
+
+<p>Ten or twelve men followed his orders and, gathering in a ring,
+for a time beat off every attack. Looking round, Oswald saw that
+scarce a man remained mounted. The shouts of the English, and the
+wild war cries of the Welsh, rang through the air. In a dozen
+places fierce contests were raging--swords and axes rose and fell,
+on helmet and steel cap.</p>
+
+<p>In obedience to the shouts of Sir Eustace, who, with three or
+four men-at-arms around him, was still mounted, the English bands
+tried to join each other, and in several cases succeeded. Oswald
+had been near the rear of the convoy when the fight began, and the
+party with whom he fought were separated by some distance from the
+others, and the prospect became more and more hopeless. His squire
+had fallen, and fully half the men who had joined him; and although
+the loss of the Welsh had been many times as great, the number of
+their assailants had in no way diminished.</p>
+
+<p>He and Roger strove, in vain, to cut a way through; and their
+height and strength enabled them to maintain a forward movement,
+their opponents shrinking from the terrible blows of Roger's mace,
+and the no less destructive fall of Oswald's sword; but the
+men-at-arms behind them fared worse, having to retreat with their
+face to the foe; and more than one, falling over the bodies of
+those slain by their leaders, were stabbed before they could rise.
+Several times the two men turned and covered the rear, but at last
+they stood alone.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, make one effort to break through, Roger;" and they flung
+themselves with such fury upon the Welsh that, for some twenty
+yards, they cut their way through them.</p>
+
+<p>Then Roger exclaimed, "I am done for, master," and fell.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald stood over him and, for a time, kept a clear circle; then
+he received a tremendous blow on the back of his helmet, with a
+heavy club, and fell prostrate over Roger.</p>
+
+<p>When he recovered his senses, the din of battle had moved far
+away. The other groups had gathered together and, moving down, had
+joined those who still resisted on the other side of the road; and,
+keeping in a close body, were fighting their way steadily
+along.</p>
+
+<p>A number of the Welsh were going over the battlefield, stabbing
+all whom they found to be still living. The sick men in the waggons
+had already been murdered.</p>
+
+<p>A Welshman, whose appearance denoted a higher rank than the
+others, approached Oswald, as soon as he sat up, and called to four
+or five of his countrymen. Oswald, with difficulty, rose to his
+feet. He still wore, round his wrist, the chain that Glendower's
+daughter had given him; and he now pulled this off and held it up,
+loudly calling out the name of Glendower, several times. The Welsh
+leader waved his followers back.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald was unarmed, and evidently incapable of defending
+himself. He came up to him. Oswald held out the chain:</p>
+
+<p>"Glendower, Glendower," he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>The man took the chain, and examined it carefully. Some Welsh
+words were engraved upon the clasp. Oswald was unaware what they
+were, but the words were, "Jane Glendower, from her father."</p>
+
+<p>The Welshman looked much surprised, and presently called to
+another, some distance away. The man came up, and he spoke to him
+in Welsh.</p>
+
+<p>"How did you obtain this?" the man asked Oswald, in English.</p>
+
+<p>"It was given in token of service, rendered by me and my squire
+here, to Glendower's daughter. She told me that it would be of
+service if, at any time, I were taken prisoner by her father's
+followers."</p>
+
+<p>This was translated to the Welshman, who said:</p>
+
+<p>"These men must be taken to Glendower. The story may be true, or
+not. The chain may have been stolen. At any rate, the prince must
+decide as to their fate."</p>
+
+<p>He now bade the men round him take off Oswald's armour. As soon
+as this was done, the latter knelt down by Roger's side, and
+removed his helmet.</p>
+
+<p>An arrow, shot from behind, had struck Roger just above the back
+piece--which, being short for him, did not reach to his helmet--and
+had gone through the fleshy part of his neck; while, at the same
+moment, a blow with an axe had cleft the helmet in sunder, and
+inflicted a deep gash on the back of the head.</p>
+
+<p>At a word from their leader, the men at once aided Oswald, who
+drew out the arrow. The wound bled but slightly, and one of the
+Welshmen, tearing off a portion of his garment, bandaged it up.
+Water was fetched from the stream below, and a pad of wet cloth
+laid on the wound at the back of the head, and kept in its place by
+bandages. As this was done Roger gave a faint groan and, a minute
+after, opened his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not try to move, Roger," Oswald said. "You are wounded; but
+not, I trust, to death. We are prisoners in the hands of the Welsh,
+but that chain Glendower's daughter gave me has saved our
+lives."</p>
+
+<p>A rough litter was constructed of boughs. On this Roger, after
+his armour had been taken off, was laid. At their leader's orders
+six Welshmen took it up, while two placed themselves, one on each
+side of Oswald. Then the leader took the head of the party, and
+moved away into the forest.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald's head still swam from the effects of the blow, but as
+they went on the feeling gradually ceased, and he was able to keep
+up with his captors. Their course was ever uphill, and after an
+hour's walking they arrived at a farmhouse, situated just at the
+upper edge of the forest.</p>
+
+<p>The litter was laid down outside the house. The Welshman went
+in, saying something to his men, who at once sat down on the
+ground; for the journey, with Roger's weight, had been a toilsome
+one. He made signs for Oswald to seat himself by the side of Roger.
+The latter was now perfectly sensible.</p>
+
+<p>"What has happened, master?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"We have been badly beaten, Roger; but when I last saw them our
+men had got together, and were fighting their way along the road. I
+fancy more than half have been killed; but, as far as I could see
+of the field, I should say that three or four times as many Welsh
+had fallen."</p>
+
+<p>"That was a lucky thought of yours, Sir Oswald, about that
+chain."</p>
+
+<p>"I had always an idea that it might be found useful; and it at
+once occurred to me, as soon as I recovered my senses."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you wounded, too?" Roger asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"No. I was beaten down by a heavy club, and my head still rings
+from the blow. Otherwise, I am uninjured."</p>
+
+<p>"What has happened to me, master?"</p>
+
+<p>"You had an arrow through your neck, Roger; but fortunately it
+was on one side. An inch to the right, and it would have struck
+your spine, or perhaps gone through your windpipe. As it is, it
+does not seem to have done much harm. Very little blood flowed when
+I pulled the arrow out. You have got a bad gash on the back of the
+head, but your head piece broke the force of the blow. It has laid
+your skull bare, but has not, so far as I can see, penetrated
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then we need think no more about it," Roger said.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that was a fight! The one we had at Knighton was as
+nothing to it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I think that even you could not want a harder one,
+Roger."</p>
+
+<p>"No; this was quite enough for one day's work. I should like a
+drink of water, if I could get one."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald made signs to one of the men, who went into the house and
+returned with a large jug of water, of which Roger took a deep
+draught; and Oswald then finished the contents, for he, too, was
+parched with thirst.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later a tall man, in full armour, followed by a
+number of Welsh chiefs, issued from the forest. He was some
+five-and-forty years old, and of noble presence. The leader of the
+party who had brought Oswald up advanced to meet him; and, saluting
+him most respectfully, spoke to him for a moment, and then produced
+the chain. Glendower--for it was the prince--examined it, and then
+at once walked up to Oswald, who had risen to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"How became you possessed of this, Sir Knight?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was given me by one of your daughters, sir. I and my squire,
+here, were on guard round your house, on the night after the Earl
+of Talbot took it. We were at some distance from the other guards,
+when two figures rose from the bushes near us. We pursued them and,
+coming up to them, found they were two ladies; and they at once
+avowed that they were your daughters. My instructions were to watch
+and see that no Welshmen approached the house; and nought had been
+said to me of arresting any leaving it, seeing that it was not
+supposed that any were there.</p>
+
+<p>"I war not with women. Being myself from Northumbria, I have no
+enmity with your people. Therefore I let them proceed on their
+way--a breach of duty for which, doubtless, I should have suffered,
+had it been known. Happily, none but my follower here, who was then
+but a man-at-arms, and I a squire, knew of it; and to this moment I
+have spoken of it to no one. As they left us, one of the ladies
+gave me this chain, saying that some day it might be of use to me,
+should I ever fall into the hands of their people. I have carried
+it on my wrist, ever since; and when your follower came up, and I
+saw the necessity had arisen, I showed it to him."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard the story from my daughters," Glendower said
+warmly, holding out his hand. "They told me how courteously you had
+treated them, and that you had refused to accept the jewels they
+offered you. They said that you had also declined to tell them your
+name, as it might do you injury, should it become known; and I have
+often regretted that I did not know the name of the gentleman who
+had behaved so nobly to them, and had saved them from an English
+prison. Had they been captured, it would have been a sore blow to
+me, not only in my affections but to my cause; for, had he held
+them in his power, Henry could have put a heavy pressure upon me.
+May I ask, now, what is your name, Sir Knight?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Oswald Forster. I was, at that time, a squire of Sir Henry
+Percy's."</p>
+
+<p>"Of Hotspur!" Glendower said, in surprise. "I did not know that
+we had levies from the north fighting against us."</p>
+
+<p>"You have not, sir. I had simply been sent, with twenty
+men-at-arms, by Sir Henry to Sir Edmund Mortimer--who is, as you
+are doubtless aware, of kin to Sir Henry, who had married his
+sister--and was sent by Sir Edmund to join the Earl of Talbot and
+Lord Grey, when they made that foray upon your house. After that I
+returned to the north; but was, some months since, again sent to
+Ludlow, to keep Sir Henry informed of the doings on this
+border."</p>
+
+<p>"But I had heard that Mortimer had sent no troops to Henry's
+army."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so, sir. I am here by an accident. A despatch came from
+London to Ludlow for the king, and as there was no other way of
+forwarding it, I volunteered to carry it here, and succeeded in
+doing so: for which service the king conferred knighthood upon me,
+upon my arrival, ten days since."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then, it was you that I heard of! I was told that two great
+men had been seen in the woods, some distance south of the camp;
+and that they had succeeded in making their escape, after slaying
+five of my followers; and that, though none knew for certain, it
+was supposed they had reached Henry's camp."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, sir. The two men were my companion, here, and
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"It was a notable feat. I think not that any other messenger has
+got through my scouts, since the king left Welshpool. You must be
+swift of foot, as well as brave and courteous; for I heard that you
+had outrun the greatest part of those who followed you."</p>
+
+<p>"We in the north have to be swift of foot," Oswald said, with a
+smile, "for the Scots keep us in practice; either in escaping them,
+when they come in too great a force to be resisted; or in following
+them, when it is our turn to pursue.</p>
+
+<p>"I trust, sir, that you will put myself and my squire to ransom,
+and will take my word for the payment; for, until I go north, I
+have no means of satisfying it."</p>
+
+<p>"That will I not," Glendower said. "Or rather, I will take a
+ransom; since, were I to release you without one, it might cause
+surprise and inquiry; and it were well that your noble conduct to
+my daughters should not be known, for Henry would not be likely to
+regard it favourably. Therefore we will put you to ransom at the
+sum of a crown for yourself, and a penny for your squire."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you, indeed, sir, and shall ever feel beholden to you;
+and I will, moreover, give you my knightly word that, whatever
+service I may have to perform, I will never again war with the
+Welsh.</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask if any of our party succeeded in reaching
+Llanidloes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, some sixty or seventy of them got in. They fought very
+well; and indeed, in close combat my Welshmen cannot, at present,
+hold their own against your armour-clad men. Still, though it would
+have pleased me better had we annihilated the force, our success
+has been sufficient to give Henry another lesson that, though he
+may march through Wales, he holds only the ground on which he has
+encamped.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Sir Oswald, I pray you to enter my abode. 'Tis a poor
+place, indeed, after my house in the Vale of the Bards; but it
+suffices for my needs."</p>
+
+<p>Before entering, he gave orders that Roger should be carried to
+an upper room, and despatched a messenger to order his own leech,
+as soon as he had done with the wounded, to come up and attend to
+him. Then he led the way into a room, where a meal was prepared. In
+a few words in Welsh he explained to his chiefs, who had been much
+surprised at the manner in which he had received Oswald, that the
+young knight had, at one time, rendered a great service to his
+daughters, Jane and Margaret; but without mentioning its precise
+nature. His experience had taught him that even those most attached
+to his cause might yet turn against him; and were they to relate
+the story, it might do serious injury to Oswald.</p>
+
+<p>"You must, on your way back," he said presently to the young
+knight, "call and see my daughters; who are at present staying with
+their sister, who is married to Adda ap Iorwerth Ddu. They would be
+aggrieved, indeed, if they heard that you had been here, and that I
+had not given them the opportunity of thanking you, in person."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald remained for a fortnight with Glendower, while Roger's
+wound was healing. At the end of that time he learned that Henry,
+having marched into Cardigan and ravaged the country there, was
+already retiring; his army having suffered terribly from the
+effects of the weather, the impossibility of obtaining supplies,
+and the constant and harassing attacks by the Welsh.</p>
+
+<p>Glendower was often absent, but when at the house he conversed
+freely with Oswald, who was no longer surprised at the influence
+that he had obtained over his countrymen. His manners were
+courteous in the extreme, and his authority over his followers
+absolute. They not only reverenced him as their prince, the
+representative of their ancient kings, and their leader in war, but
+as one endowed with supernatural power.</p>
+
+<p>The bards had fanned this feeling to the utmost, by their songs
+of marvels and portents at his birth, and by attributing to him a
+control even over the elements. This belief was not only of great
+importance to him, as binding his adherents closer to him; but it
+undoubtedly contributed to his success, from the fact of its being
+fully shared in by the English soldiery; who assigned it as the
+cause of the exceptionally bad weather that had been experienced,
+in each of the three expeditions into the country, and of the
+failure to accomplish anything of importance against him.</p>
+
+<p>This side of the character of Glendower puzzled Oswald. Several
+times, when talking to him, he distinctly claimed supernatural
+powers; and from the tone in which he spoke, and the strange
+expression his face at this time assumed, Oswald was convinced that
+he sincerely believed that he did possess these powers. Whether he
+originally did so; or whether it had arisen from the adulation of
+the bards, the general belief in it, and the successes he had
+gained; Oswald could not determine. Later, when Glendower sullied
+his fair fame by the most atrocious massacres, similar to that
+which had already taken place at the storming of New
+Radnor--atrocities that seemed not only purposeless, but at utter
+variance with the courtesy and gentleness of his bearing--Oswald
+came to believe that his brain had, to some extent, become unhinged
+by excitement, flattery, and superstition.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the fortnight Roger's wound, although not
+completely healed, was in such a state that it permitted his
+sitting on horseback, and Oswald became anxious to be off.
+Glendower, who was about to set out to harass the rear of the army,
+as it retired from Cardiganshire, at once offered to send a strong
+escort with him; as it would have been dangerous, in the extreme,
+to have attempted to traverse the country without such a
+protection. Two excellent horses, that had been captured in the
+engagement with the English, were handed over to him, for his own
+use and that of Roger. Oswald's own armour was returned to him, and
+he was pleased to find that it had been carefully attended to, and
+was as brightly burnished as when it came into his possession.</p>
+
+<p>When Glendower bid them adieu, he presented each of them with
+rings, similar to those he himself wore.</p>
+
+<p>"You have promised that you will not fight against me again; but
+it may be that, on some errand or other, you may ride into Wales;
+or that you may be staying, as you did before, at some castle or
+town near the border, when we attack it. You have but to show these
+rings to any Welshman you may come across, and you may be sure of
+being well treated, as one of my friends.</p>
+
+<p>"I trust that, when we meet again, the war will be over; and
+that my title to the kingdom of Wales may be recognized, by your
+king and people, as it is on this side of the border."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Sir Oswald," Roger said, as they rode away, accompanied
+by twenty of Glendower's followers, under the orders of an officer;
+"we have got out of that scrape better than could have been
+expected. When you and I were alone, in the midst of that crowd of
+Welshmen, I thought that it was all over with us."</p>
+
+<p>"So did I, Roger. You see, that matter of our getting
+Glendower's daughters away, uninjured, has borne good fruit."</p>
+
+<p>"It has indeed," Roger agreed. "I thought it much more likely,
+too, that it would have gone the other way."</p>
+
+<p>"Be sure you keep a silent tongue as to that, Roger; and
+remember that our story is, that I have been put at knightly
+ransom, and on the condition that I will never serve in Wales
+again. When we once get across the border we will ride straight for
+Northumberland, without going near Ludlow. I observed that the king
+much doubted the Mortimers, and were we to return there, and the
+news came to his ears, he might take it as a proof that there was
+an understanding between Glendower and Mortimer; and that it was to
+this that leniency, such as had been shown to no other prisoners,
+was due; whereas, if we go straight to Percy, 'tis not likely that
+the matter will ever come to his hearing, and at any rate, if it
+did so, he would scarce connect Mortimer with our escape."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand, Sir Oswald; and will, you may be sure, keep
+silent as to aught beyond what you have bade me say."</p>
+
+<p>Two days' journey brought them to the house of Glendower's
+married daughter. On the officer stating that the knight with him
+had been sent, under his escort, by Glendower himself, she
+requested that he should be shown in. Her husband was away.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the knight's name?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Oswald Forster, Lady."</p>
+
+<p>"I have never, so far as I know, heard it before. Methought that
+he might be one whom I may have met, in the houses of my two
+sisters married to Englishmen, in Hereford; but I have no memory of
+the name. Show him in, sir."</p>
+
+<p>Roger had removed Oswald's helmet, while the officer was
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me, Roger," he said, "since we were both concerned in
+this affair."</p>
+
+<p>He bowed deeply to the Lady Isabel; who, as she returned his
+salute, saw with surprise that his face was quite strange to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems, Sir Oswald," she said, "from the tenor of the message
+given me by the officer, that you have come to me as a visitor; and
+that 'tis as an escort, only, that he has been sent with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is so, Lady; but 'tis as a visitor rather to your sisters,
+the Ladies Jane and Margaret, that I am here. I had, once, the
+pleasure of meeting them."</p>
+
+<p>Glendower's daughter at once told a maid, who was working with
+her when the officer had entered, to request her sisters to come to
+her; and these entered the room a minute later.</p>
+
+<p>Isabel, seeing that they did not appear to recognize the young
+knight, said:</p>
+
+<p>"Our father has sent this gentleman, Sir Oswald Forster, whom
+you know, to visit you."</p>
+
+<p>The two girls looked with surprise at Oswald.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you not know this gentleman?" their sister asked, in equal
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"He is not known to us," Jane replied. "I have never seen him
+before--at least, that I can remember."</p>
+
+<p>"We have met before, nevertheless, Lady," Oswald said, with a
+smile; "though it may well be that you do not remember my face, or
+that of my squire there; seeing that we were together but a few
+minutes, and that in the moonlight."</p>
+
+<p>The girls looked up at him puzzled, and then their eyes fell
+upon Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I know!" Margaret exclaimed. "Look at the squire's height.
+Surely, Jane, these are the two soldiers who allowed us to pass
+them, that night when we fled from Sycharth."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so," Oswald said. "I thought that you were more likely
+to recognize my squire than myself, seeing that I have grown
+several inches since then, and have but lately assumed this
+knightly armour in which you see me."</p>
+
+<a id="PicK" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/k.jpg" alt=
+"How glad I am to have an opportunity of thanking you"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir," Jane said, going swiftly up to him and holding out
+her hand, which he raised to his lips; as he did that of Margaret,
+as she followed her sister; "we have thought of you so often, and
+have prayed that you should both be rewarded for your kindness to
+us! How glad I am to see you again, and have an opportunity of
+thanking you!</p>
+
+<p>"You have heard, Isabel, of our adventure, and how we escaped,
+by the kindness of two Englishmen on guard near the edge of the
+forest, from being carried as prisoners to London; where, but for
+them, we should now be lodged in some dungeon of the usurper; but
+till now, I have never known the name of our preserver.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks also to you, good squire," she said, turning to
+Roger.</p>
+
+<p>"I but carried out the orders of my master," Roger said,
+colouring like a boy, as she held out her hand to him. "There is no
+credit due to me."</p>
+
+<p>"But how came you here?" Lady Isabel asked Oswald.</p>
+
+<p>"Your sisters have, although they know it not, more than repaid
+their obligations to me; for while they may perhaps owe their
+liberty to me, I owe my life to them.</p>
+
+<p>"See, ladies," and he turned to Jane, "there is the chain you
+gave me. I have worn it, always, on my wrist. I and my squire were
+beaten down by, your father's followers; my squire grievously
+wounded and insensible, while I had been left for dead, though but
+stunned from a blow. I luckily recovered my senses, just as those
+employed in despatching the wounded came up; and, happily
+remembering your bracelet, I took it off and held it up, calling
+out your father's name.</p>
+
+<p>"Struck, I suppose, by the action and words, an officer examined
+the bracelet closely; and, making out the inscription on the clasp,
+had my squire and myself taken to the house where your father
+lodged, so that the manner of my being possessed of the trinket
+might be explained. On your father's return he recognized it; and,
+having heard from you the circumstances of our meeting, treated us
+with the greatest kindness and hospitality; and freed us without
+ransom, save a nominal one in order that, on my return, I could say
+that I had been put to ransom. On the recovery of my squire from
+his wounds, he restored our armour to us, presented us with horses,
+and sent us here under escort, deeming that you might be glad to
+see us."</p>
+
+<p>"There he was indeed right," Jane said. "We have oft regretted
+that you would not accept a more valuable jewel than that little
+chain, which was given to me by my father, when I was but a child.
+But 'tis well, indeed, that you so withstood us; for had it been
+any other of our jewels but this, it would not have been
+recognized."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so, Lady and, since my capture, I often thought that it
+was strange it so happened."</p>
+
+<p>After staying a day there, Oswald continued his journey; to the
+regret of the ladies, who were glad to hear that he would never
+again fight against the Welsh. His escort accompanied him, as near
+the border as it was safe for them to go. The next day they rode
+into Chester, and then, by easy stages, up to Alnwick.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald went to Hotspur's apartments, as soon as he entered the
+castle.</p>
+
+<p>"I congratulate you heartily," Hotspur said, as he entered. "I
+see that you have won your spurs. I said to myself, when I received
+your letter, saying that you were starting to carry a letter to the
+king, that your enterprise would bring you either death or a pair
+of gold spurs. I am glad, indeed, to see that it was the
+latter.</p>
+
+<p>"I hear that the king's army is falling back. A messenger
+brought me news from my kinsman. He said that it was but a rumour
+that had reached him; but that it seemed likely enough, for it was
+said that they had suffered terribly, both from the weather and the
+attacks of the Welsh."</p>
+
+<p>"That rumour is true, Sir Henry, and also that the army is
+retiring."</p>
+
+<p>"And they have done no more than they did before?"</p>
+
+<p>"No more, indeed, Sir Henry. They have burnt many villages, and
+slain many Welshmen; but they have done nothing, whatever, towards
+subduing Glendower."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch19">Chapter 19</a>: The Battle Of Homildon
+Hill.</h2>
+
+<p>"But how have you made your way back, ahead of the army?"
+Hotspur asked, after Oswald had given him full information as to
+the military operations.</p>
+
+<p>"Roger and I were left for dead, in that fight I have told you
+of, near Llanidloes; and we fell into the hands of the Welsh, and
+were taken before Glendower, who treated us well, and put me to
+ransom, with the engagement that I was not again to bear arms, in
+Wales."</p>
+
+<p>"That was a strange leniency, on his part," Hotspur exclaimed;
+"for I hear he puts to the sword all who fall into his hands,
+without any regard for the rules of civilized war."</p>
+
+<p>"He is a strange man, Sir Henry, and subject, I fancy, to
+changeable moods. When I was brought before him he was in a happy
+one, over the success he had gained; and it may be that he took a
+liking for me. At any rate, he fixed my ransom at a very small
+sum."</p>
+
+<p>"Which I will, of course, pay," Hotspur said, "since you were my
+squire, and were at Ludlow on my service."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you much, Sir Henry, but 'tis so small a sum that I
+myself discharged it, without difficulty."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis strange, most strange, that you should have gone into the
+lion's den, and have come out unscathed. Strange, indeed, that
+Glendower, who, as we know, is greatly in want of money, should
+have fixed your ransom at a low sum. How much was it, Sir
+Oswald?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you the story, Sir Henry, though I would tell no
+one else; for my freedom is due to something that happened, nigh
+two years ago, when I was first with Sir Edmund Mortimer. I failed
+in what was my strict duty, although I disobeyed no orders that I
+had received, and my conscience altogether acquits me of
+wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"You may be sure, Sir Oswald, that the matter will go no
+further; and knowing you as I do, I feel sure that, whatever the
+matter was, it was not to your discredit."</p>
+
+<p>"So I trust, myself, my lord; but it might have cost me my head,
+had the king come to know it. I will first tell you that my ransom
+was fixed at a crown, and that of Roger at a penny."</p>
+
+<p>Hotspur, who had been looking a little grave, laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely never before was so much bone and sinew appraised at so
+small a sum."</p>
+
+<p>"It was so put, simply that I might, with truth, avow that I was
+put to ransom. However, I paid the crown and the penny, and have so
+discharged my obligations.</p>
+
+<p>"This was how the matter came about;" and he related the whole
+circumstances to Sir Henry; and the manner in which the little
+chain, given to him by Glendower's daughter, had been the means of
+saving his life.</p>
+
+<p>"I blame you in no way, Sir Oswald," Hotspur said cordially,
+when he had heard the story; "though I say not that the king would
+have viewed the matter in the same light. Still, you held to the
+letter of your orders. You were placed there to give warning of the
+approach of any hostile body, and naught was said to you as to
+letting any man, still less any women, depart from the place. But
+indeed, how could I blame you? Since heaven itself has assoiled
+you. For assuredly it was not chance that placed on your arm the
+little trinket that, alone, could have saved your life from the
+Welsh.</p>
+
+<p>"Now to yourself, Sir Oswald. You will, I hope, continue my
+knight, as you have been my squire."</p>
+
+<p>"Assuredly, Sir Henry, I have never thought of anything
+else."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then; I will, as soon as may be, appoint to you a
+double knight's feu. I say a double feu, because I should like to
+have you as one of the castle knights, and so have much larger
+service from you, than that which a knight can be called upon to
+render, for an ordinary feu. I will bid Father Ernulf look through
+the rolls, and see what feus are vacant. One of these I will make
+an hereditary feu, to pass down from you to your heirs,
+irrevocably; the other will be a service feu, to support the
+expenses caused by your extra services, and revocable under the
+usual conditions."</p>
+
+<p>A week later there was a formal ceremonial at the castle, and in
+the presence of the earl, Hotspur, and the knights and gentlemen of
+their service, Oswald took the oath of allegiance to Sir Henry
+Percy; and afterwards, as required by law, to the king; and
+received from Hotspur deeds appointing him to two knight's feus,
+including the villages of Stoubes and Rochester, in Reddesdale.
+There were, at the time, six knight's feus vacant; and as Percy had
+left it to him to choose which he liked, he had selected these, as
+they lay but a twelve miles' ride, over the hills, from his
+father's place in Coquetdale.</p>
+
+<p>The oath of allegiance to the king, as well as to the feudal
+lord, was enacted by Henry the Second; with the intention of
+curbing, to some extent, the power of the great vassals; but
+although taken by all knights, on being presented with a feu, it
+was deemed of no effect in the case of the immediate lord being at
+war with the king; and whenever troubles arose, the lord's vassals
+always sided with him, it being universally understood that the
+oath to him, from whom they had received their land, was paramount
+over that to the king.</p>
+
+<p>There having been several formalities to be observed, and
+matters to be discussed, Oswald was unable to ride home until after
+this ceremony had taken place; but upon the following morning he
+and Roger started early, and arrived, that evening, at Yardhope.
+His welcome was a warm one, and the satisfaction of his father, and
+the delight of his mother, at seeing him in knightly armour was
+great, indeed; and it increased when he told them that he had
+received knighthood at the hands of the king himself, and that
+Hotspur had granted him the feus of Stoubes and Rochester.</p>
+
+<p>"Then we shall have you within a ride of us," his mother
+exclaimed. "That will be pleasant, indeed."</p>
+
+<p>"The feus have always gone together," John Forster said, "and
+Stoubes castle, although small, is a strong one. How many tenants
+will you have?"</p>
+
+<p>"Twenty-three. That, at least, was the number of names set down
+in the parchments."</p>
+
+<p>"That is not bad, as a beginning. Of course, you will keep some
+ten or twelve retainers in the castle; and with such men as will
+come in from the villages, at the approach of danger, you will be
+able to muster fifty or sixty in all for the defence."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall live chiefly at Alnwick, Father. Rochester is given to
+me as an hereditary feu, but I shall hold Stoubes for extra service
+at the castle; and I have little doubt that Percy will, if I do him
+good service, make it also hereditary. He as much as said so."</p>
+
+<p>"It will make a good portion, lad. Yardhope is a knight's feu,
+though I have never taken up the knighthood; and the Percys know
+that I should fight just as stoutly, as John Forster, as if I wore
+knightly armour; but though the lands are wide they are poor, while
+yours are fertile, lying down by the river. Moreover, Coquetdale is
+more liable to Scotch incursions than Reddesdale, as the road into
+Scotland runs along it. If needs be we can lend a hand to each
+other; though, both together, we could not hold either your place
+or mine against a strong invasion.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, tell us how it was that you won your spurs; and how it was
+that the king, himself, knighted you."</p>
+
+<p>"After I have eaten and drank I will do so, Father; for indeed,
+Roger and I are well-nigh famishing."</p>
+
+<p>After the meal, he related the whole story of his
+adventures.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, lad, you were in luck," his father said, when he had
+finished. "The help you gave those maidens might have brought your
+head to the block; but it turned out well, and was the saving of
+your life, so I will say nought against the deed; especially as you
+owed no allegiance either to Mortimer or to Talbot, and were, save
+for the orders that Hotspur had given you, your own master."</p>
+
+<p>Two days later, having sent over, on the morning after his
+arrival, a message to the tenants to present themselves at Stoubes
+to take their oaths to him, Oswald, accompanied by his father, rode
+into Reddesdale. He found the castle a much stronger place than
+Yardhope, which was but a fortified house; while this was a moated
+building, with strong walls and flanking towers, and a keep that
+could be held successfully, even if the walls were captured by a
+sudden assault.</p>
+
+<p>At twelve o'clock the tenants assembled. Oswald read to them the
+two parchments, and they then took the oaths to him. They were well
+satisfied to have a young knight as their lord; for the feus had
+been held by a minor, who had died two years before; and had not
+been at the castle since he was taken away, as a child, to be
+brought up at the town of Alnwick, where he had remained under the
+eye of the Percys. It had long been understood, however, that the
+feu would not be granted to him; for he was weakly from his birth,
+and wholly unfitted for the charge of a castle, so near the
+Scottish border.</p>
+
+<p>According to feudal usage, each tenant expected that he would be
+called upon to pay a heavy sum, under the name of a relief, as was
+customary in the case of a new lord taking possession; and they
+were greatly relieved when Oswald told them that, as he already
+possessed armour and horses, he would quit them for a fourth part
+of the usual amount; although he should, of course, require their
+services to enable him to repair such dilapidations as the castle
+had suffered, during the long term that it had stood empty.</p>
+
+<p>For the next three months, he stayed in Stoubes. Roger had been
+sent off at once, with two men-at-arms, to bring the horses and
+armour that had been left at Welshpool; bearing a letter to the
+governor from Oswald, thanking him much for having taken care of
+them, and saying briefly that he had been left on the field for
+dead, after the fight near Llanidloes; but had recovered, and been
+well treated by Glendower, who had put him to ransom. He took money
+with him, to pay the expenses for the keep of the horses; and
+returned, with them and the armour, after an absence of three
+weeks.</p>
+
+<p>Passing through Worcester on his way back, he had, at Oswald's
+order, purchased for himself clothes suitable for his position as
+an esquire. As for armour, it had been arranged that he should have
+it made for him at Alnwick, as it would be difficult to obtain a
+suit sufficiently large for him.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the three months the necessary repairs to the
+castle were finished. The gates had been greatly strengthened with
+thick bands of iron, the moat cleared out, and at various points
+the defences had been strengthened. The small amount of furniture
+then deemed necessary still remained there and, where needful, had
+been repaired and put in good order. Eight men-at-arms had been
+taken by Oswald into his service, and a trusty man appointed as
+seneschal.</p>
+
+<p>Then, after paying another visit to Yardhope, Oswald rode, with
+Roger and two well-mounted men-at-arms, to Alnwick.</p>
+
+<p>It was now April, and bad news had just arrived. Glendower had
+commenced the campaign with great vigour, as the appearance of a
+comet had been interpreted, by the bards, as an omen most
+favourable to him, and his force had greatly increased during the
+winter. He had destroyed the houses and strong places of all
+Welshmen who had not taken up arms at his orders, and had closely
+blockaded Carnarvon. He marched to Bangor, levelled the cathedral,
+and that of Saint Asaph, by fire, burnt the episcopal palaces and
+canons' houses. So formidable did he become that the king issued
+writs, to the lieutenants of no fewer than thirty-four counties, to
+assemble their forces at Lichfield, to crush Glendower.</p>
+
+<p>The latter had now taken the offensive, and advanced towards
+Hereford, and carried fire and sword through Mortimer's lands. Sir
+Edmund gathered his own and his nephew's tenants and retainers,
+from Herefordshire and Radnorshire, and advanced against Glendower.
+The armies met on the 22nd of June, 1402, at a short distance from
+Knighton. The battle was obstinately fought, but was decided by the
+desertion of the Welsh tenants, and by the Welsh bowmen in
+Mortimer's service turning their bows against his men-at-arms; and,
+finally, the English were defeated, with the loss of eleven hundred
+men, Sir Edmund himself being made a prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>After the battle the Welsh behaved with the greatest savagery;
+killing all the wounded, stripping the fallen, and horribly
+mutilating their bodies. The news created great excitement at
+Alnwick and, had not the situation in the north been critical,
+Percy would have gathered his forces and marched, with all speed,
+to avenge the defeat and capture of his brother-in-law.</p>
+
+<p>The Earl of Dunbar, with many of the tenants of his former
+estates, and numbers of the English borderers, had entered Scotland
+and carried out considerable raids. In revenge for this, Douglas
+despatched Thomas Halliburton and Patrick Hepburn, each with a
+considerable force, to invade Northumberland. Halliburton ravaged
+the country as far as Bamborough, collected great spoils, and
+returned with them. Hepburn, who had a still larger force,
+penetrated farther into England, carried his ravages to within a
+few miles of Alnwick; and then retired north, with an enormous
+amount of booty.</p>
+
+<p>When, however, he had crossed the border into the country known
+as the Merse, north of Berwick, the Earl of Dunbar fell upon him at
+West Nesbit, and completely defeated him. Hepburn himself, with a
+large number of his men, fell in the battle; and many important
+prisoners were captured. This battle was fought on the same day
+that Glendower defeated Mortimer.</p>
+
+<p>The victory caused great exultation on the border; but Alwyn
+said to his nephew:</p>
+
+<p>"Although this is good, as far as it goes, Oswald, you may be
+sure that Douglas will not brook this disaster with patience, but
+will gather the Scottish forces; and we may expect him, ere long,
+at the head of twenty thousand men, and we shall have a fight as
+stiff as that of Otterburn. We shall have Northumberland ablaze,
+and you will see that the earl and Hotspur will soon be preparing
+to meet the storm.</p>
+
+<p>"These last forays took them by surprise; and, as lords of the
+marches, they have suffered serious humiliation, for this victory
+was not theirs, but the work of Dunbar; and had he not intercepted
+the Scots, on their own side of the border, they would have
+returned, scatheless, with the spoils of our northern districts.
+This disgrace will spur them on to make great efforts, and these
+will be needed, or we shall see Northumberland, Cumberland, and
+Durham in flames."</p>
+
+<p>Alwyn was not mistaken. Messengers were sent off to all those
+holding knights' feus, throughout the county, bidding them to
+prepare to answer to the Percy's call; and to hold themselves, and
+their tenants, in readiness to march to any point fixed upon for a
+general rendezvous. They were to warn all the countryside that,
+directly news arrived that the Scots were in motion, they were to
+drive their cattle and horses to the nearest fortified town, or to
+take them to hiding places among the hills. Everything of value was
+to be taken away, or hidden, so that the enemy should find but
+empty houses.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald rode to Yardhope, with the message to his father.</p>
+
+<p>"I know, Father," he said, "that it needed not to warn you; but
+as it was but a short distance out of my way to come round here, I
+thought that I would pay you a day's visit."</p>
+
+<p>"No, lad; directly I heard of the victory of Dunbar, I said to
+myself, this will bring the Scots upon us in force. Douglas will
+never put up with the defeat, and will make every effort to turn
+the tables. I shall send all there is worth taking away, to a
+shepherd's hut among the fells; and shall, as soon as I hear that
+Douglas's preparations are well-nigh complete, journey with your
+mother to Alnwick, and leave her there. I shall return, and with my
+men will drive the cattle and horses to places where there is
+little chance of the Scots finding them; and will then, after
+leaving three or four men to look after them, come back to
+Alnwick.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you propose to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall do much the same, Father. Stoubes is strong enough to
+hold out against any ordinary raid, but not against an army led by
+Douglas. I shall remove the furnishing and tapestry, and shall send
+the most valuable into Alnwick, and have the rest of them hidden in
+the woods. These are the orders that have been sent, all along the
+border. Any whose places are so strong that they may well defend
+themselves, for some time, are to gather all their neighbours
+there. The rest are to repair to Alnwick, to join Percy's
+force.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, there is no knowing where the storm may break. The
+Scots may cross the Cheviots anywhere between Berwick and Carlisle;
+and, until their movements are known, the earl and Hotspur must
+keep their forces at Alnwick, in readiness to march wheresoever
+required.</p>
+
+<p>"Hotspur has sent messengers down to the Midlands, to engage as
+many archers as he can get. Of course, we have many here; but the
+borderers are spearmen rather than archers, and it were well to
+strengthen our force. Still, however large a force he may raise, we
+cannot hope to check their first incursion. The whole country is
+open to them and, if they enter near Carlisle, they may be in the
+heart of Cumberland, or Durham, before we are fairly in motion. We
+may count, however, on meeting them as they retire, if not
+before."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald then rode to his own place, bade all the tenants prepare
+to ride with him to Alnwick, at an hour's notice; and either to
+send their women and children on there, as soon as it was known
+that the Scotch army was gathering strongly on the border; or else
+to gather stores of provisions, up in the hills, and to send the
+women and children there, the moment word came that the Scots were
+on the move.</p>
+
+<p>The news of Mortimer's defeat and capture had been received, by
+the time Oswald returned to Alnwick.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis bad news, indeed," Percy said to him, "and I know that, as
+you have been staying so long at Ludlow, you will be deeply grieved
+at the misfortune that has befallen Mortimer. However, I doubt not
+that he will soon be ransomed. I know that the king appointed a
+commission of knights, to treat at once with Glendower for Lord
+Grey's ransom, and has given orders for the raising of the great
+sum demanded. It is to be gathered from a tax on church properties,
+and in other ways; and doubtless he will do the same for Mortimer,
+whose lands have been so harried, by the Welsh, that it will be
+impossible to raise any large sum from the tenants."</p>
+
+<p>"I fear, Sir Henry," Oswald said, "that the king will be
+lukewarm on the subject. During his three invasions, he has never
+once summoned Sir Edmund to join him; nor has he passed through
+Ludlow, as he might well have done, seeing that it is a central
+position, and the nearest way for an army marching towards
+Plinlimmon. I remarked, too, that when I mentioned Mortimer's name
+in my discourse with him, the king's brow clouded, as if ill
+pleased at the name."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he acts wrongly," Hotspur said angrily. "Mortimer has
+given no cause for offence. He has never, in any way, upheld the
+cause of the young Earl of March; and knows, well enough, that it
+would be madness to set up his claim to the throne, when Henry has
+given no cause for complaint, and that the boy's existence seems to
+be well-nigh forgotten by the country.</p>
+
+<p>"However, as soon as this business is over I will, myself, to
+London; and will beg the king to exercise the same benevolence, in
+the case of Mortimer, as he has shown on behalf of Lord Grey. Why,
+he might as well suspect us, to whom he largely owes his kingdom,
+as Mortimer, seeing that my wife is aunt to the young earl."</p>
+
+<p>Early in August it became known that preparations were being
+made, upon a great scale, by Douglas for the invasion of England;
+and that, as Military Governor of Scotland, he had summoned all the
+great nobles to join, with their forces; and it was even said that
+numbers of French knights were, on account of the long friendship
+between France and Scotland, crossing the seas, to fight under
+Douglas against their old enemies.</p>
+
+<p>"Methinks," Hotspur said to his knights, "there can be little
+doubt that there is an agreement between Scotland and Glendower;
+and this would account for the fury the Welshmen have been showing,
+and the manner in which they have destroyed the cathedrals,
+churches, and castles alike; and so forced Henry to march against
+them, with the forces of the greater part of England, just when
+Douglas is preparing to assail us here.</p>
+
+<p>"The forces of Westmoreland, Cumberland, Durham, and
+Northumberland, if together, might hope to make a stout resistance,
+even against so large a force as Douglas is collecting; but we
+cannot so gather. The Earl of Westmoreland, who commands the forces
+of his own county and Cumberland, must needs hold them together;
+lest the Scots pour down, besiege Carlisle, and carry fire and
+sword through those counties.</p>
+
+<p>"From here up to Berwick the country has been so plundered, and
+devastated, that it is almost a desert; and I can draw no strength
+from there. As to Durham, they urge, and with some truth that, as
+the Scots have, before now, laid portions of their county waste,
+they cannot send their forces so far north as this place; as it
+would leave them unprotected, should the enemy march through
+Tynedale into their county.</p>
+
+<p>"The king has entered Wales with the fighting men of thirty-four
+counties, so from him no aid can be expected; and it seems to me
+that we shall be quite unable to make head against the invasion;
+though assuredly, when we have gathered our forces, and are joined
+by those Dunbar will bring us, we will meet them as they return,
+spoil laden, to the border."</p>
+
+<p>Well-mounted messengers had been placed on every road by which
+the Scots could cross the border; and on the 18th of August, one
+came with the news that, twelve hours before, they had crossed into
+Cumberland at Kirksop Foot; that they were reported to be ten
+thousand strong; and that a dozen villages were already in flames.
+Another portion of their army had crossed near Tynehead, and were
+pouring into Tynedale.</p>
+
+<p>John Forster and his wife had arrived, some days before. Oswald
+had found comfortable lodgings for his mother in the town, which
+was already crowded with women and children from the border. His
+father had left again, at once; but returned, with twenty spears,
+twelve hours after the messenger had brought the news.</p>
+
+<p>"I had two or three of my men out," he said to Oswald, as he
+rode in and dismounted in the castle yard; "but as soon as I heard
+that the Scots had entered Tynedale, I knew that it was time to be
+off, for they are sure to send over strong parties to ravage
+Coquetdale. The road was well-nigh blocked, in some places, with
+fugitives. In spite of the warnings that have been issued, most of
+the people seem to have thought that the Scots could never come in
+their direction, and the news has caused a panic.</p>
+
+<p>"However, near the border the Scots will find but little
+plunder. We have had so many invasions that no man is foolish
+enough to spend money on aught that he cannot easily carry away,
+and the raiders will, there, find but empty houses. They may sweep
+in some of the cattle from the hills, to supply them with food on
+their march; but more than this they will not take, as they go
+south, as it would be but an encumbrance."</p>
+
+<p>In a few days a strong force was collected at Alnwick; but,
+though chafing at the news of the terrible devastations, that were
+being made by the Scots in Cumberland and Durham, the Earl and
+Hotspur could, at present, do nothing. The invasion was, indeed,
+one of the most disastrous that had ever taken place; and after
+having almost devastated the two counties, Douglas, with the united
+force, and an enormous train of waggons laden with plunder, great
+quantities of cattle, and other spoil, turned north again, at the
+end of the second week of September.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, Percy's force had been steadily growing. He
+had early resolved that upon the return of the Scots the battle
+must be fought, and contented himself with sending small bodies, of
+well-mounted knights and horsemen, to hover in the neighbourhood of
+the Scotch army; and to keep him informed of their intentions, and
+the route they seemed disposed to take.</p>
+
+<p>Douglas had carried his devastations up to the walls of
+Newcastle, but had not attempted to attack that strongly-defended
+town. He had, indeed, gathered as much spoil as could possibly be
+taken along; and he moved north in a quiet and leisurely way, being
+greatly hampered by the enormous train of loaded waggons.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the Earl of Northumberland and his son saw that he
+intended to march up through Northumberland, instead of returning
+by the line that he had come through Tynedale, they set their force
+in motion and marched out; leaving a sufficient strength to hold
+Alnwick, should Douglas attack it. Being joined, two days later, by
+the Earl of Dunbar, they posted themselves in a position whence
+they could march to intercept the Scots, upon any road they might
+follow on their way north.</p>
+
+<p>On the 12th, they learned for certain that the Scots were
+following the road that would take them through Wooler. Moving
+instantly, the Earl with his forces came up to them, posted on a
+hill, a mile to the northwest of Homildon. He at once seized a hill
+facing it, and disposed his knights, men-at-arms, and spearmen
+along the crest.</p>
+
+<p>Hotspur would straightway have charged down, and attacked the
+Scots in their position; but Dunbar put his hand on his bridle, and
+urged him, strongly, to await the assault; and to provoke the Scots
+into taking the offensive by galling them with his archers, in
+which he was far superior to them; while, on the other hand, they
+were much stronger in spears and horsemen.</p>
+
+<p>Hotspur, seeing the goodness of the advice, assented to it; and
+ordered the archers to descend, at once, into the valley between
+the two hills; and to launch their arrows against the Scots. On
+descending, it was found that the Scottish bowmen were already in
+the valley. These they speedily drove up the hill, and then sent
+their arrows thick and fast among the Scottish men-at-arms.</p>
+
+<p>Douglas had, like the Earl of Dunbar, perceived at what
+disadvantage the party who took the offensive would have to fight;
+and had determined to stand on the defensive, especially as, if he
+moved forward, the English could detach bodies of horsemen to work
+round the hill, and fall upon his immense train of waggons.</p>
+
+<p>For a time, he refused to accede to the earnest entreaties of
+his knights to advance. But as man after man fell under the English
+arrows, their impatience increased; until one of his best knights,
+Sir John Swinton, rode a few paces out of the ranks, and in a loud
+voice said:</p>
+
+<p>"My brave comrades, what fascinates you today, that you stand
+like deer and fawns in a park to be shot; instead of showing your
+ancient valour, and meeting your foes hand to hand? Let those who
+will descend with me and, in the name of God, we will break that
+host and conquer; or if not, we will at least die with honour, like
+soldiers."</p>
+
+<p>A mighty shout followed his words, and the whole Scottish host
+dashed down the hill. The English archers fell back a little, still
+shooting as they did so; but halted a short way up the hill, and
+shot so hotly and strongly that they pierced helmet and armour with
+their arrows.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could withstand these missiles, shot by the finest and
+strongest bowmen in the world. The Scots rolled over in heaps.
+Douglas, although clad in the most perfect steel armour, was
+wounded in five places, one arrow destroying the sight of one of
+his eyes. He fell from his horse, and utter confusion reigned in
+the Scottish ranks.</p>
+
+<p>Swinging their bows behind them, the archers drew their axes and
+rushed into the crowd, effecting a terrible slaughter. Douglas was
+made prisoner, as was the Earl of Fife, a son of the Regent Albany,
+the Earls of Moray and Angus and Orkney. Two barons, eighty
+knights, among whom were several Frenchmen, and several other
+persons of rank were also captured; while Swinton, Gordon, and many
+other knights and gentlemen were slain, together with seven hundred
+of the commonalty. With the exception only of Flodden, no battle on
+the Border was so fatal to the Scottish nobility, whose defeat was
+effected by the archers only.</p>
+
+<p>The confusion was so terrible that the Earl of Northumberland
+refused to allow his knights and men-at-arms to charge, seeing that
+they must trample down both friend and foe; therefore they stood as
+passive spectators of the desperate fight, not a lance being
+couched nor a blow struck by any of them. When all was over they
+took up the pursuit of the fugitives; many of these were overtaken
+and killed, and the pursuit was continued to the Tweed, where, not
+knowing the fords, many of the fugitives were drowned while
+endeavouring to swim the river.</p>
+
+<p>"Roger, what say you to that?" Oswald asked, as he and his
+squire drew rein, after pursuing the enemy for some distance.</p>
+
+<p>Roger's face expressed the strongest disgust.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Sir Oswald, I don't call it a battle, at all. Who ever
+heard of a battle where neither knight nor man-at-arms drew sword?
+'Tis out of all reason to fight in that manner."</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, Roger, as we have won a great victory, what
+matter is it whether we or the archers bore the chief hand in it?
+The last battle we fought in was a different matter. We had plenty
+of fighting, but no victory."</p>
+
+<p>"It was more to my taste, nevertheless," Roger grumbled, "even
+though the Welsh well nigh made an end of me; and, for myself, I
+could not help hoping that the archers would be beaten, and leave
+it to us to take our part in the fighting. They had done more than
+their share when they had broken the Scottish ranks, and slain I
+know not how many; and it would have been fair of them, after that,
+to draw back, and leave it to us to finish the business."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis well as it is, Roger, and for one I am well satisfied. We
+have given the Scots a lesson that will keep them quiet for a long
+time. We have recovered all the spoil they were carrying off, and
+we could have won nothing more, had we been in the thick of the
+melee, and come out of it, perhaps, sorely wounded again."</p>
+
+<p>Roger, however, was by no means satisfied; and, to the end of
+his life, always fell into a bad temper when the battle of Homildon
+was spoken of.</p>
+
+<p>All the prisoners of consequence were taken to Alnwick, where
+the army fell back; much to the disgust of some of the more eager
+spirits, who would fain have crossed the frontier, and made
+reprisals for the woes the Scots had inflicted. Northumberland,
+however, was well satisfied with what had been won, and did not
+wish to provoke the Scots to extremities; feeling that with so many
+of their leaders in his hands, he might be able to arrange terms
+that would ensure peace, for a considerable time, on the
+border.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoners were all treated with great kindness and
+consideration. They were lodged in the castle, and were treated as
+guests rather than as prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald and his father were both pleased to hear, two days after
+the battle, that when the Scottish dead were examined, the bodies
+of William Baird and ten of his kinsmen were found, lying together.
+They had resisted desperately to the last, refusing to surrender
+themselves; well knowing that their misdeeds and many depredations,
+in England, would bring them to the gallows, if taken alive.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Father, we shall be able to live in peace for a time,
+now. No doubt the Bairds have brought with them every spear they
+could muster, for none would willingly have stayed at home, when
+there was a promise of gathering so much booty; therefore their
+strength must be altogether broken, and it will be long, indeed,
+before the Bairds ride in a raid into Northumberland."</p>
+
+<p>His father nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a good thing, Oswald, assuredly; though I would rather
+that we had had the attacking of them in their own hold. Still, at
+any rate, there is an end of the feud for years to come; and I
+shall be able to lie down to sleep, without wondering whether they
+will be knocking at the gate, before morning."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch20">Chapter 20</a>: The Percys' Discontent.</h2>
+
+<p>During the time that had elapsed, between his receiving the news
+of Mortimer's capture by Glendower, and the battle of Homildon
+Hill, Percy had written several times to the king, with reference
+to his taking the same steps to ransom Mortimer that he had taken
+on behalf of Lord Grey. The king, however, answered very coldly;
+and one of his letters more than hinted that he believed that
+Mortimer had voluntarily placed himself in Glendower's hands, and
+that an agreement existed between them. Not only was Hotspur
+furious at such an accusation, but the earl, himself, was deeply
+angered.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis past all belief," Hotspur said, "that such a charge should
+be made. Had Mortimer wished to join Glendower, he could have gone
+to him, not as a prisoner, but at the head of three thousand good
+fighting men. Why should he have thrown away the lives of twelve
+hundred of his own vassals, and those of his nephew? Nay, more, had
+Mortimer intended treachery, he might have marched and fallen on
+the rear of the king's army, entangled among the Welsh mountains
+and forests, while Glendower fell upon him from in front. 'Tis a
+lie, and bears its mark on its face; 'tis but an excuse for
+refusing to ransom Mortimer, who he hopes will be kept a prisoner
+for years, and whose estates he will thus be able to appropriate.
+'Tis an insult not only to Mortimer but to us, to whom he owes his
+crown.</p>
+
+<p>"But let him beware! Those who built up, can pull down."</p>
+
+<p>The knights standing round put their hands on their sword hilts,
+significantly. The king was, to the followers of great barons, a
+person of but small consequence in comparison with their lord; and
+they would draw their swords, at the latter's order, as willingly
+against a king as against a foreign foe. That it was their duty to
+do so was so fully recognized that, in the troubles between the
+king and his nobles, while the latter were, if defeated, executed
+for treason, their vassals were permitted to return home
+unmolested; and it was not until the battle of Barnet that Edward,
+enraged at the humiliation that he had suffered, when he had been
+obliged to fly to France, gave orders that no quarter was to be
+shown to Warwick's vassals and retainers.</p>
+
+<p>Northumberland and Hotspur were still smarting under this
+treatment of Mortimer when, eight days after the battle, the
+messenger they had despatched to the king, in Wales, with the
+report of their great victory, and the capture of Douglas and other
+important nobles, returned with an order from the king that these
+prisoners were not to be ransomed.</p>
+
+<p>This order was received with passionate indignation by the earl
+and Hotspur. Although not altogether contrary to the usages of the
+age, since similar orders had, more than once been, issued by
+Edward the Third; the ransom of prisoners taken in battle was
+regarded as one of the most important sources of revenue, and as
+the means of defraying the expenses that nobles and knights were
+put to in aiding, with their vassals, the king in his wars.
+Occasionally, however, in the case of prisoners of importance,
+monarchs deemed it necessary, for political reasons, to forbid the
+ransom of prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>The Scottish nobles were as indignant as the Percys. They had
+regarded it as a matter of course that they would be shortly
+liberated. Their ransom, however heavy, would be soon forthcoming;
+for it was one of the conditions on which land was held that, in
+case of the lord being taken prisoner, each of his tenants must
+contribute largely, in proportion to his holding, towards the
+payment of his ransom.</p>
+
+<p>The order of the king clearly meant that they were to be taken
+to London and held there as hostages, perhaps for years; and so not
+only to ensure England against another invasion, but to further any
+designs of conquest that the king might entertain. With three of
+the great earls of Scotland--one of them the son of the Regent--and
+Douglas, the military leader of the Scots, in his hands; and with
+the Earl of Dunbar as his ally, Scotland would be practically at
+his mercy.</p>
+
+<p>An important meeting was held at Alnwick, at which the Scottish
+nobles, the Earl of Northumberland, and Hotspur were alone present,
+and here matters of vital interest to the kingdom were
+arranged.</p>
+
+<p>For six months things remained in the same state. The king's
+fourth expedition into Wales had effected no more than the
+preceding. Glendower was still virtually master of Wales. Cardiff
+had been burned by him, with its numerous priories and convents,
+with the exception of that of the Franciscans; the castle of
+Penmarc, and the town and castle of Abergavenny had been burned,
+and other strong places captured.</p>
+
+<p>The Percys remained, during this time, sullen and inactive;
+although somewhat mollified by the thanks voted them by Parliament.
+The king, as a reward for their services, bestowed upon them the
+estates of Douglas. This, however, they treated with scorn, for as
+well might he have presented to them the city of Naples or Paris;
+since, unless all Scotland was conquered, they could not come into
+peaceful mastership of the Douglas estates. Nor, indeed, could the
+king have intended it in earnest; for he was far too politic to
+think of adding so great an increase of territory to the estates of
+the Percys, who had already shown their power by placing him on the
+throne, and who might some day take back what they had given him,
+by declaring in favour of the Earl of March.</p>
+
+<p>One day in February, 1403, Oswald was summoned from Stoubes to
+Alnwick and, on his arrival there, was requested to go to the
+earl's chamber. Such a summons was extremely unusual. Hotspur had
+his own estates, and his own retinue and following; and was,
+jointly with his father, warden of the marches; and though he
+dwelt, generally, with him at Alnwick, he had his own portion of
+the castle. Thus it was seldom that the earl had any communication
+with Hotspur's knights.</p>
+
+<p>Hastening to obey, Oswald found Hotspur with his father.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a mission for you, Sir Oswald," Hotspur said, "on the
+part of the earl and myself. You know that, for a long time, there
+has been a disputation between my father and the Earl of
+Westmoreland, respecting the Scottish prisoners. The earl sent a
+small force to fight under me at Homildon, but it was a mere
+handful; and on the strength of this he advanced a claim to a
+considerable share of the ransoms of the prisoners; or, since they
+could not be ransomed, to the custody of the persons of the Earls
+of Moray and Angus. The king has now, contrary to all reason,
+inflicted upon us the indignity of appointing four commissioners,
+two of whom are but knights and the other two men of no
+consequence, to inquire into the question between my father and my
+uncle, the Earl of Westmoreland.</p>
+
+<p>"Does he think that two of his earls are going to submit
+themselves to so gross an indignity?--we, who are as much masters
+in the north of England as he is in the south--and even that he
+owes to us. I have ridden over and seen Westmoreland, who is as
+indignant as we are, and we at once arranged the little matter in
+which we are at variance, and agreed upon common measures.</p>
+
+<p>"But this is not all. Seeing that the king absolutely refused to
+do to Mortimer the same service that he did to Lord Grey, whose
+ransom he has now paid--and who, by the way, has married
+Glendower's daughter, Jane--Mortimer's vassals, with some aid from
+ourselves, have raised the money required to free Mortimer. Now the
+king has interfered, and has given orders that such ransom shall
+not be paid. 'Tis evident that he determines to drive us to
+extremities.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you these things, in order that you may see how
+intolerable the condition of affairs has become. My father and
+myself believe that it is the judgment of heaven upon us, for
+having helped to dethrone King Richard, the lawful sovereign of
+this country, and to place this usurper on the throne. Even had
+Richard's conduct rendered his deposition necessary, we did wrong
+in passing over the lawful heir, the young Earl of March. 'Tis true
+he was but a child, at that time; but he is older now, and we feel
+shame that he should be kept as a prisoner, by Henry. Had not the
+king perjured himself, we should not have been led into this error;
+for, before we assisted him, he swore a great oath that he had no
+intention of gaining the throne, but only to regain his own dukedom
+of Lancaster. It was on that ground that we lent him our aid; and
+now, forsooth, this perjured usurper treats us, who made him, as
+dirt under his feet!</p>
+
+<p>"We are resolved to suffer it no longer; and since we may not
+ransom Mortimer, we will secure his freedom in other ways, and for
+this you may give us your aid."</p>
+
+<p>"Assuredly, Sir Henry, and my Lord Earl," Oswald, who was deeply
+indignant at the unworthy treatment of his lords, replied hotly.
+"My life is at your service."</p>
+
+<p>"I expected nothing else," Hotspur said, warmly. "The matter
+stands thus. Owen Glendower was a warm partisan of King Richard,
+and was one of the few who remained faithful to the end; thereby
+incurring the deep hostility of Henry, and of his adherent Lord
+Grey. It was for this his lands were unjustly seized, for this that
+Henry's parliament refused to accede to his complaints, and so
+drove him to take up arms. Thus, then, in an enterprise against
+Henry, Glendower is our natural ally; and we intend to propose to
+him that alliance, undertaking that, if he will give us aid, his
+claim to the crown of Wales shall be acknowledged, and that he
+shall govern his country without interference from England.</p>
+
+<p>"There is none who could carry out this negotiation so well as
+yourself, since you can, by virtue of that ring he gave you, pass
+unarmed to him; while any other knight would be assuredly slain.
+You will bear a letter, signed by the earl and myself, offering him
+our friendship and alliance, on those terms; and explain to him,
+more fully, the manner in which we have been driven to throw off
+Henry's authority. You can tell him that we shall proclaim the Earl
+of March lawful king; and if he agrees to join in our project,
+which would be clearly both to his liking and advantage, it would
+be as well that he should, as soon as we move, which may not be for
+some time yet, release Sir Edmund Mortimer; who, as the boy's
+uncle, will assuredly raise his vassals on his behalf, now that
+Henry has shown such animosity against him."</p>
+
+<p>"I will gladly undertake the mission, my lord; and all the more
+gladly, since it may lead to the liberation of Sir Edmund Mortimer,
+who treated me with the greatest kindness and condescension, during
+my stay at Ludlow."</p>
+
+<p>"Prepare to start tomorrow, then," the earl said. "The letter
+shall be ready for you tonight; and beyond what my son has told
+you, you can tell Glendower that we have good hopes of large help
+from Scotland; with whom, it is said, he is already in
+alliance."</p>
+
+<p>The next morning Oswald started, taking no one but Roger with
+him. He had, the evening before, told his squire only that he was
+starting on a journey; promising to tell him more, as they rode.
+Accordingly, when well away from Alnwick, he beckoned to Roger to
+bring up his horse alongside of him.</p>
+
+<p>"Where think you that we are going, Roger? I will give you fifty
+guesses, and would warrant that you would not come at the
+truth."</p>
+
+<p>"It matters nothing to me, master; so that I ride with you, I am
+content."</p>
+
+<p>"You know, Roger, how grievously the king has treated the
+Percys; how he has prevented their taking ransom for their
+prisoners, and has refused to ransom Sir Edmund Mortimer; how he,
+in bitter jest, offered the earl the estates of Douglas; and how he
+has put upon them the indignity of sending four men, of no import,
+to decide upon their difference with Westmoreland?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, Sir Oswald, everyone knows this, and not a few have
+wondered that the Percys have suffered these things, in
+quietness."</p>
+
+<p>"A fresh thing has happened, Roger. The tenants of Mortimer,
+with aid from the earl and Hotspur, have raised the sum that
+Glendower demanded as ransom; and now the king has laid on them his
+order, that this money is not to be paid."</p>
+
+<p>"By our Lady," Roger exclaimed wrathfully, "this is too much!
+Sir Edmund is a noble gentleman, and that the king should refuse to
+allow his friends to ransom him passes all bounds."</p>
+
+<p>"So the earl and Hotspur consider," Oswald said, "and, ere long,
+you will see that they will hoist the banner of the young Earl of
+March, and proclaim him King of England."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis good," Roger exclaimed, slapping his hand on his leg. "To
+me it matters nought who is King of England, but I always held that
+it was hard that King Richard should be deposed, and murdered, by
+one who was not even his lawful successor. I am not one to question
+the conduct of my lord, but I always thought that the Percys were
+wrong in bringing this usurper over."</p>
+
+<p>"They feel that themselves, Roger, and consider the ingratitude
+of the king to be a punishment upon them, for having aided him to
+the throne."</p>
+
+<p>"But what has this to do with your journey, master?"</p>
+
+<p>"It has much to do with it, Roger, seeing that I am on my way to
+Glendower, to offer him alliance with the Percys."</p>
+
+<p>"A good step!" Roger exclaimed. "We know that these Welsh can
+fight."</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, Roger, it may bring about the freeing of Mortimer;
+for the evil feeling the king has shown against him will surely
+drive him to raise all his vassals, and those of the young earl, in
+Herefordshire and elsewhere; and thus the Percys will gain two
+powerful allies, Glendower and Mortimer; and as they advance from
+the north, the Welsh and Mortimer will join them from the west.
+When victory is gained, there will be peace on the Welsh marches.
+Owen will be recognized for what he is, the King of Wales; and
+doubtless he will then suffer the English to live quietly there,
+just as the Welsh have lived quietly in England.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, too, all the western counties will see that it is their
+interest to side with Mortimer and Glendower. Four times, during
+the last three years, have they been called out, and forced to
+leave their homes to follow the king into Wales; and as often have
+had to return, leaving behind them many of their number. They will
+see that, if Glendower is acknowledged King of Wales, this hard and
+grievous service will no longer be required of them."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so, Sir Oswald, and in truth I like the project well.
+It matters not a straw to me who is king; but if a king treats my
+lords scurvily, I am ready to shout 'Down with him!' and to do my
+best to put another up in his place; though, indeed, 'tis a salve
+to my conscience to know that the man I am fighting against is a
+usurper, and one who has set himself up in the place of the lawful
+king."</p>
+
+<p>"My conscience in no way pricks me, Roger. I fight at my lord's
+order, against his foes. That is the duty I have sworn to. As
+between him and the king, 'tis a matter for him alone. At the same
+time, I am glad that the business is likely to end in the rescue of
+a knight who has been very kind to me. Between Henry and the young
+Earl of March I have no opinion; but it seems to me that, since
+Henry ascended to the throne by might, and by the popular voice, he
+has no cause to complain, if he is put out of it by the same
+means."</p>
+
+<p>"But, should the war go against the Percys, master?"</p>
+
+<p>"That, again, is a matter for the earl and Hotspur. They know
+what force they and the Earl of Westmoreland can put in the field.
+They know that Glendower can aid with ten thousand Welshmen, and
+that Mortimer can raise three or four thousand men from his
+vassals. They should know what help they can count on from
+Scotland; and doubtless, during the last six months, have made
+themselves acquainted with the general feeling respecting the king.
+It is upon them that the risk chiefly falls. We knights and
+men-at-arms may fall in the field of battle; but that is a risk
+that we know we have to face, when we take to the calling of arms.
+If our cause is lost, and we escape from the battlefield, we have
+but to depart to our holds or our villages, and we shall hear
+nought more of the affair; while our lords, if taken, would lose
+their heads. It will be a grief for us to lose masters we love, and
+to have to pay our quittance with money or service to a new lord;
+but beyond that, we risk nought save our lives in battle. Therefore
+I trouble myself, in no way, as to the matter between the Percys
+and the king, which I take it in no way concerns me; and am content
+to do my duty, and to render my service, as I have sworn to
+do."</p>
+
+<p>"It is well, Sir Oswald," Roger said, after a long pause, "that
+Glendower gave us those rings; for from all accounts he and his
+Welshmen are more furious than ever, and there would be small
+chance of our ever reaching him, without them. The chain did its
+work, last time. 'Tis not every Welshman who would stop to examine
+it before striking, and few who could read the inscription, if they
+did so; while 'tis like that most of them are well acquainted with
+Glendower's signet."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so; but nevertheless, Roger, it will be better, when we
+have once crossed the border, that you should ride behind me with a
+white flag displayed; as a token that we come, not for war, but on
+a peaceful mission. 'Tis probable, at any rate, that any band of
+Welshmen who may meet us will, in that case, before attacking, stop
+to inquire on what errand we come."</p>
+
+<p>They rode fast, for the earl had said that he needed to have the
+news of Glendower's decision, before proceeding further in the
+matter, and in four days arrived on the border. At Shrewsbury
+Oswald inquired, carelessly, of the host of the inn where he put
+up, where Glendower was now thought to be; as he intended to
+journey south to Hereford, and would fain know whether there was
+any risk of falling in with bands of the marauders.</p>
+
+<p>"Methinks, Sir Knight, that you may travel without uneasiness;
+seeing that the country between this and Hereford has been so
+harassed, by them, that there is nought to tempt them to cross the
+border, save with so large a force that they can invade Gloucester
+or Worcestershire. Men say, moreover, that Glendower is, at
+present, in Cardiganshire. There are still a few Welsh inhabitants
+here. They declare that they are loyal to the king, and love not
+their wild countrymen. Whether it is so, or not, I cannot say; but
+they certainly manage to keep up communications with the Welsh.
+This may be for a treacherous purpose, or it may be as they say;
+that, knowing that they and all belonging to them would be slain,
+should Glendower capture the town; they, for their own safety, try
+to learn his intentions and movements, in order to warn us, should
+a surprise be intended."</p>
+
+<p>Starting early the next morning, Oswald crossed into
+Montgomeryshire, by a road through Worktree Forest, so as to avoid
+both Ludlow and Welshpool; and kept along by a country track, near
+the border of Radnor, so passing south of Llanidloes. As soon as
+they had left Radnorshire, Roger fastened to his spear a white
+cloth they had brought from Shrewsbury; then they continued their
+journey west.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until they had crossed the Wye, here an insignificant
+stream, that they came upon a native of the country. They were
+following a track, between two rough hills covered with brushwood,
+when a man, evidently of the better class, stepped out before
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Knight," he said in English, "'tis a strange sight to see
+an Englishman, with one esquire, travelling alone by so wild and
+lonely a road as this; and strange, indeed, that he should bear a
+flag of truce; for were you here on your king's business, you would
+surely be attended with a braver show. I had notice, two hours ago,
+brought by one who had seen you cross the Wye; and in the bushes
+round lie fifty men who, did I raise my hand, would let fly their
+arrows against you. But if you have reason for your coming this
+way, assuredly we should not hinder you."</p>
+
+<p>Oswald held out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"This signet ring, sir, was given me by Glendower, who said that
+any Welshman to whom I might show it would act as my guide and
+escort to him. I come on an important mission, not from the king,
+but from one from whom Glendower may be glad to hear; therefore I
+pray you take me to him, or at least send a party of your men; for
+I might, peradventure, fall in with some who would shoot before
+they questioned."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis assuredly the prince's signet," the man said, after
+carefully examining it, "and right gladly will I escort you to him.
+He is, at present, at Aberystwith."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks for your courtesy, sir. To whom am I speaking?"</p>
+
+<p>"My name is Howel ap Ryddyn. You passed my abode, which cannot
+be seen from the road; and I would, were you not pressed for time,
+gladly entertain you; but if we push forward, we may reach
+Aberystwith before nightfall, and I make no question that would
+better suit your wishes."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, sir. My business is somewhat urgent, and I shall be
+glad to meet the prince, as soon as possible. Indeed, I should not
+be sorry to reach a spot where we can sup and sleep, seeing that we
+have twice slept in the woods, since we left Shrewsbury."</p>
+
+<p>The man called out an order, in Welsh. Four men at once issued
+from the bushes, and under their guidance the horsemen soon reached
+Aberystwith.</p>
+
+<p>"I had scarce expected this pleasure, Sir Oswald," Glendower
+said warmly, as the young knight entered. "To what good fortune do
+I owe your visit?</p>
+
+<p>"But no, 'tis but poor hospitality questioning thus, when it
+will be time enough to talk of such things, later."</p>
+
+<p>"And 'tis a matter that is best discussed in private," Oswald
+replied, in an undertone.</p>
+
+<p>"And how have you fared since we parted?"</p>
+
+<p>"Since I saw you, over a year ago, the time has passed quietly,
+save for the battle with the Scots; where, although we beat them,
+there was no credit gained by the knights and men-at-arms; seeing
+that the archers, alone, did the fighting."</p>
+
+<p>"So I heard. On our side, we have been busy ever since."</p>
+
+<p>"And successful, too, as I have heard."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, fortune has been in our favour. Lord Grey's ransom has
+been of much use to us and, having married my daughter Jane, he can
+no longer be considered a foe. Yet, to do him justice, he would not
+promise even to stand neutral; though, unless under special orders
+from the king, he will not draw his sword again. I love a stanch
+man; and though Grey has taken, as I consider, the wrong side, he
+stands to it faithfully. I offered him freedom, without ransom, if
+he would promise neutrality, and that, when I had put down all
+other opposition, he would hold his Welsh lands from me; but he
+refused, and said that he would rather remain in chains, all his
+life, than be false to his vows to Henry.</p>
+
+<p>"That was good, and I would that all Welshmen were as faithful.
+They take the oath to me one week, and make their peace with Henry
+the next. Nay, some, to please him, would go so far as to try to
+assassinate me. Two such plots have there been this year, and it
+was only that I wore a good mail shirt under my garments, that my
+life was saved from a bow shot, and from one who professed to be my
+warm friend, and who had taken bread with me, half an hour
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"It is destiny, Sir Oswald. The powers watch over me, and keep
+me from harm; and these will, I know, protect me to the end,
+against the stroke of English foes, or of Welsh traitors."</p>
+
+<p>After supper was over, Glendower led Oswald to his private
+chamber.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Sir Oswald, you can speak freely. I have placed a guard
+outside the door, and there is no fear of interruption. Do you come
+on your own account, or from another?"</p>
+
+<p>"I come from the Earl of Northumberland, and his son Sir Henry
+Percy; and am charged, in the first place, to deliver this letter
+to you; and then to give you such further intelligence, as to the
+matter, as it may be needful for you to know."</p>
+
+<p>"From the Percys!" Glendower said, in surprise, as he cut the
+silk that held the roll together.</p>
+
+<p>His countenance expressed great surprise, as he read the
+contents.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no snare in this?" he said suddenly, after reading it
+through two or three times, and looking sharply at Oswald. "'Tis
+not from the Percys, who, more than any other, assisted the usurper
+to the throne, that I should have looked for such an offer."</p>
+
+<p>"I should be the last to bring such a letter to you, Glendower,
+were there aught behind what is written. The earl and Hotspur spoke
+of the matter at length to me. They regret, now, the part they took
+in enthroning Henry; at whose hands they have now received such
+indignities that they are resolved, if it may be, to undo their
+work, and to place the lawful king, the young Earl of March, on the
+throne."</p>
+
+<p>He then related the various complaints that the Percys had
+against the king, and told Glendower that the matter had been
+brought to a head by Henry's refusal to allow them to pay the
+ransom that had been collected for Sir Edmund Mortimer.</p>
+
+<p>"Whom have they with them?" Glendower asked, after listening in
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>"They have the Earl of Westmoreland, who, like themselves, is
+greatly offended at the appointment of four commissioners, men of
+no standing or position, to judge between two of the great barons
+of England; blood relations, too, whose difference is on a matter
+of but small importance. No other name was mentioned before me, but
+the earl stated that he looked for much assistance from
+Scotland."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay! As they hold in their hands Douglas, and the Regent's
+son, Moray, and Angus, they may well make terms with Scotland. Yes,
+it is a very great plot, and since I can get no ransom for
+Mortimer, and he can raise some three or four thousand men, he
+would be of more value to us free than as a prisoner."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not only that," Oswald said. "The fact that he, as young
+March's uncle, should head his following and raise his banner, will
+show that the Percys and you are not using young March's name as a
+mere pretext for taking up arms. If Mortimer, the head of his house
+during his minority, and guardian of his estates, were with them,
+men would see that 'tis really a struggle to place the lawful king
+on the throne; and many would join who, did they think it was but
+an affair between the Percys, of whom they know but little in the
+south, and you, whom they have been taught to consider a rebel,
+would stand aloof."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis well thought of, and the project pleases me. Even without
+such allies, I may hold my mountains and continue my warfare, but
+there could be neither peace nor prosperity for years; but with the
+overthrow of the usurper, and my acknowledgment as King of Wales,
+and of the entire independence of the country, from the Dee to the
+Severn, the freedom of my country might be permanently secured.</p>
+
+<p>"But I will give no certain answer, tonight. 'Tis a matter to be
+turned over in my mind, as it seems to me that I may gain much good
+by the alliance; and that, even if the Percys fail in their
+enterprise, I can be no worse off than I am, at present."</p>
+
+<p>It was not until the following evening that Glendower gave a
+decided answer.</p>
+
+<p>"I accept Percy's offer," he said. "I have thought it over in
+every way; even putting aside the benefits, to my country and
+myself, I would enter upon it; were it but for the satisfaction of
+seeing the usurper, and murderer of my dear master, King Richard,
+have the same measure meted out to him that he gave to his
+sovereign. Tonight I will write an answer to the Percys, for you to
+bear to them. Tomorrow morning I will ride, with you, to the
+stronghold where Mortimer is at present held in durance; and if he
+consents to join us, I will give him his freedom, without
+ransom."</p>
+
+<p>They started the next morning, early; and at noon arrived at a
+strong house, lying in the heart of the hills.</p>
+
+<p>"It were best that you should see him first, Sir Oswald, and
+explain the matter to him. After that, I will meet him with
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Great was the astonishment of Sir Edmund, when Oswald was
+ushered into the little room in which he was confined. It was some
+ten feet square, furnished with a pallet, chair, and small table.
+The window was very strongly barred, and Oswald observed, with
+pain, that his ten months' imprisonment had told very heavily upon
+Mortimer.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Oswald! Ah! I see I should say Sir Oswald. What brings you
+here? Some good news, I trust. Has my ransom been collected?"</p>
+
+<p>"It has been collected, Sir Edmund," Oswald said, as they shook
+hands, "but the king, who refused altogether to pay your ransom, as
+he did Lord Grey's, has forbidden the money, raised partly by your
+tenants and partly by the tenants of your nephew, to be handed
+over. 'Tis clear that he views you as an enemy; and has, indeed,
+ventured to declare his belief that your capture by Glendower was a
+thing arranged, beforehand."</p>
+
+<p>"He lies!" Sir Edmund exclaimed angrily. "We fought stoutly and,
+had it not been for the treachery of the Welsh bowmen, should have
+won the day.</p>
+
+<p>"Then how stands the matter, Sir Oswald, and how is it that you
+are here?"</p>
+
+<p>Oswald then related the purport of his mission, and gave
+Mortimer some messages with which Hotspur had charged him, on the
+evening before he started.</p>
+
+<p>"Assuredly I will join," Sir Edmund exclaimed, when Oswald
+brought his story to a conclusion. "Have I not suffered enough by
+keeping a force on foot, by having my lands harried and my vassals
+slain, in order to support Henry's claims to the kingdom of Wales,
+only to be suspected of treachery? Had I intended to join
+Glendower, I should have done so a year before; and with my force
+and his, we could have kept Henry at bay. Why should I have kept up
+the pretext of loyalty, when there was nought to have prevented my
+joining Glendower? Why should I have fought him, at the cost of the
+lives of some twelve hundred of my men, when I could have marched
+them into his camp, as friends? Why should I suffer nine months of
+close imprisonment, at the hands of an ally?</p>
+
+<p>"Henry lied, and knew that he lied, when he brought such a
+charge against me. He wished to be able to work his will on the
+young earl, and maybe to murder him as he murdered Richard, without
+there being one powerful enough to lift his voice to condemn the
+murder. All is at an end between us, and henceforth I am his open
+enemy, as he is mine; and would be heart and soul with the Percys
+in the overthrow of Henry, even if my nephew were not concerned,
+and did the earl purpose, himself, to grasp the crown."</p>
+
+<p>"Glendower is below, Sir Edmund, and will himself speak to you;
+but he thought that it were best that I should first open the
+matter to you."</p>
+
+<p>A quarter of an hour later the keeper of the hold came up, and
+said that the prince bade Sir Edmund to descend and speak with him.
+As they entered the room where Glendower was waiting, the latter
+glanced at Oswald, inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"The matter is settled," the latter said. "Sir Edmund will join
+us, with heart and hand."</p>
+
+<p>"I am indeed glad to hear it, Sir Oswald.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Edmund Mortimer," he went on, courteously, "hitherto we
+have regarded each other as enemies; henceforth we are friends, and
+you are my guest and not my prisoner. I have thought it over, and
+methinks that you must tarry here, till we have certain news of the
+day on which the Percys will set on foot their enterprise. It would
+not be safe for you to return to your estates, until you are in a
+position to call your vassals to arms at once; for the king, were
+he to hear that you were at Ludlow, might call on the lieutenants
+of the western counties, and the owners of all the castles, to
+attack you at once. Therefore, until it is time to strike, it were
+best that you should remain with me.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not propose that you should accompany me on my
+expeditions, for to do so might do harm across the border. I will,
+therefore, assign you a suitable house at Aberystwith, with such
+attendance and furnishing as are due to a guest of your
+quality.</p>
+
+<p>"The prospect seems to be a fair one. The northern lords, aided
+by the Scots, should by themselves be a match for any gathering
+Henry could collect at short notice; and, joined by my forces and
+yours, should surely be able to overthrow all opposition."</p>
+
+<p>"So it appears to me," Sir Edmund said. "'Tis indeed a powerful
+confederation and, if all goes well, ought to leave no option to
+the usurper but to die in battle, or to fly to France."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you return with us to Aberystwith, Sir Oswald?" Glendower
+presently asked the young knight.</p>
+
+<p>"I will ride straight for England, with your permission," Oswald
+said. "I am already thirty miles on my way, and the Percys urged me
+to return as soon as possible."</p>
+
+<p>"So be it. As soon as we have dined, an officer and four
+horsemen will be in readiness to ride with you, as an escort."</p>
+
+<p>A week later Oswald reached Alnwick. He was the bearer of
+letters from Glendower and Mortimer, and was able to report the
+complete success of his mission. As a mark of his satisfaction, the
+earl ordered a deed of gift to be made to him, of a large strip of
+land extending over the hills between Stoubes and Yardhope.</p>
+
+<p>"Some day," he said, as he handed the document to him, "you
+will be master of Yardhope, and by thus joining that feu to that of
+Stoubes, you will have an estate that will make you a power in the
+upper glades of Reddesdale and Coquetdale; and will support the
+dignity of a knight banneret, which I now bestow upon you, and also
+appoint you a deputy warden of the marches, with power of life and
+death over all marauders, reivers, and outlaws. I have long felt
+that it would be well that there should be one who, in case of
+necessity, could raise a hundred spears; and so prevent bodies of
+marauders, from the other side of the border, making sudden
+irruptions into the dales; and from what I have heard of you, from
+Sir Henry, I am sure that you will carry out the charge most
+worthily."</p>
+
+<p>The new acquisition would not very largely increase Oswald's
+revenues, for the greater portion of the grant was hill and moor.
+Nevertheless, there were a good many houses and small villages
+scattered in the dales, and it was these that raised the tract of
+land to the value of a knight's feu.</p>
+
+<p>In point of position, however, it was a large addition. As a
+knight banneret, with the castle of Stoubes at one end of his
+holding, and the hold of Yardhope at the other, he would occupy an
+important position on the border; and could raise at least a
+hundred spears among his tenants, in addition to the men-at-arms of
+the two strongholds.</p>
+
+<p>Three days later Hotspur released the whole of his Scottish
+prisoners; and sent them, under escort, to the border. The Percys
+now began, in earnest, their preparations for war. For greater
+convenience Hotspur went down to Morpeth, while the earl betook
+himself to Berwick-on-Tweed, where he could confer more easily with
+his Scottish allies; who, on their part, were carrying out the
+condition on which they had been released without ransom; namely,
+that they would join their forces to those of the Percys.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald made another journey to Wales, this time by ship from
+Carlisle to Aberystwith, and there acquainted Glendower and
+Mortimer with the preparations that had been made, assuring them
+that the rising would take place at the end of May. He also asked
+Glendower to raise as large an army as possible, without delay; and
+Sir Edmund Mortimer to betake himself at once to Hereford, there to
+raise his banner and summon his vassals, and those of the Earl of
+March, to join him--the king having, on his return from his last
+expedition, entered Ludlow, seized Mortimer's plate and other
+property, and appointed to the governorship of Ludlow a knight on
+whose devotion he could rely.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Ch21">Chapter 21</a>: Shrewsbury.</h2>
+
+<p>The Percys' preparations could not be carried on without
+exciting attention; and in March the king, seeing that the open
+defiance of his authority, by the release of the Scottish
+prisoners, would assuredly be followed by armed rebellion, which
+the Douglas would probably have pledged himself to aid as the
+condition of his release, began, on his side, to make similar
+preparations. Levies were called out, and the Prince of Wales was
+appointed to the command of the Welsh marches, and the governorship
+of Wales.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of June Douglas, faithful to his agreement,
+crossed the frontier; and was at once joined by Hotspur, with the
+force he had gathered. Hotspur's father was lying sick at Berwick,
+but was to follow, as speedily as possible, with the army collected
+in the north of the county, and from Dunbar's estates.</p>
+
+<p>It had been arranged that Glendower should meet the allies at
+Lichfield; and on his being joined by his uncle, the Earl of
+Westmoreland, with his following, Hotspur marched south. His
+intention was, after effecting a junction with Glendower, to march
+and give battle to the army with which Henry and the Prince of
+Wales were advancing against him. At Lichfield, however, he learned
+that Glendower had not completed his preparations in sufficient
+time to join him. He therefore changed his direction, and made for
+Shrewsbury, towards which place Glendower was marching.</p>
+
+<p>Percy's array had swollen as he went south. He had been joined
+by a number of archers, from Cheshire, and by other adherents of
+the late king; these regarding the war as an attempt, not to place
+the Earl of March upon the throne, but to overthrow the usurper who
+had dethroned their king.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald rode with sixty spearmen from his own estate; while his
+father, with thirty men from Yardhope, rode in his company. Both
+regarded the failure of Glendower to come to the place appointed as
+a serious misfortune.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," Oswald said, "if he joins us at Shrewsbury, before
+the king comes up, it will not matter much; and indeed would be, in
+one respect, the better. Mortimer with his force will be coming on;
+and though he is scarce likely to arrive at Shrewsbury in time for
+the battle, for he could not leave Wales, to summon his levies to
+the field, until the Prince of Wales had drawn off his force and
+marched to join his father; his reinforcement, afterwards, will
+fill up the gaps in our ranks, and be a great assistance, should
+Henry be able to rally another army in the Midlands. He cannot hope
+to do so before we reach London."</p>
+
+<p>"That sounds fairly, Oswald, but 'tis always better to carry out
+the plans you have made; and this absence of Glendower, at the
+point arranged, to my mind augurs ill."</p>
+
+<p>Henry was an able general. Believing that the Percys would make
+for the Welsh border, he had posted himself at Burton-on-Trent; but
+as soon as he heard that they had changed their course he started
+for Shrewsbury, and marched so quickly that he arrived there before
+Hotspur, thus throwing himself between the Percys and the
+Welsh.</p>
+
+<p>Hotspur, on arriving near the town, was enraged at hearing that
+Glendower had not arrived, according to his promise. The king's
+army was encamped on the eastern side of the town, and the northern
+forces took post a short distance away. That night Hotspur sent a
+document into the royal camp, declaring Henry to be forsworn and
+perjured: in the first place because he had sworn, under Holy
+Gospel, that he would claim nothing but his own proper inheritance,
+and that Richard should reign to the end of his life; secondly,
+because he had raised taxes and other impositions, contrary to his
+oath, and by his own arbitrary power; thirdly, because he had
+caused King Richard to be kept in the castle of Pontefract, without
+meat, drink, or fire, whereof he perished of hunger, thirst, and
+cold. There were other clauses, some of them regarding his conduct
+to Sir Edmund Mortimer. The claims of the young Earl of March to
+the throne were also set forward, and the document ended with a
+defiance.</p>
+
+<p>Henry simply sent, as reply, that he had no time to lose in
+writing; but that he would, in the morning, prove in battle whose
+claims were false and feigned.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, in the morning, when the two armies were arrayed
+in the order of battle, the king sent the Abbot of Shrewsbury to
+propose an amicable arrangement. Hotspur and Douglas, however,
+rejected the offer. The trumpets then blew on either side, and the
+armies joined battle.</p>
+
+<p>Their numbers were about equal. Each consisted of some fourteen
+thousand men. Douglas and Hotspur had taken their place in the
+centre of their line, having behind them a party of their best
+knights. These charged with fury down upon the king's standard,
+which stood in the centre of his array. Hotspur and Douglas, his
+former rival, were accounted two of the best knights in
+Christendom, and the fury of their charge was irresistible. The
+centre of the royal line was cleft in sunder, the king's guards
+were at once dispersed; and, had not Henry taken the precaution of
+arraying himself in plain armour, while two of his knights had put
+on royal surcoats, the battle would at once have been decided.</p>
+
+<p>As it was, the two knights were both killed, as were the Earl of
+Stafford and Sir Walter Blount. The royal standard was overthrown,
+and the young Prince of Wales sorely wounded in the face.</p>
+
+<p>He had already shown signs of great military talent; and, in
+spite of his wound, now showed a courage and presence of mind that
+justified the confidence his father had shown, in giving him
+important commands. He rode hither and thither among the
+disorganized troops, saw that the gap in the centre was again
+closed up, and was ever to be met where the fight was hottest.</p>
+
+<p>The impetuous charge of Hotspur and Douglas was the ruin of
+themselves, and their army. Had they paused until their troops had
+advanced close to the enemy, and the mounted men-at-arms were all
+ranged closely behind them, and in a position to support them, the
+fight would assuredly have speedily terminated in their favour; but
+before these arrived the royal army had closed its ranks, and the
+rebel leaders, with all their principal knights, were cut off from
+the main body. In vain the men of the north tried to cut their way
+through the southern ranks, and to come to the assistance of their
+chiefs; who, surrounded now by the English knights and men-at-arms,
+were fighting desperately against overwhelming numbers.</p>
+
+<p>An hour after the battle began, many parties of Welshmen came up
+and joined in the conflict; but the absence of leaders, and the
+loss of their respective captains, Hotspur and Douglas, paralysed
+the efforts of the Northumbrians and the Scottish contingent. Yet
+both fought stoutly, and suffered very heavy losses.</p>
+
+<p>For upwards of two hours Hotspur maintained the unequal fight;
+but at length an arrow pierced Hotspur's visor, and he fell dead
+from his horse. Further resistance was useless, and the survivors
+of the group, which had been reduced to a mere handful,
+surrendered. For another half hour the main battle raged; then came
+the news that Hotspur was killed, and Douglas and Westmoreland
+prisoners; the English horsemen dashed down on the flanks of the
+northern line, the spearmen pressed forward, and the Scotch and
+Northumbrians broke and fled.</p>
+
+<p>When the knights first charged, Oswald had been with his own
+following, and a hundred other horsemen, on the left flank. As soon
+as he saw what had happened, he endeavoured to ride round the right
+flank of the royal army; but was met by a much larger force of
+men-at-arms and, after hard fighting, driven back. Oswald himself,
+with Roger on one hand and his father on the other, had several
+times hewed his way deep into the enemy's squadron; and would have
+been cut off, had not the Yardhope moss troopers spurred furiously
+in to the rescue, and brought them all off again.</p>
+
+<p>Several times the charge was renewed, but ineffectually. Half
+the rebel army had been killed; and when, at last, the infantry
+broke, and it was clear that there was no more to be done, Oswald,
+who was wounded in half a dozen places, called the survivors of his
+troop to follow him; and, with his party, rode off in good
+order.</p>
+
+<p>A mile from the field they halted for a few minutes. Not one of
+them but had been more or less severely wounded in the desperate
+melee. They now took off their armour, and bandaged each other's
+wounds; and then, mounting again, they rode off.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you say, Father," Oswald asked; "shall we circle round,
+and join Glendower? We know that his army is close at hand and,
+were they to attack tonight, they should win an easy victory; for
+the king's men have suffered well nigh as sorely as we have."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Oswald; we have done enough. We have not been fighting for
+the Earl of March. We have been simply following our feudal lord,
+as we were bound to do. He is dead, and we have nought to do with
+this quarrel. What is it to us whether March or Henry is king?"</p>
+
+<p>They were not pursued. The greater part of the English cavalry
+were exhausted by their exertions against Hotspur and Douglas.
+Their loss was extremely heavy, and those in a condition to pursue
+took up the comparatively easy work of cutting down the flying
+footmen.</p>
+
+<p>The battle had been a disastrous one, for both sides. Their
+losses were about even, the number who fell altogether being put at
+ten thousand men. With Douglas, the Earl of Westmoreland, Baron of
+Kinderton, Sir Richard Vernon, and other knights were captured.
+Westmoreland, Kinderton, and Vernon were at once executed on the
+field of battle, as rebels; but Douglas, as a foreign knight, was
+simply viewed as a prisoner of war, and was kindly treated.</p>
+
+<p>Glendower took no advantage of the opportunity for striking a
+blow at the royal army; and instead of attacking it, when spent by
+fatigue and encumbered with wounds, retired at once to Wales. Had
+he, instead of doing this, marched to meet Sir Edmund Mortimer, who
+was hurrying forward with a powerful array, the united force would
+have been fully double the strength of the English army; and a
+great commander would, at once, have fought a battle that would
+probably have altered the whole course of events in England.
+Glendower's conduct here showed that, although an able partisan
+leader in an irregular warfare, he had no claim whatever to be
+considered a great general.</p>
+
+<p>Travelling rapidly, Oswald and his party crossed the Tyne; and
+hearing that the earl, now recovered from his illness, was marching
+down with his army to join his son, they rode to meet him. It was a
+painful duty that Oswald had to discharge, and the old earl, when
+he heard of the defeat of the army, the death of the son to whom he
+was deeply attached, and the capture of his brother, the Earl of
+Westmoreland, gave way to despair, dismissed his army to their
+homes at once, and retired, completely broken down in body and
+spirit, to his castle at Warkworth.</p>
+
+<p>So depressed was he that when royal messengers arrived,
+summoning him in the king's name to surrender, and journey with him
+to London, he instantly obeyed. When questioned by the king why he
+had displayed the banner of revolt against him, he said he had done
+so on the urging of Hotspur; and the king, who was always inclined
+to leniency, when leniency was safe, pardoned him, and permitted
+him to retain his dignity and estates.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald speedily recovered from his wounds, but his father
+suffered much.</p>
+
+<p>"I have fought my last fight, Oswald," he said, when his son
+rode over to see him, a few days after their return from the south.
+"I say not that I am about to die, but only that methinks I shall
+never be able to wield sword manfully again. I have talked the
+matter over with your mother, and she agrees with me that it were
+well that I handed over Yardhope to you. I do not mean that I
+should leave the old place--for generations my fathers have lived
+and died here, and I would fain do the same--but that I should hand
+over to you the feu, and you should take oath for it to
+Northumberland, and lead its retainers in the field. Were it that
+there was a chance of another raid by the Bairds, I would still
+maintain my hold myself; but their power was altogether broken, at
+Homildon.</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, the border Scots and we are at peace now, as we have
+not been so long as memories run; seeing that we have fought side
+by side against the King of England, and have suffered the same
+misfortune in defeat; therefore, I can hang up my sword.</p>
+
+<p>"But for you there may be more fighting. From what I know of the
+old earl, I am sure that he will never forgive Hotspur's death; and
+although, at present, he is reinstated in his estates, there can be
+no doubt that the king will strike further blows against the power
+of the Percys. Northumberland is a valiant soldier, tenacious in
+his purposes, and lasting in his hatreds. Had it not been that he
+was utterly broken by the news that we brought him, he would
+assuredly have marched down with his army, and tried to join
+Glendower and Mortimer; and at least have died fighting, the end
+that he would best like. I doubt not that we shall see his banner
+raised again, ere long."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope not, Father. The undertaking would be desperate."</p>
+
+<p>"However that may be, Oswald, as I can no longer render service
+for the feu, I wish to hand it over to you. 'Tis but a nominal
+change, but I should like to see the estate yours. I and my fathers
+have held our own, and were content to do so, adding somewhat to
+our means by such plunder as we could carry off from Scotland; but
+you have greatly advanced the family, and as a deputy warden of the
+marches, it is as well that Yardhope should be added to your
+holding. I should be glad, too, to have you known as Sir Oswald
+Forster of Yardhope, and not as Sir Oswald Forster of Stoubes; and
+in time, if things go well with you, I charge you to build a castle
+here, in place of this hold; which has been good enough for plain
+men like myself and my father, but which is no fit residence for
+the estate you now hold.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean to say that I wish you always to live here, for,
+maybe, Stoubes is a more pleasant abode, standing in a fair
+country, and with the climate somewhat less hard than this; but I
+should like you to come up here, at times, and to be known as
+Forster of Yardhope."</p>
+
+<p>"I will carry out your wishes, Father; but it would please me
+more for things to remain as they have been."</p>
+
+<p>"My plan is best, lad. I shall be seneschal here for you, and
+little will be changed; save that you will ride at the head of the
+retainers, instead of myself. 'Tis not meet that I should hold the
+feu, when I can no longer render due service.</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother is wholly of opinion that I have done enough of
+fighting for my life, and should trouble myself no longer with
+raidings and wars. Your mother has shown sound judgment, and her
+advice has generally been good; though I never fully recognized
+this, till I saw what great good had come of her wishing you to
+learn to read and write; for it is to that, to no small extent,
+that you owe your rapid rise and present dignity."</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, a few days later, Oswald rode with his father to
+Warkworth, to which castle the earl had returned after his visit to
+England. At the request of John Forster he received back the feu
+from him, and appointed his son to it. This done, Oswald rode to
+pay a visit to his cousins; while his father returned to Yardhope,
+with two retainers he had brought with him.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald had not seen Adam Armstrong, since the latter had come to
+Yardhope after the rescue of his daughters; and he was received by
+him with the greatest warmth, as also by Allan, who, although now
+nearly recovered from his wounds, had, fortunately for himself, not
+gained sufficient strength to be able to accompany Douglas, either
+to Homildon or in his march into England to join Percy.</p>
+
+<p>The girls were out when he rode up; but, upon their return, both
+showed the greatest pleasure, Jessie being the most demonstrative
+in her welcome.</p>
+
+<p>"It has always been a sore subject with me, Oswald," Allan said,
+"that you should have ridden away in that gallant enterprise to
+rescue my sisters, while I was lying here helpless; and knew,
+indeed, nought of it, until after you had taken them safely to
+Yardhope.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! Roger, I am glad to see you again; and to thank you, too,
+for the share you took in it."</p>
+
+<p>"In faith, Master Allan, there are no great thanks due. It was
+but a poor affair, and I had but one opportunity, and that not
+worth naming, of striking a hearty blow. It seems to me that these
+things are never fairly divided. Both in that adventure, and at
+Homildon, I scarce struck a blow; while in that affair in Wales,
+and at Shrewsbury, there was even more fighting than I cared for. I
+had to be nursed like a child after the first, and I am still stiff
+from the wounds that I got in the second.</p>
+
+<p>"There should be reason in such matters. It vexed me sorely that
+we had to ride away from the Bairds, without striking a few good
+blows in part payment of their raid here."</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad that you did not have to do so," Janet said. "I
+think there was quite enough excitement in it, and especially as we
+went down that rope; though indeed, you are so strong that I felt
+that I was quite safe with you."</p>
+
+<p>Roger laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I could have carried two of you; and sooth, you did not show
+your confidence at the time, for you held on so tightly to the rope
+that I began to think that we should never get to the bottom."</p>
+
+<p>"You told me to hold tight," Janet said, indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, that was natural enough. The difficulty was, that you
+would not let go, and at each knot it was as much as I could do to
+get you to let it slide through your fingers."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, Master Roger. Then I shall take care not to let you
+lower me down a rope again."</p>
+
+<p>"I trust there will never be the need," Roger laughed; "but
+indeed, although your weight was as nothing, I felt uneasy myself
+as we went down; for I feared that I might grip you too tightly,
+seeing that I am altogether unaccustomed to the handling of
+girls."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I suppose, Roger," Jessie said, "that now the wars are
+over, you will be marrying and settling down."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know how that might be," Roger replied, slowly. "I do
+not say that the matter has never entered my mind; and seeing that
+I am now seven-and-thirty, 'tis one that should not be much longer
+delayed. I mean not that I have ever thought as to who should be
+the woman, but I have thought whether, when the time comes that Sir
+Oswald takes him a wife, it would not be well that I should do the
+same.</p>
+
+<p>"But I know not how I stand. The abbot of Alnwick has, so far,
+allowed me to go out into the world, to unfrock myself, and to
+become a man-at-arms instead of a peaceful monk; but I have not
+been dispensed from my vows of celibacy and, were I to marry, the
+matter might be taken up by the Church, and I might be put to many
+and sore penances, and punishments, for the breach of them."</p>
+
+<p>The others all laughed at the seriousness with which Roger had
+answered the girl's jesting remark.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a matter that I have never thought of before, Roger,"
+Oswald said; "but assuredly it would, as you say, be fitting and
+right that, when I take a mistress, you should do so also--like
+master like man, you know. Since your thoughts have been turned
+that way, I will see the abbot, next time I go to Alnwick, and lay
+the case before him. Of a truth you have made a most excellent
+man-at-arms, and 'tis equally certain that you were an exceedingly
+bad monk. It would doubtless be well that you should obtain a
+complete absolution from your vows; for although I am sure that the
+good abbot regards you, now, as altogether beyond his control, and
+would take no steps against you were he to hear of your marriage,
+it might not be so in the case of his successor. He is an old man,
+and the next abbot may be of a very different character; and,
+looking through the books of the convent, he might say, 'What has
+become of Brother Roger? I see no record of his death.'</p>
+
+<p>"Then, pushing matters further, he might discover your
+backsliding, and might summon you before him, and there is no
+saying what pains and penalties he might inflict upon you."</p>
+
+<p>Roger moved uneasily in his seat.</p>
+
+<a id="PicL" />
+<center>
+<img src="images/l.jpg" alt=
+"Do not speak of such a thing, I pray you, master"
+/> </center>
+
+<p>"Do not speak of such a thing, I pray you, master--imprisonment
+in a cell, flagellation, nay, even worse might befall me at the
+hands of a rigorous abbot; for in truth, nought could well be more
+serious than the offences that I have already committed; and he
+might hold that, even though the present abbot had been backward in
+taking notice of the matter, this in no way would absolve him from
+doing his duty.</p>
+
+<p>"And indeed, as it is, it was to Hotspur that he gave permission
+for me to go out into the world. Hotspur is dead, and there is
+nought but my own word in the matter."</p>
+
+<p>"That, at any rate, I can put right, Roger, by going myself to
+the abbot; and learning, from his lips, that he did give that
+permission to Hotspur. Moreover, I received it from Hotspur's own
+lips. Still, it would be useful for me to obtain, from the abbot, a
+letter giving full absolution for all offences committed, up to the
+present time."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be a great thing," Roger said eagerly. "'Tis a
+matter that I have often turned over in my mind, when on a long
+day's ride, and I have thought of what might happen were a new man
+to become abbot of Alnwick; but such an absolution would assuredly
+go for much. No one can doubt, more especially an abbot, that
+absolution by an abbot is most effectual; and that the offences
+committed before it are wholly wiped out, and cannot be
+revived."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be best to obtain total absolution from your vows. Can
+the abbot grant that, Roger?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a moot question," Roger replied. "Many affirm that he can
+do so, and assuredly many abbots have exercised that power; others
+again hold that, although abbots cannot lawfully do so, bishops
+can; while a few maintain that even these are incapable, and that
+nothing short of the absolution by the Holy Father himself is of
+avail. Still, whatever be the true state of things, I should be
+well satisfied with an abbot's absolution, and still more so by a
+bishop's; for though, were a great prince concerned, someone
+interested might contest the matter, none would be likely to do so
+in the case of a man-at-arms or an esquire."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, Roger. Then I will endeavour to obtain a full
+absolution from your vows, by the abbot; and should he decline to
+give them I will, when I next see the earl, pray him, in
+consideration of the good services that you have rendered, to
+obtain it for you from the bishop."</p>
+
+<p>"And you have not yourself thought of marrying, Oswald?" Adam
+Armstrong said.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, Uncle. I came of age but a few days since, and it will be
+time to think of taking me a wife four or five years hence. So,
+until these troubles have wholly ceased, it were better, methinks,
+for a knight to remain unwed than to take a wife, with the risk of
+leaving her a young widow."</p>
+
+<p>"In that case, Oswald, methinks there would be little marrying
+in Northumberland; for, saving short truces, and these but ill
+observed, there is ever trouble on the border."</p>
+
+<p>"I speak not of that," Oswald replied. "Doubtless we shall
+always be subject to border raids, on both sides, and even to
+serious wars between the two countries; but I speak not of that,
+but of troubles in England. 'Tis natural to fight when Englishmen
+and Scotchmen meet, arrayed in battle; but when Englishmen meet
+Englishmen, 'tis terrible indeed; and though the slaughter at
+Shrewsbury was great beyond measure, who yet can say that the fire
+is extinguished? As long as one may be called to arms again, by the
+earl, it is, in good sooth, better to remain single than to have to
+ride to the wars, leaving the young wife behind."</p>
+
+<p>"Spoken very wisely and well, Oswald," Adam Armstrong laughed.
+"'Tis well to argue as to policy; but such arguments go for nought,
+as soon as a man's heart is fixed on any particular woman."</p>
+
+<p>"It may be so, Uncle; but as I have never thought of marriage, I
+am able to look at the matter dispassionately."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! Well, the time will come, Oswald, and you will then
+speedily come to consider that there are other things than the
+reasonableness of waiting to be considered.</p>
+
+<p>"By the way, I trust that, should England invade Scotland again
+by the valley of the Esk, you will not forget our debt to the
+Bairds. Though I lamented the disaster at Homildon, where many of
+my friends and acquaintances fell; I could not but feel that the
+death of William Baird, and so many of his kin, was a relief,
+indeed, to me. I have strengthened my hold, as you see, but I
+should have been ever obliged to remain on guard. The Bairds never
+forgive nor forget, and the manner in which they were tricked out
+of their captives must have discomposed them sorely, and rankled in
+their minds; and, sooner or later, they would have tried to wipe
+out the memory in blood. I wonder that they had not done it before
+Homildon, but doubtless they had other matters in hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I can live in peace; but I, too, have not forgotten the
+injuries I have suffered at their hands, and should rejoice,
+greatly, did I hear that their stronghold had been levelled to the
+ground."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope that it will be long before our kings march against
+Scotland again. The ill success of all our efforts should have
+taught them that, do what they will, they will never conquer
+Scotland; and Henry is not likely to court another failure, such as
+he met with two years since. 'Tis not like the wars with the Welsh.
+They are a different people, speaking in a different language,
+while we and the lowland Scots are of one blood and one
+language--scarce a noble in Scotland who is not of Norman
+descent--and a quarrel between us seems, to me, almost as bad as a
+civil war."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope that all will come to think so, some day, Oswald; but as
+long as the two kingdoms stand apart, with various interests and
+different alliances, it will hardly be likely that there will be a
+permanent peace between them."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so," Oswald agreed. "'Tis the part that Scotland plays
+by her alliance with France, and the aid she gives her by always
+choosing the time when we are fighting there to fall upon us, that
+keeps the trouble afoot. If Scotland would hold herself aloof from
+France, I see no reason why we should interfere with her in any
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"No good has ever come to us from such alliance. No French army
+has ever gone to Scotland, to aid her when pressed by Englishmen.
+France uses Scotland but as a cat's paw, with which to annoy and
+weaken England."</p>
+
+<p>"That may be so; but you must remember that France does aid
+Scotland, when she keeps the main army of England busily
+occupied."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but she does not fight England with that intent. She
+simply fights to gain back the provinces she has lost, and is ready
+to make peace when it suits, wholly regardless of the interest of
+Scotland."</p>
+
+<p>"France is never to be trusted," Oswald said. "Glendower made a
+treaty with her, a few years ago, and what good has it done to him?
+Why, when he needed her aid the most, she had made a truce with
+England. 'Tis whispered that she made a treaty with the Percys, and
+what good came of it? She is ever ready to make treaties, but never
+observes them, unless it is to her plain interest to do so."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it is with nations as it is with individuals, Oswald.
+Selfishness has a large share in the management of affairs. France,
+being a powerful country, is glad enough, when pressed by the
+English, to have diversions made for her, whether in Scotland or
+Ireland; but she has no idea of putting herself out, for the sake
+of her allies, when she desires peace with England."</p>
+
+<p>France had indeed been quick to take advantage of the trouble
+caused to Henry by the rising in the north. While he was gathering
+his army, although there was a truce with England, a French
+expedition, in which many of the royal princes took part, had
+invaded Guienne, captured several castles held by the English
+adherents, made frequent descents on our coast, plundered every
+ship they met with, captured a whole fleet of merchantmen, taken
+the islands of Guernsey and Jersey and, while Henry was fighting at
+Shrewsbury, landed near Plymouth and plundered the whole country
+round. On the news reaching them of the result of the battle of
+Shrewsbury, they at once burned Plymouth to the ground, and then,
+re-embarking, sailed for France. All remonstrances on the part of
+Henry were met by declarations that these raids were carried on
+without the knowledge of the French king, and were greatly against
+his inclinations, which were wholly for the strictest observance of
+the truce.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, a few months later, the Count of Saint Pol landed
+a force in the Isle of Wight; but the people of the island rose in
+arms, and defeated the invaders, who sailed hastily away.</p>
+
+<p>Although, having other matters in hand, Henry professed to
+believe the French king's assurances; the sailors and ship masters
+were in no way content to suffer unresistingly, and the men of the
+seaports of the east coast, and of Plymouth and Fowey, banded
+themselves together, and carried on war on their own account;
+capturing several fleets of ships, loaded with wine and other
+valuable commodities; burning the coast towns; and making several
+raids into the interior of France, and carrying off much
+plunder.</p>
+
+<p>Enraged at this retaliation, the French incited the Flemings,
+Dutch, and Hollanders to cruise against the English; and these,
+sailing in great ships, executed so many atrocities upon English
+crews and ships that, later, Henry himself sent out a fleet, under
+his second son, who executed his commission, effectually destroying
+ships, burning towns, and putting the people to the sword without
+mercy.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the breaches of the peace by the French recoiled terribly
+upon themselves, and they suffered vastly greater loss than they
+had inflicted upon the English.</p>
+
+<p>From the time when he let slip the opportunities, both of
+joining Hotspur and of falling on the royal army after their
+victory, Glendower's power declined. For a time he continued to
+capture castles, and to carry out raids across the border, but
+gradually he was driven back to his mountain strongholds. His
+followers lost heart. He became a fugitive, and died on the 20th of
+September, 1415, in the sixty-first year of his age, at the house
+of one of his married daughters, whether at Scudamore or Mornington
+is unknown.</p>
+
+<p>Mortimer died in Harlech Castle, during the time it was besieged
+by the English. It is said that his death was caused by depression
+and grief at the misfortunes that had befallen him.</p>
+
+<p>The Earl of Northumberland, as John Forster had anticipated,
+raised the standard of revolt in 1405, in concert with the
+Archbishop of York and some other nobles; but before he could join
+these with his forces, they had been forced to surrender to the
+king, who had marched north with a great army. The archbishop and
+some of his associates were executed, and the earl, finding himself
+unable to oppose so great a force, fled into Scotland. Alnwick
+surrendered without resistance, and Warkworth after a siege of
+eight days. Berwick was captured, and its governor and several
+knights executed.</p>
+
+<p>Escaping from Scotland, where he feared that he might be seized
+and surrendered to England, the earl sailed to Wales, and for some
+little time stayed with Glendower; then he crossed to the
+Continent, and in 1408 landed in Yorkshire and again raised his
+standard. The sheriff of the county called out the levies, and
+attacked him at Branham Moor, where the old earl was killed and his
+followers defeated.</p>
+
+<p>In 1415 the king, being on the eve of war with France, and
+anxious to obtain the goodwill and support of the Northumbrians,
+restored Hotspur's son, who had been for years a fugitive in
+Scotland, to the estates and honours of his father and
+grandfather.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunate it was, for Oswald, that the capture of his fellow
+conspirators caused the earl to retreat, in 1405, without giving
+battle. The young knight had, at his summons, called out his
+tenants, and with them and his retainers had joined Percy. As soon
+as the latter decided to fly to Scotland, his force scattered, and
+Oswald returned home with his following.</p>
+
+<p>He took no part in the final rising. Before this took place he
+had married his cousin, Janet. His father lived to be present at
+the wedding, but died the following year; and, in accordance with
+his wishes, Oswald took up his abode at Yardhope, which he largely
+added to, and strongly fortified. Here his mother lived with him
+until her death, ten years later.</p>
+
+<p>Oswald offered to Roger the command of his castle at Stoubes,
+but the burly squire preferred staying at Yardhope, with his
+master. He himself had taken a wife, the daughter of one of the
+principal tenants on the estate, on the same day that Oswald
+married Janet.</p>
+
+<p>His uncle, after the surrender of Alnwick, lived at Yardhope
+until, at the return of Hotspur's son as Earl of Northumberland, he
+resumed his old position as captain of the garrison, and maintained
+it until his death.</p>
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Both Sides the Border, by G. A. Henty,
+Illustrated by Ralph Peacock
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Both Sides the Border
+ A Tale of Hotspur and Glendower
+
+
+Author: G. A. Henty
+
+
+
+Release Date: August 17, 2006 [eBook #19070]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOTH SIDES THE BORDER***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Martin Robb
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 19070-h.htm or 19070-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/0/7/19070/19070-h/19070-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/0/7/19070/19070-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+BOTH SIDES THE BORDER:
+
+A Tale of Hotspur and Glendower
+
+by
+
+G. A. HENTY.
+
+Illustrated by Ralph Peacock
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+ Preface.
+ Chapter 1: A Border Hold.
+ Chapter 2: Across The Border.
+ Chapter 3: At Alnwick.
+ Chapter 4: An Unequal Joust.
+ Chapter 5: A Mission.
+ Chapter 6: At Dunbar.
+ Chapter 7: Back To Hotspur.
+ Chapter 8: Ludlow Castle.
+ Chapter 9: The Welsh Rising.
+ Chapter 10: A Breach Of Duty.
+ Chapter 11: Bad News.
+ Chapter 12: A Dangerous Mission.
+ Chapter 13: Escape.
+ Chapter 14: In Hiding.
+ Chapter 15: Another Mission To Ludlow.
+ Chapter 16: A Letter For The King.
+ Chapter 17: Knighted.
+ Chapter 18: Glendower.
+ Chapter 19: The Battle Of Homildon Hill.
+ Chapter 20: The Percys' Discontent.
+ Chapter 21: Shrewsbury.
+
+
+
+Preface.
+
+
+The four opening years of the fifteenth century were among the most
+stirring in the history of England. Owen Glendower carried fire and
+slaughter among the Welsh marches, captured most of the strong places
+held by the English, and foiled three invasions, led by the king
+himself. The northern borders were invaded by Douglas; who, after
+devastating a large portion of Northumberland, Cumberland, and Durham,
+was defeated and taken prisoner at the battle of Homildon, by the Earl
+of Northumberland, and his son Hotspur. Then followed the strange and
+unnatural coalition between the Percys, Douglas of Scotland, Glendower
+of Wales, and Sir Edmund Mortimer--a coalition that would assuredly
+have overthrown the king, erected the young Earl of March as a puppet
+monarch under the tutelage of the Percys, and secured the independence
+of Wales, had the royal forces arrived one day later at Shrewsbury, and
+so allowed the confederate armies to unite.
+
+King Henry's victory there, entailing the death of Hotspur and the
+capture of Douglas, put an end to this formidable insurrection; for,
+although the Earl of Northumberland twice subsequently raised the
+banner of revolt, these risings were easily crushed; while Glendower's
+power waned, and order, never again to be broken, was at length
+restored in Wales. The continual state of unrest and chronic warfare,
+between the inhabitants of both sides of the border, was full of
+adventures as stirring and romantic as that in which the hero of the
+story took part.
+
+G. A. Henty.
+
+
+
+Chapter 1: A Border Hold.
+
+
+A lad was standing on the little lookout turret, on the top of a border
+fortalice. The place was evidently built solely with an eye to defence,
+comfort being an altogether secondary consideration. It was a square
+building, of rough stone, the walls broken only by narrow loopholes;
+and the door, which was ten feet above the ground, was reached by broad
+wooden steps, which could be hauled up in case of necessity; and were,
+in fact, raised every night.
+
+The building was some forty feet square. The upper floor was divided
+into several chambers, which were the sleeping places of its lord and
+master, his family, and the women of the household. The floor below,
+onto which the door from without opened, was undivided save by two rows
+of stone pillars that supported the beams of the floor above. In one
+corner the floor, some fifteen feet square, was raised somewhat above
+the general level. This was set aside for the use of the master and the
+family. The rest of the apartment was used as the living and sleeping
+room of the followers, and hinds, of the fortalice.
+
+The basement--which, although on a level with the ground outside, could
+be approached only by a trapdoor and ladder from the room above--was
+the storeroom, and contained sacks of barley and oatmeal, sides of
+bacon, firewood, sacks of beans, and trusses of hay for the use of the
+horses and cattle, should the place have to stand a short siege. In the
+centre was a well.
+
+The roof of the house was flat, and paved with square blocks of stone;
+a parapet three feet high surrounded it. In the centre was the lookout
+tower, rising twelve feet above it; and over the door another turret,
+projecting some eighteen inches beyond the wall of the house, slits
+being cut in the stone floor through which missiles could be dropped,
+or boiling lead poured, upon any trying to assault the entrance.
+Outside was a courtyard, extending round the house. It was some ten
+yards across, and surrounded by a wall twelve feet high, with a square
+turret at each corner.
+
+Everything was roughly constructed, although massive and solid. With
+the exception of the door, and the steps leading to it, no wood had
+been used in the construction. The very beams were of rough stone, the
+floors were of the same material. It was clearly the object of the
+builders to erect a fortress that could defy fire, and could only be
+destroyed at the cost of enormous labour.
+
+This was indeed a prime necessity, for the hold stood in the wild
+country between the upper waters of the Coquet and the Reed river.
+Harbottle and Longpikes rose but a few miles away, and the whole
+country was broken up by deep ravines and valleys, fells and crags.
+From the edge of the moorland, a hundred yards from the outer wall, the
+ground dropped sharply down into the valley, where the two villages of
+Yardhope lay on a little burn running into the Coquet.
+
+In other directions the moor extended for a distance of nearly a mile.
+On this two or three score of cattle, and a dozen shaggy little horses,
+were engaged in an effort to keep life together, upon the rough herbage
+that grew among the heather and blocks of stones, scattered everywhere.
+
+Presently the lad caught sight of the flash of the sun, which had but
+just risen behind him, on a spearhead at the western edge of the moor.
+He ran down at once, from his post, to the principal room.
+
+"They are coming, Mother," he exclaimed. "I have just seen the sun
+glint on a spearhead."
+
+"I trust that they are all there," she said, and then turned to two
+women by the fire, and bade them put on more wood and get the pots
+boiling.
+
+"Go up again, Oswald; and, as soon as you can make out your father's
+figure, bring me down news. I have not closed an eye for the last two
+nights, for 'tis a more dangerous enterprise than usual on which they
+have gone."
+
+"Father always comes home all right, Mother," the boy said confidently,
+"and they have a strong band this time. They were to have been joined
+by Thomas Gray and his following, and Forster of Currick, and John
+Liddel, and Percy Hope of Bilderton. They must have full sixty spears.
+The Bairds are like to pay heavily for their last raid hither."
+
+Dame Forster did not reply, and Oswald ran up again to the lookout. By
+this time the party for whom he was watching had reached the moor. It
+consisted of twelve or fourteen horsemen, all clad in dark armour,
+carrying very long spears and mounted on small, but wiry, horses. They
+were driving before them a knot of some forty or fifty cattle, and
+three of them led horses carrying heavy burdens. Oswald's quick eye
+noticed that four of the horsemen were not carrying their spears.
+
+"They are three short of their number," he said to himself, "and those
+four must all be sorely wounded. Well, it might have been worse."
+
+Oswald had been brought up to regard forays and attacks as ordinary
+incidents of life. Watch and ward were always kept in the little
+fortalice, especially when the nights were dark and misty, for there
+was never any saying when a party of Scottish borderers might make an
+attack; for the truces, so often concluded between the border wardens,
+had but slight effect on the prickers, as the small chieftains on both
+sides were called, who maintained a constant state of warfare against
+each other.
+
+The Scotch forays were more frequent than those from the English side
+of the border; not because the people were more warlike, but because
+they were poorer, and depended more entirely upon plunder for their
+subsistence. There was but little difference of race between the
+peoples on the opposite side of the border. Both were largely of mixed
+Danish and Anglo-Saxon blood; for, when William the Conqueror carried
+fire and sword through Northumbria, great numbers of the inhabitants
+moved north, and settled in the district beyond the reach of the Norman
+arms.
+
+On the English side of the border the population were, in time,
+leavened by Norman blood; as the estates were granted by William to his
+barons. These often married the heiresses of the dispossessed families,
+while their followers found wives among the native population.
+
+The frequent wars with the Scots, in which every man capable of bearing
+arms in the Northern Counties had to take part; and the incessant
+border warfare, maintained a most martial spirit among the population,
+who considered retaliation for injuries received to be a natural and
+lawful act. This was, to some extent, heightened by the fact that the
+terms of many of the truces specifically permitted those who had
+suffered losses on either side to pursue their plunderers across the
+border. These raids were not accompanied by bloodshed, except when
+resistance was made; for between the people, descended as they were
+from a common stock, there was no active animosity, and at ordinary
+times there was free and friendly intercourse between them.
+
+There were, however, many exceptions to the rule that unresisting
+persons were not injured. Between many families on opposite sides of
+the border there existed blood feuds, arising from the fact that
+members of one or the other had been killed in forays; and in these
+cases bitter and bloody reprisals were made, on either side. The very
+border line was ill defined, and people on one side frequently settled
+on the other, as is shown by the fact that several of the treaties
+contained provisions that those who had so moved might change their
+nationality, and be accounted as Scotch or Englishmen, as the case
+might be.
+
+Between the Forsters and the Bairds such a feud had existed for three
+generations. It had begun in a raid by the latter. The Forster of that
+time had repulsed the attack, and had with his own hand killed one of
+the Bairds. Six months later he was surprised and killed on his own
+hearthstone, at a time when his son and most of his retainers were away
+on a raid. From that time the animosity between the two families had
+been unceasing, and several lives had been lost on both sides. The
+Bairds with a large party had, three months before, carried fire and
+sword through the district bordering on the main road, as far as Elsdon
+on the east, and Alwinton on the north. News of their coming had,
+however, preceded them. The villagers of Yardhope had just time to take
+refuge at Forster's hold, and had repulsed the determined attacks made
+upon it; until Sir Robert Umfraville brought a strong party to their
+assistance, and drove the Bairds back towards the frontier.
+
+The present raid, from which the party was returning, had been
+organized partly to recoup those who took part in it for the loss of
+their cattle on that occasion, and partly to take vengeance upon the
+Bairds. As was the custom on both sides of the border, these
+expeditions were generally composed of members of half a dozen
+families, with their followers; the one who was, at once, most
+energetic and best acquainted with the intricacies of the country, and
+the paths across fells and moors, being chosen as leader.
+
+Presently, Oswald Forster saw one of the party wave his hand; and at
+his order four or five of the horsemen rode out, and began to drive the
+scattered cattle and horses towards the house. Oswald at once ran down.
+
+"Father is all right, Mother. He has just given orders to the men, and
+they are driving all the animals in, so I suppose that the Bairds must
+be in pursuit. I had better tell the men to get on their armour."
+
+Without waiting for an answer, he told six men, who were eating their
+breakfast at the farther end of the room, to make an end of their meal,
+and get on their steel caps and breast and back pieces, and take their
+places in the turret over the gate into the yard. In a few minutes the
+animals began to pour in, first those of the homestead, then the
+captured herd, weary and exhausted with their long and hurried journey;
+then came the master, with his followers.
+
+Mary Forster and her son stood at the top of the steps, ready to greet
+him. The gate into the yard was on the opposite side to that of the
+doorway of the fortalice, in order that assailants who had carried it
+should have to pass round under the fire of the archers in the turrets,
+before they could attack the building itself.
+
+She gave a little cry as her husband came up. His left arm was in a
+sling, his helmet was cleft through, and a bandage showed beneath it.
+
+"Do not be afraid, wife," he said cheerily. "We have had hotter work
+than we expected; but, so far as I am concerned, there is no great harm
+done. I am sorry to say that we have lost Long Hal, and Rob Finch, and
+Smedley. Two or three others are sorely wounded, and I fancy few have
+got off altogether scatheless.
+
+"All went well, until we stopped to wait for daybreak, three miles from
+Allan Baird's place. Some shepherd must have got sight of us as we
+halted, for we found him and his men up and ready. They had not had
+time, however, to drive in the cattle; and seeing that we should like
+enough have the Bairds swarming down upon us, before we could take
+Allan's place, we contented ourselves with gathering the cattle and
+driving them off. There were about two hundred of them.
+
+"We went fast, but in two hours we saw the Bairds coming in pursuit;
+and as it was clear that they would overtake us, hampered as we were
+with the cattle, we stood and made defence. There was not much
+difference in numbers, for the Bairds had not had time to gather in all
+their strength. The fight was a stiff one. On our side Percy Hope was
+killed, and John Liddel so sorely wounded that there is no hope of his
+life. We had sixteen men killed outright, and few of us but are more or
+less scarred. On their side Allan Baird was killed; and John was
+smitten down, but how sorely wounded I cannot say for certain, for they
+put him on a horse, and took him away at once. They left twenty behind
+them on the ground dead; and the rest, finding that we were better men
+than they, rode off again.
+
+"William Baird himself had not come up. His hold was too far for the
+news to have reached him, as we knew well enough; but doubtless he came
+up, with his following, a few hours after we had beaten his kinsmen.
+But we have ridden too fast for him to overtake us. We struck off north
+as soon as we crossed the border, travelled all night by paths by which
+they will find it difficult to follow or track us, especially as we
+broke up into four parties, and each chose their own way.
+
+"I have driven all our cattle in, in case they should make straight
+here, after losing our track. Of course, there were many who fought
+against us who know us all well; but even were it other than the Bairds
+we had despoiled, they would hardly follow us so far across the border
+to fetch their cattle.
+
+"As for the Bairds, the most notorious of the Scottish raiders, for
+them to claim the right of following would be beyond all bearing. Why,
+I don't believe there was a head of cattle among the whole herd that
+had not been born, and bred, on this side of the border. It is we who
+have been fetching back stolen goods."
+
+By this time, he and his men had entered the house, and those who had
+gone through the fray scatheless were, assisted by the women, removing
+the armour from their wounded comrades. Those who had been forced to
+relinquish their spears were first attended to.
+
+There was no thought of sending for a leech. Every man and woman within
+fifty miles of the border was accustomed to the treatment of wounds,
+and in every hold was a store of bandages, styptics, and unguents ready
+for instant use. Most of the men were very sorely wounded; and had they
+been of less hardy frame, and less inured to hardships, could not have
+supported the long ride. John Forster, before taking off his own
+armour, saw that their wounds were first attended to by his wife and
+her women.
+
+"I think they will all do," he said, "and that they will live to strike
+another blow at the Bairds, yet.
+
+"Now, Oswald, unbuckle my harness. Your mother will bandage up my arm
+and head, and Elspeth shall bring up a full tankard from below, for
+each of us. A draught of beer will do as much good as all the salves
+and medicaments.
+
+"Do you take the first drink, Jock Samlen, and then go up to the
+watchtower. I see the men have been posted in the wall turrets. One of
+them shall relieve you, shortly."
+
+As soon as the wounds were dressed, bowls of porridge were served
+round; then one of the men who had remained at home was posted at the
+lookout; and, after the cattle had been seen to, all who had been on
+the road stretched themselves on some rushes at one end of the room,
+and were, in a few minutes, sound asleep.
+
+"I wonder whether we shall ever have peace in the land, Oswald," his
+mother said with a sigh; as, having seen that the women had all in
+readiness for the preparation of the midday meal, she sat down on a low
+stool, by his side.
+
+"I don't see how we ever can have, Mother, until either we conquer
+Scotland, or the Scotch shall be our masters. It is not our fault. They
+are ever raiding and plundering, and heed not the orders of Douglas, or
+the other Lords of the Marches."
+
+"We are almost as bad as they are, Oswald."
+
+"Nay, Mother, we do but try to take back our own; as father well said,
+the cattle that were brought in are all English, that have been taken
+from us by the Bairds; and we do but pay them back in their own coin.
+It makes but little difference whether we are at war or peace. These
+reiving caterans are ever on the move. It was but last week that Adam
+Gordon and his bands wasted Tynedale, as far as Bellingham; and carried
+off, they say, two thousand head of cattle, and slew many of the
+people. If we did not cross the border sometimes, and give them a
+lesson, they would become so bold that there would be no limit to their
+raids."
+
+"That is all true enough, Oswald, but it is hard that we should always
+require to be on the watch, and that no one within forty miles of the
+border can, at any time, go to sleep with the surety that he will not,
+ere morning, hear the raiders knocking at his gate."
+
+"Methinks that it would be dull, were there nought to do but to look
+after the cattle," Oswald replied.
+
+It seemed to him, bred up as he had been amid constant forays and
+excitements, that the state of things was a normal one; and that it was
+natural that a man should need to have his spear ever ready at hand,
+and to give or take hard blows.
+
+"Besides," he went on, "though we carry off each others' cattle, and
+fetch them home again, we are not bad friends while the truces hold,
+save in the case of those who have blood feuds. It was but last week
+that Allan Armstrong and his two sisters were staying here with us; and
+I promised that, ere long, I would ride across the border and spend a
+week with them."
+
+"Yes, but that makes it all the worse. Adam Armstrong married my sister
+Elizabeth, whom he first met at Goddington fair; and, indeed, there are
+few families, on either side of the border, who have not both English
+and Scotch blood in their veins. It is natural we should be friends,
+seeing how often we have held Berwick, Roxburgh, and Dumfries; and how
+often, in times of peace, Scotchmen come across the border to trade at
+the fairs. Why should it not be so, when we speak the same tongue and,
+save for the border line, are one people? Though, indeed, it is
+different in Kirkcudbright and Wigtown, where they are Galwegians, and
+their tongue is scarce understood by the border Scots. 'Tis strange
+that those on one side of the border, and those on the other, cannot
+keep the peace towards each other."
+
+"But save when the kingdoms are at war, Mother, we do keep the peace,
+except in the matter of cattle lifting; and bear no enmity towards each
+other, save when blood is shed. In wartime each must, of course, fight
+for his nation and as his lord orders him. We have wasted Scotland
+again and again, from end to end; and they have swept the Northern
+Counties well nigh as often.
+
+"I have heard father say that, eight times in the last hundred years,
+this hold has been levelled to the ground. It only escaped, last time,
+because he built it so strongly of stone that they could not fire it;
+and it would have taken them almost as long, to pick it to pieces, as
+it took him to build it."
+
+"Yes, that was when you were an infant, Oswald. When we heard the
+Scotch army was marching this way, we took refuge with all the cattle
+and horses among the Pikes; having first carried out and burnt all the
+forage and stores, and leaving nothing that they could set fire to.
+Your father has often laughed at the thought of how angry they must
+have been, when they found that there was no mischief that they could
+do; for, short of a long stay, which they never make, there was no way
+in which they could damage it. Ours was the only house that escaped
+scot free, for thirty miles round.
+
+"But indeed, 'tis generally but parties of pillagers who trouble this
+part of the country, even when they invade England. There is richer
+booty, by far, to be gathered in Cumberland and Durham; for here we
+have nought but our cattle and horses, and of these they have as many
+on their side of the border. It is the plunder of the towns that
+chiefly attracts them, and while they go past here empty handed, they
+always carry great trains of booty on their backward way."
+
+"Still, it would be dull work if there were no fighting, Mother."
+
+"There is no fighting in Southern England, Oswald, save for those who
+go across the sea to fight the French; and yet, I suppose they find
+life less dull than we do. They have more to do. Here there is little
+tillage, the country is poor; and who would care to break up the land
+and to raise crops, when any night your ricks might be in flames, and
+your granaries plundered? Thus there is nought for us to do but to keep
+cattle, which need but little care and attention, and which can be
+driven off to the fells when the Scots make a great raid. But in the
+south, as I have heard, there is always much for farmers to attend to;
+and those who find life dull can always enter the service of some
+warlike lord, and follow him across the sea."
+
+Oswald shook his head. The quiet pursuits of a farmer seemed to him to
+be but a poor substitute for the excitement of border war.
+
+"It may be as you say, Mother; but for my part, I would rather enter
+the service of the Percys, and gain honour under their banner, than
+remain here day after day, merely giving aid in driving the cattle in
+and out, and wondering when the Bairds are coming this way, again."
+
+His mother shook her head. Her father and two brothers had both been
+slain, the last time a Scottish army had crossed the border; and
+although she naturally did not regard constant troubles in the same
+light in which a southern woman would have viewed them, she still
+longed for peace and quiet; and was in constant fear that sooner or
+later the feud with the Bairds, who were a powerful family, would cost
+her husband his life.
+
+Against open force she had little fear. The hold could resist an attack
+for days, and long ere it yielded, help would arrive; but although the
+watch was vigilant, and every precaution taken, it might be captured by
+a sudden night attack. William Baird had, she knew, sworn a great oath
+that Yardhope Hold should one day be destroyed; and the Forsters wiped
+out, root and branch. And the death of his cousin Allan, in the last
+raid, would surely fan the fire of his hatred against them.
+
+"One never can say what may happen," she said, after a pause; "but if
+at any time evil should befall us, and you escape, remember that your
+uncle Alwyn is in Percy's service; and you cannot do better than go to
+him, and place yourself under his protection, and act as he may advise
+you. I like not the thought that you should become a man-at-arms; and
+yet methinks that it is no more dangerous than that of a householder on
+the fells. At least, in a strong castle a man can sleep without fear;
+whereas none can say as much, here."
+
+"If aught should happen to my father and you, Mother, you may be sure
+that I should share in it. The Bairds would spare no one, if they
+captured the hold. And although Father will not, as yet, take me with
+him on his forays, I should do my share of fighting, if the hold were
+attacked."
+
+"I am sure that you would, Oswald; and were it captured I have no doubt
+that, as you say, you would share our fate. I speak not with any
+thought that it is likely things will turn out as I say; but they may
+do so, and therefore I give you my advice, to seek out your uncle. As
+to a capture of our hold, of that I have generally but little fear; but
+the fact that your father has been wounded, and three of his men
+killed, and that another Baird has fallen, has brought the possibility
+that it may happen more closely to my mind, this morning, than usual.
+
+"Now, my boy, you had best spend an hour in cleaning up your father's
+armour and arms. The steel cap must go to the armourer at Alwinton, for
+repair; but you can get some of the dints out of his breast and back
+pieces, and can give them a fresh coat of black paint;" for the
+borderers usually darkened their armour so that, in their raids, their
+presence should not be betrayed by the glint of sun or moon upon them.
+
+Oswald at once took up the armour, and went down the steps into the
+courtyard, so that the sound of his hammer should not disturb the
+sleepers. As, with slight but often repeated blows, he got out the
+dents that had been made in the fray, he thought over what his mother
+had been saying. To him also the death of three of the men, who had for
+years been his companions, came as a shock. It was seldom, indeed, that
+the forays for cattle lifting had such serious consequences. As a rule
+they were altogether bloodless; and it was only because of the long
+feud with the Bairds, and the fact that some warning of the coming of
+the party had, in spite of their precaution, reached Allan Baird; that
+on the present occasion such serious results had ensued.
+
+Had it not been for this, the cattle would have been driven off without
+resistance, for Allan Baird's own household would not have ventured to
+attack so strong a party. No attempt would have been made to assault
+his hold; for he had often heard his father say that, even in the case
+of a blood feud, he held that houses should not be attacked, and their
+occupants slain. If both parties met under arms the matter was
+different; but that, in spite of the slaying of his own father by them,
+he would not kill even a Baird on his hearthstone.
+
+Still, a Baird had been killed, and assuredly William Baird would not
+be deterred by any similar scruples. His pitiless ferocity was
+notorious, and even his own countrymen cried out against some of his
+deeds, and the Earl of Douglas had several times threatened to hand him
+over to the English authorities; but the Bairds were powerful, and
+could, with their allies, place four or five hundred men in the field;
+and, in the difficult country in which they lived, could have given a
+great deal of trouble, even to Douglas. Therefore nothing had come of
+his threats, and the Bairds had continued to be the terror of that part
+of the English border that was the most convenient for their
+operations.
+
+Oswald was now past sixteen, and promised to be as big a man as his
+father, who was a fine specimen of the hardy Northumbrian race--tall,
+strong, and sinewy. He had felt hurt when his father had refused to
+allow him to take part in the foray.
+
+"Time enough, lad, time enough," he had said, when the lad had made his
+petition to do so. "You are not strong enough, yet, to hold your own
+against one of the Bairds' moss troopers, should it come to fighting.
+In another couple of years it will be time enough to think of your
+going on such an excursion as this. You are clever with your arms, I
+will freely admit; as you ought to be, seeing that you practise for two
+hours a day with the men. But strength counts as well as skill, and you
+want both when you ride against the Bairds; besides, at present you
+have still much to learn about the paths through the fells, and across
+the morasses. If you are ever to become a leader, you must know them
+well enough to traverse them on the darkest night, or through the
+thickest mist."
+
+"I think that I do know most of them, Father."
+
+"Yes, I think you do, on this side of the border; but you must learn
+those on the other side, as well. They are, indeed, of even greater
+importance in case of pursuit, or for crossing the border unobserved.
+Hitherto, I have forbidden you to cross the line, but in future Mat
+Wilson shall go with you. He knows the Scotch passes and defiles,
+better than any in the band; and so that you don't go near the Bairds'
+country, you can traverse them safely, so long as the truce lasts."
+
+For years, indeed, Oswald, on one of the hardy little horses, had
+ridden over the country in company with one or other of the men; and
+had become familiar with every morass, moor, fell, and pass, down to
+the old Roman wall to the south, and as far north as Wooler, being
+frequently absent for three or four days at a time. He had several
+times ridden into Scotland, to visit the Armstrongs and other friends
+of the family; but he had always travelled by the roads, and knew
+nothing of the hill paths on that side. His life had, in fact, been far
+from dull, for they had many friends and connections in the villages at
+the foot of the Cheviots, and he was frequently away from home.
+
+His journeys were generally performed on horseback, but his father
+encouraged him to take long tramps on foot, in order that he might
+strengthen his muscles; and would, not infrequently, give him leave to
+pay visits on condition that he travelled on foot, instead of in the
+saddle.
+
+Constant exercise in climbing, riding, and with his weapons; and at
+wrestling and other sports, including the bow, had hardened every
+muscle of his frame, and he was capable of standing any fatigues; and
+although his father said that he could not hold his own against men, he
+knew that the lad could do so against any but exceptionally powerful
+ones; and believed that, when the time came, he would, like himself, be
+frequently chosen as leader in border forays. He could already draw the
+strongest bow to the arrowhead, and send a shaft with a strength that
+would suffice to pierce the light armour worn by the Scotch borderers.
+It was by the bow that the English gained the majority of their
+victories over their northern neighbours; who did not take to the
+weapon, and were unable to stand for a moment against the English
+archers, who not only loved it as a sport, but were compelled by many
+ordinances to practise with it from their childhood.
+
+Of other education he had none, but in this respect he was no worse off
+than the majority of the knights and barons of the time, who were well
+content to trust to monkish scribes to draw up such documents as were
+required, and to affix their seal to them. He himself had once, some
+six years before, expressed a wish to be sent for a year to the care of
+the monks at Rothbury, whose superior was a distant connection of his
+father, in order to be taught to read and write; but John Forster had
+scoffed at the idea.
+
+"You have to learn to be a man, lad," he had said, "and the monks will
+never teach you that. I do not know one letter from another, nor did my
+father, or any of my forebears, and we were no worse for it. On the
+marches, unless a man means to become a monk, he has to learn to make
+his sword guard his head, to send an arrow straight to the mark, to
+know every foot of the passes, and to be prepared, at the order of his
+lord, to defend his country against the Scots.
+
+"These are vastly more important matters than reading and writing;
+which are, so far as I can see, of no use to any fair man, whose word
+is his bond, and who deals with honest men. I can reckon up, if I sell
+so many cattle, how much has to be paid, and more of learning than that
+I want not. Nor do you, and every hour spent on it would be as good as
+wasted. As to the monks, Heaven forfend that you should ever become
+one. They are good men, I doubt not, and I suppose that it is necessary
+that some should take to it; but that a man who has the full possession
+of his limbs should mew himself up, for life, between four walls,
+passing his time in vigils and saying masses, in reading books and
+distributing alms, seems to me to be a sort of madness."
+
+"I certainly do not wish to become a monk, Father, but I thought that I
+should like to learn to read and write."
+
+"And when you have learnt it, what then, Oswald? Books are expensive
+playthings, and no scrap of writing has ever been inside the walls of
+Yardhope Hold, since it was first built here, as far as I know. As to
+writing, it would be of still less use. If a man has a message to send,
+he can send it by a hired man, if it suits him not to ride himself.
+Besides, if he had written it, the person he sent it to would not be
+able to read it, and would have to go to some scribe for an
+interpretation of its contents.
+
+"No, no, my lad, you have plenty to learn before you come to be a man,
+without bothering your head with this monkish stuff. I doubt if
+Hotspur, himself, can do more than sign his name to a parchment; and
+what is good enough for the Percys, is surely good enough for you."
+
+The idea had, in fact, been put into Oswald's head by his mother. At
+that time the feud with the Bairds had burned very hotly, and it would
+have lessened her anxieties had the boy been bestowed, for a time, in a
+convent. Oswald himself felt no disappointment at his father's refusal
+to a petition that he would never have made, had not his mother dilated
+to him, on several occasions, upon the great advantage of learning.
+
+No thought of repeating the request had ever entered his mind. His
+father had thought more of it, and had several times expressed grave
+regret, to his wife, over such an extraordinary wish having occurred to
+their son.
+
+"The boy has nothing of a milksop about him," he said; "and is, for his
+age, full of spirit and courage. How so strange an idea could have
+occurred to him is more than I can imagine. I should as soon expect to
+see an owlet, in a sparrow hawk's nest, as a monk hatched in Yardhope
+Hold."
+
+His wife discreetly kept silence as to the fact that she, herself, had
+first put the idea in the boy's head; for although Mary Forster was
+mistress inside of the hold, in all other matters John was masterful,
+and would brook no meddling, even by her. The subject, therefore, of
+Oswald's learning to read and write, was never renewed.
+
+
+
+Chapter 2: Across The Border.
+
+
+A most vigilant watch was kept up, for the next week, at Yardhope Hold.
+At night, three or four of the troopers were posted four or five miles
+from the hold, on the roads by which an enemy was likely to come;
+having under them the fleetest horses on the moor. When a week passed
+there was some slight relaxation in the watch, for it was evident that
+the Bairds intended to bide their time for a stroke, knowing well that
+they would not be likely to be able to effect a surprise, at present.
+The outlying posts were, therefore, no longer maintained; but the dogs
+of the hold, fully a dozen in number, were chained nightly in a circle
+three or four hundred yards outside it; and their barking would, at
+once, apprise the watchers in the turrets on the walls of the approach
+of any body of armed men.
+
+Two days later, Oswald started for his promised visit to the
+Armstrongs. It was not considered necessary that he should be
+accompanied by any of the troopers, for Hiniltie lay but a few miles
+across the frontier. In high spirits he galloped away and, riding
+through Yardhope, was soon at Alwinton; and thence took the track
+through Kidland Lee, passed round the head of the Usmay brook, along
+the foot of Maiden Cross Hill, and crossed the frontier at Windy Guile.
+Here he stood on the crest of the Cheviots and, descending, passed
+along at the foot of Windburgh Hill; and by noon entered the tiny
+hamlet of Hiniltie, above which, perched on one of the spurs of the
+hill, stood the Armstrongs' hold. It was smaller than that of Yardhope,
+and had no surrounding wall; but, like it, was built for defence
+against a sudden attack.
+
+Adam Armstrong was on good terms with his neighbours across the border.
+Although other members of his family were frequently engaged in forays,
+it was seldom, indeed, that he buckled on armour, and only when there
+was a general call to arms. He was, however, on bad terms with the
+Bairds, partly because his wife was a sister of Forster's, partly
+because of frays that had arisen between his herdsmen and those of the
+Bairds, for his cattle wandered far and wide on the mountain slopes to
+the south, and sometimes passed the ill-defined line, beyond which the
+Bairds regarded the country as their own. Jedburgh was but ten miles
+away, Hawick but six or seven, and any stay after the sun rose would
+speedily have brought strong bodies of men from these towns, as well as
+from his still nearer neighbours, at Chester, Abbotrule, and Hobkirk.
+
+Oswald's approach was seen, and two of his cousins--Allan, who was a
+lad of about the same age, and Janet, a year younger--ran out from the
+house to meet him.
+
+"We have been expecting you for the last ten days," the former
+exclaimed, "and had well nigh given you up."
+
+"I hold you to be a laggard," the girl added, "and unless you can duly
+excuse yourself, shall have naught to say to you."
+
+"My excuse is a good one, Janet. My father made a foray, a fortnight
+since, into the Bairds' country, to rescue some of the cattle they had
+driven off from our neighbours, some days before. There was a sharp
+fight, and Allan Baird was killed; and since then we have been
+expecting a return visit from them, and have been sleeping with our
+arms beside us. Doubtless they will come someday, but as it is evident
+they don't mean to come at present, my father let me leave."
+
+"In that case we must forgive you," the girl said. "Some rumours of the
+fray have reached us, and my father shook his head gravely, when he
+heard that another Baird had been killed by the Forsters."
+
+"It was not only us," Oswald replied. "There were some of the Liddels,
+and the Hopes, and other families, engaged. My father was chosen as
+chief; but this time it was not our quarrel, but theirs, for we had
+lost no cattle, and my father only joined because they had aided us
+last time, and he could not hold back now. Of course, he was chosen as
+chief because he knows the country so well."
+
+"Well, come in, Oswald. It is poor hospitality to keep you talking
+here, outside the door."
+
+A boy had already taken charge of Oswald's horse and, after unstrapping
+his valise, had led it to a stable that formed the basement of the
+house.
+
+"Well, laddie, how fares it with you, at home?" Adam Armstrong said,
+heartily, as they mounted the steps to the main entrance. "We have
+heard of your wild doings with the Bairds. 'Tis a pity that these feuds
+should go on, from father to son, ever getting more and more bitter.
+But there, we can no more change a borderer's nature than you can stop
+the tide in the Solway. I hear that it was well nigh a pitched battle."
+
+"There was hard fighting," Oswald replied. "Three of our troopers, and
+eight or ten of the others were killed. My father was twice wounded,
+one of the Hopes was killed, and a Liddel severely wounded. But from
+what they say, the Bairds suffered more. Had they not done so, there
+would have been a hot pursuit; but as far as we know there was none."
+
+"The Bairds will bide their time," Armstrong said gravely. "They are
+dour men, and will take their turn, though they wait ten years for it."
+
+"At any rate they won't catch us sleeping, Uncle; and come they however
+strong they may, they will find it hard work to capture the Hold."
+
+"Ay, ay, lad, but I don't think they will try to knock their heads
+against your wall. They are more like to sweep down on a sudden, and
+your watchman will need keen eyes to make them out before they are
+thundering at the gate, or climbing up the wall. However, your father
+knows his danger, and it is of no use talking more of it. What is done
+is done."
+
+"And how is your mother, Oswald?" Mistress Armstrong asked.
+
+"She is well, Aunt, and bade me give her love to you."
+
+"Truly I wonder she keeps her health, with all these troubles and
+anxieties. We had hoped that, after the meeting last March of the
+Commissioners on both sides, when the Lords of the Marches plighted
+their faith to each other, and agreed to surrender all prisoners
+without ransom, and to forgive all offenders, we should have had peace
+on the border. As you know, there were but three exceptions named;
+namely Adam Warden, William Baird, and Adam French, whom the Scotch
+Commissioners bound themselves to arrest, and to hand over to the
+English Commissioners, to be tried as being notorious truce breakers,
+doing infinite mischief to the dwellers on the English side of the
+border. And yet nothing has come of it, and these men still continue to
+make their raids, without check or hindrance, either by the Earl of
+March or Douglas."
+
+"There are faults on both sides, wife," her husband said.
+
+"I do not deny it, gudeman; but I have often heard you say these three
+men are the pests of the border; and that, were it not for them, things
+might go on reasonably enough, for no one counts a few head of cattle
+lifted, now and again. It is bad enough that, every two or three years,
+armies should march across the border, one way or the other; but surely
+we might live peaceably, between times. Did not I nearly lose you at
+Otterburn, and had you laid up on my hands, for well-nigh six months?"
+
+"Ay, that was a sore day, for both sides."
+
+"Will you tell me about it, Uncle?" Oswald asked. "My father cares not
+much to talk of it; and though I know that he fought there, he has
+never told me the story of the battle."
+
+"We are just going to sit down to dinner, now," Adam Armstrong said,
+"and the story is a long one; but after we have done, I will tell you
+of it. Your father need not feel so sore about it; for, since the days
+of the Bruce, you have had as many victories to count as we have."
+
+After dinner, however, Armstrong had to settle a dispute between two of
+his tenants, as to grazing rights; and it was not until evening that he
+told his story.
+
+"In 1388 there were all sorts of troubles in England, and France
+naturally took advantage of them, and recommenced hostilities, and we
+prepared to share in the game. Word was sent round privately, and every
+man was bidden to gather, in Jedburgh forest. I tell you, lad, I went
+with a heavy heart, for although men of our name have the reputation of
+being as quarrelsome fellows as any that dwell on the border, I am an
+exception, and love peace and quiet; moreover, the children were but
+young, and I saw that the fight would be a heavy business, and I did
+not like leaving them, and their mother. However, there was no help for
+it, and we gathered there, over 40,000 strong. The main body marched
+away into Cumberland; but Douglas, March, and Moray, with 300 spears
+and 2000 footmen, including many an Armstrong, entered Northumberland.
+
+"We marched without turning to the right or left, or staying to attack
+town, castle, or house, till we crossed the river Tyne and entered
+Durham. Then we began the war; burning, ravaging, and slaying. I liked
+it not, for although when it comes to fighting I am ready, if needs be,
+to bear my part, I care not to attack peaceful people. It is true that
+your kings have, over and over again, laid waste half Scotland;
+killing, slaying, and hanging; but it does not seem to me any
+satisfaction, because some twenty of my ancestors have been murdered,
+to slay twenty people who were not born until long afterwards, and
+whose forbears, for aught I know, may have had no hand in the slaughter
+of mine.
+
+"However, having laden ourselves with plunder from Durham, we sat down
+for three days before Newcastle, where we had some sharp skirmishes
+with Sir Henry and his brother, Sir Ralph Percy; and in one of these
+captured Sir Henry's pennant.
+
+"Then we marched away to Otterburn, after receiving warning from Percy
+that he intended to win his pennant back again, before we left
+Northumberland. We attacked Otterburn Castle, but failed to carry it,
+for it was strong and well defended. There was a council that night,
+and most of the leaders were in favour of retiring at once to Scotland,
+with the abundance of spoil that we had gained. But Douglas persuaded
+them to remain two or three days, and to capture the castle, and not to
+go off as if afraid of Percy's threats. So we waited all the next day;
+and at night the Percys, with 600 spears and 8000 infantry, came up.
+Our leaders had not been idle, for they had examined the ground
+carefully, and arranged how the battle should be fought, if we were
+attacked.
+
+"Having heard nothing of the English, all day, we lay down to sleep,
+not expecting to hear aught of them until the morning. It was a
+moonlight night, and being in August, there was but a short darkness
+between the twilights; and the English, arriving, at once made an
+attack, falling first on the servants' huts, which they took for those
+of the chiefs. This gave us time to form up in good order, as we had
+lain down each in his proper position.
+
+"A portion of the force went down to skirmish with the English in
+front, but the greater portion marched along the mountain side, and
+fell suddenly upon the English flank. At first there was great
+confusion; but the English, being more numerous, soon recovered their
+order and pushed us back, though not without much loss on both sides.
+
+"Douglas shouted his battle cry, advanced his banner, fighting most
+bravely; as did Sir Patrick Hepburn, but for whose bravery the Douglas
+banner would have been taken, for the Percys, hearing the cry of 'a
+Douglas! a Douglas!' pressed to that part of the field, and bore us
+backwards. I was in the midst of it, with ten of my kinsmen; and though
+we all fought as became men, we were pressed back, and began to think
+that the day would be lost.
+
+"Then the young earl, furious at seeing disaster threaten him, dashed
+into the midst of the English ranks, swinging his battle-axe and, for a
+time, cutting a way for himself. But one man's strength and courage can
+go for but little in such a fray. Some of his knights and squires had
+followed him, but in the darkness it was but few who perceived his
+advance.
+
+"Presently three knights met him, and all their spears pierced him, and
+he was borne from his horse, mortally wounded. Happily the English were
+unaware that it was Douglas who had fallen. Had they known it, their
+courage would have been mightily raised, and the day would assuredly
+have been lost. We, too, were ignorant that Douglas had fallen, and
+still fought on.
+
+"In other parts of the field March and Moray were holding their own
+bravely. Sir Ralph Percy, who had, like Douglas, charged almost alone
+into Moray's ranks, was sorely wounded and, being surrounded,
+surrendered to Sir John Maxwell. Elsewhere many captures were made by
+both parties; but as the fight went on the advantage turned to our
+side; for we had rested all the day before, and began the battle fresh,
+after some hours of sleep; while the English had marched eight leagues,
+and were weary when they began the fight.
+
+"Sir James Lindsay and Sir Walter Sinclair, with some other knights who
+had followed Douglas, found him still alive. With his last words he
+ordered them to raise his banner, and to shout 'Douglas!' so that
+friends and foes should think that he was of their party. These
+instructions they followed. We and others pressed forwards, on hearing
+the shout; and soon, a large party being collected, resumed the battle
+at this point. Moray and March both bore their arrays in the direction
+where they believed Douglas to be battling, and so, together, we
+pressed upon the English so hardly that they retreated, and for five
+miles we pursued them very hotly. Very many prisoners were taken, but
+all of quality were at once put to ransom, and allowed to depart on
+giving their knightly word of payment within fifteen days.
+
+"It was a great victory, and in truth none of us well knew how it had
+come about, for the English had fought as well and valiantly as we did
+ourselves; but it is ill for wearied men to fight against fresh ones.
+Never was I more surprised than when we found that the battle, which
+for a time had gone mightily against us, was yet won in the end.
+Methinks that it was, to a great extent, due to the fact that each
+Englishman fought for himself; while we, having on the previous day
+received the strictest orders to fight each man under his leader, to
+hold together, and to obey orders in all respects, kept in our
+companies; and so, in the end, gained the day against a foe as brave,
+and much more numerous, than ourselves."
+
+"Thank you, Uncle Armstrong. I have often wondered how it was that the
+Percys, being three to one against you, were yet defeated; fighting on
+their own ground, as it were. 'Tis long, indeed, since we suffered so
+great a reverse."
+
+"That is true enough, Oswald. In the days of Wallace and Bruce, we
+Scots often won battles with long odds against us; but that was because
+we fought on foot, and the English for the most part on horseback--a
+method good enough on an open plain, but ill fitted for a land of
+morass and hill, like Scotland. Since the English also took to fighting
+on foot, the chances have been equal; and we have repulsed invasions
+not so much by force, as by falling back, and so wasting the country
+that the English had but the choice of retreating or starving.
+
+"There is reason, indeed, why, when equal forces are arrayed against
+each other, the chances should also be equal; for we are come of the
+same stock, and the men of the northern marches of England, and those
+of Scotland, are alike hardy and accustomed to war. Were we but a
+united people, as you English are, methinks that there would never have
+been such constant wars between us; for English kings would not have
+cared to have invaded a country where they would find but little spoil,
+and have hard work to take it. But our nobles have always been ready to
+turn traitors. They are mostly of Norman blood and Norman name, and no
+small part of them have estates in England, as well as in Scotland.
+Hence it is that our worst enemies have always been in our midst.
+
+"And now it is time for bed, or you will be heavy in the morning; and I
+know that you intend starting at dawn, with the dogs, and have promised
+to bring in some hares for dinner."
+
+Not only Oswald and Allan, but Janet also was afoot early; and, after
+taking a basin of porridge, started for the hills, accompanied by four
+dogs. They carried with them bows and arrows, in case the dogs should
+drive the hares within shot.
+
+Six hours later they returned, carrying with them five hares and a
+brace of birds. These had both fallen to Oswald's bow, being shot while
+on the ground; for in those days the idea that it was unsportsmanlike
+to shoot game, except when flying, was unknown.
+
+For a week they went out every day, sometimes with the dogs, but more
+often with hawks; which were trained to fly, not only at birds in their
+flight, but at hares, on whose heads they alighted, pecking them and
+beating them so fiercely with their wings, that they gave time for the
+party on foot to run up, and despatch the quarry with an arrow.
+
+Once or twice they accompanied Adam Armstrong, when he rode to some of
+the towns in the neighbourhood, and spent the day with friends of the
+Armstrongs there. For a fortnight, the time passed very pleasantly to
+the English lad; but, at the end of that time, Adam Armstrong returned
+from a visit to Jedburgh with a grave face.
+
+"I have news," he said, "that your King Richard has been deposed; that
+Henry, the Duke of Lancaster, having landed in Yorkshire, was joined by
+Percy and the Earl of Westmoreland, and has been proclaimed king. This
+will cause great troubles in England, for surely there must be many
+there who will not tamely see a king dethroned by treasonable
+practices; and another, having no just title to the crown, promoted to
+his place.
+
+"Such a thing is contrary to all reason and justice. A king has the
+same right to his crown as a noble to his estates, and none may justly
+take them away, save for treasonable practices; and a king cannot
+commit treason against himself. Therefore it is like that there will be
+much trouble in England, and I fear that there is no chance of the
+truce that concludes, at the end of this month, being continued.
+
+"The fact that the two great northern lords of England are both, with
+their forces, in the south will further encourage trouble; and the
+peace that, with small intermissions, has continued since the battle of
+Otterburn, is like to be broken. Therefore, my lad, I think it best
+that you should cut short your visit, by a week, and you shall return
+and finish it when matters have settled down.
+
+"Here in Scotland we are not without troubles. Ill blood has arisen
+between March and Douglas, owing to the Duke of Ramsay breaking his
+promise to marry the Earl of March's daughter, and taking Douglas's
+girl to wife. This, too, has sorely angered one more powerful than
+either Douglas or March--I mean, of course, Albany, who really
+exercises the kingly power.
+
+"But troubles in Scotland will in no way prevent war from breaking out
+with England. On the contrary, the quarrel between the two great lords
+of our marches will cause them to loose their hold of the border men,
+and I foresee that we shall have frays and forays among ourselves
+again, as in the worst times of old. Therefore, it were best that you
+went home. While these things are going on, the private friendship
+between so many families on either side of the border must be
+suspended, and all intercourse; for maybe every man on either side will
+be called to arms, and assuredly it will not be safe for one of either
+nation to set foot across the border, save armed, and with a strong
+clump of spears at his back."
+
+"I shall be sorry, indeed, to go," Oswald said, "but I see that if
+troubles do, as you fear, break out at the conclusion of the peace, a
+fortnight hence--"
+
+"They may not wait for that," Adam Armstrong interrupted him. "A truce
+is only a truce so long as there are those strong enough to enforce it,
+and with Douglas and March at variance on our side, and Northumberland
+and Westmoreland absent on yours, there are none to see that the truce
+is not broken; and from what I hear, it may not be many days before we
+see the smoke of burning houses rising, upon either side of the
+border."
+
+"The more reason for my going home," Oswald said. "My father is not
+likely to be last in a fray, and assuredly he would not like me to be
+away across the border when swords are drawn. I am very sorry, but I
+see that there is no help for it; and tomorrow, at daybreak, I will
+start for home."
+
+That evening was the dullest Oswald had spent, during his visit. The
+prospect that the two nations might soon be engaged in another
+desperate struggle saddened the young cousins, who felt that a long
+time might elapse before they again met; and that in the meantime their
+fathers, and possibly themselves, might be fighting in opposite ranks.
+Although the breaches of the truces caused, as a rule, but little
+bloodshed, being in fact but cattle lifting expeditions, it was very
+different in time of war, when wholesale massacres took place on both
+sides, towns and villages were burned down, and the whole of the
+inhabitants put to the sword. Ten years had sufficed to soften the
+memory of these events, especially among young people, but each had
+heard numberless stories of wrong and slaughter, and felt that, when
+war once again broke out in earnest, there was little hope that there
+would be any change in the manner in which it would be conducted.
+
+Oswald rode rapidly, until he had crossed the border. The truce would
+not expire for another thirteen days, but the raiders might be at work
+at any moment; for assuredly there would be no chance of complaints
+being made, on the eve of recommencement of general hostilities. He met
+no one on the road, until he reached the first hamlet on the English
+side. Here he stopped to give his horse half an hour's rest, and a
+feed. As he dismounted, two or three of the villagers came up.
+
+"Have you heard aught, lad, of any gatherings on the other side of the
+border?"
+
+"None from where I came; but there was a talk that notices had been
+sent, through the southern Scottish marches, for all to be in readiness
+to gather to the banner without delay, when the summons was received."
+
+"That is what we have heard," a man said. "We have made everything in
+readiness to drive off our cattle to the fells; the beacons are all
+prepared for lighting, from Berwick down to Carlisle; and assuredly the
+Scotch will find little, near the border, to carry back with them.
+
+"You are the son of stout John Forster of Yardhope Keep, are you not? I
+saw you riding by his side, two months since, at Alwinton fair."
+
+"Yes, I was there with him."
+
+"He will have hot work, if a Scotch army marches into Tynedale. The
+Bairds will be sure to muster strongly, and they won't forgive the last
+raid on them; and whichever way they go, you may be sure that your
+father's hold will receive a visit."
+
+"It was but a return raid," Oswald said. "The Bairds had been down our
+way, but a short time before, and lifted all the cattle and horses that
+they could lay hands on, for miles round."
+
+"That is true enough. We all know the thieving loons. But men remember
+the injuries they have suffered, better than those they have inflicted;
+and they will count Allan Baird's death as more than a set-off for a
+score of their own forays."
+
+"If we have only the Bairds to settle with, we can hold our walls
+against them," Oswald said; "but if the whole of the Scotch army come
+our way, we must do as you are doing, drive the cattle to the hills,
+and leave them to do what harm they can to the stone walls, which they
+will find it hard work to damage."
+
+"Aye, I have heard that they are stronger than ordinary; and so they
+need be, seeing that you have a blood feud with the Bairds. Well, they
+are not like to have much time to waste over it, for our sheriff has
+already sent word here, as to the places where we are to gather when
+the beacon fires are lighted; and you may be sure that the Percys will
+lose no time in marching against them, with all their array; and the
+Scots are like to find, as they have found before, that it is an easier
+thing to cross the border than it is to get back."
+
+Late that evening, Oswald returned home. After the first greetings, his
+father said:
+
+"It is high time that you were back, Oswald. Rumour is busy, all along
+the border; but for myself, though I doubt not that their moss troopers
+will be on the move, as soon as the truce ends, I think there will not
+be any invasion in force, for some little time. The great lords of the
+Scotch marches are ill friends with each other; and, until the quarrel
+between Douglas and Dunbar is patched up, neither will venture to march
+his forces into England. It may be months, yet, before we see their
+pennons flying on English soil.
+
+"My brother Alwyn has been over here, for a day or two, since you were
+away. The Percys are down south, so he was free to ride over here. He
+wants us to send you to him, without loss of time. He says that there
+is a vacancy in Percy's household, owing to one of his esquires being
+made a knight, and a page has been promoted to an esquireship. He said
+that he spoke to Hotspur, before he went south, anent the matter; and
+asked him to enroll you, not exactly as a page, but as one who, from
+his knowledge of the border, would be a safe and trusty messenger to
+send, in case of need. As he has served the Percys for thirty years,
+and for ten has been the captain of their men-at-arms; and has never
+asked for aught, either for himself or his relations, Percy gave him a
+favourable answer; and said that if, on his return, he would present
+you to him, and he found that you were a lad of manners that would be
+suitable for a member of his household, he would grant his request;
+partly, too, because my father and myself had always been stanch men,
+and ready at all times to join his banner, when summoned, and to fight
+doughtily. So there seems a good chance of preferment for you.
+
+"Your mother is willing that you should go. She says, and truly enough,
+that if you stay here it will be but to engage, as I and my forebears
+have done, in constant feuds with the Scots; harrying and being
+harried, never knowing, when we lie down to rest, but that we may be
+woke up by the battle shout of the Bairds; and leaving behind us, when
+we die, no more than we took from our fathers.
+
+"I know not how your own thoughts may run in the matter, Oswald, but
+methinks that there is much in what she says; though, for myself, I
+wish for nothing better than what I am accustomed to. Percy would have
+knighted me had I wished it, years ago; but plain Jock Forster I was
+born, and so will I die when my time comes; for it would alter my
+condition in no way, save that as Jock Forster I can lead a raid across
+the border, but as Sir John Forster it would be hardly seemly for me to
+do so, save when there is open war between the countries.
+
+"It is different, in your case; You are young, and can fit yourself to
+another mode of life; and can win for yourself, with your sword, a
+better fortune than you will inherit from me. Besides, lad, I am like
+enough, unless a Baird spear finishes me sooner, to live another thirty
+years yet; and it is always sure to lead to trouble, if there are two
+cocks in one farmyard. You would have your notions as to how matters
+should be done, and I should have mine; and so, for many reasons, it is
+right that you should go out into the world. If matters go well with
+you, all the better; if not, you will always be welcome back here, and
+will be master when I am gone.
+
+"What say you?"
+
+"It comes suddenly upon me, Father; but, as I have always thought that
+I should like to see something of the world beyond our own dales, I
+would gladly, for a time at least, accept my uncle's offer; which is a
+rare one, and far beyond my hopes. I should be sorry to leave you and
+my mother but, save for that it seems to me, as to you, that it would
+be best for me to go out into the world, for a time."
+
+"Then that is settled, and tomorrow you shall ride to Alnwick and see,
+at any rate, if aught comes of the matter.
+
+"Do not cry, Wife. It is your counsel that I am acting upon, and you
+have told me you are sure that it is best that he should go. It is not
+as if he were taking service with a southern lord. He will be but a
+day's ride away from us, and doubtless will be able to come over, at
+times, and stay a day or two with us; and once a year, when times are
+peaceable, you shall ride behind me, on a pillion, to see how things go
+with him at the Percys' castle. At any rate it will be better, by far,
+than if he had carried out that silly fancy of his, for putting himself
+in the hands of the monks and learning to read and write; which would,
+perchance, have ended in his shaving his crown and taking to a cowl,
+and there would have been an end of the Forsters of Yardhope.
+
+"Now, put that cold joint upon the table, again. Doubtless the lad has
+a wolf's appetite."
+
+There was no time lost. The next day was spent in looking out his
+clothes and packing his valise, by his mother; while he rode round the
+country, to say goodbye to some of his friends. The next morning, at
+daybreak, he started; and, at nightfall, rode into the castle of
+Alnwick, and inquired for Alwyn Forster. The two men-at-arms, who had
+regarded his appearance, on his shaggy border horse, with scarce
+concealed contempt; at once answered, civilly, that the captain would
+be found in his room, in the north turret. They then pointed out to him
+the stables, where he could bestow his horse; and, having seen some hay
+placed before it, and a feed of barley, to which the animal was but
+little accustomed, Oswald made his way up the turret, to the room in
+which his uncle lodged.
+
+The stately castle, and the beauty, as well as the strength, of the
+Percys' great stronghold, had in no small degree surprised, and almost
+awed the lad, accustomed only to the rough border holds. It was
+situated on rising ground, on the river Aln; and consisted of a great
+keep, which dated back to the times of the Saxons; and three courts,
+each of which were, indeed, separate fortresses, the embattled gates
+being furnished with portcullises and strong towers. Within the circuit
+of its walls, it contained some five acres of ground, with sixteen
+towers, the outer wall being surrounded by a moat.
+
+The Percys were descended from a Danish chief, who was one of the
+conquerors of Normandy, and settled there. The Percy of the time came
+over with William the Norman, and obtained from him the gift of large
+possessions in the south of England, and in Yorkshire; and, marrying a
+great Saxon heiress, added to his wide lands in the north.
+
+One of the Percys, in the reign of Henry the Second, made a journey to
+Jerusalem, and died in the Holy Land. None of his four sons survived
+him. His eldest daughter Maud married the Earl of Warwick; but, dying
+childless, her sister Agnes became sole heir to the broad lands of the
+Percys. She married the son of the Duke of Brabant, the condition of
+her marriage being that he should either take the arms of the Percys,
+instead of his own; or continue to bear his own arms, and take the name
+of Percy. He chose the latter alternative. Their son was one of the
+barons who forced King John to grant the Magna Carta.
+
+The Percys always distinguished themselves, in the wars against the
+Scot; and received, at various times, grants of territory in that
+country; one of them being made Earl of Carrick, when Robert the Bruce
+raised the standard of revolt against England.
+
+Upon the other hand, they not unfrequently took a share in risings
+against the Kings of England; and their estates were confiscated, for a
+time, by their taking a leading part in the action against Piers
+Gaveston, the royal favourite.
+
+It was in the reign of Henry the Second that the Percy of the time
+obtained, by purchase, the Barony of Alnwick; which from that date
+became the chief seat of the family. The present earl was the first of
+the rank, having been created by Richard the Second. He was one of the
+most powerful nobles in England, and it was at his invitation that
+Henry of Lancaster had come over from France, and had been placed on
+the throne by the Percys, and some other of the northern nobles; and,
+as a reward for his service, the earl was created High Constable of
+England.
+
+
+
+Chapter 3: At Alnwick.
+
+
+"You are rarely changed, Oswald," his uncle said, as the lad entered
+his apartment. "'Tis three years since I last saw you, and you have
+shot up nigh a head, since then. I should not have known you, had I met
+you in the street; but as I was expecting you, it is easy to recall
+your features. I made sure that you would come; for, although your
+father was at first averse to my offer, I soon found that your mother
+was on my side, and I know that, in the long run, my brother generally
+gives in to her wishes; and I was sure that, as you were a lad of
+spirit, you would be glad to try a flight from home.
+
+"You are growing up mightily like your father, and promise to be as big
+and as strong as we both are. Your eyes speak of a bold disposition,
+and my brother tells me that you are already well practised with your
+arms.
+
+"You understand that it is Sir Henry, whom they call Hotspur, that you
+are to serve. As to the earl, he is too great a personage for me to ask
+a favour from, but Sir Henry is different. I taught him the first use
+of his arms, and many a bout have I had with him. He treats me as a
+comrade, rather than as the captain of his father's men-at-arms, here;
+and when I spoke to him about you, he said at once:
+
+"'Bring him here, and we will see what we can do for him. If he is a
+fellow of parts and discretion, I doubt not that we can make him
+useful. You say he knows every inch of our side of the border, and
+something of the Scottish side of it, his mother's sister being married
+to one of the Armstrongs. There is like to be trouble before long. You
+know the purpose for which I am going away; and the Scots are sure to
+take advantage of changes in England, and a youth who can ride, and
+knows the border, and can, if needs be, strike a blow in self defence,
+will not have to stay idle in the castle long. His father is a stout
+withstander of the Scots, and the earl would have given him knighthood,
+if he would have taken it; and maybe, in the future, the son will win
+that honour. He is too old for a page, and I should say too little
+versed in our ways for such a post; but I promise you that, when he is
+old enough, he shall be one of my esquires.'
+
+"So you may soon have an opportunity of showing Hotspur what you are
+made of. And now, I doubt not that you are hungry. I will send down to
+the buttery, for a couple of tankards and a pasty. I had my supper two
+hours ago, but I doubt not that I can keep you company in another."
+
+He went to the window, and called out, "John Horn!"
+
+The name was repeated below, and in two minutes a servant came up. The
+captain gave him directions, and they shortly sat down to a substantial
+meal.
+
+"The first thing to do, lad, will be to get you garments more suitable
+to the Percys' castle than those you have on; they are good enough to
+put on under armour, or when you ride in a foray; but here, one who
+would ride in the train of the Percys must make a brave show. It is
+curfew, now; but tomorrow, early, we will sally into the town, where we
+shall find a good choice of garments, for men of all conditions. You
+hold yourself well, and you have something of your mother's softness of
+speech; and will, I think, make a good impression on Sir Henry, when
+suitably clad.
+
+"You see, there are many sons of knights, of good repute and standing,
+who would be glad, indeed, that their sons should obtain a post in
+Hotspur's personal following; and who might grumble, were they passed
+over in favour of one who, by his appearance, was of lower condition
+than themselves.
+
+"John Forster is well known, on the border, as a valiant fighter, and a
+leading man in Coquetdale. It is known, too, that he might have been
+knighted, had he chosen; and doubtless there are many who, having heard
+that his hold is one of the strongest on the border, give him credit
+for having far wider possessions than that bit of moor round the hold,
+and grazing rights for miles beyond it. If, then, you make a brave
+show, none will question the choice that Hotspur may make; but were you
+to appear in that garb you have on, they might well deem that your
+father is, after all, but a moss trooper.
+
+"He told me that you had, once, a fancy to learn to read and write.
+What put that idea into your head? I do not say that it was not a good
+one, but at least it was a strange one, for a lad brought up as you
+have been."
+
+"I think, Uncle, that it was rather my mother's idea than my own; she
+thought that it might conduce to my advancement, should I ever leave
+the hold and go out into the world."
+
+"She was quite right, Oswald; and 'tis a pity that you did not go, for
+a couple of years, to a monastery. It is a good thing to be able to
+read an order, or to write one, for many of the lords and knights can
+do no more than make a shift to sign their names. As for books I say
+nothing, for I see not what manner of good they are; but father Ernulf,
+who is chaplain here, tells me that one who gives his mind to it can,
+in a year, learn enough to write down, not in a clerkly hand, but in
+one that can be understood, any letter or order his lord may wish sent,
+or to read for him any that he receives.
+
+"In most matters, doubtless, an order by word of mouth is just as good
+as one writ on vellum; but there are times when a messenger could not
+be trusted to deliver one accurately, as he receives it; or it might
+have to be passed on, from hand to hand. Otherwise, a spoken message is
+the best; for if a messenger be killed on the way, none are the wiser
+as to the errand on which he is going; while, if a parchment is found
+on him, the first priest or monk can translate its purport.
+
+"The chaplain has two younger priests with him; and, should you be
+willing, I doubt not that one of these would give you instruction, for
+an hour or two of a day. The Percys may not be back for another month
+or two, and if you apply yourself to it honestly, you might learn
+something by that time."
+
+"I should like it very much, Uncle."
+
+"Then, so it shall be, lad. For two or three hours a day you must
+practise in arms--I have some rare swordsmen among my fellows--but for
+the rest of the time, you will be your own master. I will speak with
+father Ernulf, in the morning, after we have seen to the matter of your
+garments."
+
+A straw pallet was brought up to the chamber; and, after chatting for
+half an hour about his visit to the Armstrongs, Oswald took off his
+riding boots and jerkin, the total amount of disrobing usual at that
+time on the border, and was soon asleep.
+
+"I am afraid, Uncle," he said in the morning, "that the furnishment of
+the purse my father gave me, at starting, will not go far towards what
+you may consider necessary for my outfit."
+
+"That need not trouble you at all, lad. I told your father I should
+take all charges upon myself, having no children of my own, and no way
+to spend my money; therefore I can afford well to do as I like towards
+you. Once the war begins, you will fill your purse yourself; for
+although the peoples of the towns and villages suffer by the Scotch
+incursions, we men-at-arms profit by a war. We have nought that they
+can take from us, but our lives, while we take our share of the booty,
+and have the ransom of any knights or gentlemen we may make prisoners."
+
+Accordingly they went into Alnwick, and Alwyn Forster bought for his
+nephew several suits of clothes, suitable for a young gentleman of good
+family; together with armour, of much more modern fashion than that to
+which Oswald was accustomed. When they returned to the castle, the lad
+was told to put on one of these suits, at once.
+
+"Make your old ones up in a bundle," his uncle said. "There may be
+occasions when you may find such clothes useful; though here,
+assuredly, they are out of place. Now, I will go with you to Father
+Ernulf."
+
+The priest's abode was in what was called the Abbots' Tower, which was
+the one nearest to the large monastery, outside the walls.
+
+"I told you, father," the captain said, "that belike my nephew would
+join me here, as I was going to present him to Sir Henry Percy. The
+good knight will not be back again, mayhap, for some weeks; and the lad
+has a fancy to learn to read and write, and I thought you might put him
+in the way of his attaining such knowledge."
+
+"He looks as if the sword will suit his hand better than the pen," the
+priest said, with a smile, as his eye glanced over the lad's active
+figure. "But surely, if he is so inclined, I shall be glad to further
+his wishes. There is a monk at the monastery who, although a good
+scholar, is fitted rather for the army than the Church. He was one of
+our teachers, but in sooth had but little patience with the blunders of
+the children; but I am sure that he would gladly give his aid to a lad
+like this, and would bear with him, if he really did his best. I have
+nought to do at present, and will go down with him, at once, and talk
+to Friar Roger.
+
+"If the latter would rather have nought to do with it, one of my
+juniors shall undertake the task; but I am sure that the friar would
+make a better instructor, if he would take it in hand.
+
+"He is a stout man-at-arms--for, as you know, when the Scots cross the
+border, the abbot always sends a party of his stoutest monks to fight
+in Percy's ranks; as is but right, seeing that the Scots plunder a
+monastery as readily as a village. Friar Roger was the senior in
+command, under the sub-prior, of the monks who fought at Otterburn, and
+all say that none fought more stoutly, and the monks were the last to
+fall back on that unfortunate day. They say that he incurred many
+penances for his unchurchly language, during the fight; but that the
+abbot remitted them, on account of the valour that he had shown."
+
+Accordingly, the priest went off with Oswald to the monastery, while
+Alwyn Forster remained, to attend to his duties as captain of the
+men-at-arms. On his saying that he wished to see the friar Roger, the
+priest was shown into a waiting room, where the monk soon joined them.
+
+He was a tall, powerful man, standing much over six feet in height, and
+of proportionate width of shoulders. He carried his head erect, and
+looked more like a man-at-arms, in disguise, than a monk. He bent his
+head to the priest, and then said in a hearty tone:
+
+"Well, Father Ernulf, what would you with me, today? You have no news
+of the Scots having crossed the border, and I fear that there is no
+chance, at present, of my donning a cuirass over my gown?"
+
+"None at present, brother, though it may well be so, before long. I
+hope that we shall soon have the earl and his son back again, for the
+Scots are sure to take advantage of their absence, now that the truce
+is expired.
+
+"No, I want you on other business. This young gentleman is the nephew
+of Alwyn Forster, whom you know."
+
+"Right well, Father; a good fellow, and a stout fighter."
+
+"He is about to enter Sir Henry's household," the priest went on; "but,
+seeing that the knight is still away, and may be absent for some weeks
+yet, the young man is anxious to learn to read and write--
+
+"Not from any idea of entering the Church," he broke off, with a smile,
+at the expression of surprise on the monk's face; "but that it may be
+useful to him in procuring advancement.
+
+"I have, therefore, brought him to you; thinking that you would make a
+far better teacher, for a lad like him, than your brothers in the
+school. I thought perhaps that, if I spoke to the abbot, he might
+release you from your attendance at some of the services, for such a
+purpose."
+
+"That is a consideration," the monk laughed.
+
+"Well, young sir, I tell you fairly that among my gifts is not that of
+patience with fools. If you are disposed to work right heartily, as I
+suppose you must be, or you would not make such a request, I on my part
+will do my best to teach you; but you must not mind if, sometimes, you
+get a rough buffet to assist your memory."
+
+"I should doubt whether a buffet, from you, would not be more likely to
+confuse my memory than to assist it," Oswald said, with a smile; "but
+at any rate, I am ready to take my chance, and can promise to do my
+best to avoid taxing your patience, to that point."
+
+"That will do, Father," the monk said. "He is a lad of spirit, and it
+is a pleasure to train one of that kind. As to the puny boys they send
+to be made monks because, forsooth, they are likely to grow up too weak
+for any other calling, I have no patience with them; and I get into
+sore disgrace, with the abbot, for my shortness of temper."
+
+"I am afraid, from what I hear," the priest said, shaking his head, but
+unable to repress a smile, "that you are often in disgrace, Brother
+Roger."
+
+"I fear that it is so, and were it not that I am useful, in teaching
+the lay brothers and the younger monks the use of the carnal weapons, I
+know that, before this, I should have been bundled out, neck and crop.
+'Tis hard, Father, for a man of my inches to be shut up, here, when
+there is so much fighting to be done, abroad."
+
+"There is good work to be done, everywhere," the priest said gravely.
+"Many of us may have made a mistake in choosing our vocations; but, if
+so, we must make the best we can of what is before us."
+
+"What time will you come?" the monk asked Oswald.
+
+"My uncle said that he would suit my hours to yours; but that, if it
+was all the same to you, I should practise in arms from six o'clock
+till eight, and again for an hour or two in the evening; so that I
+could come to you either in the morning or afternoon."
+
+"Come at both, if you will," the monk said. "If the good father can get
+me off the services, from eight till six, you can be with me all that
+time, save at the dinner hour. You have but a short time to learn in,
+and must give yourself heartily to it.
+
+"There is the chapel bell ringing, now, and I must be off. The abbot
+will not be present at this service, Father; and if you will, you can
+see him now. I doubt not that he will grant your request, for I know
+that I anger him, every time I am in chapel. I am fond of music, and I
+have a voice like a bull; and, do what I will, it will come out in
+spite of me; and he says that my roaring destroys the effect of the
+whole choir."
+
+So saying, he strode away.
+
+"Do you wait outside the gates, my son," the priest said. "I shall be
+only a few minutes with the abbot; who, as Friar Roger says, will, I
+doubt not, be glad enough to grant him leave to abstain from attendance
+at the services."
+
+In a short time, indeed, he rejoined Oswald at the gate.
+
+"That matter was managed, easily enough," he said. "The abbot has,
+himself, a somewhat warlike disposition, which is not to be wondered
+at, seeing that he comes from a family ever ready to draw the sword;
+and he has, therefore, a liking for Friar Roger, in spite of his
+contumacies, breaches of regulations, and quarrels with the other
+monks. He is obliged to continually punish him, with sentences of
+seclusion, penance, and fasting; but methinks it goes against the
+grain. He said, at once, that he was delighted to hear that he had
+voluntarily undertaken some work that would keep him out of trouble,
+and that he willingly, and indeed gladly, absolved him from attendance
+in chapel, during the hours that he was occupied with you.
+
+"'He is not without his uses,' he said. 'He is in special charge of the
+garden, and looks after the lay brothers employed in it. I will put
+someone else in charge, while he is busy, though I doubt if any will
+get as much work out of the lay brothers as he does; and indeed, he
+himself labours harder than any of them. With any other, I should say
+that tucking his gown round his waist, and labouring with might and
+main was unseemly; but as it works off some of his superabundant
+energy, I do not interfere with him.'"
+
+"How ever did he become a monk, Father?"
+
+"It seems that he was a somewhat sickly child, and his father sent him
+to the monastery to be taught, with a view to entering the Church. He
+was quick and bright in his parts, but as his health improved he grew
+restless, and at fifteen refused to follow the vocation marked out for
+him, and returned home; where, as I have heard, he took part in various
+daring forays across the border. When he was five-and-twenty, he was
+wounded well-nigh to death in one of these, and he took it as a
+judgment upon him, for deserting the Church; so he returned here, and
+became a lay brother. He was a very long time, before he recovered his
+full strength, and before he did so he became a monk, and I believe has
+bitterly regretted the fact, ever since.
+
+"Some day, I am afraid, he will break the bounds altogether, throw away
+his gown, assume a breast plate and steel cap, and become an unfrocked
+monk. I believe he fights hard against his inclinations, but they are
+too strong for him. If war breaks out I fear that, some day, he will be
+missing.
+
+"He will, of course, go down south, where he will be unknown; and
+where, when the hair on his tonsure has grown, he can well pass as a
+man-at-arms, and take service with some warlike lord. I trust that it
+may not be so, but he will assuredly make a far better man-at-arms than
+he will ever make a good monk."
+
+The next morning, after practising for two hours with sword and pike,
+Oswald went down, at eight o'clock, to the monastery, and was conducted
+to friar Roger's cell. The latter at once began his instruction,
+handing him a piece of blackened board, and a bit of chalk.
+
+"Now," he said, "you must learn to read and write, together. There are
+twenty-six letters, and of each there is a big one and a little one.
+The big ones are only used at the beginning of a sentence--that is
+where, if you were talking, you would stop to take breath and begin
+afresh--and also at the first letter of the names of people, and
+places.
+
+"The first letter is 'A'. There it is, in that horn book, you see. It
+looks like two men, or two trees, leaning against each other for
+support; with a line, which might be their hands, in the middle.
+
+"Now, make a letter like that, on your board. The little 'a' is a small
+circle with an upright, with a tail to it; you might fancy it a fish,
+with its tail turned up.
+
+"Now, write each of those, twelve times."
+
+So he continued with the first six letters.
+
+"That will be as much as you will remember, at first," he said. "Now we
+will begin spelling with those letters, and you will see how they are
+used. You see, it is a mixture of the sounds of the two: 'b a' makes
+ba, and 'b e' be, 'c a' ca, 'd a' da, 'd e' de, and so on. Now, we will
+work it out."
+
+Oswald was intelligent, and anxious to learn. He had been accustomed,
+when riding, to notice every irregularity of ground, every rock and
+bush that might serve as a guide, if lost in a fog, and he very quickly
+took in the instruction given him; and, by the time the convent bell
+rung to dinner, he had made a considerable progress with the variations
+that could be formed with the six letters that he had learned; and the
+friar expressed himself as highly satisfied with him.
+
+"You have learned as much, in one morning, as many of the boys who
+attend schools would learn in a month," he said. "If you go on like
+this, I will warrant that, if Percy delays his return for two months,
+you will know as much as many who have been two years at the work. I
+have always said that it is a mistake to teach children young; their
+minds do not take in what you say to them. You may beat it into them,
+but they only get it by rote; and painfully, because they don't
+understand how one thing leads to another, and it is their memory only,
+and not their minds, that are at work."
+
+The next day came news that the Scotch had crossed the border, and
+there was great excitement in the castle; but it was soon learned that
+the invasion was not on a great scale, neither the Douglases nor the
+Earl of March having taken part in it.
+
+"There is no fear of our being attacked, here," Alwyn Forster said to
+Oswald. "The sheriffs of the county will call out their levies, and
+will soon make head against them. At the same time, we shall make
+preparations against any chance of their coming hither."
+
+This was done. Vast quantities of arrows were prepared, stones
+collected and carried up to the points on the wall most exposed to
+attack; and orders sent out, by the governor of the castle in the
+Percys' absence, to the people for many miles round, that on the
+approach of the Scots all were to retire to refuge, the women and
+children taking to the hills, while the men capable of bearing arms
+were to hasten to the defence of the castle.
+
+For a time, the Scots carried all before them, wasting and devastating
+the country. Oswald heard that they had captured, without resistance,
+his father's hold. He rejoiced at the news, for he feared that, not
+knowing the strength of the invading force, resistance might have been
+attempted; in which case all in the hold might have been put to the
+sword. He had no doubt, now, that his father and mother had retired
+with their followers to the hills, as they had always determined to do,
+in case of an invasion by a force too strong to resist.
+
+Had the Percys been at home, they might have held out, confident that
+the Scotch would be attacked before they could effect its capture; but
+as all the northern lords, with their retainers, were away in the
+south, it would be some time before a force could be collected that
+could make head against the Scots.
+
+A portion of the Scottish army laid siege to the castle of Wark, on the
+Tweed. This castle had always played a conspicuous part in the border
+wars. It had been besieged and captured by David of Scotland, in the
+reign of Stephen; and two or three years later was again besieged, but
+this time repulsed all attacks. David, after his defeat at the battle
+of the Standard, resumed the siege. It again repulsed all attacks, but
+at last was reduced to an extremity by famine, and capitulated.
+
+The castle was demolished by the Scots, but was rebuilt by Henry the
+Second. In 1215 it was again besieged, this time by King John, who
+resented the defection of the northern barons; and it was captured, and
+again destroyed. In 1318 it was captured and destroyed by Robert Bruce.
+In 1341 it was besieged by David Bruce, but held out until relieved by
+King Edward, himself. In 1383 it was again besieged by the Scots, and
+part of its fortifications demolished. On the present occasion it was
+again captured, and razed to the ground.
+
+Another portion of the Scottish army, plundering and burning, advanced
+along the valley of the Coquet. As they approached, the inhabitants of
+the district round Alnwick began to pour into the castle; but orders
+were issued that all the fighting men should join the force of Sir
+Robert Umfraville, the sheriff of the district, who was gathering a
+force to give the Scots battle.
+
+"I fear that there is small chance of the Scots making their way
+hither," Oswald's instructor said, in lugubrious tones. "Sir Robert is
+a stout fighter, and the Scots, laden as they must be with booty, and
+having hitherto met with no resistance, will be careless and like to be
+taken by surprise. Methinks the abbot ought to send off a contingent,
+to aid Sir Robert."
+
+Oswald laughed.
+
+"I suppose he wants to keep them for more urgent work, and thinks that
+the Church should only fight when in desperate straits. However,
+Father, you may have an opportunity yet; for we cannot regard it as
+certain that Sir Robert will defeat the Scots."
+
+Three days later, however, the news arrived that Sir Robert had
+attacked the Scots, at Fulhetlaw, and utterly defeated them; taking
+prisoner Sir Richard Rutherford and his five sons, together with Sir
+William Stewart, John Turnbull, a noted border reiver, and many others;
+and that those who had escaped were in full flight for the border.
+
+The Scotch incursion had made no change in Oswald's work. He continued
+to study hard with the monk. As a rule, he fully satisfied his teacher;
+but at times, when he failed to name the letters required to make up a
+certain sound, the latter lost all patience with him; and, more than
+once, with difficulty restrained himself from striking him. Spelling in
+those days, however, had by no means crystallized itself into any
+definite form, and there was so large a latitude allowed that, if the
+letters used gave an approximate sound to the word, it was deemed
+sufficient.
+
+The consequence was that Oswald's education progressed at a speed that
+would, in these more rigid days, be deemed impossible. He was intensely
+interested in the work, and even his martial exercises were, for the
+time, secondary to it in his thoughts. He felt so deeply grateful to
+his instructor that, even if he had struck him, he would have cared but
+little. In those days rough knocks were readily given, and the idea
+that there was anything objectionable, in a boy being struck, had never
+been entertained by anyone. Wives were beaten not uncommonly, servants
+frequently; and from the highest to the lowest, corporal punishment was
+regarded as the only way to ensure the carrying out of orders.
+
+Oswald was slower in learning to write down the letters than he was to
+read them. His hands were so accustomed to the rein, the bow, and the
+sword that they bungled over the work of forming letters. Nevertheless,
+by the time the Percys returned, three months and a half after his
+arrival at the castle, he could both read and write short and simple
+words; and as these formed a large proportion of English speech, at the
+time, he had made a considerable step in the path of learning, and the
+monk was highly pleased with his pupil.
+
+"I shall not be able to come tomorrow, Father," he said to the monk,
+one day. "The earl and Sir Henry will be back tonight, and my uncle
+says that I must keep near him, tomorrow; so that, if opportunity
+offers, he may present me to the knight."
+
+"I feared it would come to that," the monk said. "I wish they had all
+stopped away, another three or four months; then you would have got
+over your difficulty of piecing together syllables, so as to make up a
+long word. 'Tis a thousand pities that you should stop altogether, just
+when you are getting on so well."
+
+"I will come as often as I can, Father, if you will let me."
+
+"No, no, lad. I know what it is, when the family are at home. It will
+be, 'Here, Oswald, ride with such a message;' or Hotspur, himself, may
+be going out with a train, and you will have to accompany him. There
+will always be something.
+
+"Indeed, save but for your teaching, it is high time that the Percys
+were back again; for there has already been a great deal of hot work,
+on the border, and report says that the Scots are mustering strongly,
+and that there is going to be a great raid into Cumberland; so you will
+be busy, and so shall I. The lay brothers have made but a poor hand of
+it, while I have been busy. I went down in the evening, yesterday, to
+see them drill; and it was as much as I could do to prevent myself from
+falling upon them, and giving them a lesson of a different sort.
+
+"As it was, I gave it to their instructor heartily, and was had up
+before the abbot on his complaint, this morning; and am to eat Lenten
+fare for the next ten days, which accords but ill either with my liking
+or needs."
+
+In the evening, the courtyard was ablaze with torches as, amid the
+cheers of the garrison, the Earl of Northumberland and his son rode in,
+with a strong body of men-at-arms. The greater portion of the following
+with which they had met Henry of Lancaster on his landing, and escorted
+him to London, had long since returned to their homes; being released
+from service, when it was seen that no opposition was to be looked for
+from the adherents of Richard. The followings of the various nobles and
+knights of the northern counties had left the main body on the way
+home, and Northumberland had brought with him, to Alnwick, only the
+men-at-arms who formed the regular force retained under his standard.
+
+Oswald was greatly struck with the splendid appearance, and
+appointments, of the earl and the knights who attended him, and with
+the martial array of his followers. Hitherto, he had seen but the
+roughest side of war; the arms and armour carried not for show, but for
+use, and valued for their strength, without any reference to their
+appearance. On the border there was not the smallest attempt at
+uniformity in appearance, polished armour was regarded with disfavour,
+and that worn was of the roughest nature, the local armourer's only
+object being to furnish breast and back pieces that would resist the
+strongest spear thrust. Of missiles they made little account, for the
+Scots had but few archers, and their bows were so inferior in strength,
+to those carried by the English archers, that armour strong enough to
+resist a spear thrust was amply sufficient to keep out a Scottish
+arrow.
+
+There was not, even in the array of the Earl of Northumberland's
+men-at-arms, any approach to the uniformity that now prevails among
+bodies of soldiers. The helmets, breast and back pieces, were, however,
+of similar form, as the men engaged for continued service were
+furnished with armour by the earl; but there was a great variety in the
+garments worn under them, these being of all colours, according to the
+fancy of their wearers. All, however, carried spears of the same
+length, while some had swords, and others heavy axes at their girdles.
+The helmets and armour were all brightly polished, and as the lights of
+the torches flashed from them and from the spearheads; Oswald, for the
+first time, witnessed something of the pomp of war.
+
+His uncle, as captain of the men-at-arms left in the castle, was
+invited to the banquet held after the arrival of the force. Oswald,
+therefore, was free to wander about among the soldiers, listening to
+their talk of what they had seen in London, and of the entertainments
+there in honour of the new king; exciting, thereby, no small amount of
+envy among those who had been left behind in garrison.
+
+Oswald already knew that the earl had been appointed Constable of
+England, for life, and now heard that the lordship of the Isle of Man
+had since been conferred on him.
+
+
+
+Chapter 4: An Unequal Joust.
+
+
+"You must don your best costume tomorrow, Oswald," his uncle said, when
+he returned from the banquet. "Sir Henry Percy's first question, after
+asking as to the health of the garrison, was:
+
+"'Has this nephew of yours, of whom you were speaking to me, come yet?'
+
+"I told him that you had been here well-nigh four months, that you had
+been practising in arms with my best swordsmen, who spoke highly of
+you, and that the whole of your spare time had been spent at the
+monastery, where you had been studying to acquire the art of reading
+and writing, thinking that such knowledge must be useful to you in his
+service. I told him that brother Roger had reported that you had shown
+marvellous sharpness there, and could already read from a missal,
+barring only some of the long words.
+
+"'Oh, he had the fighting monk for his master!' Sir Henry said,
+laughing. 'Truly he must have been a good pupil, if he has come out of
+it without having his head broken, a dozen times. The friar is a thorn
+in the abbot's flesh, and more than once I have had to beg him off, or
+he would have been sent to the monastery of Saint John, which is a
+place of punishment for refractory monks. But in truth he is an honest
+fellow, though he has mistaken his vocation. He is a valiant
+man-at-arms, and the abbot's contingent would be of small value,
+without him.
+
+"'Well, I will see your nephew in the morning. His perseverance in
+learning, and his quickness in acquiring it, show him to be a youth of
+good parts, and intelligent; but until I see him, I cannot say what I
+will make of him.'"
+
+Accordingly, the next morning the lad accompanied his uncle to Sir
+Henry's private apartment, and found the knight alone. Sir Henry, Lord
+Percy, was now about forty years old. He had received the order of
+knighthood at the coronation of Richard the Second, when his father was
+created earl; and, nine years later, he was made governor of Berwick
+and Warden of the Marches; in which office he displayed such activity
+in following up and punishing raiders, that the Scots gave him the name
+of Hotspur. He was then sent to Calais, where he showed great valour.
+Two years later he was made Knight of the Garter, and was then
+appointed to command a fleet, sent out to repel a threatened invasion
+by the French. Here he gained so great a success that he came to be
+regarded as one of the first captains of the age.
+
+At Otterburn, his impetuosity cost him his freedom; for, pressing
+forward into the midst of the Scotch army, he and his brother Ralph
+were taken prisoners, and carried into Scotland. He had just been
+appointed, by King Henry, sheriff of Northumberland, and governor of
+Berwick and Roxburgh, and received other marks of royal favour.
+
+Although of no remarkable height, his broad shoulders and long, sinewy
+arms testified to his remarkable personal strength. His face was
+pleasant and open, and showed but small sign of his impetuous and fiery
+disposition.
+
+"So this is the young springal," he said, with a smile; as, with a
+quick glance, he took in every detail of Oswald's figure and
+appearance. "By my troth, you have not overpraised him. He bears
+himself well, and is like to be a stout fighter, when he comes to his
+full strength. Indeed, as the son of John Forster of Yardhope, and as
+your nephew, good Alwyn, he could scarce be otherwise; although I have
+not heard that either his father, or you, ever showed any disposition
+for letters."
+
+"No indeed, Sir Henry; nor have we, as far as I have ever seen, been
+any the worse for our lack of knowledge on that head. But with the lad
+here, it is different. Under your good patronage he may well hope to
+attain, by good conduct and valour, a promotion where book learning may
+be of use to him; and therefore, when he expressed a desire to learn, I
+did my best to favour his design."
+
+"And you did well, Alwyn. And since he has gained so much, in so short
+a time, it were a pity he should not follow it up; and he shall, if it
+likes him, so long as he is in this castle, have two hours every
+morning in which he can visit the fighting monk, until he can read and
+write freely.
+
+"Now, young sir, the question is, how can we best employ you? You are
+too old for a lady's bower, but not old enough, yet, for an esquire."
+
+"Nor could I aspire to such a position, my lord, until I have proved
+myself worthy of it. My uncle told me that he had suggested that I
+might be useful as a bearer of messages, and orders; and as I know
+every foot of the border, from near Berwick to Cumberland, methinks
+that I might serve you in that way. I ride lightly, know every morass
+and swamp, and every road through the fells; and have at times, when
+there was peace, crossed the Cheviots by several of the passes, to pay
+visits to my mother's sister, who is married to one of the Armstrongs,
+near Jedburgh. If your lordship will deign to employ me in such
+service, I can promise to do so safely, and to justify my uncle's
+recommendation; and shall be ready, at all times, to risk my life in
+carrying out your orders."
+
+"Well spoken, lad. I like the tone of your voice, and your manner of
+speech. They are such as will do no discredit to my household, and I
+hereby appoint you to it; further matters I will discuss with your
+uncle."
+
+Oswald expressed his thanks in suitable terms, and then, bowing deeply,
+retired.
+
+"A very proper lad, Alwyn. I would have done much for you, old friend,
+and would have taken him in some capacity, whatever he might have
+turned out; but, frankly, I doubted whether John Forster, valiant moss
+trooper as he is, would have been like to have had a son whom I could
+enroll in my household, where the pages and esquires are all sons of
+knights and men of quality. It is true that his father might have been
+a knight, had he chosen, since the earl offered him that honour after
+Otterburn; for three times he charged, at the head of a handful of his
+own men, right into the heart of the Scottish army, to try and rescue
+me; but he has always kept aloof in his own hold, going his own way and
+fighting for his own hand; and never once, that I can recall, has he
+paid a visit to us here, or at our other seats. I feared that under
+such a training as he would be likely to have, the lad would have been
+but a rough diamond. However, from his appearance and bearing, he might
+well have come of a noble family."
+
+"'Tis his mother's doing, methinks, Sir Henry. She is of gentle birth.
+Her father was Sir Walter Gillespie. He was killed by the Scots, when
+she was but a girl, or methinks he would scarcely have given her in
+marriage to my brother John. She went with a sister to live with an old
+aunt, who let the girls have their way, without murmur; and seeing that
+they had no dowry, for their father was but a poor knight, there were
+not many claimants for their hands; and when she chose John Forster,
+and her sister Adam Armstrong, she did not say them nay. She has made a
+good wife to him, though she must have had many an anxious hour, and
+doubtless it is her influence that has made the lad what he is."
+
+"How think you I had best bestow him, among the pages or the esquires?"
+
+"I should say, Sir Henry, as you are good enough to ask my opinion,
+that it were best among the esquires. It would be like putting a
+hunting dog among a lady's pets, to put him with the pages. Moreover,
+boys think more of birth than men do. The latter judge by merit, and
+when they see that the lad has something in him, would take to him;
+whereas were he with the pages there might be quarrels, and he might
+fall into disgrace."
+
+"I think that you are right, Alwyn. He might get a buffet or two, from
+the esquires, but he will be none the worse for that; while with the
+pages it might be bickering, and ill will. He shall take his chance
+with the squires. Bring him to me at twelve o'clock, and I will myself
+present him to them, with such words as may gain their goodwill, and
+make the way as easy as may be for him."
+
+Accordingly, at twelve o'clock, Oswald went to Hotspur's room, and was
+taken by him to the hall where the esquires, six in number, had just
+finished a meal. They varied in age from eighteen to forty. They all
+rose, as their lord entered.
+
+"I wish to present to you this young gentleman, my friends. He is the
+son of John Forster of Yardhope, whose name is familiar to you all, as
+one of the most valiant of the defenders of the border against the
+Scottish incursions. None distinguished themselves more at the battle
+of Otterburn, where he performed feats of prodigious valour, in his
+endeavours to rescue me and my brother from the hands of the Scots. The
+earl my father offered him knighthood, but he said bluntly that he
+preferred remaining, like his father, plain John Forster of Yardhope.
+The lad's mother is a daughter of Sir Walter Gillespie, and he is
+nephew of Alwyn, captain of the men-at-arms here.
+
+"He knows every foot of the border, its morasses, fells, and passes;
+and will prove a valuable messenger, when I have occasion to send
+orders to the border knights and yeomen. I have attached him to my
+household. You will find him intelligent, and active. He comes of a
+fighting stock; and will, I foresee, do no discredit to them in the
+future. I hesitated whether I should place him with the pages or with
+you, and have decided that, with your goodwill, he will be far more
+comfortable in your society, if you consent to receive him."
+
+"We will do so willingly, on such recommendation," the senior of the
+esquires said; "as well as for the sake of his brave uncle, whom we all
+respect and like, and of his valiant father. The addition of young
+blood to our party will, indeed, not be unwelcome; and while,
+perchance, he may learn something from us, he will assuredly be able to
+tell us much that is new of the doings on the border, of which nothing
+but vague reports have reached our ears."
+
+"Thanks, Allonby," Hotspur said. "I expected nothing less from you. He
+will, of course, practise at arms regularly, when not occupied in
+carrying messages; and you will be surprised to hear that he will go
+for two hours daily to the monastery, where he has, for the last three
+months, been learning reading and writing at the hands of Brother
+Roger, the fighting monk. It is his own desire, and a laudable one; and
+when I say that he has succeeded in giving Brother Roger satisfaction,
+you may well imagine that he must have made great progress."
+
+A smile ran round the faces of the esquires, for Brother Roger's
+pugnacious instincts were widely known.
+
+"Truly, Sir Henry, if brother Roger did not lose patience with him, it
+would be hard, indeed, if we could not get on with him; and in truth,
+this desire to improve himself speaks well for the lad's disposition."
+
+When Hotspur left, Allonby said, "Take a seat, Master Oswald. But
+first, have you dined?"
+
+"I took my meal an hour since, with my uncle," Oswald replied.
+
+"Ay, I remember that your uncle sticks to the old hours. Tell us, were
+you with your father in that foray he headed, to carry off some cattle
+that had been lifted by the Bairds? We heard a report of it, last
+night."
+
+"I was not with him, to my great disappointment; for he said that
+another year must pass, before I should be fit to hold my own in a
+fray. The affair was a somewhat hot one. Three of my father's men were
+killed, and some ten or twelve of those under other leaders; and my
+father and several of the band were wounded, some very sorely. It
+happened thus."
+
+And he then told the details of the affair.
+
+"It might well have been worse," Allonby said, "for, had the Bairds had
+time to assemble, it would have gone hardly with your father's party;
+especially as there is, as I have heard, a blood feud between him and
+them."
+
+"They have scored the last success," Oswald said, "seeing that they
+accompanied Sir Richard Rutherford in his raid, nigh two months ago;
+and, as I hear, while the rest came on harrying and plundering
+Croquetdale, the Bairds and their gathering remained at our hold, which
+they found deserted, for indeed my father could not hope to defend it
+successfully, against so large a force; and there they employed
+themselves in demolishing the outer wall, and much of the hold itself;
+and would have completed their task, had it not been for the defeat
+inflicted upon the rest of the Scots by Sir Robert Umfraville, when
+they were forced to hasten back across the border. My father sent me a
+message afterwards, saying that he and my mother, with their followers,
+had been forced to take to the fells; and that, on their return, they
+found the place well-nigh destroyed; but that he was going to set to
+work to rebuild it as before, and that he hoped, some time, to demolish
+the Bairds' hold in like fashion. It will be some time before the place
+is restored; for, my father's means being limited, he and his retainers
+would have to turn masons; but as the materials were there, he doubted
+not that, in time, they would make a good job of it."
+
+"Truly, it is a hard life on the border," the squire said, "and it is
+wonderful that any can be found willing to live within reach of the
+Scotch raiders. I myself have done a fair share of fighting, under our
+lord's banner; but to pass my life, never knowing whether I may not
+awake to find the house assailed, would be worse than the hardest
+service against an open foe.
+
+"Now, Master Oswald, we will go down to the courtyard, and see what
+your instructors have done for you, in the matter of arms. With whom
+have you been practising, since you came here?"
+
+"Principally with Godfrey Harpent, Dick Bamborough, and William Anell;
+but I have had a turn with a great many of the other men-at-arms."
+
+"The three men you name are all stout fellows, and good swordsmen. As a
+borderer, I suppose that you have practised with the lance?"
+
+"We call it by no such knightly term. With us it is a spear, and nought
+else; but all borderers carry it, both for fighting and for pricking up
+cattle; and from the time that I could sit a horse I have always
+practised for a while, every day, with some of my father's troopers, or
+with himself, using blunt weapons whitened with chalk, so as to show
+where the hits fell. Although in a charge upon footmen, our border
+spearmen would couch their weapons and ride straight at their foe; in
+skirmishes, where each can single out an enemy, and there is a series
+of single combats, they do not so fight, but circle round each other,
+trusting to the agility of their horses to avoid a thrust, and to
+deliver one when there is an opening. Our spears are nothing like so
+heavy as the knightly lances, and we thrust with them as with the point
+of a sword."
+
+"But in that way you can hardly penetrate armour," one of the other
+esquires said.
+
+"No, it is only in a downright charge that we try to do so. When we are
+fighting as I speak of, we thrust at the face, at the armpit, the
+joints of the armour, which in truth seldom fits closely, or below the
+breastplate. The Scotch use even less armour than do our borderers,
+their breast pieces being smaller, and they seldom wear back pieces. It
+is a question chiefly of the activity of the horses, as of the skill of
+their riders, and our little moor horses are as active as young goats;
+and although neither horse nor rider can stand a charge of a
+heavily-armed knight or squire, methinks that if one of our troopers
+brought him to a stand, he would get the better of him, save if the
+knight took to mace or battle-axe."
+
+"Have you your horse with you, Oswald?"
+
+"Yes, it is in the stable. I have gone out with it, every morning, as
+soon as the castle gates were opened, and have ridden for a couple of
+hours before I began my exercises."
+
+"Do you take him in hand first, Marsden," Allonby said to one of the
+younger esquires, a young man of two or three and twenty.
+
+Light steel caps with cheeks, gorgets, shoulder and arm pieces, and
+padded leathern jerkins were put on; and then, with blunted swords,
+they took their places facing each other. The squire took up a position
+of easy confidence. He was a good swordsman, and good-naturedly
+determined to treat the lad easily, and to play with him for a time
+before scoring his first hit.
+
+He soon, however, found that the game was not to be conducted on the
+lines that he had laid down. Oswald, after waiting for a minute or two,
+finding his opponent did not take the offensive, did so himself; and
+for a time Marsden had all his work to do, to defend himself. Several
+times, indeed, it was with the greatest difficulty that he guarded his
+head. The activity of his assailant almost bewildered him, as he
+continually shifted his position, and with cat-like springs leapt in
+and dealt a blow, leaping back again before his opponent's arm had time
+to fall.
+
+Finding at last that, quick as he might be, Marsden's blade always met
+his own, Oswald relaxed his efforts, as he was growing fatigued; and as
+he did so Marsden took the offensive, pressing him backwards, foot by
+foot. Every time, however, that he found himself approaching a barrier,
+or other obstacle, that would prevent his further retreat, Oswald, with
+a couple of springs, managed to shift his ground. When he saw that
+Marsden was growing breathless from his exertions, he again took the
+offensive, and at last landed a blow fairly on his opponent's helm.
+
+"By my faith," the squire said, with a laugh that had nevertheless a
+little mortification in it, "I would as soon fight with a wildcat; and
+yet your breath scarce comes fast, while I have not as much left in me
+as would fill an eggshell."
+
+"It was an excellent display," Allonby said.
+
+"Truly, lad, your activity is wonderful, and you might well puzzle the
+oldest swordsman, by such tactics. Marsden did exceedingly well, too.
+Many times I thought that your sword would have gone home, but up to
+the last, his guard was always ready in time. As for yourself, we had
+scarce the opportunity of seeing how your sword would guard your head,
+for you trusted always to your legs, rather than your arms.
+
+"Well, lad, you will do. Your arm is like iron, or it would have tired
+long before, with that sword, which is a little over heavy for you. As
+to your wind, you would tire out the stoutest swordsman in the Percys'
+train. I do not say that, in the press of a battle, where your activity
+would count for little, a good man-at-arms would not get the better of
+you; but in a single combat, with plenty of room, it would be a good
+man, indeed, who would tackle you; especially were he clad in armour,
+and you fighting without it. His only chance would be to get in one
+downright blow, that would break down your guard. As Marsden says, you
+fight like a wildcat, rather than as a man-at-arms; but as the time may
+come when you will ride in heavy armour, and so lose the advantage of
+your agility, you had best continue to practise regularly with us, and
+the men-at-arms, and learn to fight in the fashion that would be
+needed, were you engaged in a pitched battle when on horseback, and in
+armour."
+
+"I shall be glad, indeed, to do so," Oswald said modestly. "I know that
+I am very ignorant of real swordsmanship, and the men-at-arms have me
+quite at their mercy, when they insist upon my not shifting my ground.
+At home, I have only practised with my father's troopers, and we always
+fight on foot, and with stout sticks instead of swords, and without
+defences save our head pieces; but fighting in knightly fashion I knew
+nothing of, until I came here."
+
+"You will soon acquire that, lad. With your strength of arm, length of
+wind, quickness of eye, and activity, you will make a famous swordsman,
+in time.
+
+"Ah! Here is Sir Henry."
+
+"Have you been trying the lad's metal?" Hotspur asked, as he saw Oswald
+in the act of taking off his steel cap. Marsden had already done so.
+
+"That have we, Sir Henry, and find it as of proof. Marsden here, who is
+no mean blade, has taken him in hand; and the lad has more than held
+his own against him, not so much by swordsmanship as by activity, and
+wind. It was a curious contest. Marsden compared Oswald to a wildcat,
+and the comparison was not an ill one; for, indeed, his springs and
+leaps were so rapid and sudden that it was difficult to follow him, and
+the fight was like one between such an animal, and a hound. Marsden
+defended himself well against all his attacks, until his breath failed
+him, and he was dealt a downright blow on his helm, on which I see it
+has made a shrewd dent. As for his blows, they fell upon air, for the
+lad was ever out of reach before the ripostes came. In his own style of
+fighting, I would wager on him against any man-at-arms in the castle."
+
+"I am glad to hear it," Hotspur said. "I shall feel the less scruple,
+in sending him on missions which are not without danger. He will need
+training, to fit him for combat in the ranks. No doubt he has had no
+opportunity for such teaching, and would go down before a heavy-armed
+man, with a lance, like a blade of grass before a millstone."
+
+"He thinks not, Sir Henry, at least not in a single combat, for by his
+accounts his horse is as nimble as himself; but of course, in charges
+he and his horse would be rolled over, as you say."
+
+"He thinks not? Oh, well, we will try him! I have an hour to spare.
+
+"Do you put on a suit of full armour, Sinclair, and we will ride out to
+the course beyond the castle.
+
+"What will you put on, lad?"
+
+"I will put on only breast piece and steel cap; but I only said I
+should have a chance against a lance, Sir Henry. I do not pretend that
+I could stand against any man-at-arms, armed with sword and mace; but
+only that I thought that, with my horse, I could evade the shock of a
+fully-accoutred man, and then harass and maybe wound him with my
+spear."
+
+"Well, we will try, lad. Put on what you will, and get your horse
+saddled. It will be rare amusement to see so unequal a course. We shall
+be ready in a quarter of an hour."
+
+Oswald went up to his uncle, and told him what was proposed. Alwyn, who
+had witnessed his exercises with the rough riders of his father, smiled
+grimly.
+
+"If you can evade his first charge, which I doubt not that you can, you
+will have him at your mercy, with your light spear against his lance,
+and your moor horse against his charger; but put on the heaviest of
+your two steel caps, and strong shoulder pieces. 'Tis like enough that,
+in his temper, he may throw away his lance and betake him to his sword.
+I will demand that he carries neither mace nor battle-axe, and that you
+should only carry sword and spear. Your horse's nimbleness may keep you
+out of harm, which is as much as you can expect, or hope for. Put on a
+light breast plate, too, for in spite of the wooden shield to his lance
+head, he may hurt you sorely if he does chance to strike you."
+
+Oswald saw that his horse was carefully saddled. He procured from his
+uncle a piece of cloth; and, removing the spearhead, wrapped this round
+the head of the shaft, until it formed a ball the size of his fist.
+This he whitened thickly with chalk.
+
+In a few minutes Sinclair, who was the heaviest and strongest of the
+esquires, rode out into the courtyard in full armour. Sir Henry, with
+his own esquires, and several of the gentlemen of the earl's household,
+came down; and Hotspur laughed at the contrast presented by the two
+combatants: the one a mass of steel, with shield and lance, on a
+warhorse fully caparisoned; the other a slight, active-looking figure,
+with but little defensive armour, on a rough pony which had scarce an
+ounce of superfluous flesh.
+
+"Now, gentlemen," he said, "we may be engaged in warfare with the
+Scots, before long; and you will here have an opportunity of seeing the
+nature of border fighting. The combat may seem to you ridiculously
+unequal, but I know the moss trooper, and I can tell you that, in a
+single combat like this, activity goes far to counterbalance weight and
+armour. You remember how Robert Bruce, before Bannockburn, mounted on
+but a pony, struck down Sir Robert Bohun, a good knight and a powerful
+one."
+
+As the party went out, through the gates, to the tilting ground outside
+the walls, the men-at-arms, seeing that something unusual was going to
+take place, crowded up to the battlements, looking down on the ground.
+
+"Now, gentlemen," Percy said, "you will take your places at opposite
+ends of the field; and when I drop my scarf, you will charge. It is
+understood that you need not necessarily ride straight at each other;
+but that it is free, to each of you, to do the best he can to overthrow
+his opponent."
+
+As he gave the signal, the two riders dashed at full speed at each
+other; and, for a moment, the spectators thought that Oswald was going
+to be mad enough to meet his opponent in full course. When, however,
+the horses were within a length of each other, the rough pony swerved
+aside with a spring like that of a deer; and, wheeling round instantly,
+Oswald followed his opponent. The latter tried to wheel his charger,
+but as he did so, Oswald's spear struck him in the vizor, leaving a
+white mark on each side of the slit; and then he too wheeled his horse,
+maintaining his position on the left hand, but somewhat in rear, of his
+opponent; who was, thereby, wholly unable to use his lance, while
+Oswald marked the junction of gorget and helmet with several white
+circles. Furious at finding himself incapable of either defending
+himself, or of striking a blow, the squire threw away his lance, and
+drew his sword.
+
+Hotspur shouted, at the top of his voice:
+
+"A breach of the rules! A breach of the rules! The combat is at an
+end."
+
+But his words were unheard, in the helmet. Making his horse wheel round
+on his hind legs, Sinclair rode at Oswald with uplifted sword. The
+latter again couched his spear under his arm and, touching his horse
+with his spur, the animal sprung forward; and before the sword could
+fall, the point of the spear caught the squire under the armpit, and
+hurled him sideways from his saddle.
+
+Hotspur and those round him ran forward. Sinclair lay without moving,
+stunned by the force with which he had fallen. Oswald had already leapt
+from his horse, and raised Sinclair's head, and began to unlace the
+fastenings of his helmet. Hotspur's face was flushed with anger.
+
+"Do not upbraid him, my lord, I pray you," Oswald said. "He could
+scarce have avoided breaking the conditions, helpless as he felt
+himself; and he could not have heard your voice, which would be lost in
+his helmet. I pray you, be not angered with him."
+
+Hotspur's face cleared.
+
+"At your request I will not, lad," he said; "and, indeed, he has been
+punished sufficiently."
+
+By the time that the helmet was removed, one of the soldiers from the
+battlements ran out from the castle, with a ewer of water. This was
+dashed into the squire's face. He presently opened his eyes. A heavy
+fall was thought but little of in those days; and as Sinclair was
+raised to his feet, and looked round in bewilderment at those who were
+standing round him, Hotspur said good temperedly:
+
+"Well, Master Sinclair, the lad has given us all a lesson that may be
+useful to us. I would scarce have believed it, if I had not seen it;
+that a stout soldier, in full armour, should have been worsted by a lad
+on a rough pony; but I see now that the advantage is all on the
+latter's side, in a combat like this, with plenty of room to wheel his
+horse.
+
+"Why, he would have slain you a dozen times, Sinclair. Look at your
+vizor. That white mark is equal on both sides of the slit, and had
+there been a spear head on the shaft, it would have pierced you to the
+brain. Every joint of your armour, behind, is whitened; and that
+thrust, that brought you from your horse, would have spitted you
+through and through.
+
+"Now, let there be no ill feeling over this. It is an experiment, and a
+useful one; and had I, myself, been in your place, I do not know that I
+could have done aught more than you did."
+
+Sinclair was hot tempered, but of a generous disposition, and he held
+out his hand to Oswald, frankly.
+
+"It was a fair fight," he said, "and you worsted me, altogether. No one
+bears malice for a fair fall, in a joust."
+
+"The conditions were not at all even," Oswald said. "On a pony like
+mine, unless you had caught me in full career, it was impossible that
+the matter could have turned out otherwise."
+
+"I often wondered," Hotspur said, as they walked towards the gate,
+"that our chivalry should have been so often worsted by the rough
+Scottish troopers; but now I understand it. The Scotch always choose
+broken ground, and always scatter before we get near them; and,
+circling round, fall upon our chivalry when their weight and array are
+of no use to them. Happily, such a misadventure has never happened to
+myself; but it might well do so. The Scotch, too, have no regard for
+the laws of chivalry; and once behind will spear the horse, as indeed
+happened to me, at Otterburn. 'Tis a lesson in war one may well take to
+heart; and when I next fight the Scots, I will order that on no
+account, whatever, are the mounted men to break their ranks; but,
+whatever happens, are to move in a solid body, in which case they could
+defy any attacks upon them by light-armed horse, however numerous."
+
+At the gate of the castle, Alwyn Forster met them.
+
+"You have given me a more useful addition to my following than I dreamt
+of, Alwyn," Hotspur said. "Did you see the conflict?"
+
+"I watched it from the wall, Sir Henry. I felt sure how the matter
+would end. The lad is quick and sharp at border exercises. I have seen
+him work with his father's troopers. There were not many of them who
+could hold their own against him, and in fighting in their own way, I
+would back the moss troopers against the best horsemen in Europe. They
+are always accustomed to fight each man for himself, and though a score
+of men-at-arms would ride through a hundred of them, if they met the
+charge; in single combat their activity, and the nimbleness of their
+horses, would render them more than a match for a fully-caparisoned
+knight."
+
+"So it seems," Hotspur said; "and yet, if Sinclair had but known that
+the lad was about to swerve in his course, which indeed he ought to
+have known--for it would have been madness to meet his charge--he too
+should have changed his course to his left, when a couple of lengths
+away; for he might be sure that the lad would turn that way, so as to
+get on his left hand, and in that case he would have ridden over him
+like a thunderbolt."
+
+"Yes, Sir Henry, but Oswald would have had his eye on knee and bridle;
+and the moment the horse changed his direction, he would have been
+round the other way, like an arrow from a bow; and would have planted
+himself, as he did, in the squire's rear."
+
+"Perhaps so," Hotspur said thoughtfully. "At any rate, Alwyn, the boy
+has given us all a lesson, and you have done me good service, by
+presenting him to me."
+
+
+
+Chapter 5: A Mission.
+
+
+For the next three or four months, Oswald was but little at the castle;
+Percy utilizing his services, in the manner most agreeable to him, by
+sending him on errands to various knights and gentlemen, in different
+parts of Northumberland, and to the fortified places held by the
+English across the Border. A fortnight after his contest with Sinclair,
+Sir Henry formally appointed him one of his esquires.
+
+"You are young," he said, "for such a post; but as you have shown that
+you are well able to take care of yourself in arms, and as I perceive
+you to be shrewd and worthy of confidence, your age matters but little.
+As my messenger, you will be more useful travelling as one of my
+esquires, than as one without settled rank; and I can not only send
+written communications by you, but can charge you to speak fully in my
+name, and with my authority."
+
+Oswald was not slow in finding out the advantages that the position
+gave him. On the first errands on which he had been sent, he had been
+treated as but an ordinary messenger, had been placed at dinner below
+the salt, and herded with the men-at-arms. As an esquire of Lord Percy,
+he was treated with all courtesy, was introduced to the ladies of the
+family, sat at the high table, and was regarded as being in the
+confidence of his lord. His youth excited some little surprise, but
+acted in his favour, because it was evident that Percy would not have
+nominated him as one of his esquires, had he not shown particular
+merit. In his journeys, he often passed near Yardhope, where the
+rebuilding of the wall and keep was being pushed on with much vigour;
+the inhabitants of the villages in the valley lending their assistance
+to restore the fortalice, which they regarded as a place of refuge, in
+case of sudden invasion by the Scots. His parents were both greatly
+pleased at his promotion, especially his mother, who had always been
+anxious that he should not settle down to the adventurous, and
+dangerous, life led by his father.
+
+"By our Lady," John Forster said, "though it be but six months since
+you first left us, you have changed rarely. I speak not of your fine
+garments, but you have grown and widened out, and are fast springing
+from a boy into a man; and it is no small thing that Percy should have
+thought so well of you as to make you one of his esquires, already."
+
+"It was from no merit of mine, Father, but because he thought that, as
+his messenger, I should be able to speak in his name with more
+authority than had I been merely the bearer of a letter from him."
+
+"'Tis not only that," his father replied. "I received a letter but two
+days since from my brother Alwyn, written by the hand of a monk of his
+acquaintance, telling me that Lord Percy was mightily pleased with you;
+not only because you had set yourself to read and write, but from the
+way in which you had defeated one of his esquires in a bout at arms.
+Alwyn said that he doubted not that you would win knightly spurs, as
+soon as you came to full manhood. So it is clear that merit had
+something to do with your advancement, though this may be also due, to
+some extent, to the cause you assign for it. The monk who wrote the
+letter added, on his own account, that he had been your preceptor; and
+that, though he had often rated you soundly, you had made wonderful
+progress."
+
+"The monk is a good teacher," Oswald laughed; "but he would have made a
+better man-at-arms than he will ever make a monk. I believe it pleased
+him more that I worsted Sinclair--which indeed was a small thing to do,
+seeing that he had no idea of fighting, save of charging straight at a
+foe--than at the progress I made at my books. He commands the
+contingent that the monastery sends, when Percy takes the field to
+repel an invasion; and, could he have his own will, would gladly
+exchange a monk's robes for the harness of a man-at-arms. I would wish
+for no stouter companion in the fray."
+
+The speed with which he had performed his journeys, and the
+intelligence which he showed in carrying out his missions and reporting
+on their issue, earned for the lad an increasing amount of liking and
+confidence, on the part of his lord. It was not only that he delivered
+the replies to Hotspur's messages accurately; but his remarks, upon the
+personal manner and bearing of those to whom he was sent, were of still
+greater value to Percy. Naturally, all had promised to have their
+contingent of fighting men ready, in case of serious invasion by the
+Scots; but Oswald was able to gather, from their manner, whether the
+promises would surely be fulfilled; or whether, in case of trouble, the
+knights were more likely to keep their array for the defence of their
+own castles than to join Percy in any general movement.
+
+One day, when Oswald had been engaged six months at this work, which
+had taken him several times into Cumberland and Westmoreland, as well
+as the north, Lord Percy summoned him to his private apartment.
+
+"Hitherto you have done well, Oswald, and I feel now that I can trust
+you with a mission of far higher importance than those you have
+hitherto performed. 'Tis not without its dangers, but I know that you
+will like it none the less for that reason. You are young, indeed, for
+business of such importance; but it seems to me that, of those around
+me, you would be best fitted to carry it out. Your manner of speech has
+changed much, since you came here; but doubtless you can fall at will
+into the border dialect, which differs little from that on the other
+side; and you can pass, well enough, as coming from Jedburgh, or any
+other place across the border.
+
+"All the world knows, lad, that George, Earl of March and Dunbar, was
+mightily offended at Rothesay breaking off the match with his daughter,
+and marrying the child of his rival Douglas; but now I am going to tell
+you what the world does not know, and which is a secret that would cost
+many a life, were it to be blabbed abroad, and which I should not tell
+you, had I not a perfect confidence in your discretion. The anger of
+March--as he is mostly called on this side of the border, while in
+Scotland they more often call him Earl of Dunbar--goes beyond mere
+displeasure with the Douglas, and sullen resentment against Rothesay.
+He has sent a confidential messenger to me, intimating that he is ready
+to acknowledge our king as his sovereign, and place himself and his
+forces at his disposal.
+
+"I see you are surprised, as is indeed but natural; but the Marches
+have ever been rather for England than for Scotland, although they have
+never gone so far as to throw off their allegiance to the Scottish
+throne. It is not for us to consider whether March is acting
+treacherously, to James of Scotland; but whether he is acting in good
+faith, towards us.
+
+"It was easy for him to send a messenger to me, since Scotland trades
+with England, and a ship bound for London might well touch at one of
+our ports on the way down; but the presence of an Englishman, at
+Dunbar, would not be so readily explained. His messenger especially
+enjoined on me not to send any communication in writing, even by the
+most trustworthy hand; since an accident might precipitate matters, and
+drive him to take up arms, before we were in a position to give him
+aid. Therefore, in the first place, I wish you to journey to Dunbar, to
+see the earl, and deliver to him the message I shall give you, and
+endeavour to inform yourself how far he is to be trusted. Say what he
+will, I can scarce bring myself to believe that he will really throw
+off his allegiance to Scotland; save in the event of a great English
+army marching north, when doubtless he would do what most Scotch nobles
+have always done, namely, hasten to give in his submission, and make
+the best terms he can, for himself. 'Tis a business which I like not,
+although it is my duty to accept a proposal that, if made in good
+faith, would be of vast value to the king.
+
+"You must, after seeing the earl, return here with all speed, to bear
+me any message March may give you, and to report your impressions as to
+his sincerity, and good faith. 'Tis a month since I received his
+message. Since then, I have communicated with the king, and have
+received his authority to arrange terms with March, to guarantee him in
+the possession of his lordships, to hand over to him certain tracts of
+the Douglas country which he bargained for, and to assure him of our
+support. But he must be told that the king urges him to delay, at
+present, from taking any open steps; as, in the first place, he is
+bound by the truce just arranged, for the next two years; and in the
+second because, having no just cause of quarrel with Scotland, and
+being at present but newly seated on the throne, he would have
+difficulty in raising an army for the invasion of that country. The
+king is ready to engage himself not to renew the truce, and to collect
+an army, in readiness to act in concert with him, as soon as it is
+terminated.
+
+"The earl has sent, by his messenger, a ring; which, on being presented
+at Dunbar, will gain for the person who carries it immediate access to
+him; and I shall also give you my signet, in token that you are come
+from me. You will carry, also, a slip of paper that can be easily
+concealed, saying that you have my full authority to speak in my name.
+You yourself can explain to him that I have selected you for the
+mission because of your knowledge of border speech, and because a youth
+of your age can pass unobserved, where a man might excite attention and
+remark, and possibly be detained, until he could render a satisfactory
+account of himself.
+
+"Here are the conditions, set down upon paper. Take it, and commit them
+to heart, and then tear the paper into shreds, and burn them. As far as
+Roxburgh you can, of course, ride as my squire; but beyond, you must
+travel in disguise. This you had better procure here, and take with
+you; for although the Governor of Roxburgh is a trusty knight, it were
+best that no soul should know that you go on a mission to March; and I
+shall simply give you a letter to him, stating that you are engaged in
+a venture in my service, and that your horse and armour are to be kept
+for you, until your return."
+
+Thanking Lord Percy for the honour done him, in selecting him for the
+mission, and promising him to carry it out, to the best of his power,
+Oswald retired and, making his way up to an inner room, set about
+learning the contents of the paper given him, which was, indeed, a copy
+of the royal letter to Percy. When he had thoroughly mastered all the
+details, and could repeat every word, he followed Sir Henry's
+instructions, tore the letter up, and carefully burned every fragment.
+Then he went out into the town, and bought garments suited for
+travelling unnoticed in Scotland, the dress being almost identical on
+both sides of the border, save for the lowland Scotch bonnet.
+
+On his return, he found that Lord Percy had sent for him during his
+absence, and he at once went to his apartments.
+
+"I have been thinking over this matter further," Sir Henry said. "The
+abbot came in, just as you left me; and, among other things, he
+mentioned that friar Roger had again fallen into disgrace, having gone
+so far as to strike the sub-prior on the cheek, almost breaking the jaw
+of that worthy man; and that, finding discipline and punishment of no
+avail with him, he was about to expel him, in disgrace, from the
+community. He said that he had only retained him so long on account of
+my goodwill for the fellow, and from the fact that he would, as I had
+often urged, be most valuable as leader of the abbot's forces, in case
+of troubles with the Scots, but that his last offence has passed all
+bearing.
+
+"For the time I could say nothing, for discipline must be maintained,
+in a monastery as well as in the castle; but after the abbot had left
+me, and I was walking up and down in vexation over the affair--for I
+like the rascal, in spite of his ways, and there is no one else who
+could so well lead the contingent of the monastery--a thought occurred
+to me. I like not your going altogether alone, for the times are
+lawless, and you might meet trouble on the road; and yet I did not see
+whom I could send with you. Now it seems to me that this stout knave
+would make an excellent companion for you.
+
+"In the first place, you like him, and he likes you; secondly, a monk
+travelling north on a mission, say from the abbot to the prior of a
+monastery near Dunbar, could pass anywhere unheeded; and in the third
+place, although as a peaceful man he could carry no military arms, he
+might yet take with him a staff, with which I warrant me he would be a
+match for two or three ordinary men; and lastly, I may be able to
+convince the abbot that he can thus get rid of him from the monastery,
+for some time, and avoid the scandals he occasions, and yet hold him
+available on his return for military service.
+
+"What say you, lad?"
+
+"I should like it much, Sir Henry. I could wish for no stouter
+companion; and although he may be quarrelsome with his fellows, it is,
+methinks, solely because the discipline of the monastery frets him, and
+he longs for a more active life; but I believe that he could be fully
+trusted to behave himself discreetly, were he engaged in outdoor work,
+and there can be no doubt that he is a stout man-at-arms, in all ways."
+
+"I should not trust him, in any way, with the object of your mission.
+If I obtain the abbot's consent, I shall simply send for him, rate him
+soundly for his conduct, but telling him I make all allowances for his
+natural unfitness for his vocation; and that I have, as a matter of
+grace, obtained from the abbot permission to use his services for a
+while, and to suspend his sentence upon him, until it be seen how he
+comports himself; and, with that view, I am about to send him as your
+companion, on a commission with which I have intrusted you, to the town
+of Dunbar. I shall hint that, if he behaves to my satisfaction, I may
+persuade the abbot to allow him to remain in my service, until the time
+comes when he may be useful to the convent for military work; he still
+undertaking to drill the lay brothers, and keep the abbot's contingent
+in good order; and that, when the troubles are at an end, I will obtain
+for him full absolution from his vows, so that he may leave the
+monastery without the disgrace of being expelled, and may then take
+service with me, or with another, as a man-at-arms.
+
+"I wish you to be frank with me. If you would rather go alone, matters
+shall remain as they are."
+
+"I would much rather that he went with me, my lord. From the many
+conversations that I have had with him, I am sure that he is shrewd and
+clever, and that, once beyond the walls of the monastery and free to
+use his weapon, he would be full of resource. There is doubtless much
+lawlessness on both sides of the border, and although I should seem but
+little worth robbing, two travel more pleasantly than one; and the monk
+has taken such pains with me, and has been so kind, that there is no
+one with whom I would travel, with greater pleasure."
+
+"Then I will go across to the monastery, at once, and see the abbot;
+and I doubt not that he will grant my request, for, much and often as
+brother Roger has given him cause for anger, I know that he has a sort
+of kindness for him, and will gladly avoid the necessity for punishing
+and disgracing him. If all is arranged, the monk shall come over here,
+and see you."
+
+An hour later, Brother Roger came in to the captain's quarters.
+
+"So you have been in trouble again, Brother Roger," Alwyn Forster said
+with a laugh, as he held out his hand to him.
+
+"That have I, and an hour ago I was lying in a prison cell, cursing my
+hot temper; and with, as it seemed, the certainty of being publicly
+unfrocked, and turned out like a mangy dog from a pack. It was not,
+mind you, that the thought of being unfrocked was altogether
+disagreeable; for I own that I am grievously ill fitted for my
+vocation, and that fasts and vigils are altogether hateful to me; but
+it would not be a pleasant thing to go out into the world as one who
+had been kicked out, and though I might get employment as a
+man-at-arms, I could never hope for any promotion, however well I might
+behave. However, half an hour ago the cell door was opened, and I was
+taken before the abbot, whom I found closeted with Hotspur.
+
+"The latter rated me soundly, but said that, for the sake of Otterburn,
+he had spoken for me to the abbot; and that as he would, for the
+present, be able to make use of me in work that would be more to my
+liking, the abbot had consented to reconsider his decision, and would
+lend me to him for a time, in hopes that my good conduct would, in the
+end, induce him to overlook my offences; and that, in that case, he
+might even be induced to take steps, of a less painful description than
+public disgrace, for freeing me of my gown.
+
+"I naturally replied that I was grateful for his lordship's
+intercession; and that, outside monkish offices, there was nothing I
+would not do to merit his kindness. He told me that I was to report
+myself to your nephew, who would inform me of the nature of the service
+upon which I was, at first, to be employed."
+
+"It is to undertake a journey with me," Oswald said. "I am going on a
+mission for our lord, to Dunbar. The object of my mission is one that
+concerns me only, but it is one of some importance; and as the roads
+are lonely, since March and Douglas quarrelled, and order is but badly
+kept on the other side of the border, he thought that I should be all
+the better for a companion. Assuredly, I could wish for none better
+than yourself, for in the first place you have proved a true friend to
+me; in the second, you have so much knowledge, that we shall not lack
+subjects for conversation upon the journey; and lastly, should I get
+into any trouble, I could reckon upon you as a match for two or three
+border robbers."
+
+"Nothing could be more to my taste," the monk said joyfully. "I did not
+feel quite sure, before, whether I was glad or sorry that my expulsion
+was put off, for I always thought that it would come to that some day;
+but now that I learn for what service Hotspur intends me, I feel as if
+I could shout for joy.
+
+"Get me a flagon of beer, good Alwyn. I have drunk but water for the
+last twenty-four hours, and was in too great haste, to learn what was
+before me, even to pay a visit to brother Anselm, the cellarer, who is
+a stanch friend of mine.
+
+"And do I go as a man-at-arms, Master Oswald? For, as your mission is
+clearly of a private character, disguise may be needful."
+
+"No, Roger, you will go in your own capacity, as a monk, journeying on
+a mission from the abbot to the head of some religious community, near
+Dunbar. I doubt not that Lord Percy will obtain a letter from the
+abbot, and though it may be that there will be no need to deliver it,
+still it may help us on the way. As you are going with me, I shall
+attire myself as a young lay servitor of the convent."
+
+"I would that it had been otherwise," the monk said, with a sigh. "I
+should have travelled far more lightly, in the heaviest mail harness,
+than in this monk's robe. Besides, how can I carry arms, for use in
+case of necessity?"
+
+"You can carry a staff," Oswald said, laughing; "and being so big a
+man, you will assuredly require a long and heavy one; and, even if it
+is heavily shod with iron, no one need object."
+
+"That is not so bad, Master Oswald. A seven-foot staff, of the
+thickness of my wrist; with an iron shoe, weighing a pound or two, is a
+carnal weapon not to be despised. As you doubtless know, our bishops,
+when they ride in the field, always carry a mace instead of a sword, so
+that they may not shed blood; though I say not that the cracking of a
+man's skull is to be accomplished, without some loss thereof. However,
+if a bishop may lawfully crack a man's head, as an eggshell, I see not
+that blame can attach to me, a humble and most unworthy son of the
+church, if some slight harm should come to any man, from the use of so
+peaceful an instrument as a staff. And how about yourself, young
+master?"
+
+"I can carry a sword," Oswald replied. "In times like these, no man
+travels unarmed; and as I go as a servitor, and an assistant to your
+reverence, there will be nothing unseemly in my carrying a weapon, to
+defend you from the attack of foes."
+
+"You can surely take a dagger, too. A dagger is a meet companion to a
+sword, and is sometimes mighty useful, in a close fight. And, mark me,
+take a smaller dagger also, that can be concealed under your coat. I
+myself will assuredly do the same. There are many instances in which a
+trifle of that kind might come in useful, such as for shooting the lock
+of a door, or working out iron bars."
+
+"I will do so," Oswald said, "though I hope there will be no occasion,
+such as you say, for its use."
+
+"When do we start, Master Oswald?"
+
+"Tomorrow, at daybreak. We shall ride as far as Roxburgh. I shall go on
+my own horse, which, though as good an animal as was ever saddled, has
+but a poor appearance. You had best purchase a palfrey, as fat and
+sleek as may be found, but with strength enough to carry your weight. I
+shall be amply provided with money; and if you find a bargain, let me
+know, and I will give you the means. Mind, buy nothing that looks like
+a warhorse, but something in keeping with your appearance."
+
+That evening, Oswald had another interview with Percy, and received his
+final instructions, and a bag of money.
+
+"Be careful with it, lad," he said; "not so much because of the use
+that it may be to you, but because, were you seized and searched by
+robbers, and others, the sight of the gold might awake suspicions that
+you were not what you seemed, and might lead to a long detention. Keep
+your eye on Brother Roger, and see that he does not indulge too much in
+the wine cups, and that he comports himself rather in keeping with his
+attire, than with his natural disposition; and if you have any
+difficulty in restraining him, or if he does not obey your orders, send
+him back, at once. Will you see him again this evening?"
+
+"He is waiting for me in my apartment, now, my lord, having come for
+the money for the purchase of a palfrey, which I bade him get."
+
+"Send him to me, when you get there."
+
+When the monk appeared before Hotspur, the latter said, "See here,
+monk, I have saved you from punishment, and become, as it were, your
+surety. See that you do not discredit me. You will remember that,
+although my young esquire may ask your advice, and benefit by your
+experience, he is your leader; and his orders, when he gives them, are
+to be obeyed as promptly as if it were I myself who spoke, to one of my
+men-at-arms. He is my representative in the matter, and is obeying my
+orders, as you will obey his. The mission is one of importance, and if
+it fails from any fault of yours, you had better drown yourself in the
+first river you come to, than return to Northumberland."
+
+"I think that you can trust me, my lord," the monk said, calmly. "I am
+a very poor monk, but methinks that I am not a bad soldier; and
+although I go in the dress of the one, I shall really go as the other.
+I know that my duty, as a soldier, will be to obey. Even as regards my
+potations, which I own are sometimes deeper than they should be,
+methinks that, as a soldier, I shall be much less thirsty than I was as
+a monk. If the enterprise should fail from any default of mine, your
+lordship may be sure that I shall bear your advice in mind."
+
+"I doubt not that you will do well, Roger. I should not have sent you
+with my esquire, on such a business, had I not believed that you would
+prove yourself worthy of my confidence. I know that a man may be a good
+soldier, and even a wise counsellor, though he may be a very bad monk."
+
+The next morning the pair rode out from the castle, at daybreak. Roger
+was dressed in the usual monkish attire of the time, a long loose gown
+with a cape, and a head covering resembling a small turban. He rode a
+compactly built little horse, which seemed scarce capable of carrying
+his weight, but ambled along with him as if it scarcely felt it. Oswald
+was dressed as a lay servitor, in tightly-fitting high hose, short
+jerkin girt in by a band at the waist, and going half-way down to the
+knee. He rode his own moorland horse, and carried on his arm a basket
+with provisions for a day's march. He wore a small cloth cap, which
+fell down to his neck behind. His uncle accompanied him to the gate,
+which was, by his orders, opened to give them egress.
+
+"Goodbye, lad," he said. "I know not, and do not wish to know, the
+object of your journey. It is enough for me that it is a confidential
+mission for Hotspur, and I am proud that you should have been chosen
+for it, and I feel convinced that you will prove you have merited our
+lord's confidence.
+
+"Goodbye, friend Roger! Don't let your love of fisticuffs and hard
+knocks carry you away, but try and bear yourself as if you were still
+in the monastery, with the abbot keeping his eye upon you."
+
+Brother Roger laughed.
+
+"You make a cold shiver run down my back, Alwyn. I was feeling as if I
+had just got out of a cold cellar, into the sunshine, and could shout
+with very lightness of heart. I am not in the least disposed to quarrel
+with anyone, so let your mind be easy as to my doings. I shall be
+discretion itself; and even if I am called upon to strike, will do so
+as gently as may be, putting only such strength into the blow as will
+prevent an opponent from troubling us further."
+
+So, with a wave of the hand, they rode on.
+
+"I had better strap that staff beside your saddle, and under your
+knee," Oswald said, when they had ridden a short distance. "You carry
+it as if it were a spear, and I have seen already three or four people
+smile, as we passed them."
+
+Roger reluctantly allowed Oswald to fasten the staff beside him.
+
+"One wants something in one's hands," he said. "On foot it does not
+matter so much, but now I am on horseback again, I feel that I ought to
+have a spear in hand, and a sword dangling at my side."
+
+"You must remember that you are still a monk, Roger, although enlarged
+for a season. Some day, perhaps, you will be able to gratify your
+desires in that way. You had best moderate the speed of your horse, for
+although he ambles along merrily, at present, he can never carry that
+great carcase of yours, at this pace, through our journey."
+
+"I should like one good gallop," Roger sighed, as he pulled at the
+rein, and the horse proceeded at a pace better suited to the appearance
+of its rider.
+
+"A nice figure you would look, with your robes streaming behind you,"
+Oswald laughed. "There would soon be a story going through the country,
+of a mad monk.
+
+"Now, we take this turning to the right, and here leave the main north
+road, for we are bound, in the first place, to Roxburgh."
+
+"I thought that it must be that, or Berwick, though I asked no
+questions."
+
+"We shall not travel like this beyond Roxburgh, but shall journey
+forward on foot."
+
+"I supposed that we should come to that, Master Oswald, for otherwise
+you would not have told me to provide myself with a staff."
+
+They journeyed pleasantly along. Whenever they approached any town or
+large village, Oswald reined back his horse a little, so that its head
+was on a level with Roger's stirrup. They slept that night at
+Kirknewton, where they put up at a small hostelry. Oswald had intended
+going to the monastery there, but Roger begged so earnestly that they
+should put up elsewhere, that he yielded to him.
+
+"I should have no end of questions asked, as to our journey across the
+border, and its object," Roger said; "and it always goes against my
+conscience to have to lie, unless upon pressing occasions."
+
+"And, moreover," Oswald said, with a laugh, "you might be expected to
+get up to join the community at prayers, at midnight; and they might
+give you a monk's bed, instead of a more comfortable one in the guest
+chambers."
+
+"There may be something in that," Roger admitted, "and I have so often
+to sleep on a stone bench, for the punishment of my offences, that I
+own to a weakness for a soft bed, when I can get one."
+
+However, Oswald was pleased to see that his follower behaved, at their
+resting place, with more discretion than he could have hoped for;
+although he somewhat surprised his host, by the heartiness of his
+appetite; but, on the other hand, he was moderate in his potations, and
+talked but little, retiring to a bed of thick rushes, at curfew.
+
+"In truth, I was afraid to trust myself," he said to Oswald, as they
+lay down side by side. "Never have I felt so free, since
+Otterburn--never, indeed, since that unfortunate day when I was
+wounded, and conceived the fatal idea of becoming a monk. Two or three
+times, the impulse to troll out a trooper's song was so strong in me,
+that I had to clap my hand over my mouth, to keep it in."
+
+"'Tis well you did, Roger, for assuredly if you had so committed
+yourself, on the first day of starting, I must have sent you back to
+Alnwick, feeling that it would not be safe for you to proceed with me
+farther. When we get upon the Cheviots, tomorrow, you may lift your
+voice as you choose; but it were best that you confined yourself to a
+Latin canticle, even there, for the habit of breaking into songs of the
+other kind might grow upon you."
+
+"I will do so," Roger said, seriously. "Some of the canticles have
+plenty of ring and go, and the words matter not, seeing that I do not
+understand them."
+
+The next morning they resumed their journey, crossed the Cheviots,
+which were here comparatively low hills; and, after four hours' riding,
+arrived at Roxburgh.
+
+"Why do we come here?" Roger asked. "It would surely have been much
+shorter had we travelled through Berwick, and along the coast road."
+
+"Much shorter, Roger; but Sir Henry thought it better that we should go
+inland to Haddington, and thence east to Dunbar; as, thus entering the
+town, it would seem that we came from Edinburgh, or from some western
+monastery; whereas, did we journey by the coast road, it might be
+guessed that we had come from England."
+
+As before, they put up at a hostelry; and Oswald then proceeded, on
+foot, to the governor's house. Some soldiers were loitering at the
+door.
+
+"What do you want, lad?" one of them asked, as he came up.
+
+"I have a letter, which I am charged to deliver into the governor's own
+hands."
+
+"A complaint, I suppose, from some worthy prior, who has lost some of
+his beeves?"
+
+"Maybe the governor will inform you, if you ask him," Oswald replied.
+
+"I shall pull your ear for you, when you come out, young jackanapes,"
+the soldier said, hotly.
+
+"That danger I must even risk. Business first, and pleasure
+afterwards."
+
+And while the other soldiers burst into a fit of laughter, at the
+astonishment of their comrade at what he deemed the insolence of this
+young servitor of a monastery, he quietly entered. The guard at the
+door, who had heard the colloquy, led him into the governor's room.
+
+"A messenger with a letter desires speech with you, Sir Philip," he
+said.
+
+"Bid him enter," the knight said, briefly.
+
+Oswald entered, and bowed deeply. He waited until the door closed
+behind the attendant, and then said:
+
+"I am the bearer of a letter, sir, from Lord Percy to you."
+
+The knight looked at him in surprise.
+
+"Hotspur has chosen a strange messenger," he muttered to himself, as he
+took the missive Oswald held out to him, cut the silk that bound it
+with a dagger, and read its contents. As he laid it down, he rose to
+his feet.
+
+"Excuse my want of courtesy," he said. "Lord Percy tells me that you
+are one of his esquires--no slight recommendation--and that you are
+intrusted with somewhat important a mission, on his part, to Dunbar, a
+still higher recommendation--for assuredly he would not have selected
+you for such a purpose, had you not stood high in his regard. But,
+indeed, at first I took you for what you seemed, as the bearer of a
+complaint from some abbot; for in truth, such complaints are not
+uncommon, for whenever a bullock is lost, they put it down to my men.
+
+"Where are your horses that Percy speaks of? You will, I hope, take up
+your abode here, as long as you stay in the town."
+
+"Thank you, Sir Philip; but I shall go forward in the morning. I have
+already put up at the Golden Rose. It would attract attention, were I
+to come here, and it were best that I remain as I am; and indeed, I
+have brought no clothes with me, save those I stand in."
+
+"Well, perhaps, as you do not wish to attract attention, it were best
+so; and I pray you inform Lord Percy of the reason why you declined my
+entertainment."
+
+"I shall be glad, Sir Philip, if you will send down a couple of your
+men to fetch the horses up to your stables; as I shall start, as soon
+as the gates are open, tomorrow morning."
+
+"I will do so, at once."
+
+And the governor rang a handbell on the table.
+
+"Send two of the men up here," he said, as an attendant entered.
+
+A minute later a door opened, and two soldiers came in, and saluted.
+One of them, to Oswald's amusement, was the man with whom he had
+exchanged words, below.
+
+"You will accompany this gentleman to the Golden Rose, and bring back
+two horses, which he will hand over to you, and place them in the
+stables with mine.
+
+"Are you sure, Master Forster, that there is nothing more that I can do
+for you?"
+
+"Nothing, whatever, I thank you, sir; and I am greatly obliged by your
+courtesy, and with your permission I will take my leave. I hope to
+return here in the course of a week, or ten days."
+
+So saying, Oswald shook hands with the governor and went downstairs,
+followed by the soldiers, who had not yet recovered from their surprise
+at seeing Oswald seated, and evidently on familiar terms with their
+lord. Oswald said nothing to them, until he arrived at the Golden Rose.
+Then he led the way to the stables, and handed the horses over to them.
+
+"I suppose that that pulling of the ear will be deferred, for a time?"
+he said, with a smile, to the soldier who had made the remark.
+
+The man sheepishly took hold of the bridle.
+
+"I could not tell, sir--" he began.
+
+"Of course you could not," Oswald interrupted. "Still, it may be a
+lesson, to you, that it is just as well not to make fun of people,
+until you are quite sure who they are. There, I bear no malice; get
+yourselves a stoup of wine, in payment for your services."
+
+"I thought that there was something out of the way about him," the
+other man said, as they walked up the street with the two horses; "or
+he would never have turned upon you, as he did. It is evident that he
+is someone of consequence, and is here on some secret business or
+other, with Sir Philip. It is well that he did not bear malice, for you
+would have got it hot, from the governor, had he reported what you said
+to him."
+
+
+
+Chapter 6: At Dunbar.
+
+
+The journey passed without any incident of importance, but Oswald had
+reason to congratulate himself on having taken the monk with him. On
+one occasion, as they were passing over a wild heath, a party of eight
+or ten men, on rough ponies, rode up. They were armed with spears and
+swords. They reined up with exclamations of disappointment as Roger,
+who had rolled up his robe round his waist, for convenience of walking,
+let it fall round him.
+
+"You have played us a scurvy trick, monk," the leader said, angrily.
+"Who was to guess it was a monk, who was thus striding along?"
+
+"You would find it difficult to walk, yourself, with this robe dangling
+about your heels," Roger said.
+
+"Whither are you bound, and whence are you going?"
+
+"We are travelling to Dunbar, being sent to the convent of Saint Magnus
+there, and come from Roxburgh."
+
+"'Tis a shame that so stalwart a fellow as you are should be leading a
+drone's life, in a convent; when every true Scotsman is sharpening his
+spear, in readiness for what may come when the truce with England
+expires."
+
+"I am glad to hear that you are so well employed," Roger replied; "but
+methinks that, in days like these, it is sometimes useful to have a few
+men of thews and sinews, even in a religious house; for there are those
+who sometimes fail in the respect they owe to the Church."
+
+"That is true enough," the men laughed. "Well, go thy way. There is
+naught to be gained from a travelling monk."
+
+"Naught, good friend, save occasionally hard blows, when the monk
+happens to be of my strength and stature, and carries a staff like
+this."
+
+"'Tis a goodly weapon, in sooth, and you look as if you knew how to
+wield it."
+
+"Even a monk may know that, seeing that a staff is not a carnal
+weapon."
+
+And rolling up his sleeves, Roger took the staff in the middle with
+both hands, in the manner of a quarterstaff, and made it play round his
+head; with a speed, and vigour, that showed that he was a complete
+master of the exercise.
+
+"Enough, enough!" the man said, while exclamations of admiration broke
+from the others. "Truly from such a champion, strong enough to wield a
+weapon that resembles a weaver's beam, rather than a quarterstaff,
+there would be more hard knocks than silver to be gained; but it is all
+the more pity that such skill and strength should be thrown away, in a
+convent. Perhaps it is as well that you are wearing a monk's gown, for
+methinks that, eight to one as we are, some of us might have got broken
+heads, before we gained the few pence in your pocket.
+
+"Come on, men. Better luck next time. It is clear that this man is not
+the one we are charged to capture."
+
+And, with his followers, he rode off across the moor.
+
+"I do not think that they are what they seem," Oswald said, as they
+resumed their journey. "The man's speech was not that of a border
+raider, and his followers would hardly have sat their horses so
+silently, and obeyed his orders so promptly, had they been merely
+thieving caterans; besides, you marked that he said you were not the
+man they were watching for."
+
+"Whom think you that they are, then, Master Oswald?"
+
+"I think it possible that they may be a party of Douglas's followers,
+led by a knight. It may be that Douglas has received some hint of
+March's being in communication with England; and that he has sent a
+party to seize, and search, any traveller who looked like a messenger
+from the south. Of course, this may be only fancy. Still, I am right
+glad that you were wearing your monkish robe; for, had I been alone, I
+might have been cross-questioned so shrewdly as to my purpose in
+travelling, that I might have been held on suspicion, and means
+employed to get the truth out of me."
+
+At the small town where they stopped, next night, they learned that
+many complaints had been made, by travellers from the south, of how
+they had been stopped by a party of armed men on the border, closely
+questioned, and searched, and in some cases robbed. This had been going
+on for some weeks, and the sheriff of the county had twice collected an
+armed force, and ridden in search of the robbers, but altogether
+without success. It was believed that they were strangers to the
+district, and the description given of them had not agreed with those
+of any noted bad characters, in the neighbourhood.
+
+"Certainly, Master Oswald," the monk said, "all this seems to support
+your idea. Money and valuables are soon found; but by what these men
+say of the way in which the clothes and belongings of these travellers
+were searched, it would seem to show that money was not the object of
+the band, but rather the discovery of correspondence, and that money
+was only taken as a cloak."
+
+"I have no doubt that they were there to intercept someone, Roger,
+though it may not have been Percy's messengers; still, we are well rid
+of them, and I hope that we shall meet no more, on our way."
+
+The hope was fulfilled, and they reached Dunbar without further
+interruption. Here they deemed it better to separate. The monk went to
+a convent, and gave out there that he was on the way to Edinburgh,
+being on a journey thither to see his aged father, who was in his last
+sickness. Oswald went to a shop, and bought clothes suited for the son
+of a trader in a fair position; and, changing his things at the inn
+where he had put up, made his way to the castle.
+
+"I would have speech with the earl," he said, to the warder at the
+gate. "I have his orders to wait upon him."
+
+"What is your name and condition?"
+
+"That matters not. I am here by the earl's orders. He sent me a ring,
+by which it might be known that I am authorized to have access to him."
+
+On seeing the ring, the warder at once called to one of the servitors,
+and bade him conduct Oswald to the earl's apartment.
+
+"Whom shall I say?" he asked, when he reached the door.
+
+"Give this ring to him, and say that the bearer awaits admittance to
+him."
+
+The man entered the room and then, opening the door again, motioned to
+Oswald to enter. The earl, a tall and powerfully-built man, looked with
+a keen scrutiny at him.
+
+"From whom come you, young sir?"
+
+"From the holder of that ring, my Lord Earl," Oswald said, presenting
+the ring that Percy had given him. "My name is Oswald Forster, and I
+have the honour to be one of Lord Percy's esquires."
+
+"Come you alone?" the earl asked.
+
+"I came with a companion, a monk. I was in the disguise of a young
+servitor of his convent. We came on foot from Roxburgh."
+
+He then unscrewed the handle of a dagger Percy had given him, for the
+purpose, and pulled out a small roll of paper, which he handed to the
+earl. It contained only the following words:
+
+"Do not intrust undue confidence in the bearer. The matters you wot of
+are in good train; of them my messenger knows nothing."
+
+"This was so writ by Sir Henry Percy," said Oswald, "in order that, if
+I were detained and searched on the way, and this paper found on me, I
+might not be forced, by torture, to say aught of my message."
+
+"But this signet ring would have shown to whom you were coming."
+
+"It was concealed in my staff, my lord, and could not have been
+discovered, had not that been split open. Had it been so, I should have
+admitted that Lord Percy had indeed committed the signet and the
+writing to me to carry, and had bid me travel as the servitor of a monk
+on his journey north; but that, more than that these were to be
+delivered to you, I knew nothing. Lord Percy selected me as his
+messenger partly because, from my youth, I should not be likely to be
+suspected of being a messenger between two great lords; and in the
+second place because, if arrested, and these matters found on me, the
+statement in the letter would be readily believed. It would not be
+supposed that important state secrets would be committed to a lad, like
+myself."
+
+The earl made no reply, for a time, but sat with his eyes fixed on
+Oswald's face, as if he were reading him thoroughly.
+
+"Then you do know the matters in question?"
+
+"I do, my lord. I am the bearer of a further communication to you."
+
+"Say on, then."
+
+"Lord Percy bids me say that, on the receipt of your message to him, he
+forwarded it by one of his knights to the king at Westminster; and that
+the matter was discussed, by his majesty, with two or three of his most
+trusted councillors. After full consideration, the king has accepted
+your offer, and will grant all its conditions. He sent, my lord, also a
+document with his royal seal attached, engaging to observe all the
+conditions of the compact. This document Lord Percy holds, to be given
+to you on a convenient occasion; but he deemed it of so important a
+nature that it would be too hazardous to send it to you. The king, in a
+letter to Lord Percy, begged him to tell you that, so long as the truce
+continued, he could not collect an army to support you; but that, as
+the time for its termination approached, he would begin to do so, and
+would be in readiness to take the field, in the north, immediately you
+move in the matter."
+
+The earl sat for some time, in thought.
+
+"Do you know the conditions of the compact?" he asked, suddenly.
+
+Oswald had expected this question, and felt sure that the earl, who
+was, when not inflamed by anger, a cool and cautious man, would highly
+disapprove of Hotspur's frankness; and might possibly detain him, if he
+knew that he possessed so important a secret. He therefore replied:
+
+"As to such grave matters, it was not necessary that I should know more
+than I have said to you, my Lord Earl. As it is no secret that you and
+the Douglases have personal enmity, I deemed that the compact referred
+to our king giving you aid, should you need it against the Douglases."
+
+The answer was apparently satisfactory. The earl asked no further
+questions, on this head.
+
+"Were there other reasons than those you have stated why he chose you
+as his messenger?"
+
+"Another reason he gave me, my lord, was that, as I came of a family
+who reside within a few miles of the border, and had relatives on this
+side whom I sometimes visited, my language was similar to that spoken
+in Roxburghshire; so that I could therefore pass as a Lowland Scot,
+without difficulty. No one, in fact, at the various places at which we
+have stopped, has taken me for aught but a countryman; though the monk
+with me was often taxed with being an Englishman, though belonging to a
+monastery at Roxburgh."
+
+Again the earl was silent for some time.
+
+"I must think over the message that I shall give you, for Percy," he
+said. "I like not the delay, though I see that there is good reason for
+it. As one of Hotspur's esquires, I would fain treat you with all
+courtesy, and lodge you here; but this might cause question as to who
+you are, and it were, therefore, better that you should lodge in the
+town. Have you put up anywhere?"
+
+"I rested for an hour at the sign of the Lion, my lord; engaging a room
+there, in order to effect a change in my clothes. I left by the back
+entrance, in order that the change should not be observed."
+
+"It were best that you fetched those you travelled in away, or rather
+that you returned unnoticed; and, as it is getting dark now, this can
+doubtless be managed; and, when you sally out, place that cloak over
+your shoulders to hide your dress as a servitor, and go to the other
+inn, the Falcon. Say, there, that you are staying for a few days in
+Dunbar, having come here on business with me; and that I bade you go
+there, so that I might know where to send for you, if necessary. You
+can pass for what you seem, a young trader who has come from Edinburgh
+to arrange, on the part of your father, a cloth merchant there, for a
+supply of stuffs for the clothing of my retainers."
+
+Oswald carried out his instructions, walked about until it was quite
+dark, then entered the inn, made his way unobserved to the chamber
+where he had left his clothes, put these on, made the others up into a
+bundle, and then went downstairs again and paid his bill; saying, as he
+did so, that he had found the friends he came to see, and that they had
+room to take him in. After leaving the house he threw the cloak, which
+he had carried on his arm, over his shoulders; and put on the cap that
+belonged to his other dress, and then went to the Falcon Inn, and
+repeating to the landlord the statement the earl had made, was at once
+shown to a chamber, with some deference.
+
+"Will your worship have supper here, or in the room below?"
+
+"I will come down," he said. "It is dull work, sitting alone."
+
+Having ordered his supper, with a flask of wine, Oswald again donned
+his attire as a trader, and went downstairs. Just as he entered the
+room, in which several persons were sitting, a soldier came in from the
+outer door. He looked round the room.
+
+"I have a message, from the earl, for the person who was with him, this
+afternoon."
+
+Oswald at once rose, and went across to him.
+
+"The earl bade me tell you," the soldier said, in a low voice, "that
+his present furnisher is Robert Micklethwaite, and that his place of
+business is near the castle gate, at Edinburgh."
+
+"Please thank the earl for the information," Oswald replied, and then
+returned to his seat.
+
+He had indeed, while dressing, been wondering what name he should give.
+It was like enough that, in Dunbar, many might know the names of the
+principal traders in Edinburgh; and that, were he to give an unknown
+one, he might be questioned as to his place of business. The message,
+therefore, relieved him of this difficulty.
+
+After he had finished his supper, which was an excellent one, he
+beckoned to the landlord.
+
+"I am a stranger here, landlord," he said. "I pray you to drink a cup
+with me, and tell me the news of the place.
+
+"You may know the name of Micklethwaite," he went on, as the landlord
+sat down, "and that he comes, or sends regularly, to arrange for the
+supply of cloth, its quality and price, required for the earl's
+retainers."
+
+"Master Micklethwaite always puts up here, when he visits Dunbar," the
+landlord said. "I must have misunderstood him, for one day, when he was
+talking with me, he said that it was a trouble to him that he had no
+sons."
+
+"Nor has he," Oswald said; "luckily for me, who am but a nephew."
+
+"He is a good customer," the landlord went on, "and good company, too;
+but he cares not for French wines, and does not trouble my cellarer,
+much."
+
+"He is a careful man," Oswald said, with a smile; "and though he is a
+good trencherman, he does not waste his money on such matters. However,
+he lets me have a freer hand than he uses himself; and asks not, when I
+return, for a close account of my outgoings.
+
+"What do they say, here, as to the chances of another war with
+England?"
+
+"I fear the worst," the landlord replied. "These wars are ruin to us,
+and we have had the English at the gates of Dunbar over many times,
+already; and the town sacked, and burnt over our heads, more than once.
+Though I do not say that it might not have been worse, for our earls
+have ever stood aloof, as much as possible, and have often inclined
+towards the English side. Still, even then it is bad enough, for the
+whole country, from Berwick, has often been wasted to check the
+progress of the armies, and our trade well-nigh ruined. A pest on all
+wars, say I!"
+
+"And which way, think you, that the present earl's leanings would go?"
+
+"I think not about it, one way or the other. My business is to sell
+food and liquor, the earl's to take part in affairs of state. In days
+like these, it is quite enough for each man to attend to his own
+business, without troubling about that of other people; more especially
+when that other is a powerful noble, who thinks little enough of
+slitting a tongue that wags too freely.
+
+"No, no, lad; John Sanderson is no fool, and knows better than to open
+his mouth, touching the affairs of great nobles. I know not how it may
+be with you, and the burghers of Edinburgh, but here we are content to
+cool our own porridge, and let others take their food hot or cold, as
+they choose."
+
+"I was not wishing you to give me so much your own ideas, as the common
+talk of the town; but I see that my question was indiscreet, and I ask
+your pardon."
+
+"I know you meant no harm, lad, and that your question was just one
+that any young man of your age might ask, without thinking that there
+was harm in it, or that the answering of it might lead to harm. I can
+tell you that, whatever folk may think here in Dunbar, they say naught
+about it to their nearest neighbour. We can talk of war with England,
+that is too common a thing for there to be harm in it; and as no one
+knows aught, one man's opinion is as good as another's; but the talk is
+general, and assuredly no man asks his neighbour what this great lord
+will do, or how matters will go. There is no harm in two gossips
+wondering whether, if the English come, the town will hold out till
+help comes, or whether they will batter down the walls first.
+
+"It is a kind of riddle, you see, and all the more that no one knows
+who may be by the king's side, when the storm breaks. A generation
+back, men might make a fair guess; but now it were beyond the wisest
+head to say and, for my part, I leave the thinking to those whom it
+concerns. You from Edinburgh ought to know more than we do, for in
+great cities men can talk more freely, seeing that no one lord has the
+place in his hands, and that the citizens have rights, and hold to
+them.
+
+"The general thought is that we shall have war, directly the truce is
+over. Among us who live by peaceful trade, we still hope for peace; for
+we see not what good comes of war, save to those who make raids in
+England, and as often as not these get more hard knocks than plunder;
+but to the quiet trader it means loss, and may well mean ruin, if the
+English army again marches through Scotland. We can discover no reason
+why the two countries should not live peaceably together, each going
+about its own business. I have heard it said, before now, that it would
+be a good thing for both countries if the border districts on both
+sides were stripped altogether of their people, and allowed to lie
+desolate.
+
+"Ay, it would be a rare thing, that. It is thieving loons, on both
+sides of the border, that keep up the ill feeling; and the loss would
+not be great, seeing that there are plenty of waste tracts where the
+people might be bestowed, and pass their time more profitably, in
+raising crops and cattle, than in destroying or carrying off those of
+their neighbours. However, young sir, that is not like to be, in our
+time."
+
+"I am afraid not, Sanderson, and we must needs make the best we can of
+things, as they stand. I think that 'twould be well, if the English do
+come north again and capture Edinburgh, and ruin trade for years, to
+cross the seas to France, and take service there."
+
+"Scarce spoken like a peaceful trader," the landlord laughed; "but I
+doubt not you would make a good soldier, and that a sword would suit
+your hand to the full as well as a yard measure.
+
+"Well, it makes not so much difference, to me. Men must eat and drink,
+and though my wine would be drunk up without payment, and I should have
+to run the risk of being killed on the walls, if the English came; I
+should know that, in a short time, men would come and go as before, and
+that they will drink good wine if they have money to pay for it, and in
+six months my trade would be as brisk as ever; but men seem to think
+that, this time, it will be the Scots who will invade England, for the
+English barons have had enough of wars in France, and will be slow in
+furnishing their quota when called on; and that we shall carry fire and
+sword through the northern counties."
+
+"That we may do, though Northumberland and Hotspur will doubtless have
+something to say to it. I fear it will be as it has been, many a time
+before. Our armies will march back with their plunder, the news of the
+damage done will inflame all England, and then a great army will march
+north. The nobles will hasten to make terms for themselves, and the
+harm and damage will fall upon quiet people, who had nought whatever to
+do with the invasion."
+
+"True enough, young sir, true enough, though it is a shame that it
+should be said. Had the cities a voice in the matter of peace and war,
+you may be right sure that we should hear no more of invasions and
+troubles, from this side of the Border. I say not that there would be
+peace, for the claims of the English kings to authority in Scotland,
+although we have not heard so much of them since Bannockburn, are but
+in abeyance; and the first time that there is really peace, between
+them and France, you may be sure that we shall hear of them again, and
+then the towns as well as the country would join, heartily, in
+repelling an invasion."
+
+"They never did so in the past time, Sanderson. They generally opened
+their gates at once, or if they closed them, it was because there was a
+strong garrison, under some knight or noble who, and not the
+townspeople, had the say in the matter. Now, methinks I will to bed,
+for I have had a long day's travel."
+
+The next day passed without any message from the earl, but on the
+following morning one of the retainers from the castle came in, with
+the message that the earl desired the presence of Mr. Micklethwaite.
+
+Oswald went up, at once. The earl was, as before, alone.
+
+"I have been thinking, Master Forster, that it would be safer, both for
+you and for me, were you to tarry here for a while. You came through
+safely, it is true, but you might not have such good fortune on your
+return; and even though I sent no written answer, it would be enough,
+were Percy's signet found upon you, to ensure your imprisonment, and
+perhaps death. At any rate, they would have the means of wringing from
+you the mission of which you were in charge; while I could send equally
+well a message by sea, as I did before."
+
+"I see that there might be some slight danger, my Lord Earl," Oswald
+said quietly; "but I, as well as another, might take passage down by
+ship touching at Berwick, or other port."
+
+The earl's brow clouded.
+
+"'Tis a matter to be thought over," he said, moodily. "A ship might be
+captured, seeing that there are often French freebooting vessels on the
+coast. And what were your orders from Lord Percy?"
+
+"That I was to return, immediately I had conveyed his message to you."
+
+"I would gladly hasten your departure," the earl said, after a moment's
+pause, "but you see, great issues hang upon this affair. However, I
+will think the matter over again, and will see how it can be best
+managed."
+
+After leaving the castle, Oswald went to the convent where the monk was
+lodged, and asked for speech with Brother Roger. In a minute or two the
+latter came out.
+
+"Are we off, young master?" he asked. "In truth, it is as bad here as
+at Alnwick; and, after a taste of liberty, I am longing to be out
+again; and indeed, I have had some trouble in accounting for my stay
+here, instead of continuing my journey to see my aged father."
+
+"If it depended upon me, I would say that we would start forthwith; but
+what I have somewhat feared, all along, has come to pass. I was the
+bearer of a certain message of much importance, from Hotspur to the
+earl, and I fear that the latter will detain me. He thinks that I know
+more than I have said, which indeed is true, and likes not that one who
+is so entirely cognisant of his secret counsels, and intentions, should
+go free. He put it down to the fact that I might be captured, on my way
+back, and forced to confess the whole details of the mission with which
+I am charged. It is possible that this is so, but it is more likely
+that he dislikes that anyone should know secrets that concern his
+safety; and although he has not said as much, at present, I believe
+that it is his intention to hold me here as prisoner; though doubtless
+with due courtesy, as befits Percy's messenger and esquire; until
+affairs come to a head, which may not be for a year or two, yet."
+
+"Is there a guard over you, at present?"
+
+"Not that I know of, Roger, but it may be that the inn is watched. At
+any rate, he would try to overtake me, did I attempt to leave without
+his permission."
+
+"Then, Master Oswald, I should say let us be off, at once."
+
+"But how, Roger? On foot we should be speedily overtaken, and if not
+watched at present, doubtless I shall be, after my interview with the
+earl this morning. Were I to try and buy horses, I might be arrested at
+once. However, I have been thinking that the best plan would be for you
+to go round to the port, and to bargain for a passage for us to
+Edinburgh. Then we would slip on board quietly, half an hour before she
+sailed.
+
+"Methinks it were as well that you did not go in your robes. I will
+purchase a dress suitable to a cattle drover, for you, and a similar
+one for myself. I will bring yours for you here, in an hour's time, if
+you will wait a hundred yards from the gate for me. Then you can go to
+some quiet spot and change your garments, and then go down to the port.
+I will be standing at the door of my inn, and as you pass say, without
+checking your pace, the hour at which a boat sails, today or tomorrow;
+and then do you be near the hotel, again, an hour before that time.
+
+"Do not speak to me as I come out, but keep a short distance behind me;
+and if you see that I am followed by anyone, you must do your best to
+rid me of him. You had better bring your present garments along with
+you. They may be useful."
+
+Roger assented joyously. The thought that, at any rate for a time, he
+was to get rid of his robes filled him with joy; and the possibility
+that there might be danger in the enterprise only added to his
+pleasure.
+
+Feeling the need for great care, Oswald walked for some little time
+before entering a shop, passing through several quiet streets; and,
+when assured that he was not followed, he went into the booth of a
+clothier.
+
+"I have occasion for two suits of clothes, such as would be worn by
+cattle drovers," he said. "I am about to travel and, having money about
+me, can best do so safely in such a garment. I want one suit to fit me,
+and another for a companion, who is a big stout man, a good deal above
+the ordinary height."
+
+"'Tis a wise precaution, your honour, for the roads are by no means
+safe, at present. I can fit you, with ease, and will pick out the
+largest clothes I have in stock, for your companion."
+
+The purchase was soon made. It consisted of a rough smock of blue
+cloth, reaching to the knees, and girded in by a strap at the waist;
+and breeches of the same material, reaching below the knees, with
+strips of gray cloth to be wound round and round the leg, from the knee
+to the ankle. In addition, Oswald bought two pairs of rough sandals,
+and two lowland bonnets. Each suit was done up, at his request, in a
+separate parcel; and then, retracing his steps, he joined Roger and
+handed his clothes to him.
+
+"I will go outside the gates and change my things," Roger said, "and
+then go down to the port. I will then come to your hotel, as you said.
+If no ship sails until tomorrow, I have only to put my robe on over
+these garments, and return to the convent. If there is one sailing this
+evening, I shall not go back there again; but will be on the lookout
+for you, half an hour before the boat leaves the port."
+
+"The nearer the time of sailing, the better, Roger; for if I am
+watched, and there is any trouble with the man who follows me, the
+sooner we are on board before any alarm is raised, the better. But I
+should hardly think a boat would start, in the evening."
+
+"I don't know, Master Oswald. I was down at the port, yesterday, and
+the tide was high at three o'clock; and methinks that a boat would put
+out an hour or two before low tide, so as to take the water with it as
+far as New Berwick, and there catch the flood flowing into the Firth.
+In that case, the boat would put out at six, or maybe seven o'clock."
+
+"I would that it had been two hours later, Roger. After dark, it were
+easy enough to silence a man without attracting much attention; but in
+broad daylight, it would not be so easily done."
+
+"Not if we went straight from the inn to the port, Master, but there is
+no need for you to take that route."
+
+"You are right, Roger. Indeed, it would be better not to do so, for
+were they to have an idea that we had escaped by water, the earl might
+send a fast boat after us. Therefore, when I come out I will turn off
+and go, by unfrequented streets and lanes, in the opposite direction.
+In that way you will be better able to see if I am followed, and may
+find some quiet place, where you can give a man a clout on the head
+that will rid us of him."
+
+"Will you come out, Master Oswald, in your present attire, or in your
+disguise?"
+
+"I will wear this cloak and headgear, and will put these leggings over
+the others, so that I shall have but to take them off and fling them
+aside, and to throw off my cloak and cap and put on this bonnet, all of
+which will not take a minute and can be done in a doorway or passage
+without attracting observation. I should be afraid to go out, in the
+drover's attire. The servants at the inn know me, now; and moreover, a
+man of such condition would not think of going to the Falcon. Were I to
+be noticed, coming out, it might be thought that I had entered it for
+some evil purpose."
+
+"I shall be on hand, master. I had thought of not returning to the
+monastery, but I must do so, for I have left my staff there, and it
+will be as suitable for a drover as a monk. I shall go to the harbour,
+as soon as I have seen you; and if it is this evening a boat sails, I
+shall go back at once and bid them farewell, saying that a ship is
+sailing for Leith, and that I have taken passage in her."
+
+Oswald returned to the inn and, half an hour later, went down to the
+doorway, where he stood as if idly watching the flow of traffic. A
+quarter of an hour later, he saw Roger approaching. He looked the
+character that he had assumed, to the life. He had dirtied his hands
+and face, and smudged his smock with stains of mud. He strolled along,
+with a free step and head erect. He did not look at Oswald as he
+passed, but said, "Boat sails at seven, tonight."
+
+Oswald stood for some time longer. A short distance down the street, he
+observed two of the earl's retainers. They were standing, apparently
+looking at the goods in a mercer's window. After a time, they moved on
+a short distance, passed the inn, and stopped again to look in another
+shop, twenty or thirty yards away.
+
+Then Oswald left the door. The landlord was standing in the passage,
+and beckoned to him to enter his private room.
+
+"Young sir," he said, "I know not whether you have done anything that
+has displeased the earl, nor is it any business of mine; but you are a
+fair-spoken young gentlemen, and I would not that any ill came to you.
+I like not to meddle in the earl's affairs, for he would think nothing
+of ordering my house to be burnt over my head. However, I may warn you
+that he is making inquiries about you. One of his retainers has been
+here, two hours ago, with a confidential message from the earl, to
+inquire whether you had said anything about leaving, and to bid me send
+a message to him, secretly, should you do so."
+
+"I thank you warmly, my good host," Oswald replied. "I have had no
+quarrel with the earl, but we have differed as to the value of the
+goods he requires. He would fain have them at last year's prices; but
+wool has gone up, and we could not sell them, save at a loss. It may be
+that he thinks I shall go away, and that if he finds I am about to do
+so he will send for me, and agree to my terms, which indeed are so low
+that they leave but little profit. However, it were well that you
+should let me know how much I owe you, and I will pay that, at once. Do
+not make up the account, but tell me roundly there or thereabouts; and
+then, should I leave suddenly, you can say truly that I had not asked
+for my bill, and that you were altogether ignorant of my intention of
+leaving."
+
+"There can be no occasion for that," the host said. "You can pay me the
+next time you come, should you decide to leave suddenly."
+
+"Nay, I would rather settle obligations, for if I do not do business
+with the earl, it may be some time before I return."
+
+The landlord made rapid calculations, and named a sum, which Oswald at
+once handed to him, with warm thanks for the warning he had given him.
+
+"I may stay here three or four days longer," he said meaningly, "as the
+earl may, at the last moment, come to an agreement as to the price of
+the goods. I should be sorry to return to my uncle without getting an
+order, for the earl has, for years, been one of our best customers."
+
+The landlord nodded.
+
+"I understand," he said. "It would be as well, perhaps, that you should
+say as much in the hearing of one of the drawers; so that, if
+questioned, I shall have a witness who can bear me out."
+
+
+
+Chapter 7: Back To Hotspur.
+
+
+It was still broad daylight when, at half-past six, Oswald left the inn
+and sauntered, at a leisurely pace, down the street. His eye at once
+fell on Roger's tall figure, and he also saw two retainers of the earl,
+loitering about. They were not the same men he had seen in the morning,
+but doubtless had relieved those on watch.
+
+He took the first turning off the main street and, after passing
+through several lanes, found himself at the foot of the town wall. A
+narrow lane ran between it and a row of small houses. No one was about,
+and he thought that Roger would take advantage of the loneliness of the
+spot, to endeavour to rid him of his followers, whose footsteps he
+could hear some distance behind him. Presently, he glanced carelessly
+round. The men were some thirty or forty yards behind him; and coming
+up with them, at a rapid step, was Roger. A minute later, he heard a
+voice raised in anger.
+
+"Where are you going, fellow? There is plenty of room to pass, without
+pushing between us. You want teaching manners."
+
+Roger gave a loud laugh.
+
+"Who is going to teach me?" he said.
+
+"I will!" one of the men said, angrily placing his hand upon his sword
+hilt.
+
+As he did so, he was levelled to the ground by a tremendous blow from
+Roger's staff. With a shout, the other soldier drew his sword; but,
+before he could guard himself, the staff again descended, and he fell
+senseless beside his comrade.
+
+Roger at once knelt beside them, tore off strips of their garments and,
+rolling them up, pressed them into their mouths; and, with string which
+he had brought for the purpose, tied them in their place. Then, taking
+out a few pieces of cord he tied their hands behind them, and their
+ankles together; dragged them into a dark entry, and left them lying
+there.
+
+The whole transaction had occupied but two or three minutes, and had
+attracted no attention, whatever. The soldiers' shout might have been
+heard; but there was no clashing of weapons, and a shout was too
+unimportant a matter for anyone within hearing to take any trouble
+about.
+
+Oswald, seeing that Roger needed no assistance, had occupied himself
+with stripping off the outer pair of leggings; and had made these, with
+his cloak and cap, into a bundle; and, pressing the drover's cap down
+over his eyes, was ready by the time Roger came up to him.
+
+"It was splendidly managed, Roger."
+
+"It did well enough," the other said, carelessly. "It may be an hour
+before anyone stumbles over them; and, long before that, we shall be at
+sea."
+
+They made their way back through quiet lanes until near the port, and
+then boldly went down to the side of a small craft.
+
+"You are just in time, my men," the skipper said. "In another five
+minutes, we should be throwing off the ropes and hoisting sails. Now
+that you have come, we shall do so, at once. The tide is just right for
+us, and we have nothing further to stop for."
+
+The boat was a large fishing smack, and had put into Dunbar but that
+afternoon, with the intention of disposing of the catch. Two others
+had, however, come in still earlier. The market being glutted, the
+skipper had determined to take his catch, which was a heavy one, on to
+Leith; and had agreed, for a very small sum, to carry the two drovers
+to that port.
+
+Oswald and Roger aided in getting up the sails, and in a few minutes
+the smack was at sea. The wind was from the southwest, and the boat ran
+rapidly up the coast.
+
+"The earl will be in a nice way, when he finds that you have gone,"
+Roger said, as he stood in the stern to watch the rapidly receding
+towers of Dunbar. "There will be a hot hue and cry for you. The earl is
+not accustomed to be thwarted, and they say that he is a mighty
+hot-tempered man. I have no doubt that, as soon as his fellows bring
+him word of what has happened to them, and he finds that you have
+quitted the inn, he will send parties of horse out to scour the roads
+to Berwick and Haddington; and to search the country, far and near."
+
+"He is welcome to do that," Oswald said. "My fear is that he will send
+down to the port, to inquire if any craft put out about the hour at
+which his men were attacked. But even if he does so, there is no great
+chance of our being overtaken. We are travelling fast, and in another
+hour it will be dark; and long before daybreak we shall reach Leith,
+having both wind and tide in our favour, all the way."
+
+They kept an anxious watch, as long as there was light enough for them
+to make out if a vessel left Dunbar. Both fancied that they could see a
+sail, just as twilight was falling, but neither could be sure that it
+was not the effect of imagination. They were already ten miles away,
+and as the tide had now begun to make along the shore, it was certain
+that for some time, at least, a ship, however fast she might be, would
+gain but little upon them, until she had fairly entered the Firth.
+There would be no moon and, even should she overtake them, she might
+well pass them in the dark.
+
+When they lay down, they agreed that they would keep awake in turns;
+and that, if they made out a ship apparently pursuing them, they would
+offer the skipper the full value for his boat, and betake themselves to
+it, and row for shore.
+
+"The greatest danger," Roger said, "would be of their passing us,
+unseen; and then lying-to near the entrance of the port, and
+overhauling us as we came in."
+
+"That is a danger that we cannot guard against. Can you swim, Roger?"
+
+"It is years since I have done so," the monk replied, "but I used to do
+so, in the old days."
+
+"There is an empty cask here, by my side," Oswald went on. "If we are
+challenged, the best plan would be to lower it down, quietly, into the
+water; and to hold on by it. The boat would certainly go some distance,
+before she had lost her way and brought up; and we should be out of
+sight of both ships, before they came together."
+
+"That is a good idea. If we hear a hail, I will at once cut a good
+length of rope, and twist it round a barrel for us to hold on by. But I
+don't think there is any chance of our being overhauled."
+
+"I agree with you in that respect; still, it is just as well to have
+our plans prepared, in case it should happen."
+
+They kept a vigilant watch through the night, without catching sight of
+any craft proceeding in the same direction as themselves.
+
+It was still dark when the helmsman hailed the skipper: "I see the
+lights of Leith ahead," and later they passed the beacon fire that
+marked the entrance to the port. Five minutes later Oswald and his
+companion, after paying the sum agreed on, stepped on shore.
+
+"That danger is over. I did not think that there was any real cause for
+fear. I should like to see the earl, as his bands of horsemen ride in,
+today, with the news that they can hear nothing of us."
+
+"I should like to hit him just such a clout, with my staff, as I gave
+his two retainers," Roger said. "Earl as he is, it was scandalous, and
+contrary to all usages, to arrest a messenger; especially when that
+messenger is an esquire of one of equal rank to himself, and his
+message, as I suppose, a friendly one."
+
+"I don't so much blame him. He had no means of judging my discretion;
+and the consequences, to him and others, had I fallen into the hands of
+Douglas, or those of a marauding leader, might have been serious,
+indeed. I doubt not that, had I been content to stay with him, he would
+have treated me with all honour. I might even have done so, and have
+got him to send another messenger to Percy; but the latter bade me to
+return at once, and moreover said that he had another mission, as soon
+as I had carried the present one to a successful termination."
+
+"And have you done so, Master Oswald?"
+
+"Yes, I think so, Roger. I was to ascertain the earl's real intentions
+regarding certain matters, and I think that he means honestly to adhere
+to an offer he made. The very fear that he has shown, lest his
+intentions should be betrayed, seems to prove that he is most anxious
+that naught should occur to interfere with his plans."
+
+"The Earls of Dunbar have ever been a treacherous race," Roger said
+earnestly, "and ready to betray their own countrymen, in order to curry
+favour with England, and continue in possession of their estates.
+However, as we have benefited from it, we need not grumble, if the
+Scots are contented.
+
+"Now, Master Oswald, what are we to do next?"
+
+"I should say that we had better find a corner to lie down, until
+daybreak. I don't think that either of us have slept. Then we will go
+into a tavern and breakfast, and afterwards go on to Edinburgh. I
+should like to see the town and castle, and the chance may never come
+again to me.
+
+"Then, tomorrow morning, we will start in earnest. We shall have plenty
+of opportunities to talk over our plans, so let us lose no time, now,
+in looking for a bed."
+
+Fortunately, they soon came upon some fishing nets, carelessly piled
+under the lee of a stack of timber. Here they threw themselves down,
+and were soon fast asleep.
+
+When they woke, the sun was well up. Fishermen were preparing to get up
+sail; and those who had, like themselves, come in during the night,
+were commencing to unload their cargoes.
+
+"Look there!" Oswald exclaimed, as he pointed to a vessel, from whose
+masthead floated a flag with the arms of the Earl of March. "She is
+just entering the port. They did chase us after all, you see, but they
+did not gain on our fishing boat."
+
+"Well, methinks that we had better be off, at once," Roger said. "They
+will soon learn which boat has come from Dunbar, and find out from the
+men what were the disguises worn by us. So we had best lose no time in
+getting out of Leith."
+
+"They would never dare to seize us, here," Oswald said.
+
+"I don't know that. If they have strict orders to bring us back, they
+would not feel much hesitation in seizing us, wherever they found us;
+knowing well enough that the burghers of Leith would not concern
+themselves greatly about the capture of two drovers, who would probably
+be charged with all sorts of crime. Were it one of their own citizens,
+it would be different; but it is scarce likely that the burghers would
+care to quarrel, with a powerful noble, for the sake of two strangers
+of low degree. The gates will be open before this, and we shall be
+safer in Edinburgh than we are here."
+
+Accordingly, they postponed their breakfast and, passing through the
+town without a pause, issued out by the south gate, and walked briskly
+to Edinburgh. As soon as they arrived, they found a small tavern, and
+partook of a hearty meal. Listening while they ate to the conversation
+going on around them, they found that the young Duke of Rothesay was,
+at present, staying at the castle.
+
+"Men say that the disputes between him and his uncle, the Duke of
+Albany, have of late grown hotter."
+
+"That might well be," another said. "Rothesay is a man, now. He has
+shown himself a brave soldier, and it is not likely that he would
+support, with patience, the haughtiness and overbearing manner of
+Albany. It was an evil day for Scotland when our good king, who was
+then but prince, lamed himself for life; and so was forced, on his
+accession, to leave the conduct of affairs to Albany, then Earl of
+Fife. The king, as all men know, is just and good, and has at heart the
+welfare of his subjects; but his accident has rendered him unfit to
+take part in public affairs, and he loves peace and quiet as much as
+Albany loves intrigues, and dark and devious ways. 'Tis a sore pity
+that the king cannot make up his mind to throw himself into the arms of
+Douglas, and call upon the nobility to join in expelling Albany from
+his councils; and to give the charge of affairs into the hands of
+Rothesay, or even to bestow upon him the kingly dignity, while he
+himself retires to the peaceful life he loves."
+
+"That would have been better done," the other said, "before the young
+duke married; for many of the nobles, who would have otherwise
+supported him, would hold aloof, seeing that the accession of Rothesay
+would be but handing over the real power of the state from Albany to
+Douglas. Men say that the feud between March and Douglas grows hotter
+and hotter, and that the boldness with which March upbraided the king,
+for the breaking off by Rothesay of his marriage with Elizabeth of
+Dunbar, has so angered him, Rothesay, and Albany, who had aided in
+bringing about the match with Elizabeth Douglas, that 'tis like that
+March will, ere long, be arraigned for his conduct, and the threats
+that he uttered in his passion."
+
+"Well, gossips, it matters little to us," an elderly man said. "Whether
+king or prince or duke is master, we have to pay; and assuredly, were
+Rothesay king, our taxes would not abate; seeing that he is extravagant
+and reckless, though I say not that he has not many good qualities. But
+these benefit, in no way, men like ourselves; while the taxation to
+support extravagance touches us all."
+
+There was a murmur of assent from the little group who were talking,
+who struck Oswald as being farmers, who had come in from the country to
+sell cattle to the butchers of the town. They were interrupted in their
+talk by the landlord, who came across to them.
+
+"My good friends," he said, "I pray you talk not so loudly concerning
+princes and nobles. It is true that we are a royal city, and that the
+burghers of Edinburgh have their rights and their liberties;
+nevertheless, it were dangerous to talk loud concerning nobles. We are
+quiet people all, and none here wear the cognizance of Douglas or
+Albany. Still, it would do me much harm, were it reported that there
+had been talk here concerning such powerful nobles; and though the
+Douglas might care little what was said of him, methinks that there are
+others--I name no names--who would spare neither great nor small who
+incurred their resentment."
+
+"I knew not that we were talking loudly, John Ker; and methinks that
+none, save the two men at the near table, have heard our words; and
+they look honest fellows enough. Still, what you say is right, and
+while we may talk of these things by our firesides, 'tis best to keep a
+silent tongue, while abroad."
+
+"You need not disquiet yourself about us," Roger broke in. "We have no
+communion with lords or princes; and, so that we can drive our herds
+safely down into Cumberland, we care not whether one noble or another
+has the king's ear. We have but just returned, from England."
+
+"Well, man, I may put you in the way of getting a job, if you want
+one," the eldest of the party said. "I myself have a small farm, near
+Lavingston, and but breed cattle for the Edinburgh market; but I have a
+brother, at Lanark, who buys cattle up in the north; and, when there is
+peace between the countries, sends the droves down to Carlisle, and
+makes a good profit on their sales. I saw him but two hours ago, and he
+told me that he was daily expecting a lot of cattle from the north; and
+that he intended to send them on, without delay, to Carlisle. If you
+say to him that you have seen me, and that I recommended you to call on
+him, and see if he wanted any drovers to aid in taking them down; I
+doubt not he will take you on, unless he has already engaged men."
+
+"I thank you for the offer," Roger said, "but our home lies near
+Roxburgh, and we intend to abide there for a time; for the roads are by
+no means safe, at present. Douglas is thinking more of his quarrel with
+Dunbar than of keeping down border freebooters. We escaped them this
+time; but we heard of their taking heavy toll from some herds that
+followed us, and of their killing two or three drovers who offered
+objection; so we have determined to abide at home, for a time, to see
+how matters go."
+
+After taking a brief view of the town they started, in the afternoon,
+to walk to Dalkeith, where they slept; and, leaving there at daybreak,
+crossed a lofty range of hills, and came down into Lauderdale. They had
+no fear of any interruption such as they had experienced before--as,
+had Douglas news of negotiations going on between March and England, he
+would not think it necessary to watch the road between Edinburgh and
+the border--and late in the evening they arrived at Ancrum, on the
+Teviot, having done fully fifty miles, since starting.
+
+Ten miles in the morning took them to Roxburgh. Here they put up at a
+small tavern, and Oswald donned the servitor's suit that he had brought
+with him from Dunbar; while Roger, to his great disgust, resumed his
+monk's gown, which he put on over the drover's suit.
+
+Oswald then went to the governor's. His former acquaintance happened to
+be at the door, and endeavoured to atone for his former rudeness, by at
+once ushering him to the governor's room.
+
+"Welcome back, Master Forster!" the latter said. "Your mission,
+whatever it was, is speedily terminated. From what you said, I had not
+looked for you for another fortnight."
+
+"If I had not come when I did," Oswald said, "my absence might have
+been prolonged, for months. However, all has gone well, and I purpose
+starting at once for Alnwick, and would fain reach Wooler by
+nightfall."
+
+"That you can do, easily enough. I will order the horses to be saddled,
+at once."
+
+"I thank you, Sir Philip. I will mount here in the courtyard. I care
+not, now, what notice may be taken of me; seeing that there is but some
+ten miles to be ridden, to the frontier."
+
+"Nor, I warrant me, will you meet with interference on the road," the
+knight said. "I have not heard of anyone being stopped for toll, for
+the past year, between this and the border."
+
+A quarter of an hour later they left Roxburgh; and, travelling at an
+easy pace, arrived at Wooler before sunset; and on the following
+evening entered Alnwick. They could have reached it earlier, but Oswald
+thought it as well not to enter the castle until after dark, as he did
+not wish to be noticed in his present attire.
+
+Fastening the horses to hooks in the courtyard, Oswald ran up to his
+apartment, which was next to that of his uncle.
+
+"Welcome back, Oswald!" the latter said, as he opened his door on
+hearing his footsteps. "I had thought that you would be longer away."
+
+"I am back sooner than I expected, Uncle. Will you order supper to be
+brought up here, for Roger and myself? We are both hard set; though,
+indeed, we had a meal of bread and cheese, at noon, at a wayside
+tavern."
+
+"Brother Roger has behaved well?"
+
+"Excellently. He has cracked but two sconces since we left, and these
+were on my behalf. He will sleep on some rushes in my room, tonight. He
+hates the thought of returning to the monastery, and has begged me,
+most earnestly, to ask Percy to continue him in his employment."
+
+As soon as Oswald had donned his ordinary attire, he went to Lord
+Percy's quarters.
+
+"You are back sooner than I had expected, Oswald," Hotspur said, as he
+entered. "Nothing has gone wrong, I hope?"
+
+"Nothing, my lord, but I was forced to leave Dunbar, after but three
+days' stay there; for the earl was so fearful that I might be detected,
+on my way back, that he would have retained me with him until the time
+for action came; sending down another messenger, by sea, to you. As
+your orders were to return with all speed, I gave him the slip, and
+made my way back as quickly as possible."
+
+"And March?"
+
+"I think that the earl is in earnest in his professions, my lord; and
+that you can rely upon him for such aid as he can render. But, from
+what I heard in Edinburgh--"
+
+"In Edinburgh!" Hotspur said, in surprise; "what took you there?"
+
+"I will tell you, my lord; but the point is that men said openly,
+there, that there was a report that he would be attainted, and deprived
+of his land, for treasonable words spoken by him to the king, the Duke
+of Albany, and the Duke of Rothesay. If this is so, he will have to
+fly; for assuredly he has, at present, no force gathered that could
+resist those of the king and Douglas."
+
+"Give me an account of what has happened," Hotspur said, frowning. "I
+feared that March's impetuous temper would lead him into trouble,
+before we were in a position to march to his assistance; and I heard
+rumours of a stormy scene between him and Rothesay, when he learned
+that he had been fooled; but I knew not that the king, himself, was
+present."
+
+Oswald related the story of his journey, and the interruption on the
+moor; and the reports, that he had afterwards heard, of the stoppage of
+all travellers coming from the south, by the same band.
+
+"The leader was evidently above the rank of an ordinary marauder, and
+his followers obeyed him as men-at-arms would obey an officer; and it
+seemed to me, my lord, that Douglas must have heard a vague report that
+the earl was in communication with England; and sought to intercept
+some messenger, on whom he might find a letter, or from whom he could
+extract proofs of the earl's treachery."
+
+"'Tis like enough," Hotspur said. "When a man is so rash as to upbraid
+the king, and still more Albany, he must needs fall under suspicion.
+Now, go on with your story."
+
+When Oswald had brought his narration to an end, Percy said:
+
+"You have done very well, Oswald, and have deserved the confidence that
+I placed in you. You have shown much circumspection, and you did well
+in escaping from Dunbar, as you did. The mad monk, too, seems to have
+behaved well. I doubted your wisdom in taking him, but he has certainly
+proved a useful fellow."
+
+"I would petition, my lord, that you should continue him in your
+service; and that, should you employ me upon another mission, you will
+again allow me to take him with me. He is a shrewd fellow, as well as a
+stout one, and I could wish for no better companion; though I own that,
+since he put on his gown again at Roxburgh, and rode hither, his
+spirits have greatly failed him."
+
+"I will arrange that with the abbot," Hotspur said; "but tell him that,
+while he is here, he must continue to wear his robe. His face is too
+well known for him to pass as a man-at-arms, without being recognized
+by half the garrison. The Lord Abbot would well object to one of his
+monks turning into a swaggering man-at-arms, at his very door.
+
+"At any rate, I shall tell the abbot that, if he will consent quietly
+to the monk's unfrocking himself, until he can obtain for him release
+from his vows; I will scud him away to one of the other castles, whence
+I can fetch him, if you need him to accompany you on any errand, and
+where he can form part of the regular garrison. But the knave must be
+informed that it were best that he say nought about his former
+profession, and that he comport himself as quietly as is in his nature.
+
+"I will give him a small command, as soon as may be; for although a
+very bad monk, he has proved himself to be a good soldier."
+
+"I thank you greatly, my lord," Oswald said; "and will talk seriously
+to the monk, who will be delighted when he hears that the abbot will
+take steps to allow him to lay aside his gown."
+
+Roger was, indeed, delighted when he heard the news; and still more so
+when, three days later, Oswald informed him that Hotspur had obtained,
+from the abbot, what was practically a release from his vows. The good
+abbot said that he felt that harm, rather than good, would ensue from
+keeping the monk a member of the monastery.
+
+"He infects the lay brothers, with his talk," he said. "He is a good
+instructor in arms, but he teaches not as one who feels that it is a
+dire necessity to carry arms, but as one who delights in it. Moreover,
+he causes scandals by his drinking bouts, and does not add to the
+harmony of the place. At a time like this, when the Scots may, at any
+moment, fall across the border, such a fellow may do good service to
+his country; and it is surely better that a man should be a good
+soldier, than that he should be a bad monk. Therefore I will let him
+go, my lord; but keep him away from here. It would be a grave scandal,
+were he to be brawling in the town where he is known. Therefore, I pray
+you, take him elsewhere. I have striven long to make him a worthy
+member of his order, but I feel that it is beyond me; and it would be
+best, therefore, that he should go his own way. He may come to be a
+worthy soldier, and so justify me in allowing him to unfrock himself.
+
+"As he is abiding in your castle, I pray you bid him present himself
+here, tomorrow. I would fain speak to him, and give him such advice,
+concerning his future conduct, as may be of benefit to him."
+
+When Roger returned from the monastery, the next day, he wore a much
+more serious face than usual.
+
+"The abbot has done me more good, by his talk this morning," he said to
+Oswald, "than by all the lectures and penances he has ever imposed on
+me. In truth, he is a good man, and I had half a mind to say that I
+would return to the convent, and do my best to comport myself mildly
+and becomingly.
+
+"But I felt that it would not do, Oswald. The thing is too strong for
+me and, however I might strive, I know that when the temptation came I
+should break out again; and so, I held my peace."
+
+"What did he say to you, Roger?"
+
+"He said many things, but the gist of it was that there were as good
+men outside the walls of a monastery as there were within it, and that
+a soldier has as many opportunities--indeed many more opportunities--of
+showing himself a good man as a monk has. In battle, he said, a soldier
+must act as such, and fight stoutly against the enemy, and take life as
+well as risk his own; but after the fight is over he should show
+himself merciful, and if he cannot follow out the precept to love his
+enemies, he should at least be compassionate and kind to them. But
+above all, he should never oppress the helpless, should comport himself
+honourably and kindly to women and children, and, if necessary, draw
+sword in their defence against those who would ill use them. And,
+though the spoils of war were honourable and necessary, when captured
+in fair fight, yet the oppression and robbery of the poor were deadly
+crimes.
+
+"'Comport yourself always, Roger, as if, though a soldier in arms, you
+were still a monk at heart. You are brave and strong, and may rise to
+some honour; but, whether or no, you may bear yourself as if you were
+of gentle blood, and wore knightly spurs. Not all who are so are
+honourable and merciful, as they have vowed to be. Remember, I shall
+hear of you from time to time, through my Lord Percy; and that it will
+gladden me to have a good account of you, and to feel that I have not
+done wrong in letting you go forth, from this house of rest, to take
+part in the turmoil and strife of the world.'
+
+"He said more than this, but this is the pith of it. I knelt down, and
+swore that I would strive, to the utmost in my power, to do as he bade
+me; and he put his hands on my head, and bade me go in peace; and I
+tell you, I mean to prove to him that his words have not been in vain."
+
+Two days later, Oswald started with Roger, and rode to Warkworth
+Castle, some ten miles away; bearing an order to the governor to add
+Roger to the strength of the garrison, telling him that he had shown
+himself to be a brave soldier, and a skilful one, and that he could
+place confidence in him, and appoint him to any sub-command that might
+become vacant.
+
+On the way, they entered a wood. Here Roger took off his monastic garb,
+and clad himself in armour such as was worn by the garrison of Alnwick.
+The monk's clothes were made up into a bundle, and left in the wood,
+Oswald saying:
+
+"I will carry them back with me, on my return, Roger. It may be that
+they may come in useful, yet, if you and I travel together again in the
+Percys' service."
+
+A month passed, and then the Earl of March came, by sea, to Alnwick.
+Douglas and the regent had marched against him with an overwhelming
+force; and, as they were both personal enemies, he knew that his fate
+would be sealed if he fell into their hands, and he had therefore been
+driven to declare himself, openly, as a vassal of the English king.
+
+On the day after his arrival he happened to be in Hotspur's room, when
+Oswald entered.
+
+"Ah! ah!" he said, "This is your messenger, Percy.
+
+"You left me with scant notice, sir."
+
+And he smiled.
+
+"I was forced to do so, my lord earl; for, in truth, I was not sure
+that you would not prevent me from following my lord's orders, to
+return after seeing you."
+
+"You were right. In the first place, I was not sure that you were a
+true messenger; and in the second place, I feared that you might, on
+return, fall into the hands of the Douglases; who would speedily find
+means to wring from you an account of your mission. Therefore, I
+thought that it were best that you should tarry a while with me, at
+Dunbar.
+
+"The young fellow has a good head, Lord Percy, and is as hard to hold
+as a wildcat. I put the matter of watching him into the hands of two or
+three of my men, whose wits I have tried more than once, and know them
+to be among the most trustworthy of my followers. This lad, however,
+outwitted them. How, they have never been able to explain; but my
+fellows were found, trussed up like fowls for roasting, in an alley
+into which they had been thrown; having, as they declared, been knocked
+down by a giant fellow, who sprung from they knew not where, just as
+they were about to lay hands upon your messenger. After they had
+vanished, none had seen him pass the walls, and we judged that he must
+have started in a craft that sailed up the Forth. Fearing that, if they
+landed, he might speedily fall into the hands of Douglas, I sent a
+vessel in chase; but they missed him, and indeed, from that time to
+this I knew not, save by your letter to me, whether he had reached here
+safely."
+
+After a short stay, the Earl of March was about to return to Dunbar;
+when he heard that the king, himself, was coming north with an army for
+the invasion of Scotland, and would then confer with him, and consider
+the terms on which he proposed to transfer his allegiance to him. A
+month later the king arrived at Alnwick, and there George Dunbar, Earl
+of March, entered into an agreement with him; in which he renounced all
+fealty to the King of Scotland, in consideration for which he was
+granted an estate in Lincolnshire, and other revenues. It was also
+agreed that the subjects of the King of England should support the
+earl, in time of necessity; and should be supported by him, and
+received into his fortresses.
+
+He was not, now, in a position to render any very efficient aid to the
+king; for Robert Maitland, his nephew, to whom he had committed the
+castle of Dunbar, had been summoned by Douglas, who had marched there
+with a strong force, by order of the king, and had surrendered the
+stronghold to him. However, he brought Dunbar's wife and family, and a
+considerable force of his retainers, safely across the border.
+
+He and Percy, together, then made a raid into the Douglas territory;
+and penetrated as far as Haddington, and collected much spoil from the
+country round. Douglas, however, came suddenly upon them in great
+force, and they were obliged to retreat hastily across the frontier
+again, abandoning their baggage and booty.
+
+The king's invasion was no more satisfactory. The Earl of March was
+unable to place Dunbar in his hands; and, as the Scots declined battle
+in the open, he laid siege to Edinburgh, but without success. Dunbar
+being closed to him, he was unable to obtain provisions, and was forced
+to fall back to England, having accomplished nothing.
+
+During his invasion, he had shown much more leniency than had been the
+custom with his predecessors. He had taken what was necessary to
+support the army, but had abstained from wasting the country,
+destroying villages and towns, and slaughtering the country people;
+and, so far from embittering the animosity between the two nations, he
+had produced a better state of feeling; and a truce was, in
+consequence, concluded for a year, at Kelso, by special commissioners
+from both kings, on the 21st of December, 1400.
+
+
+
+Chapter 8: Ludlow Castle.
+
+
+Oswald Forster had not been present when, in June, 1400, the king
+arrived at Alnwick. A few days after the coming of the Earl of March,
+Hotspur received a letter from Sir Edmund Mortimer, the brother of his
+wife; asking him to send a body of men-at-arms, under an experienced
+captain who could aid him to drill newly-raised levies; for that one
+Owen Glendower had taken up arms against the Lord Grey de Ruthyn, and
+that turbulent men were flocking to his standard, and it was feared
+that serious trouble might ensue. Percy was in a position to send but
+few men, for with war with the Scotch imminent, he could not weaken
+himself by sending off a large force. However, he sent for Alwyn
+Forster.
+
+"I need twenty picked men, for the service of Sir Edmund Mortimer,
+Alwyn. I would send more, were it not for the position of affairs here.
+What say you to taking the command of them?"
+
+"I would gladly do so, my lord, if it be that there is a chance of
+something more lively than drilling hinds, and turning them into
+men-at-arms, which has been my business for years now, without a chance
+of striking a blow in earnest."
+
+"I think that there will be a certainty of fighting, Alwyn. The
+Welshmen are growing troublesome again, and Sir Edmund thinks that
+there may be tough work, on the Welsh marches, and has written to me
+for aid.
+
+"With the king coming hither, there is a chance that the Earl of March,
+and myself, will open the war by harrying the Douglas's lands. I can
+spare no great force, but even twenty tried men-at-arms would, no
+doubt, be welcome. As the king is going to march into Scotland, there
+is no fear that there will be any serious invasion by the Scots, and
+therefore you can be spared for a while. I think not that any of my
+knights would care to go in command of so small an array, but I thought
+that you might like to take it."
+
+"I shall be right glad to do so, my lord."
+
+"I shall send your nephew with you. He is a shrewd and gallant young
+fellow, and I know he would far rather be taking part in active
+service, against the Welsh, than spending his time in idleness, here.
+He has been too long used to a life on horseback to rest contented to
+be cooped up in a castle. Besides, there will be a good opportunity of
+distinguishing himself, and of learning something of a warfare even
+wilder, and more savage, than that in these northern marches."
+
+"I should like much to have him with me, my lord. Methinks that he has
+the making of a right good knight; and, young as he is, I am sure that
+his head is better than mine, and I should not be too proud to take
+counsel of him, if needs be."
+
+"That is settled then, Alwyn. Choose your men, and set off tomorrow
+morning. Ralph Peyton, your lieutenant, shall take the command of the
+garrison until you return."
+
+Oswald was delighted when his uncle told him of the mission with which
+he was charged, and that he himself was to accompany him.
+
+"You are to have the choice of the men-at-arms, Uncle?"
+
+"Yes, Oswald. I know what you are going to say. You would like to have
+that mad monk of yours, as one of them."
+
+"That should I, Uncle. You have no stouter man-at-arms in all your
+band, and he has proved that he can be discreet when he chooses, and
+did me good service in my last expedition."
+
+"Very well, lad, we will take him. I will send one of the men over, at
+once, for him to join us on the road tomorrow. I shall choose young and
+active fellows, of whom we have plenty. I have never fought against the
+Welsh; but they are light footed, and agile, and their country is full
+of hills and swamps. The older men would do as good service here, were
+the castle besieged in our absence; of which, however, there is but
+slight chance; but for work against the Welsh, they would be of little
+use."
+
+Hotspur himself spoke to Oswald, that evening.
+
+"Here is a missive to give to Sir Edmund Mortimer. I have commended you
+to him, telling him that, though young, there is not one of my squires
+in whom I could more implicitly trust; and that you had carried out a
+delicate mission for me, with rare discretion and courage. Your uncle,
+as an old retainer, and a good fighter, and the captain of my garrison,
+goes in command of the men-at-arms, and in regular fighting one could
+need no better officer; but in such warfare as that against the Welsh
+is like to be, yours will be the better head to plan, and as my squire
+you will represent me. I have specially commended you to him, as one
+always to be depended upon."
+
+"I am greatly beholden to your lordship," Oswald said, "and will try to
+justify the commendations that you have given me."
+
+At daybreak on the following morning, the little party rode out from
+the castle. Oswald with his uncle rode in front; the former in the
+highest spirits, while the sturdy old soldier was himself scarce less
+pleased, at this change from the monotony of life in garrison.
+
+"Years seem to have fallen off my shoulders, lad," he said, "and I feel
+as young as I did when I fought at Otterburn."
+
+"That was a bad business, Uncle; and I trust that no such misfortune as
+that will befall us, this time."
+
+"I hope not, indeed, Oswald. It was a sore fight, and we are scarce
+likely to have a pitched battle with these Welsh carls. They fight not
+much in our fashion, as I have heard; but dash down from their hills,
+and carry fire and sword through a district, and are off again before a
+force can be gathered to strike a blow. Then there are marches to and
+fro among their hills, but it is like chasing a will-o'-the-wisp; and
+like enough, just when you think you have got them cooped up, and
+prepare to strike a heavy blow, they are a hundred miles away,
+plundering and ravaging on our side of the frontier. They are half-wild
+men, short in stature, and no match for us when it comes to
+hand-to-hand fighting; but broad in the shoulder, tireless, and active
+as our shaggy ponies, and well-nigh as untamable. 'Tis fighting in
+which there is little glory, and many hard knocks to be obtained; but
+it is a good school for war. It teaches a man to be ever watchful and
+on his guard, prepared to meet sudden attacks, patient under
+difficulties; and, what is harder, to be able to go without eating or
+drinking for a long time, for they say that you might as well expect to
+find corn and ale on the crest of the Grampians, as you would on the
+Welsh hills."
+
+"The prospect doesn't look very pleasant, Uncle," Oswald laughed.
+"However, their hills can scarcely be more barren than ours, nor can
+they be quicker on the stroke than the border raiders; and for such
+work, we of the northern marches have proved far more useful than the
+beefy men of the south."
+
+"No doubt, no doubt; and maybe that, for that reason, Sir Edmund prayed
+Hotspur to send a detachment to his aid; for he would know that we are
+accustomed to a country as rough, and to a foe as active as he has now
+to meet.
+
+"I wonder what has stirred up the Welsh now, knowing as they do that,
+although they may gain successes at first, it always ends in the
+harrying of their lands, and the burning of their castles and villages.
+They have been quiet for some years. But they are always like a swarm
+of bees. They will work, quietly enough, till they take offence at
+something; then they will pour out in a fury, attacking all they come
+across, and caring nothing about death, so that they can but prick an
+enemy with their stings. Maybe it is the report that the king is
+engaging in another Scotch war, and they think that it is a good time
+to gather spoil from their neighbours. They used to be mightily given
+to warring among themselves, but of late I have heard but little of
+this.
+
+"It is a hundred years, now, since they were really troublesome, and
+rose under Morgan ap Madoc; and Edward the Second had himself to reduce
+them to submission, and build strong castles at Conway, Beaumaris, and
+other places. There have been one or two partial risings, since then,
+but nothing of much consequence. It may well be that the present
+generation, who have not themselves felt the power of English arms, may
+have decided to make another stroke for independence; and if so, it
+will need more than Mortimer's force, or that of the other border
+barons, to bring them to reason; and as for our little detachment, it
+will be but a drop in the ocean. However, it may be that this is a mere
+quarrel, between Mortimer and some of his neighbours.
+
+"I have heard somewhat of the Welshman Owen Glendower, who lives in
+those parts. He has a grievance against Lord Grey of Ruthyn; who, as he
+says, unjustly seized a small estate of his. I know that he petitioned
+Parliament for redress, but that his petition was lately refused."
+
+"'Tis strange that such a man should have known enough of English law
+to have made a petition to our parliament."
+
+"Yes; but he is no common man. He went to England and studied at our
+universities, and even lived in the inns of court, and learned the laws
+of this country. Then, strangely enough, he became an esquire in the
+household of King Richard, and did good service to him; and when the
+court was broken up, on Richard being dethroned, he went away to his
+estate in Wales. Since then I have not heard of him, save as to this
+dispute with Lord Grey and his petition to Parliament thereon; but men
+who were at Richard's court have told me that he was a courteous
+gentleman, of excellent parts and, it was said, of much learning."
+
+"Such a man might be a formidable enemy," Oswald said; "and if he has
+been robbed by Lord Grey, he might well head an insurrection, to
+recover his estates from that noble."
+
+In the course of their ride they were joined by Roger, who warmly
+thanked Alwyn for having selected him as one of his band. The other
+soldiers received him heartily, for the fighting monk had been a
+familiar personage at Alnwick, and his mighty strength and jovial
+disposition rendered him very popular among the soldiers of the
+garrison. There had been general satisfaction among them, when it was
+known that he had laid aside his monk's gown, and had become one of the
+Percys' men-at-arms; and there had been many expressions of regret that
+he had been sent off, instead of forming one of the garrison of
+Alnwick. Two or three of them addressed him, as usual, as monk, but he
+said:
+
+"Look here, comrades, I have been a monk, and a bad one, and the less
+said about it the better. I am no longer a monk, but a man-at-arms; and
+as I am not proud of my doings as a monk, I have given up the title, as
+I have given up the garb. Therefore I give fair notice that whosoever,
+in future, shall address me as monk, will feel the weight of my arm. My
+name is Roger, and as Roger let me be called, henceforth."
+
+So saying, he fell into his place in the line, when the cavalcade
+continued their way.
+
+The journey was a long one. Oswald had been well supplied with funds,
+and seldom found difficulty in obtaining lodgings for the party. The
+sight of an esquire, with a small troop of men-at-arms wearing the
+Percy cognizance, excited no curiosity as they rode south; but when
+they turned westward it was otherwise, and at their halting places
+Oswald and his uncle, who dined apart from the others, were always
+questioned as to their destination.
+
+But when it was known that they were travelling to the castle of
+Mortimer, whose sister was the wife of their lord, none were surprised;
+for rumours were already current of troubles on the Welsh border; and
+when they entered Shropshire they heard that Owen Glendower, with a
+considerable force, had fallen suddenly upon the retainers of Lord Grey
+de Ruthyn, had killed many, and had reoccupied the estates of which he
+had been deprived by that nobleman.
+
+On the fifteenth day after leaving Alnwick they arrived at Ludlow
+Castle, of which Mortimer was the lord. Oswald was at once conducted to
+the hall where the knight was sitting.
+
+"I am bearer of a message from Sir Henry Percy," he said; "he has sent
+hither a party of twenty men-at-arms, under the command of the captain
+of his garrison, at Alnwick."
+
+"I had hoped for more," the knight said, taking the missive and opening
+it; "but I can understand that, now the king is marching against
+Scotland, Percy cannot spare troops to despatch so long a distance. I
+trust that he and my sister, his wife, and the earl are in good
+health?"
+
+"I left them so, sir."
+
+The knight read Hotspur's letter.
+
+"He speaks in terms of high commendation of you, young sir," he said,
+as he laid the letter down on the table. "Such commendation is rarely
+bestowed on one so young. I marvelled somewhat, when you entered, that
+Sir Henry Percy should have sent so young a squire; but from what he
+says, I doubt not that his choice is a good one; and indeed, it is
+plain that your muscles have had rare exercise, and that you can stand
+fatigue and hardship better than many older men. It is like that you
+will have your share, for the whole border seems to be unsettled. You
+have heard that this Glendower has boldly attacked, and driven out,
+Lord Grey's retainers from the estates he had taken.
+
+"As to the rights of that matter, I have nought to say. Lord Grey
+manages the affairs with the Welsh in his own county of Denbighshire,
+and along the north; and I keep their eastern border, and I meddle not
+with his affairs, nor he with mine. I know that this Glendower is a
+supporter of King Richard, of whom there are many tales current; some
+saying that he escaped from Pomfret, and is still alive, though I doubt
+not that the report that he died there is true. We know that there is,
+in Scotland, a man whom it pleases Albany to put forward as Richard;
+but this, methinks, is but a device to trouble our king. Whether this
+Glendower believes in this man, or not, I know not; but certain it is
+that he would embrace any opportunity to prove his hostility to Henry,
+whom he professes to regard as a usurper. Whether it is on account of
+his holding such opinions, and foolishly giving expression to them,
+that Lord Grey thought fit to seize his estates I know not; nor,
+indeed, do I care. Now, however, that the man has taken up arms, and by
+force has dispossessed Lord Grey, the matter touches all of us who are
+responsible for the keeping of peace in the Welsh marches.
+
+"Were it only a quarrel between Lord Grey and this man, it would matter
+but little; but, from all I hear, he exercises a strange influence over
+his countrymen, who deem that he has mysterious powers, and can call up
+spirits to aid him. For myself, I have never known an instance where
+necromancy or spirits have availed, in any way, against stout arms and
+good armour; but such is not, assuredly, the opinion of the unlearned,
+either in this country or in Wales. But these mountaineers are
+altogether without learning, and are full of superstitions. Even with
+us, a man more learned than the commonalty is deemed, by them, to
+dabble in the black art; and it may well be that this reputation
+Glendower has obtained is altogether due to the fact that he has much
+knowledge, whereas the people have none. However that may be, there is
+no doubt that the Welsh people are mostly ignorant; and that, at the
+call of this Glendower, men from all parts are hastening to join his
+banner. Even on this side of the border there are complaints that the
+Welsh servants are leaving, not openly and after a due termination of
+service, but making off at night, and without a word of warning.
+
+"All this would seem to show that there is trouble on hand, and it
+behoves us to be watchful, and to hold ourselves in readiness; lest at
+any time they should, as in the days of old, cross the border, and
+carry fire and sword through Shropshire and Hereford. The royal castles
+in Wales could, doubtless, hold out against all attacks; but the
+garrisons would have to remain pent up within their walls, until
+succour reached them. Fortunately, most of them are situated near the
+sea, and could be relieved without the troops having to march through
+places where a heavily armed man can scarce make his way, and where
+these active and half-clad Welshmen can harass them, night and day,
+without ever giving them a chance of coming to close quarters.
+
+"A messenger from Lord Grey arrived here, yesterday. Indeed, since the
+attack on his retainers, we have been in constant communication. At
+first he made light of the matter, and said that he should like to have
+the Welshman hanging from the battlements of his castle; but, during
+the last week, his messages have been less hopeful. Glendower had
+disappeared from the neighbourhood altogether, leaving a sort of
+proclamation to Lord Grey affixed to the door of his house; saying
+that, next time he heard of him, no mercy would be shown, and every man
+would be slain. He now says that rumours reach him of large gatherings,
+and that there are bonfires, nightly, on the hilltops. He doubts not
+that the troubles will soon be suppressed, but admits that much blood
+may have to be spilt, ere it is done.
+
+"I can bear testimony to the bonfires, for from the top of the keep a
+dozen can be seen, any night, blazing among the hills."
+
+"Of course, sir, your messenger, asking Lord Percy to send a body of
+men-at-arms here, was despatched before Glendower's attack on Lord
+Grey?"
+
+"Certainly; but it is three months, now, since Parliament refused
+Glendower's appeal for justice against Lord Grey; and rumours have been
+busy, ever since. Some said that he was travelling through the valleys,
+accompanied by some of the harpers, who have always taken a leading
+part in stirring up the Welsh to insurrection. Some avow that he has
+retired to a fortress, and was there weaving designs for the overthrow
+of Lord Grey, and even of the whole of the English castles. Some say
+that he claims to be a descendant of Llewellyn, and the rightful king
+of Wales.
+
+"There is some foundation for this, for I have talked to some of the
+better class of Welsh; who have, like Glendower, studied in our
+universities. The Welsh are, above all things, fond of long pedigrees,
+and can trace, or pretend to trace, the lineage of all their principal
+families up to Noah; and some of them admit that there is some ground
+for the claim Glendower is said to have made.
+
+"Still, all these rumours make me feel uneasy. As we have had many
+years of quiet here, it has not been necessary to keep up more than a
+sufficient number of men-at-arms for the defence of this castle. I
+might have increased the force, for the people of these parts bear a
+deep animosity against the Welsh, and dread them greatly; as they may
+well do, from the many wrongs and outrages they have suffered at their
+hands. One reason why I have not taken on many men, since the talk of
+coming troubles began, is that, close to the border as we are, many
+have connections with the Welsh by business or marriage; and these, if
+enrolled in the garrison, might serve as spies, and give warning of any
+movement we might undertake. I had hoped that Percy could have spared
+me a hundred good men-at-arms. I would rather have had his men than
+others, because they have been trained in border warfare, by the
+constant troubles in Scotland; and would, moreover, come to me with a
+better heart than others, since Sir Henry's wife is my sister, and it
+is, therefore, almost a family quarrel upon which they have entered.
+
+"Had I known, when I wrote, that the king was on his way north, I
+should have taken steps to raise my strength elsewhere, as of course
+Percy would have occasion to use every lance he could muster. Lord Grey
+has sent off a messenger to the king, begging him to denounce this
+fellow as an outlaw; and should he be troublesome, he himself may,
+after he has done with the Scots, send hither a force; for although we
+may hope, with the aid of the levies of the border counties, to drive
+back the Welsh in whatever force they may come, 'tis another thing to
+march into the mountains. The matter has been tried, again and again,
+and has always taxed the power of England to the utmost.
+
+"'Tis of no use lamenting over spilt milk but, for my part, I regret
+that Parliament did not give a fair hearing to Glendower's complaint
+against Lord Grey. The refusal to do so was a high-handed one. It has
+driven this man to desperation, and has enlisted the sympathies of all
+Welshmen who have English neighbours; for they cannot but say, among
+themselves, 'If he is to be plundered and despoiled, and his complaints
+refused a hearing, what is to prevent our being similarly despoiled?
+'Tis surely better to take up the sword, at once, and begin again the
+fight for our independence.'
+
+"As it is, it may cost thousands of lives, immense efforts, and vast
+trouble before things are placed on their former footing.
+
+"Doubtless, the captain of the men-at-arms you have brought is a good
+soldier, since Percy says that he is captain of his garrison at
+Alnwick!"
+
+"He bears a high reputation in Northumberland, Sir Edmund. I may say
+that he is my uncle, and 'tis from his recommendation that Lord Percy,
+in the first place, took me into his household."
+
+"I will go down and speak with him," the knight said. "I gave orders,
+as soon as I heard who had arrived, that proper entertainment should be
+given to all; yet it is but right that I should, myself, go down to
+thank them for having come so far; and to welcome their captain, whose
+experience will be of no small use to my own men, who have never been
+engaged in border war. Some have fought in France, but under conditions
+so different that their experience will aid them but little; save,
+indeed, if the Welsh grow so strong and so bold that they venture to
+attack this castle."
+
+Percy's men, when the knight descended, had indeed sat down to supper
+with the retainers of the castle, while Alwyn was being entertained by
+the captain of his men-at-arms. All rose to their feet when Sir Edmund
+entered, but he waved his hand to them, to be seated.
+
+"Finish your meal," he said, "and afterwards, if you will muster in the
+courtyard, I will inspect you, and see what stout Northumberland men
+Lord Percy has sent me."
+
+He then went up to the top of the keep with Oswald, pointed out the
+distant hills, and told him what valleys and villages lay among them,
+and the direction in which such roads as there were ran. By the time
+they had descended, Percy's men were drawn up in the courtyard.
+
+"This is my uncle, Captain Alwyn Forster," Oswald said, "of whom Lord
+Percy has written to you."
+
+"I am glad to see so stout a soldier here," the knight said, holding
+out his hand to Alwyn; "and I am grateful to Lord Percy for sending, in
+answer to my request, one in whom he has such perfect confidence; and I
+specially thank you for having willingly relinquished so important a
+post, to head so small a following."
+
+"I was glad to come, Sir Edmund, for I had rested so long, at Alnwick,
+that I longed for some brisk action, and fell gladly into my lord's
+view, when he requested me to come hither. I can answer for my men, for
+they are all picked, by myself, from among the stoutest of Sir Henry's
+following."
+
+"That I can well believe," the knight said, as he looked at the twenty
+troopers. "Tall, strong men all; and as brave as they are strong, I
+doubt not. I shall be glad to have so stout a band to ride behind me,
+if these Welshmen break out.
+
+"You are all accustomed to border warfare, but this differs a good deal
+from that in Northumberland. While the northern forays are mostly made
+by horsemen, it is rare that your Welshman adventures himself on
+horseback. But they are as active as your wild ponies, and as swift;
+and, if the trouble increases, they will give you plenty to do.
+
+"I learn from your lord's letter that you will be, as usual, under pay
+from him while you are with me. I shall pay you as much more. 'Tis meet
+that, if you render me service, I should see that you are comfortable,
+and well contented."
+
+There was a murmur of satisfaction among the men and, after
+recommending them to the care of the captain of the garrison, and
+bidding Alwyn speak in the name of his men, fearlessly, for anything
+that should be lacking, Sir Edmund left the courtyard.
+
+The seneschal of the castle, Sir John Wyncliffe, requested Oswald to
+follow him. He first showed him the chamber, in one of the turrets,
+that he was to occupy; and then took him down to the hall, where two
+other knights, four esquires, and two or three pages were assembled, in
+readiness for the supper.
+
+Mortimer, with his wife and two daughters, presently came down and took
+his place at the head of the table; at which the others sat down, in
+order of their rank. As a guest, Oswald was placed among the knights.
+Before sitting down, Sir Edmund presented him to his wife and
+daughters.
+
+"This is one of Sir Henry Percy's esquires," he said, "and can give you
+more news of Sir Percy's wife; of whom, beyond saying that she sends
+her greetings to you all, Hotspur tells us nothing."
+
+"Have you been long a member of Sir Henry Percy's household?"
+
+"But a year, my lady."
+
+"Hotspur speaks of him in very high terms, and says that he has
+rendered him great services, and that he has the highest confidence in
+him."
+
+"To what family do you belong, sir?" the dame asked. "From my husband's
+sister, who was staying here some months since, I learned much of your
+northern families."
+
+"I am the son of John Forster of Yardhope, who has the reputation of
+being as hard a fighter as any on the border. He is not a knight,
+though of fair estates; for, although Earl Percy offered him
+knighthood, for his services at the battle of Otterburn, he said that
+he preferred remaining plain John Forster, as his fathers had been
+before him. My mother was a daughter of Sir Walter Gillespie, and my
+uncle is captain of the garrison of Alnwick; and it was for his
+goodwill towards him, and my father, that Sir Henry appointed me one of
+his esquires, thinking, moreover, that I might be more useful than
+some, because I know every foot of the border, having relations on the
+Scottish side of it."
+
+They now sat down to supper. After it was over, Sir Edmund took Oswald
+with him to his wife's bower.
+
+"There," he said, "you can talk at your ease, and tell us how my
+sister, your mistress, is, and the children."
+
+"Did you not say, Sir Edmund," his wife asked, "that it was the captain
+of his men-at-arms that Sir Hotspur sent hither, in command of the
+band?"
+
+"That is so, dame."
+
+"Then, surely, he should have been at our table."
+
+"I asked him," Sir Edmund replied, "but he said that he would rather,
+with my permission, lodge with John Baldry; who is, like himself, a
+stout soldier, but who likes better his own society than that of the
+high table. He said that, except upon rare and special occasions, he
+always has been accustomed to take his meals alone, or with some
+comrades whom he could take to his room. As this is also John Baldry's
+habit, he prayed me to allow him to accept his invitation to share his
+room."
+
+"What he says about his habits is true, my lady. I can well understand
+my uncle cares not for company where it would not be seemly for him to
+raise his voice, or to enter into a hot argument, on some point of
+arms."
+
+"What were the services of which Sir Henry speaks?"
+
+"It was a mission with which he charged me, and which involved some
+danger."
+
+"By the way," Dame Mortimer said, "my sister-in-law wrote to me, some
+time since, telling us of a strange conflict that was held between one
+of the squires, and another who had been newly appointed; and who, on
+one of the mountain ponies, worsted his opponent, although the latter
+was much older, and moreover clad in full armour, and riding a heavy
+warhorse. Was it you who were the victor on that occasion?"
+
+"I can scarce be said to have been the victor, my lady. It was, indeed,
+hardly a combat. But I maintained that one accustomed to the exercises
+in use among our border men, and mounted on one of our ponies,
+accustomed to move with great rapidity, and to turn and twist at the
+slightest movement of the rider's knee, would be a match for a
+heavy-armed knight in single combat; although a number would have no
+chance, against the charge of a handful of mailed knights; and Sir
+Henry put it to the proof, at once."
+
+
+
+Chapter 9: The Welsh Rising.
+
+
+For a time the garrison at the castle had but little to do. Lord Grey
+had taken no steps to recover the estates from which his retainers had
+been so unceremoniously ejected. He had, indeed, marched a strong force
+through them; but the Welsh had entirely withdrawn, and it would be
+necessary to keep so large a force unemployed, were he to reoccupy the
+land, that he abstained from taking any decisive action, prior to the
+return of the messenger whom he had despatched to inform the king of
+the forcible measures that Glendower had taken to recover the estate.
+It would have been no trifling step to take, to carry his arms into
+Wales, and so bring on a fresh struggle after so many years of peace;
+and he would not move in the matter, until he had the royal authority.
+
+Henry lost no time in replying. Glendower had been an open supporter of
+Richard, and had retired from court rather than own his successor as
+king. He had made his complaints against Lord Grey before Parliament,
+and his appeal had been rejected by an overwhelming majority. His
+attack upon Lord Grey was, therefore, viewed in the light of an insult
+to the royal power; and, a fortnight after Oswald and his party arrived
+at Sir Edmund's, a messenger arrived with a royal order, to all barons
+holding castles on the border, to proclaim Owen Glendower an outlaw,
+and to take all measures necessary to capture him.
+
+Sir Edmund shook his head, as he read the proclamation, copies of which
+were to be fixed to the castle gate, and in other conspicuous places.
+
+"Lord Grey has stirred up a fire that it will be difficult to
+extinguish. It were as wise to kick over a hive of bees, when naked to
+the waist, as to set Wales in a ferment again. Had this proclamation
+been sent to me, only, I would have taken it upon myself to hold it
+over until I had, myself, made a journey north to see the king, and to
+submit to him my views on the subject; and to point out how dire might
+be the consequences, to the inhabitants of our marches, and how great
+would be the effort required, if Glendower should be supported by the
+whole of his countrymen, as I believe he will be. However, as it has
+been sent to all the keepers of the marches this cannot be done; and I
+shall, at once, send orders to the sheriffs of Shropshire, and
+Hereford, to warn the militia that they may be called out at any
+moment, and must hold themselves in preparedness, having every man his
+arms and accoutrements in good condition, and fit for service,
+according to the law. I shall also issue orders to my own tenants to be
+ready to take up arms, and to drive their herds away, and bring their
+wives and families into the castle, as soon as the beacon fire is
+lighted on the summit of the keep."
+
+This was said to Oswald, to whom Sir Edmund had taken a strong liking,
+and to whom he spoke more freely than he might have done to his own
+knights and officers, as being in Earl Percy's service, and having no
+personal interest in the matters in debate.
+
+"You yourself have heard the tales that have been brought in to me,
+showing how greatly the people have been stirred by the belief in
+Glendower's powers of necromancy; how blue flames have been seen to
+issue from every window and loophole of his house; how red clouds, of
+various strange shapes, hover over it; and mysterious sounds are heard
+throughout the night. For myself, I believe not these tales, though I
+would not take upon myself to say they are false, since everyone knows
+that there are men who have dealings with the powers of darkness.
+Still, I should have, myself, to see these things, before I gave
+credence to them. That, however, makes no difference in the matter;
+true or not, they seem to be believed by the Welsh, and cannot but
+increase his power.
+
+"Well, we shall soon hear what reply he makes to the proclamation, of
+which he will certainly hear, within a few hours of its posting."
+
+The answer, indeed, was not long in coming; for, within a week, a copy
+of the reply sent by Glendower to the king appeared, side by side with
+every proclamation put up, none knowing who were daring enough to affix
+them. In this, Glendower no longer spoke of his grievance against Lord
+Grey; but declared that, with the will of the people, he had assumed
+the sovereignty of Wales, to which he was legally entitled, by his
+descent from her kings. He called upon every Welshman in England to
+resort, at once, to his standard.
+
+"The die is cast, now," Sir Edmund said, as he read the paper affixed
+to the castle gate. "It is no longer a question whether Glendower is
+wrongfully treated by Lord Grey; it is a matter touching the safety of
+the realm, and the honour of our lord the king. There is, I have now
+learned, some foundation for Owen's claim to be the representative of
+the kings of Wales, through his mother, Elinor. She was the eldest
+daughter of Elinor the Red, who was daughter and heiress of Catharine,
+one of the daughters of Llewellyn, the last Prince of Wales. For aught
+I know, there may be others who have a better claim than he; but at
+least he has royal blood in his veins.
+
+"At present, that matters little. He has usurped the title of King of
+Wales, and is evidently a most ambitious and dangerous fellow; and none
+can doubt that this scheme has not just sprung from his brain, but has
+long been prepared, and that his quarrel with Lord Grey has but
+hastened the outbreak.
+
+"I shall myself ride to Ruthyn, and consult with Lord Grey as to the
+measures to be taken. It may be that our forces may be sufficient to
+crush the movement, ere it gains strength; though I greatly doubt it.
+Still, it would be well that we should act in concert.
+
+"Sir John Burgon and Sir Philip Haverstone, do you take half a dozen
+men-at-arms, and ride through the country, bidding all the tenants
+assemble here, next Saturday, in their arms and harness, that I myself
+may inspect them. You may tell them that a third of their number must
+be in readiness tonight, and must ride hither by morning. The others
+must, on an alarm being given, gather in strong houses, selected by
+themselves as the most defensible in their district, with their wives
+and families, so as to repel any attack the Welsh may make; leaving
+behind them the boys and old men, to drive out their flocks and herds,
+either towards the nearest castle, or to Hereford or Shrewsbury, as may
+be nearest to them."
+
+When the knights had left, messengers were sent out to all the owners
+of castles in Radnor, Hereford, and Shropshire; bidding them assemble,
+in four days' time, at Ludlow. On the day of the meeting, nearly three
+hundred tenants and vassals presented themselves. To them Sir Edmund,
+having first inspected them and their arms, explained the situation.
+Then, each man was asked how many he could bring into the field, in
+accordance with the terms of his holding, and it was found the total
+amounted to nigh eight hundred men.
+
+"I know not when the affair is likely to begin; and will, therefore,
+call only for a quarter of your force. Send your sons and unmarried
+men. At the end of a month they can return to you and, if needs be, you
+can send as many more in their places. It may be that I shall not
+require these; but, possibly, every man may have to come out; but you
+must bear in mind it is not for the defence of this town and castle
+that men are required, for the garrison and burghers can hold out
+against any attack, but to save your homesteads from destruction."
+
+The news had created a deep sensation. Although none of those present
+had experienced the horrors of border warfare, there was not one but
+had heard, from their fathers, tales of burning, massacre, and
+wholesale destruction by the Welsh forays. But so long a time had
+passed, since the last serious insurrection, that the news that Wales
+might shortly be in arms, again, came as a terrible blow to them. All
+agreed to send in their proportion of men, at once, and to see that the
+rest were all ready to assemble, immediately the summons came.
+
+The next day some forty knights, owners of the castles thickly
+scattered through the border counties, assembled in Ludlow Castle.
+There was a long consultation. Arrangements were made for the despatch
+of messengers, by those nearest to the frontier, with news of any Welsh
+raid. Points were fixed upon where each should assemble, with what
+force he could gather; thence to march to any threatened place, or to
+assemble at Ludlow Castle, Mortimer being the warden of the marches
+along that line of the border.
+
+On the following day Sir Edmund rode, with two of his knights, to hold
+council with Lord Grey, at Ruthyn. The distance was considerable, and
+he was absent six days from his castle. Before he returned, an event
+happened that showed Glendower was in earnest, and intended to maintain
+his pretensions by the sword.
+
+At daybreak, on the third day after Mortimer had left, a messenger
+arrived at the castle; with news that a large body of Welsh had, the
+evening before, entered Radnor by the road across the hills from
+Llanidloes, and were marching towards Knighton, burning the villages as
+they went, and slaying all who fell into their hands.
+
+The horn was at once sounded, and Sir John Wyncliffe and the other
+knights hastily assembled in the courtyard. Here, after a short
+consultation, it was determined that a mounted party should be, at
+once, despatched to endeavour to harass the advance of the Welsh; the
+troop consisting of Alwyn's men-at-arms, twenty men of the garrison,
+and fifty mounted men who formed part of the new levy. Four hundred
+footmen were to follow, at once.
+
+Sir John Wyncliffe at first thought of taking the command himself, but
+it was pointed out to him that his presence would be required, in
+Ludlow, to marshal the forces that would speedily arrive from all the
+country round. Sir John Burgon, therefore, a valiant knight, who had
+greatly distinguished himself against the French, was unanimously
+chosen by his companions as leader of the whole party; while with him
+rode Sir Philip Haverstone, and Sir William Bastow.
+
+"This reminds one of one's doings at home, Oswald," his uncle said, as
+he formed up his little troop. "I trust the Welsh will not retreat,
+until we have had a taste of their quality; but I doubt much if they
+will prove as formidable foes as the Scotch borderers."
+
+For a considerable portion of the distance, the roads led through
+forests, which at that time covered the greater part of the country.
+Oswald, at the invitation of the knights, rode with them at the head of
+the cavalcade. The way was beguiled by anecdotes, that had been passed
+down from mouth to mouth, of the last Welsh war.
+
+They reached Knighton by nine o'clock. The enemy had not, as yet, come
+within sight of the town; but, throughout the night, the sky to the
+west had been red with the flames of the burning villages and
+homesteads.
+
+The male inhabitants were all under arms. Many had already sent their
+wives and children, in waggons, towards Ludlow; but, as the town had a
+strong wall, the men were determined upon making a stout defence.
+
+They crowded round the newly arrived troops, with loud cheers; which
+were raised, again and again, when they heard that, by midday, four
+hundred footmen would arrive to their assistance. It had been arranged
+that Sir Philip Haverstone should remain in the town, to take charge of
+the defence; and that the mounted men should, under Sir John Burgon,
+endeavour to check the Welsh plundering parties in the open. Sir
+William Bastow was to remain, to assist Haverstone in the defence of
+the town. There was no great fear of this falling; as, before the day
+was out, four or five thousand men would be assembled at Ludlow, and
+would be able to march to its relief. These matters being arranged, Sir
+John Burgon led his little troop out of the town.
+
+The accounts of the Welsh forces were very conflicting, but the balance
+of opinion was that there were not less than four or five thousand of
+them. Beyond the fact that they were skirting the hills, and advancing
+towards Knighton, the terrified fugitives could say nothing, save of
+their own experiences. It was evident, however, that the Welsh force
+was not keeping together; but, after crossing the border, had broken up
+and scattered over the country, burning and slaying. Some of the bands
+had approached to within five miles of the town; and they might, not
+improbably, come in contact with fresh bands of the enemy, crossing the
+hills near the source of the Severn. As soon as they had sallied from
+the castle, and left the town behind them, Sir John halted his party.
+
+"Now, men," he said, "there is one thing that you should
+remember--these Welshmen are not to be despised. Doubtless you will be
+able to ride over them, but do not think that, when you have done so,
+you have defeated them. They will throw themselves down on the ground,
+leap up as you pass over them, stab your horses from below, seize your
+legs and try to drag you from your saddles, leap up on to the crupper
+behind you, and stab you to the heart. This is what makes them so
+dangerous a foe to horsemen, and at Crecy they did terrible execution
+among the French chivalry.
+
+"Therefore be careful, and wary. Spit all you see on the ground, with
+your lances; and hold your swords ever in readiness, to strike them
+down as they rise up beside you. Keep in as close order as you can, for
+thus you will make it more difficult for them to rise from the ground,
+as you pass over."
+
+He then formed his troop into two lines. In the centre of the front
+line he placed the twenty men-at-arms from the castle, with fifteen of
+the tenants on either hand. Oswald's troop formed the centre of the
+second line, with ten of the tenants on either flank. Another of the
+knights was in command in this line. They were to ride some fifty paces
+behind the first, to cut down all who rose to their feet after the
+first line had passed; and if the resistance were strong, and the first
+line brought to a stand, they were to ride up and reinforce them.
+
+They had ridden some three miles, when they saw a column of smoke rise,
+half a mile away. The pace was quickened, and they had gone but a short
+distance when some panic-stricken men came running down the road.
+
+"How many Welshmen have attacked your village?" Sir John asked.
+
+"Hundreds of them, Sir Knight," one of the men panted out; "at least,
+so it seemed to me; but indeed, we were this side of the village when
+they rushed into it; and, seeing that nought could be done to resist
+them, we fled at once."
+
+When within three hundred yards of the village they entered open
+ground, and at once formed up in the order the knight had directed.
+Oswald took his place by the side of his uncle, a couple of lengths in
+advance of their own troop.
+
+Scarce a word was spoken in the ranks. Here and there dead bodies were
+scattered over the ground, showing that the pursuit of the fugitives
+had been maintained thus far. From the village the wild shouts of the
+triumphant Welsh sounded plainly; but mingled with these came,
+occasionally, a cry of pain, that seemed to show that either the work
+of slaughter was not yet completed, or that some of the villagers still
+held one of the houses, and were defending themselves until the last.
+
+Every face was set and stern. The tenants knew that, at any moment,
+similar scenes might be enacted in their own villages; while the
+men-at-arms were eager to get at the foe, and take vengeance for the
+murders they had perpetrated.
+
+"Be sure you keep your ranks," Sir John said; "remember that any who
+straggle may be attacked by a score of these wild men, and slain before
+others can come to their help. Ride forward in perfect silence, till we
+are within striking distance."
+
+At a gallop, the troop swept down upon the village. As they reached the
+first houses, they saw that the road was full of wild figures. Some
+were emerging from the houses, laden with such spoil as could be
+gathered there, chiefly garments; others, with torches, were setting
+fire to the thatched roofs; while, in the middle of the village, a
+number were attacking a house somewhat larger and more massively built
+than the rest.
+
+Sir John raised his sword, with the shout of "A Mortimer! A Mortimer!"
+
+The shout was re-echoed by his followers, and a moment later they
+dashed into the midst of the Welsh. At first they swept all before
+them; but speedily the mountaineers, running out from the houses,
+gathered thickly on each side of the road and, as the first line
+passed, closed in behind it; and, running even more swiftly than the
+charging horses, strove to leap up behind. Some struck at the horses
+with their swords, hamstringing several of them, and slaying their
+riders as they fell.
+
+"Ride, ride!" the knight in command of the second line shouted, and at
+even greater speed than before his followers rode hotly forward; and
+came, ere long, on the struggling mass, for the first line were now
+endeavouring to turn, so as to face their assailants.
+
+With a great shout, the second line fell upon them, the war cries of "A
+Percy! A Percy!" being mingled with those of "A Mortimer!" Their
+approach had been unnoticed by the Welsh, and their onslaught was
+irresistible. The Welsh were hurled to the ground by the impetus of the
+charge, and the two lines joined hands.
+
+"Forward again!" Sir John shouted, and the troop, dashing forward, were
+soon hotly engaged with the enemy, who were in strong force at the
+point where they were attacking the house. The orders of their
+commander were now impossible to follow. It was a fierce melee, where
+each fought for himself.
+
+"Face round!" Oswald shouted. "Now, men, lay about you.
+
+"A Percy! A Percy!"
+
+The active little horses swung round instantly, and faced the crowd
+surging up against them. This was the style of fighting to which the
+border men were accustomed. Active as the Welsh were, the border ponies
+were as quick in their movements, wheeling and turning hither and
+thither, but keeping ever within a short distance of each other. The
+troopers hewed down the foe with their heavy swords; and, being partly
+protected by their armour, they possessed a great advantage over their
+opponents.
+
+Oswald and his uncle fought slightly in advance of the others, lending
+a helping hand to each other, when the pressure was greatest. On one
+occasion a Welshman seized Alwyn's leg, while he was engaged with a
+foeman on the other side, and strove to throw him from his horse.
+Oswald wheeled his pony, and with a sweeping blow rid his uncle of his
+foe; but, at the same moment, a man leapt up behind him, while two
+others assailed him in front.
+
+The Welshman's sinewy arms prevented him from again raising his sword,
+and he would have been slain by those in front, had he not, at the
+moment, slipped his right foot from his stirrup and thrown himself from
+his horse, his leg sweeping off the man who held him behind, and hurled
+him to the ground beneath him.
+
+The Welshman's grasp instantly relaxed; but, as Oswald tried to rise, a
+blow fell upon his helmet, and four Welshmen threw themselves upon him.
+He threw his arms around two of them, and rolled over and over with
+them, thereby frustrating the efforts of their companions to strike or
+stab him, through some unguarded point in his armour; when suddenly
+there was a mighty shout, two tremendous blows were struck in quick
+succession, then there was a shout, "Hold them still, Master Oswald,
+hold them still!"
+
+Oswald tightened his grasp on his assailants, who were now striving to
+rise. There was another crashing blow, and then his last opponent
+slipped from his grasp, and fled.
+
+"Thanks, Roger," he said, as he leapt to his feet, "you were but just
+in time; another minute, and those fellows would have got their knives
+into me."
+
+"I have had my eye upon you, master, all the time; and while doing a
+little on my own account, have kept myself in readiness to come to your
+aid, if need be."
+
+Roger was fighting with a heavy mace, and the number of men lying
+round, with their skulls crushed in, showed with what terrible effect
+he had been using it. Oswald again leapt on to his horse, which had
+been too well trained to leave his master's side; and had indeed in no
+small degree aided him, by kicking furiously at the Welsh, as they
+strove to aid their comrades on the ground.
+
+By this time the combat was well-nigh over. The protection afforded by
+Alwyn's band, against any attack on their rear, had enabled Sir John's
+men-at-arms and the tenants to clear the street in front of them; but
+the Welsh, though unable to hold their own in open fight, had now
+betaken themselves to their bows and arrows, and from behind every
+house shot fast.
+
+The door of the house that had still resisted had been thrown open, and
+eight men had come out, followed by some twenty women and children.
+
+"Do each of you leap up behind one of us!" Sir John shouted.
+
+"Help the women up, men, then right-about, and ride out of the village.
+It is getting too hot for us, here."
+
+The order was quickly obeyed and, placing the horses carrying a double
+burden in the centre, the troop rode out in a compact body. The Welsh
+poured out into the road behind them.
+
+"Level your spears!" Alwyn shouted to his men; who had, by his orders,
+fallen in in the rear of the others.
+
+The long spears were levelled and, with a shout, the twenty men rode
+down on their pursuers, bursting their way through them as if they had
+been but a crowd of lay figures; then, wheeling, they returned again,
+none venturing to try to hinder them, and rejoined the main body.
+
+"Well done, indeed!" Sir John Burgon exclaimed, "and in knightly
+fashion. Verily, those long border spears of yours are right good
+weapons, when so stoutly used."
+
+Once outside the village, the troop rode quietly on to the spot at
+which they had first charged. Then the villagers dismounted.
+
+"You made a stout defence, men," Sir John said. "It was well that you
+had time to gain that house."
+
+"It was agreed that all should take to it, Sir Knight," one of the men
+said; "but the attack was so sudden that only we, and these women, had
+time to reach it before they were on us; and, had it not been for your
+arrival, they must soon have mastered us, for they were bringing up a
+tree to burst in the door; and as none of us had time to catch up our
+bows and arrows, we had no way of hindering them. Still, methinks many
+would have fallen, before they forced their way in."
+
+The men now fell in again. Their numbers were counted. The losses were
+by far the heaviest in the front line. Five of the castle men-at-arms,
+and fourteen of the levy were killed. Several others had gashes from
+the long knives and light axes of the Welsh. Five of the tenants in the
+second line had fallen, but none of Alwyn's band, although most of the
+latter had received wounds, more or less serious, in their combat with
+the Welsh.
+
+"The loss is heavy," Sir John said, "but it is as nought to that
+inflicted upon the Welsh. I did not count them, as we rode back, but
+assuredly over a hundred have fallen, not counting those who were slain
+in that last charge of yours, Alwyn. Truly your men have fought
+gallantly, as was shown by the pile of dead, where your men-at-arms
+defended our rear.
+
+"The Welsh will be moving, ere long. Half the village is already
+burning, and you may be sure that there is nothing left to sack, in the
+other houses. If they come this way we must fall back, for in the
+forest we shall be no match for them. If they move across the open
+country, we may get an opportunity of charging them, again."
+
+He told two of his men to dismount, and to crawl cautiously along, one
+on each side of the burning village; and to bring back news, the moment
+the Welsh began to leave it. In twenty minutes both returned, saying
+that the enemy were streaming out at the other end of the village,
+laden with plunder of all kinds. There seemed to be no order or
+discipline among them, each trooping along at his pleasure.
+
+"Good!" the knight said. "We will give them another lesson, and this
+time on more favourable terms than the last."
+
+The troops formed into column, and galloped at a canter through the
+burning village. At the other end they came upon a number of
+stragglers, who were at once killed. Then they emerged into the fields
+beyond, and formed line. The plain was dotted with men, the nearest but
+a hundred yards away, the farthest nearly half a mile.
+
+In a single line the horsemen swept along. The rearmost Welshmen turned
+round at the tramp of the horses, and at once, throwing to the ground
+the bundles that they carried, took to their heels with shouts of
+warning. As these were heard, the alarm spread among the rest, who,
+believing that their foes had ridden away through the forest, were
+taken completely by surprise.
+
+A panic seized them. Leaders in vain shouted orders, their voices were
+unheard among the cries of the men. Some, indeed, gathered together as
+they ran; but the greater portion fled in various directions, to escape
+the line of spears vengefully following them.
+
+Those unable to avoid the charge stood at bay, like wild animals. First
+shooting their arrows, they drew their short axes or their knives, as
+the horsemen came within a short distance of them. Few had a chance of
+striking, most of them falling, pierced through and through by the
+spears. Those who, by swiftness of eye, escaped this fate, sprung at
+the horses like wildcats, clinging to the saddles, while they strove to
+bury their knives in the riders' bodies.
+
+Their back pieces now served the troopers in good stead, as did their
+superior personal strength. Some beat their assailants down on to the
+pommel of their saddles, and throttled or stabbed them; while in many
+cases, where they were hard pressed, the sword of a comrade rid them
+from their foes.
+
+So the line held on its way, until they reached the head of the body of
+fugitives. Then in obedience to the shout of Sir John Burgon they
+turned, broke up into small bodies, and scoured the plain, cutting down
+the flying foe; and did not draw bridle, until what remained of the
+enemy had gained the shelter of the wood. Then, at the sound of their
+leader's trumpet, they gathered around him in the centre of the plain.
+
+Two or three had fallen from the Welsh arrows, and not a few had
+received ugly slashes from their knives; but, with these exceptions,
+all had come scatheless through the fray. At least two hundred dead
+Welshmen were scattered on the plain.
+
+"You have done your work well, men," Sir John said, "and taught them a
+lesson that they will not forget. Now, let us ride back to Knighton,
+and see how matters go there."
+
+On arriving at the little town, they found that all was quiet, and that
+no bodies of Welsh had approached the town. The party of horse were
+again sent out, in various directions, the smoke serving them as a
+guide. The villages were found to be entirely deserted; but, pushing
+farther on, many fugitives came out from hiding places.
+
+Their reports were all of the same character. The Welsh were in full
+retreat for their own country.
+
+By the time the troops returned with the news to Knighton, the footmen
+from Ludlow had marched in, and were being entertained by the
+inhabitants; who, now that the danger had passed, had returned.
+
+"Retired have they, Sir John?" his two fellow knights said, as he
+arrived with his following. "It was but a raid for plunder, then, and
+not an invasion. Doubtless, Glendower merely wished to warm their
+blood, and to engage them so far in his enterprise that they could no
+longer draw back. They must have carried off some hundreds of cattle
+and sheep, to say nothing of other plunder; and, had it not been for
+our having the news soon enough to get here before they retired, they
+would have got off scatheless. As it is, they have learned that even a
+well-planned foray cannot be carried out with impunity; but the loss of
+three hundred lives will not affect them greatly, when it is clear that
+they have murdered twice that number, as well as enriched themselves
+with plunder."
+
+"I think not that we shall hear of them, again," Sir John said.
+"Glendower has shown us, without doubt, what are his intentions; and he
+may now wait to see what comes of last night's work. I expect that he
+will keep among the hills, where he can fight to better advantage; for
+horsemen are of little use, where there are mountains and forests."
+
+After a consultation between the knights, it was agreed that two
+hundred of the footmen were to remain, for two or three days, at
+Knighton; in case the retreat of the Welsh might be a feigned one,
+intended to lull the inhabitants into a state of security, and then to
+make a sudden night attack upon the walls. The whole force remained
+until the next morning, and then, leaving Sir Philip Haverstone in
+command of the party remaining at Knighton, the rest, horse and foot,
+marched back to Ludlow.
+
+"Your band have indeed distinguished themselves, Oswald," Sir John had
+said, on the previous evening, as they talked on the events of the day.
+"Truly they are as stout men as I have ever seen fighting. And you have
+escaped without a wound, though I marked that your armour and clothes
+were covered with mire, as if you had been rolling in the road."
+
+"That is just what I have been doing, Sir John. One of them leaped on
+to the horse behind me, and pinioned my arms; while two or three others
+made at me, with axes and staves. The clasp of the fellow was like an
+iron band and, seeing that my only chance was to rid myself of him, I
+slung my leg over my horse, and we came down together, he undermost.
+Whether the fall killed him or not, I cannot say, but his arms relaxed.
+Half a dozen sprang on me, and in another minute I should have been
+killed, had not that big trooper of mine come to my aid, and with a
+mighty mace dashed out their brains, well-nigh before they knew that
+they were attacked."
+
+"A stout fellow, indeed," Sir John said, "and one I should like to have
+to ride behind me, on the day of battle. I had marked him before, and
+thought that I had never seen a more stalwart knave; though methinks
+that he would look better, did he not crop his hair so wondrously
+short."
+
+Oswald laughed.
+
+"He does it not to beautify himself, Sir John, but to hide the fact
+that the hair on his crown is but of six weeks' growth."
+
+And then he related the circumstances under which Roger came to be a
+member of his troop.
+
+"By my faith, he has done well!" Sir John said. "A man with such sinews
+as that is lost in a cloister. He is a merry fellow, too. I have often
+marked him at the castle, and his laugh is a veritable roar, that would
+sound strange echoing along the galleries of a monastery. The abbot did
+well to let him go, for such a fellow might well disturb the peace and
+quiet of a whole convent.
+
+"You say that he has skill in war?"
+
+"Yes, Sir John. He has been the instructor in arms of the lay brothers,
+and of some of the monks, too; and he led the contingent of the abbey
+at Otterburn; and, although the day went against the English, he and
+his followers greatly distinguished themselves."
+
+"If you would part with him, I would better his condition, Master
+Oswald; for, on my recommendation, Sir Edmund would, I am sure, make
+him captain of a company."
+
+"I should be sorry, indeed, to part with him, Sir John, and the more so
+since he has saved my life today; but, even were I willing, I feel sure
+he would not leave me, as we have gone through some adventures
+together, and he believes that it is to me that he owes his escape from
+the convent."
+
+"What were these adventures, Oswald?"
+
+"It was a matter touching the Earl of March--not Sir Edmund's nephew,
+now in the care of the king, but the Scottish earl, George, Earl of
+Dunbar, also bearing the title of Earl of March. Now that he has taken
+the oath to King Henry, there is no reason why I should not speak of
+it."
+
+And he then gave them an account of his visit to Dunbar, and of his
+escape.
+
+"And why did the earl wish to keep you?"
+
+"Maybe, sir, that he had not then made up his mind, and thought that
+affairs might yet have been accommodated between himself, Douglas, and
+the Scottish king."
+
+"Perhaps that was so," Sir John agreed. "He is a crafty, as well as a
+bold man. However, you were well out of Dunbar, and you and your monk
+managed the affair well. Think you that the earl is to be trusted?"
+
+"I should say so. These great Scottish nobles deem themselves well-nigh
+the king's equal, and carry on their wars against each other as
+independent lords. His castle of Dunbar is in the hands of his
+bitterest enemy, and Douglas will come into no small portion of his
+estates. Without the aid of England he could not hope to recover them,
+and his interests, therefore, are wholly bound up with ours."
+
+"'Tis strange that there should be two Earls of March, of different
+families and names; and, now that Dunbar has become a vassal of the
+king, it will make the matter stranger. However, at present no mistakes
+can arise, seeing that the one is an able warrior, and the other a mere
+boy. But in the future, were the two Earls of March at the same time at
+the court of our king, mistakes might well be made, and strange
+complications take place.
+
+"Doubtless you are aware that Sir Edmund's nephew is, by right of
+birth, King of England. He was, you know, sprung from the Duke of
+Clarence, the elder brother of the Duke of Lancaster. The duke died
+without male issue, and his rights fell to Edmund Mortimer, Earl of
+March, the husband of his daughter Philippa. From their marriage was
+born the Roger Mortimer who was lord lieutenant of Ireland, during a
+part of King Richard's reign, and was killed in the wars of that
+country. He left two sons, of whom the elder was but eight or nine
+years old, when Richard was dethroned; and he and his brother are now
+living at Windsor, and are well treated there by the king.
+
+"Had my lord's nephew attained the age of manhood, at the deposition of
+Richard, many would doubtless have supported his right to the throne;
+but for a child of eight to rule this realm, and keep in check the
+turbulence of the great lords, would be so absurd that no one even
+mentioned his name; and Henry, of course, ascended the throne as if by
+right of conquest."
+
+"I have heard something of this before, Sir John; but as the Percys
+were among the chief supporters of Henry, the fact that there was one
+who had greater rights to the throne was never talked of, at Alnwick;
+although, by Percy's marriage with Sir Edmund's sister, he became uncle
+of the young Earl of March."
+
+"I can understand that, and indeed Sir Edmund himself has never, in the
+most intimate conversation with us, expressed any opinion that the
+young earl would, if he had his rights, be King of England."
+
+
+
+Chapter 10: A Breach Of Duty.
+
+
+Two or three hours after the return of the force to Ludlow, Sir Edmund
+Mortimer returned, having ridden almost without a halt, since be
+received the news of the Welsh incursion. His knights met him in the
+courtyard.
+
+"Well, my friends, I hear you have sent the Welsh back again, as fast
+as they came."
+
+"We cannot say that, Sir Edmund," Sir John Wyncliffe replied. "Sir John
+Burgon went out, with ninety horse; and, coming upon a party of five or
+six hundred of them, killed half their number, and put the rest to
+flight; but their main body left of their own free will, and without
+any urging. 'Tis a pity that they were so hurried, for in another
+twenty-four hours we should have had some four thousand men on the
+march against them, besides those who first went on."
+
+"Have they done much damage?"
+
+"There is scarce a house left standing, between the hills on this side
+of Llanidloes, and Knighton. From what we can gather, they must have
+slain three or four hundred, at least. At first the total was put much
+higher; but, as soon as they retired, many fugitives made their way
+into Knighton; having slipped away in the darkness, when their villages
+were attacked, and concealed themselves in the woods, or among the
+rocks."
+
+"There has been fighting up in the north, too," Sir Edmund said. "When
+I got to Ruthyn, I found that Lord Grey was away; but I talked over
+matters with his knights. I was to have left on the morning of the
+fifth day after leaving here, but at night Glendower's men raided
+almost up to the gates of the castle. Their plans were well laid; for,
+just at midnight, an alarm was given by a sentry on the walls. Everyone
+ran to arms, the instant the warder's horn was sounded; but when I
+reached the top of the walls, fires were bursting out in twenty places.
+It was not long before the knights rode out, with a hundred and fifty
+men-at-arms, but the Welsh were already gone. It seems that they had
+laid an ambuscade round every village and, on the signal being given,
+fell at once upon the sleeping inhabitants, put all to the sword, fired
+the houses; and in ten minutes from the first alarm made off, driving
+horses, cattle, and sheep before them.
+
+"I was with the party, and we rode hard and fast, but we came up with
+none of them. Each party must have gone its own way, striking off into
+the hills. As soon as we returned to the castle I started, with my four
+men-at-arms, and we have lost no time on the road; especially after the
+rumour reached us that there had been a Welsh raid here, also.
+
+"Now, Sir John Burgon, will you give me an account of the doings of
+your party?"
+
+The knight reported their proceedings, after leaving Ludlow, and
+concluded:
+
+"It is like that the story would not have so run, Sir Edmund, had it
+not been for the bravery shown by the northern men, under the young
+squire Oswald and his captain, Alwyn. So furiously did the Welsh assail
+us, in rear, that we should have suffered heavily, indeed, even if we
+had not met with a grave disaster; had it not been that this band
+covered our rear, while we charged forward, fighting so stoutly that
+the spot where they posted themselves was thickly covered with dead. I
+found time to look round, now and then, for they made but a poor
+resistance to our advance. Never did I see stronger fighting.
+
+"I have questioned the men. All say that none fought more bravely than
+young Oswald, and his uncle gives him warm praise. The lad, however,
+would have lost his life, had it not been for that stout fellow, who
+stands half a head above his comrades, and is a very giant in strength.
+Oswald, himself, told me how it came about," and he repeated the
+account of the incident.
+
+"It was a quick thought, to throw himself and the fellow who held him
+off the horse; though it would not have availed him, much, had not this
+stout man-at-arms been at hand. Still, in no case could he have
+defended himself, single handed, against five of these knaves; though
+doubtless he would have given a good account of some of them, had not
+his arms been held.
+
+"Alwyn said that, three times during the fray, the young esquire saved
+his life, by cutting down men who were attacking him from behind, while
+he was occupied by other opponents in front."
+
+"He will make a valiant knight, some day, Sir John. Sir Henry Percy
+would not have written so strongly about him, had he not good reason
+for feeling that he would not do discredit to his recommendation.
+
+"Well, Sir Knights, you have all merited my thanks, for the manner in
+which you have discharged your duties, during my absence.
+
+"Of course, you were perfectly right, Wyncliffe, in remaining here;
+until, at any rate, the knights brought in their following from the
+country round. It was important to save Knighton, but vastly more so to
+prevent their overspreading the whole country; which might, for aught
+we can tell, have been Glendower's object; and it is as well that
+Haverstone and Bastow should have remained at Knighton.
+
+"Now, as I have not broken my fast, and have ridden since midnight
+without a stop, I will breakfast; and we can then talk over the plans
+to be pursued, for there is no disguising the fact that the Welsh are
+up in arms, and that we have long and heavy work before us.
+
+"However, it is a matter too serious for us to undertake by ourselves,
+but is for the king himself to take in hand. A raid can be punished by
+a counter-raid; but now that Glendower has declared himself sovereign
+of Wales, and that everything points to the fact that the men of his
+nation are all ready to support him, it is a matter that touches his
+majesty very closely; and I doubt not that, as soon as he has finished
+this war with the Scots, he will march hither, at the head of his army.
+
+"However, I shall send out a summons to the tenants of all my nephew's
+estates, in Herefordshire, and order them to hold themselves in
+readiness, should Glendower venture to invade us. But I think not that
+he will do so. He knows that these counties bristle with castles, in
+which the people could find refuge; and that, if he undertook to
+besiege them, he would speedily lose the best part of his army.
+
+"None of his people have experience of war, and to besiege a strong
+place needs machines of all kinds, and of these Glendower has none, nor
+is it likely that he can construct them. Besides, while marching out he
+would be exposed to an attack, by the garrisons of these castles
+sallying out in his rear. Therefore, I think not that he will be
+foolish enough to undertake any great enterprises; though he may make
+raids, and carry off booty and cattle, as he has now done.
+
+"Moreover, I cannot keep the vassals in the field longer than their
+feudal obligations compel them to stay, unless I pay and feed them;
+which might be done readily enough, for two or three months. But the
+war may last for years, and I must reserve my means, and strength, till
+they are urgently needed.
+
+"Lord Grey will doubtless be of my opinion, but is sure to do what he
+can to capture Glendower; as he will consider him, not only as an enemy
+of the king, but as a personal foe. However, powerful as he is, I think
+not that he will venture, alone, to lead an army into the Welsh hills;
+until he receives assistance from the king."
+
+Two days later, news came that the king, as soon as he heard of
+Glendower's proclamation, had sent orders to Lord Grey and Lord Talbot,
+to punish him.
+
+"They will reach Chester, two days hence," Sir Edmund said. "After the
+raid they made here, I would gladly take some small share in punishing
+this rebel.
+
+"You, Sir John Burgon, have had a full share of honour, by your defeat
+of him, the other day; therefore, I will send Sir William Bastow.
+
+"Do you, Sir William, take thirty of the best mounted men of the
+garrison, together with Lord Percy's troop, and ride to Chester. I will
+give you a letter to Lord Talbot, saying that, being anxious to aid in
+the punishment of the rebel who has just raided my marches, I have sent
+you in all haste, with fifty stout men, to aid him in striking a blow;
+and, if possible, in effecting Glendower's capture, before he can do
+further harm to the king's loyal subjects."
+
+Half an hour later, the troop mounted. Oswald was in high spirits, for
+Sir Edmund had spoken a few words to him, when telling him of the
+service to which he had appointed him.
+
+"I am sending your troop with Sir William Bastow," he said, "chiefly in
+order that I may give you another opportunity of distinguishing
+yourself; and also because I am sure that Percy would be glad that his
+men should take part in an enterprise in which there may be honour, and
+credit. Lastly, because I would that my party should do me credit; and
+the fighting, the other day, showed me that your followers better
+understand warfare, of this kind, than do mine."
+
+The troop arrived at Chester the second day after leaving, and rested
+their horses for twenty-four hours. On the arrival of the Earl of
+Talbot, and Lord Grey, Sir William Bastow called, at the inn where they
+put up, and delivered the letter from Sir Edmund Mortimer.
+
+"'Tis well done of Sir Edmund," the Earl of Talbot said; "and although
+Ruthyn lies beyond his government of the marches, he is defending his
+own command, by aiding Lord Grey and myself against this presumptuous
+traitor. I will gladly take your clump of spears with me, among whom
+are, I see, a small party of Lord Percy's men-at-arms.
+
+"I hear that Sir Edmund's men inflicted a sharp blow upon the Welsh,
+near Knighton. I met his messenger, bearing his report to the king, as
+we came along; and he gave me the particulars, from which it seems that
+the fight was, for a time, a hard one, and that the Welshmen fought, as
+they used to do, with much bravery."
+
+"They did, my lord. I was not with the party that defeated them, having
+been left at Knighton to aid in the defence there, should the Welsh
+attack the town; but Sir John Burgon, who commanded, said that, in the
+village, they fought as if they cared not for their lives; though they
+made scarce any defence, when he fell upon them as they retired, in
+disorder. The success he gained he attributes, in no small degree, to
+Percy's little troop; led by their captain, a stout soldier who
+commands the garrison of Alnwick, and by a young squire of Sir Henry
+Percy, who, though but a lad, fought with extreme bravery.
+
+"He is with me now. Sir Henry places great trust in him, and wrote most
+warmly, concerning him, to Sir Edmund Mortimer."
+
+"We are just going to supper, sir," the earl said. "I hope that you
+will join us. And I pray you, tell me where this young squire is
+lodging, that I may send for him, at once; as I would fain learn, from
+his lips, some closer account of the fighting, which may be of utility
+to us, in our adventure."
+
+Oswald arrived just as supper was brought in, and was introduced to the
+earl, and Lord Grey, by Sir William Bastow.
+
+"Sit down with us, young sir," the earl said, kindly. "You are an
+esquire, I hear, of my good friend Sir Henry Percy. As you eat, I pray
+you tell me about this fight with the Welsh. Sir Edmund himself was not
+in command, I hear."
+
+"No, my lord, he was away at the time, having ridden to Ruthyn, to hold
+council with Lord Grey."
+
+"Ah! I had not heard that he had been there," Earl Grey said.
+
+"He arrived the day before the Welsh raid on your estate, sir. Finding
+that you were absent, he intended to return home the next morning; but
+the matter delayed him, for a day, as he rode out with your knights to
+punish the marauders; who, however, made off before they could be
+overtaken."
+
+"When you see him, I pray you give him my thanks, for so doing; and
+now, tell us what happened."
+
+"Sir William Bastow can better inform you, sir, of what took place
+until we rode away from Knighton; where he remained, with Sir Philip
+Haverstone, to take command of the townspeople, in case the Welsh
+should arrive before strong aid should come."
+
+Sir William then related the measures that had been decided upon, and
+the steps taken to call out the levies; and how he and his brother
+knights had ridden to Knighton, with the intent to hinder, as far as
+possible, the Welsh advance; until the footmen could reach the town, to
+be followed, shortly afterwards, by the troops that would come in from
+the castles of Radnor.
+
+Oswald then continued the story, and gave an account of the fight in
+the village, and the manner in which the Welsh were attacked, while
+retiring with their booty, and completely routed.
+
+"Their tactics have in nowise changed, then," the earl said, "since the
+days of Griffith and Llewellyn. Against a direct charge they were
+unable to stand; but they attacked, with fury, whenever there was an
+opportunity of fighting under circumstances when our weight and
+discipline gave us little advantage. I hear, from Sir William Bastow,
+that your little band covered the rear of Sir John Burgon's troop, and
+succeeded in keeping them at bay, until he had broken the resistance in
+front, and carried off a small party of villagers who were still
+defending themselves."
+
+"That was so, my lord. Our men were all accustomed to border warfare;
+and had for the most part, before entering Percy's service, been often
+engaged in border forays; and had taken to soldiering after their own
+homes had been burnt, and their cattle driven off, by Scottish raiders.
+Therefore they were accustomed to fight each for himself, instead of in
+close order. Their horses, too, bred on the moors, are far more active
+and nimble than are the heavier horses of the south; and enter heart
+and soul into a fray, kicking and plunging and striking with their
+forelegs at any who approach to assail their riders. Thus it was that
+they were able to hold the Welsh carles at bay, far better than men
+otherwise trained and mounted would have been. Another thing is, that
+in these Border conflicts each man is accustomed to keep his eye on his
+neighbour; and, if he sees him hard pressed, to give him aid. Therefore
+it is not surprising that, while the men slew many of the Welsh, they
+themselves escaped with but a few cuts from blows and hatchets."
+
+"But you yourself were unhorsed, Sir William tells me, and were in
+great peril. How did that come about?"
+
+"Both my unhorsing, sir, and my rescue, were the result of what I just
+said, our habit of keeping an eye on our neighbours. A Welshman was on
+the point of attacking Captain Alwyn, when he was engaged with two
+others in front. I struck the man down but, as I did so, a Welshman
+sprang on to my horse, behind, and pinned my arms to my side; while
+four others rushed at me."
+
+He then related how he had thrown himself and his assailant off his
+horse, and had been saved by Roger.
+
+"It was a good device, and quickly carried into effect," Earl Talbot
+said; "though it was well that the man-at-arms next to you was watching
+you, just as you had watched his captain; else it must have gone hard
+with you. It is evident that, if you continue as you have begun, you
+will turn out a right valiant knight.
+
+"Your narrative is useful, and I see that, when we fall in with the
+Welsh, it will be necessary to have a picked body of men-at-arms, whose
+duty shall be to cover the rear of the main attack; for it seems that
+this is the real point of danger. Should we come into conflict with
+them, I will assign to you a body of men-at-arms, who with Percy's men
+shall, under your command, fulfil that duty. This would at once be of
+signal benefit to us, and will give you another opportunity of
+distinguishing yourself, and winning your spurs when the time comes."
+
+"I thank you greatly, my lord, and trust that I may so bear myself as
+to merit your approbation."
+
+The next morning the force mounted, at daybreak. It consisted of two
+hundred horse, that the earl had brought with him; and which was to be
+joined, at Chirk, by a hundred and fifty of Lord Grey's men from
+Ruthyn, orders having been already sent on for them to hold themselves
+in readiness. This was to be done quietly, and without stir, as word
+would be sure to be sent to Glendower, were it to be known in the town
+that preparations had been made for an expedition. They were to start
+from the castle at ten o'clock at night, when the town would be wrapped
+in sleep, and would arrive at Chirk before daybreak.
+
+On arriving at the castle, it was found that the troops from Ruthyn had
+duly come in. They were received by the seneschal of William Beauchamp,
+Lord of Abergavenny. Chirk Castle had passed through many hands, having
+been several times granted to royal favourites; being a fine building,
+standing on a lofty eminence, which afforded a view of no less than
+seventeen counties. It was square and massive, with five flanking
+towers, and its vast strength was calculated to defy the utmost efforts
+of the Welsh to capture it. It was but a short distance thence to the
+valley of the Dee, in which was the estate of Glendower, extending for
+some eight miles north, into what is now the neighbourhood of
+Llangollen.
+
+As one of the detachments had arrived before daybreak, and the other
+two hours after dark, it was improbable that their advent had been
+noticed; and, at the request of the knight who commanded the troop from
+Ruthyn, the gates of the castle had been kept closed all day, no one
+being allowed to enter or leave.
+
+At daybreak the next morning, the whole force sallied out.
+Three-quarters of an hour later, they dashed down into the valley at a
+point about half a mile distant from Glendower's dwelling.
+
+This was a very large and stately building. Near it stood a guest house
+and a church, and all the appurtenances of a man of high rank. It was
+called Sycharth. Here Glendower maintained an almost princely
+hospitality; for, in addition to this estate, he possessed others in
+South Wales.
+
+More especially bards were welcomed here. Some resided for months;
+others, who simply paused on their rambles through the country,
+remained but for a few days; but all were received with marked honour
+by Glendower, who was well aware of the important services that they
+could render him. Indeed, it was on them that he relied, to no small
+extent, to arouse the feelings of the populace; and his hospitality was
+well repaid by the songs they sung, in hall and cottage, in his praise;
+and by their prophecies that he was destined to restore the ancient
+glories of the country.
+
+The house was surrounded by a moat and wall, but had otherwise no
+defensive works; as, for a hundred years, the English and Welsh had
+dwelt peaceably, side by side. Many of the castles were, indeed, held
+by Welshmen, and there were few garrisons but had a considerable
+proportion of Welsh in their ranks.
+
+It was singular that Glendower should, after his defiance of the king,
+and the raids that had lately been made, have continued to dwell in a
+spot so open to attack, and within striking distance of the three great
+castles of Ruthyn, Chirk, and Holt. Certain it is that he kept no
+garrison that would suffice to offer a stout defence against a strong
+band, although the precaution was taken of keeping a watchman, night
+and day, in one of the turrets. The sound of his horn was heard by the
+horsemen, as soon as they began to descend the hill.
+
+"A pest on the knave!" Lord Grey exclaimed. "He will slip through our
+fingers, yet."
+
+It was scarce a minute later when a mounted man was seen to dash out,
+at full speed, from the other side of the building. He was evidently
+well mounted; and although the pursuit was hotly kept up, for two
+miles, he gained the forest while they were still a quarter of a mile
+behind him, and was lost to view; for although they beat the wood for
+some distance, they could find no traces of him.
+
+When passing by the house, a detachment of a hundred men were ordered
+to surround it, and to suffer none to enter or leave it. On the return
+of the pursuing party the house was entered, and ransacked from end to
+end. The male retainers found in it were ruthlessly killed. The
+furniture, which showed at once the good taste and wealth of the owner,
+was smashed into pieces, the hangings torn down, and the whole place
+dismantled. Only two female attendants were found, and these were
+suffered, by Earl Talbot's orders, to go free.
+
+"This is evidently the ladies' bower, when they happen to be here,"
+Lord Grey said; as, an hour later, he entered a room in one of the
+turrets, which had been already plundered by the soldiers. "'Tis a pity
+that we did not find one or two of Glendower's daughters here. They
+would have been invaluable as hostages.
+
+"We were too hasty, Talbot. We should have closely questioned some of
+the men, or those two women, and should have found means to learn
+whether they were staying here. It may be that it was so, and that they
+are, even now, concealed in some secret hiding place, hard by."
+
+He at once called up several of his men, and set them to search every
+room in the turret, for some sign of an entrance to a secret chamber;
+but although the walls were all tapped, and the floors examined, stone
+by stone, no clue was found to such an entrance, if it existed.
+
+The house, which was built entirely of stone, offered no facilities for
+destroying it by fire. The doors were all hewn down; the gates in the
+wall taken off their hinges, and thrown into the moat, being too
+massive to be destroyed by the arms of the soldiers. The outlying
+buildings were all burned down, the vineyard rooted up, and the water
+turned out of the fish pond. Then, greatly vexed at their failure to
+seize Glendower himself, the two nobles rode back to Chirk; leaving a
+hundred men, of whom the band from Ludlow formed part, under two of
+Earl Talbot's knights, to retain possession of the house, until it
+should be decided whether it should be levelled stone by stone; or left
+standing, to go, with the estate, to whomsoever the king might assign
+it.
+
+By Lord Grey's advice, sentries were posted outside the walls, from
+nightfall till daybreak, to prevent any risk of surprise by Glendower,
+whose spies might take him word that the main body of the assailants
+had left. One of the great halls had been left untouched, to serve for
+the use of the garrison; and as an abundance of victuals were found in
+the house, and the cellar was well stocked with wines, it was but a
+short time before the garrison made themselves thoroughly comfortable.
+
+As soon as it became dark, twenty men were placed on watch. Oswald,
+with his party, were to take the third watch, at midnight; and
+Mortimer's men-at-arms the second. The captain of each band was to
+place the men, at such points as he might select. Alwyn talked the
+matter over with his nephew.
+
+"It seems to me," the former said, "that there is but a small chance of
+anyone trying to leave the castle; and at any rate, if they did so, it
+would scarcely be over the wall, for a splash in the moat would at once
+betray them. Moreover, I love not killing in cold blood, and should any
+poor fellows be stowed away somewhere, I should be willing enough to
+let them go free."
+
+"I agree with you altogether, Alwyn," Oswald, who had not heard the
+talk between Grey and Talbot, concerning Glendower's daughters, replied
+heartily. "I would have gladly saved the men who were killed today. It
+is one thing to slay in battle, but to slaughter unresisting men goes
+altogether against my grain."
+
+"Then as we are agreed on that, Oswald, I should say that we had best
+place the greater portion of our men well away from the wall. We can
+leave two at the gate, and set two others to march round and round the
+moat. I should say we had best plant the others, in pairs, a quarter of
+a mile round the house. It is vastly more important to prevent
+Glendower from recapturing his house, by surprise, than it is to take
+prisoners two or three fellows making their escape."
+
+"I agree with you, Alwyn."
+
+Accordingly, when they filed out from the gate, four were posted as
+Alwyn had suggested. The rest were disposed, in pairs, in a circle at a
+distance round the house.
+
+"I will keep watch with Roger," Oswald said. "'Tis some time since I
+have had an opportunity for a talk with him. I will take the next post,
+if you like. The wood comes closer to the house, there, than at any
+other point; and there are patches, behind which an enemy might creep
+up. My eyes and ears are both good; and as for Roger, if he lifts that
+mighty voice of his in tones of alarm, it will reach the ears of all
+the others, and be the signal for them to run back to the gate, at the
+top of their speed."
+
+"Very well, Oswald. I shall walk round the ground, and see that all are
+vigilant. We know not where Glendower's men were lying. It may hap they
+were twenty miles away, but even so he would have had plenty of time to
+have brought them up, by now. I don't think there is much chance of any
+of our men being surprised; most of them having, in their time, been so
+used to midnight rides across moor and hill, and so accustomed to see
+in the dark that, crafty as the Welshmen may be, I do not think there
+is a chance of their getting within a hundred yards of any of our
+posts, without being seen; especially as the moon is still half full."
+
+"Do you think that there is any chance of our being disturbed, Master
+Oswald?" Roger said, as they took up their post under a low, stunted
+tree.
+
+"I do not think so. If Glendower's spies have told him that the main
+body, of those who surprised him this morning, have returned to Chirk;
+he may be sure that enough have been left, to hold the place
+successfully against him and his wild followers, till assistance can
+reach us; and he would have nothing to gain by recapturing his house,
+for he could not hold it long against the force assembled at Chirk.
+Besides, he must know, well enough, that if he is to fight
+successfully, it must be in the woods. Whether he has studied the black
+art, or no, there is little doubt that he has turned his attention
+greatly to military matters, and that he is a foe who is not to be
+despised. He is playing a deep game, and will give us a deal of
+trouble, unless I am greatly mistaken, before we have done with him."
+
+"I hear all sorts of strange stories of his powers, Master Oswald."
+
+"Yes; but you see, Roger, the spirits who, as they say, serve him,
+cannot be of much use; or they would have warned him of the coming of
+Talbot, and we should not have taken him unawares, this morning."
+
+"That is true enough," Roger said, in a tone of relief. "For my part, I
+am not greatly alarmed at spirits. The good abbot used to threaten me
+that I should be carried off by them, unless I mended my ways; but I
+always slept soundly enough, and never saw aught to frighten me. They
+used to say that the spirits of some of the dead monks used to walk in
+the convent garden, but though my cell looked down upon it, and I have
+often stood there by the hour, never did I see anything to frighten me.
+
+"If the Welsh do come, what are we to do, master--fight them?"
+
+"By no means, Roger. Our duty is to watch, and not to fight. You must
+lift up your voice, and shout as loud as you can, and then we must run
+to the gate. There we can make a fight, till the rest join us. But,
+whatever you do, do not shout until I tell you. A false alarm would
+raise the whole garrison; and, if naught came of it, would make us a
+laughing stock."
+
+While they were talking, both were keeping a close lookout on the
+ground in front of them, and also to the right and left, for the
+watches were two hundred yards apart, and they had to make sure that no
+party of the enemy slipped unseen between them. Suddenly Roger plucked
+Oswald's sleeve, and said in a whisper:
+
+"Unless my eyes deceive me, master, I saw two dark figures flit from
+that clump of bushes, some forty yards away, to those next to them.
+There they go again!"
+
+"I see them, Roger. It may be that they are spies, who have crept up
+close. Let us give chase to them."
+
+"Shall I shout, master?"
+
+"No, no. This is not an attack. Stoop as low as you can or, if they
+look back, they will see that great figure of yours, and be off like
+hares. Run as softly as you can."
+
+Stooping low, they set off at a run and, being certain that the figures
+were making straight for the forest, they did not pause to get another
+glimpse of them, but ran straight on. They had gone some seventy or
+eighty yards, when they heard a stifled exclamation; and then, without
+further attempt at concealment, two figures rose from a bush twenty
+yards ahead, and fled for the forest. There was no more occasion for
+stooping and, at the top of their speed, Oswald and Roger pursued the
+fugitives.
+
+These ran fast, but Oswald, who had outpaced his heavier companion,
+came up to them when within fifty yards of the edge of the forest; and,
+passing them, drew his sword and faced them.
+
+"Surrender," he said, "or I will cut you down."
+
+Instead of the fierce spring that he had anticipated, the two figures
+stopped suddenly, exchanged a word in Welsh, and then dropped their
+cloaks. To Oswald's astonishment, two young women stood before him.
+They evidently belonged to the upper class. Both were richly dressed.
+They wore heavy gold chains round their necks, and bracelets of the
+same metal; set, as Oswald noticed by the reflection of the moon, with
+jewels. They had also brooches, and their girdles were held in with
+massive gold clasps.
+
+By this time Roger had come up, and stood staring with astonishment.
+
+"Take these, good fellows," the girl said in English, as she began to
+unfasten her necklace. "Take these, and let us go. They will make you
+rich."
+
+"I am an esquire of Sir Henry Percy," Oswald said, "and I rob not
+women. By your appearance, I should judge you to be daughters of
+Glendower."
+
+"It would be useless to deny it," one of the girls said, proudly.
+
+"Why do you come spying here?" Oswald said. "Surely, among your
+father's warriors, others better suited for such work might have been
+found."
+
+"We were not spying," the girl replied. "We have lain hidden all day,
+and were but making our escape."
+
+"How can that be, madam? We had a guard all round the castle, and know
+that none can have escaped."
+
+"Being an esquire, you are a gentleman, sir, and will not disclose what
+I am about to tell you; though, indeed, now that our father's house is
+in your hands, it boots not much whether the secret is known. There is
+a secret passage from the castle that opens into these bushes, and it
+was through that that we issued out; having been in hiding all day, in
+the secret chamber from which it leads.
+
+"Well, sir, we are your prisoners; and shall, I suppose, be sent to
+London, there to be held until our father is in the usurper's hands,
+which will not be, believe me, for years yet."
+
+Oswald was silent. The two girls, some seventeen or eighteen years of
+age, both possessed singular beauty they had inherited from their
+father; and bore themselves with an air of fearlessness that won his
+admiration. He was still but a lad and, thinking of the years these
+fair girls might pass in a prison, he felt a deep pity for them. He
+drew Roger aside.
+
+"What think you, Roger? Must we send these fair young girls to prison?"
+
+"In faith, I know not, master. Having been shut up many a time in a
+cell, I have a sort of fellow feeling for prisoners; and indeed, two
+fairer maidens I have never seen. Our orders were to look after
+Welshmen, and see that they did not attack us. No word was said of
+Welsh women. And besides, they were running away, and not thinking of
+attacking us."
+
+"That is all very well, Roger, but I cannot deceive myself. There is no
+doubt that it is our duty to take these two maidens prisoners, but my
+heart aches at the thought that they might pass years of their lives in
+a prison. They are not responsible for their father's misdeeds and
+ambition, and it may be that, if they are restored, Glendower may be
+induced to treat those who fall into his hands mercifully. None but
+ourselves know of this, and no one need ever know.
+
+"I will risk it, anyhow," he said after a short pause. "I know that I
+am not doing my duty in letting them go; and that, were it ever known,
+I should lose all chance of further advancement, if indeed I did not
+lose my life. However, it need never be known, and my conscience would
+sorely trouble me, whenever I thought of them shut up in one of King
+Henry's prisons."
+
+He turned to the girls again.
+
+"Think you, ladies," he asked, "that were you in the king's hands, your
+father would make terms and submit himself?"
+
+"Certainly not," the one who had spoken before said. "He has other
+children--sons and daughters--and he would not dream of abandoning his
+rights, and betraying his country, to obtain the liberty of two of us."
+
+"In that case, then, your imprisonment would in no degree stop this
+war, or bring about a renewal of peace between the two countries?"
+
+"Certainly not; and as for us, we would strangle ourselves in prison,
+did we think that any thought of us would turn our father from his
+noble purpose."
+
+"Then in that case," Oswald said quietly, "it is clear that your
+captivity would do nought to bring about peace, or to allay the
+troubles that have now begun. Therefore I will take on me to let you
+go, though in so doing I may be failing somewhat in my duty. Only
+promise me that, in the future, you will use what influence you may
+possess with your father, to obtain kind treatment for prisoners who
+may fall into his hands."
+
+The expression of haughty defiance, that they had hitherto worn, faded
+from the girls' faces.
+
+"We shall never forget your kindness, sir," one said, in a low voice.
+"We thank you, with all our hearts; not so much for our own sake, as
+for our father's. He has been cruelly ill used. He has much to trouble
+him, and although I know that our captivity would not turn him from his
+purpose, it could not but greatly grieve and trouble him, and he has
+already troubles enough on his shoulders.
+
+"Will you accept one of these jewels, as a token only of our gratitude
+for your kindness, shown this night to us?"
+
+"Thanks, lady, but no gift will I take. I am failing in my duty, but at
+least it shall not be said that I received aught for doing so."
+
+"Then at least--" the girl began, turning to Roger.
+
+"No, lady," the man-at-arms said. "I am neither knight nor esquire, but
+a simple soldier; but I take no presents for saving two maidens from
+capture and captivity. I have been a monk all my life, though now a
+man-at-arms. Never before have I had an opportunity of doing aught of
+kindness for a woman, and I am glad that the chance has fallen in my
+way."
+
+"May I ask the name of one who has done us such kindness?" the girl
+said, turning to Oswald.
+
+"It were best not, lady. It is a service that might cost me my head,
+were it to be bruited about. 'Tis best, then, that even you should not
+know it. I doubt not that you would preserve the secret; but you would
+perhaps mention it to your father, and it were best that it were known
+to none."
+
+The girls were silent for a minute.
+
+"Sir," the elder said, after exchanging a word or two with her sister,
+"we would ask a boon of you. The successes in a war are not always on
+one side. My sister and I will think often of one who has so greatly
+befriended us; and were you, by any accident of war, to fall into the
+Welsh hands, and should evil befall you, it would be a deep grief to
+us. We pray you then, sir, to accept this little gold necklet. Its
+value is small, indeed, but it was given to me when a child by my
+father. My name and his are engraved on the clasp. Should you, at any
+time of stress, send this to my father; right sure am I that, on
+recognizing it, he would treat as dear friends those who have done so
+much for his daughters. I pray you to accept it, and to wear it always
+round your neck or wrist; and if it should never prove useful to you,
+it will at least recall us to your thoughts."
+
+"I cannot be so churlish, lady, as to refuse your token so offered; and
+though I hope that it will not be needful to use it as you say--for,
+indeed, I expect to return very shortly to my lord in Northumberland--it
+will be a pleasant remembrance of the service that a good fortune has
+enabled me to render, to two fair maidens. Be assured that I shall ever
+keep your necklet, for the sake of the givers.
+
+"And now, farewell! We must be back at our post, for the captain of the
+guard will be going his round, and we might be missed."
+
+"We shall never forget you, sir. May the blessing of God fall on you,
+for your kind deed!"
+
+"May all good fortune attend you!" Oswald answered; and then, with
+Roger, he made his way back to his post; while the girls hurried on,
+and entered the forest.
+
+
+
+Chapter 11: Bad News.
+
+
+"This has been a strange adventure, Roger."
+
+"A very strange one, master. Lord Grey would tear his hair, if he knew
+that those two pretty birds had been hiding in the cage all day, and he
+never knew it. However, I see not that it can do us harm. Nay, more,
+there is a probability that it may even benefit us, for if it should
+happen, by ill fortune, we should ever fall into the hands of the
+Welsh, and they should abstain from cutting our throats then and there,
+perchance these young ladies would repay the service we have rendered
+them, by taking us under their protection."
+
+"It may be so, indeed, Roger, though I hope that I shall never hear
+more of tonight's adventure. We may reason as we will, but there is no
+doubt that, although we had no instructions touching the capture of
+women, we have failed in our duty."
+
+"That will in no way trouble me, Master Oswald. When I was a monk, I
+failed in my duty scores of times, and am no whit the worse for it;
+rather the better, indeed, since it is owing to my failures that I am
+now a free man-at-arms, instead of being mewed up for life in a
+convent. I shall not sleep one wink less, for having saved two of the
+prettiest girls I ever saw from having been shut up, for years, in a
+prison."
+
+"I am afraid your sense of duty is not strong, Roger."
+
+"I am afraid not, master, saving in the matter of doing my duty in face
+of an enemy."
+
+"You mean, Roger, that you will do your duty when it so pleases you,
+and not otherwise."
+
+"I expect that is the way with a good many of us," Roger laughed. "I
+wonder whether Lord Grey had any idea that Glendower's daughters were
+in the house when we arrived there?"
+
+"I know not, but I remember now that they had men searching, for some
+time, for signs of secret passages. Whether it was from any idea that
+Glendower's daughters might be hidden away, I know not."
+
+"Truly it might have been," Roger said, "for I saw, among the spoil
+that was carried off when the others rode for Chirk, some silks and
+stuffs that looked like feminine garments.
+
+"There is somebody coming across from the next post," he broke off.
+"Doubtless it is the captain. You would not tell him what we have
+done?"
+
+"Certainly not, Roger. My uncle is an old soldier, and though he would
+not, for my sake, say anything about it, I think not that he would
+approve of what has been done. 'Tis best, at any rate, to keep it
+entirely to ourselves."
+
+"All quiet here, as elsewhere?" Alwyn asked as he came up.
+
+"All quiet, Uncle."
+
+"'Tis well; for although methinks that we could hold the place against
+the Welshmen, we could hardly hope that some of our posts would not be
+cut off, before they could reach the house. It is well to keep watch,
+but the more I think of it, the more I feel that Glendower will scarce
+attack us. He could not hold the place, did he gain it; and it might
+well be that, after we were turned out again, the place would be
+destroyed, seeing that it would need two or three hundred men to be
+shut up here, in garrison."
+
+After waiting half an hour, Alwyn again made the round of the posts,
+and then went in to rouse the party that were to relieve them. As soon
+as these issued out, the sentries were called in, and stretched
+themselves for three hours' sleep.
+
+Before day dawned, a messenger rode in from Chirk, bearing Earl
+Talbot's orders for the evacuation of the house, as there could be no
+advantage in retaining it; and, were it empty, Glendower might return
+there, and afford them another opportunity for capturing him.
+
+On the following day the party broke up. Lord Grey rode with his men to
+Ruthyn, and the forty men-at-arms from Ludlow returned to that town;
+where, a few days later, the news arrived that Glendower, with a large
+following, had established himself on the rugged height of Corwen, and
+was engaged in strengthening the ancient fortifications on its summit.
+
+For a time there was quiet on the border, and then came the startling
+news that Glendower had suddenly surprised, plundered, and burnt to the
+ground the town of Ruthyn, where a fair was being held at the time.
+Then, having obtained great booty, and greatly injured his enemy Lord
+Grey, he again retired. It was evident that no local force of
+sufficient strength could be found to pursue Glendower into his
+fastnesses on the ranges of Berwyn and Snowdon, and nothing was done
+until, three months later, the king, on his return from Scotland,
+marched into Wales with the levies of Warwickshire, Leicestershire, and
+eight other adjacent counties, while orders were issued to the people
+of Shrewsbury, and other towns on the eastern border, to hold
+themselves in readiness to repel any movement of the Welsh in that
+direction.
+
+The king, however, accomplished nothing. Glendower, with his following,
+took refuge among the forests of Snowdon; and the English army marched
+along the north coast, putting to the sword a few bands of peasantry,
+who ventured to oppose them; crossed to the Isle of Anglesey and,
+entering the Franciscan monastery of Llanfaes, slew some of the monks
+and carried the rest to England, and established a community of English
+monks in the convent. This was done because the Franciscans had been
+supporters of the late king, and were believed to have given aid and
+encouragement to Glendower.
+
+The Welsh expedition was, therefore, no more successful than the Scotch
+had been.
+
+For a time, matters settled down. Glendower was occupied in
+strengthening his position. So much had his reputation spread, that
+large numbers of Welshmen who had settled in England now sold their
+property, gave up their positions and abandoned their careers, and made
+their way across the border to join him. Still, for some months no
+operations were undertaken, on either side; and, a week after the
+return of the king and his forces, Sir Edmund Mortimer said to Oswald:
+
+"I will no longer keep you and your following from your lord's side. I
+have largely strengthened my garrison, and twenty men, however valiant,
+are no longer of importance. As you know, I should not have asked Percy
+to aid me, had I not thought that, perchance, he might have come
+himself, bringing with him two or three hundred men; and that my sister
+might have accompanied him. Maybe, if matters go on quietly on the
+northern marches, he may be able to do so yet; but I fear that the
+Scotch will take advantage of the troubles here, and may, for aught I
+know, have entered into communication with Glendower, so that they may
+together harass the kingdom. I have written several times to him,
+telling him what good service you and his men have rendered; and that I
+would I had five hundred such good fighters with me, in which case I
+would undertake, single handed, to bring this fellow to reason.
+
+"I have written a letter which I will hand you to deliver, saying that,
+as at present things are quiet and Glendower is in hiding among the
+mountains, I have sent you back to him; not without the hope that,
+should greater events take place, he himself will come hither, for a
+while, to give me the benefit of his knowledge of border warfare, even
+if he comes accompanied only by my sister and a dozen spears. I may
+tell you that, some two months since, he wrote saying that he should be
+glad to have you, and the captain of his garrison of Alnwick, back
+again; and I then wrote to him, saying that while the king was in Wales
+I would hold you, seeing that Glendower might make a great foray here,
+while the king was hunting for him in the north; but that, as soon as
+he left with his army, I would send you home."
+
+Alwyn and the men were all well pleased when they heard that they were
+to return; for, since the raid on Glendower's house, their life had
+been a dull one, to which even the fact that they were receiving pay
+from Sir Edmund, as well as from Percy, was insufficient to reconcile
+them; and it was with light hearts that they started, on the following
+morning, for the north, arriving at Alnwick ten days after leaving. Sir
+Hotspur came down into the courtyard, as they rode into the castle.
+
+"Welcome back, Oswald; and you, my trusty Alwyn!
+
+"I thank you all, my men, for the manner in which you have borne
+yourselves, and that you have shown the men of the west how stoutly we
+Northumbrians can hold our own, in the day of battle. I am glad,
+indeed, to find that all that went have returned home; some bearing
+scars, indeed, but none disabled. I will instruct your captain to grant
+all of you a month's leave, to pay a visit to your families.
+
+"You must sup with us tonight, Alwyn, and give us a full account of
+your doings, and also your frank opinion as to the state of things in
+the west, and the probability of long trouble with this strange
+Welshman, who has so boldly taken up arms, and defied the strength of
+England."
+
+It was nearly a year since the party had left Alnwick, and Oswald had,
+in that time, greatly increased in height and strength. He was now
+eighteen, and as he was nearly six feet in height, and his figure had
+filled out greatly since he had left his home, he might well have
+passed as three or four years older than his real age. That evening,
+Alwyn gave a full account of their fray with the Welsh.
+
+"These men fight stoutly, Alwyn," Percy said, when he had concluded his
+story.
+
+"Right stoutly, Sir Henry, and were their discipline equal to their
+bravery, they would be formidable opponents, indeed; but as it is, they
+are quite unable to stand against men-at-arms in a set battle. In this
+respect they are by no means equal to the Scotch, but for surprises, or
+irregular fighting, I could wish to see no better men."
+
+"It is an unfortunate affair," Percy said. "It seemed that we had
+finished with Wales, at Llewellyn's death, and that the two nations had
+become one. In London, and many other places, they were settled among
+us. Numbers of them studied at our universities, and in Shropshire,
+Radnor, Flint, and other border counties I have heard that most of the
+labouring men were Welsh, and have come to speak our language; and
+indeed, they form no small portion of the garrisons of the castles; so
+much so that I fear that, should the Welsh really ravage the border
+counties, 'tis like that not a few of the castles will fall into their
+hands by the treachery of their fellow countrymen in the garrisons.
+
+"Sir Edmund speaks very highly of you, Oswald, not only for your
+behaviour in the fight, which was reported to him by Sir James Burgon,
+a knight well fitted to judge in such matters, but as an inmate of his
+castle. He said that, from your conversation, he has conceived a high
+opinion of you.
+
+"At present things are somewhat quiet here, and it were well that you
+should, like your uncle, take a holiday for a time, and visit your
+father and mother. They have sent over, several times, for news of
+you."
+
+The next morning Oswald mounted and rode off, attended by Roger, who
+had asked Oswald to take him with him, as he had no relations he cared
+to visit. Alwyn was going for a few days only, and indeed, would
+probably have declined to take a holiday at all, had not Oswald
+earnestly begged him to go with him.
+
+"'Tis two years since you have been there," Oswald said.
+
+"That is so, Oswald, but I have often been longer without seeing my
+brother; and, in truth, of late I have had so little to do, with but
+twenty men to look after, that I long for regular work and drill again.
+Still, it were best that I went with you. There are turbulent times on
+hand, both on this border, in Wales, and maybe in France. I may get
+myself killed, and your father's house may be harried again by the
+Bairds, and he may not succeed in getting off scatheless, as he did
+last time; and I should blame myself, afterwards, if I had not seen
+him, and shaken his hand, when I had an opportunity such as the
+present."
+
+Oswald had seen so much, during the two years that had passed since he
+first left the hold that, as he rode towards it, it seemed strange that
+everything should be going on as if it was but the day before that he
+had ridden away--the only difference being that the hold looked
+strangely small, and of little account, after the many strong castles
+he had seen.
+
+As soon as they reached the moor, within sight of the hold, a horseman
+was seen to leave it, and ride at a gallop towards them.
+
+"That is ever the way," Oswald said; "we like to know, when a visitor
+is seen, whether he comes as friend or foe."
+
+As the moss trooper rode up, and was about to put the customary
+question, he recognized Oswald; and, wheeling his pony without a word,
+dashed off at full gallop, waving his spear and shouting, as he
+approached the hold.
+
+They rode at a canter after him and, as they reached the entrance, his
+father and mother appeared at the door at the top of the steps. The
+latter ran down the steps and, as Oswald leapt from his horse, threw
+her arms round his neck.
+
+"Thank God you are back again, my boy!" she cried; "though as yet, I
+can hardly believe that this tall fellow is my Oswald. But otherwise
+you are in no way changed."
+
+"I think, Mother, that you are looking better than when I saw you
+last."
+
+"I am well, dear," she said. "We have had a quiet year, and no cause
+for anxiety, and things have gone well with us; and it has been
+pleasant, indeed, for us to have received such good news of your
+doings, and to know that you stood so well with Hotspur."
+
+Oswald now ran up the steps to greet his father, who was already
+talking with Alwyn, who had slipped off his horse and run to speak to
+his brother, while Oswald was occupied with his mother.
+
+"Well, lad," John Forster said, laying his hand upon his shoulder, and
+looking him up and down, "you have grown well nigh into manhood. I
+always said that you would over top me, and though methinks that I have
+still three inches of advantage, you have yet time to grow up to look
+down on me.
+
+"Well, you have done credit to us, boy, and your monkish reading and
+writing has not harmed you, as I was afraid it would. Alwyn tells me
+that no man of Percy's troop did better than you, in that fight with
+the Welsh; save, mayhap, that big man-at-arms down there, who, he tells
+me, cracked the skulls of four Welshmen who were trying to stab you,
+besides those he disposed of on his own account."
+
+"I owe him my life, indeed, Father. He is a man after your own heart,
+strong and brave and hearty, even jovial when occasion offers. He can
+troll out a border lay with the best, and can yet read and write as
+well as an abbot. His name is Roger."
+
+"Come up, Roger," John Forster shouted, "and give me a grip of your
+hand. You have saved my son's life, as he tells me; and, so long as you
+live, there will be a nook by the fire, here, and a hearty welcome,
+when you are tired of soldiering."
+
+"In truth, you are a mighty man," he went on, after he and Roger had
+exchanged a grip that would have well nigh broken the bones of an
+ordinary man. "I have been looked upon as one able to strike as hard a
+blow as any on the border; but assuredly, you would strike a heavier
+one. Why, man, you must be five or six inches bigger, round the chest,
+than I am."
+
+"You have been an active man from your youth," Roger replied, "ever on
+horseback and about, while I spent years with nought to do but eat and
+drink, and build up my frame, in a monastery."
+
+"Oswald told us, in his letters, that you had been a monk; but had,
+with the consent of the abbot, unfrocked yourself."
+
+"It was so," Roger replied, with a laugh. "Methinks that it was a happy
+day for the abbot, as well as for myself, when I laid aside my gown;
+for I fear that I gave him more trouble than all the rest of his
+convent. Besides, it was as if a wolf's cub had been brought up among a
+litter of ladies' lapdogs--it was sure to be an ill time for both."
+
+"And for how long are you at home with us, brother Alwyn?" John Forster
+asked, presently.
+
+"I am here for a week only, John; but Oswald has leave for a month,
+seeing that, at present, there is no great chance of Hotspur needing
+his services. The Scotch are quiet since the king returned, I hear."
+
+"Ay, they are as quiet as is their nature to be, but 'tis not likely to
+last long. I went not with the army, but I hear that Henry behaved so
+gently that the Scotch feel that it would be almost an act of
+ingratitude to meddle with us, for a time. However, that will not last
+long. Next spring they will doubtless be storming down over the hills
+again."
+
+The holiday passed delightfully to Oswald. Roger enjoyed it even more.
+It was so long since the latter had been permitted the freedom of
+riding at will, over mountain and moor, that he was like a schoolboy
+enjoying an altogether unwonted holiday. He and Oswald scoured the
+country, sometimes returning late in the afternoon, but often staying
+for the night at the houses of one or other of Oswald's friends. Once
+they crossed the border, and rode to the Armstrongs', where they
+stopped for a couple of days, bringing Allan and Janet back with them;
+for Roxburgh was still held by the English, and unless when hostilities
+were actively going on, the people of the border, save the marauders,
+who were always ready to seize any opportunity that offered of carrying
+off booty, were on friendly terms, and maintained frequent intercourse
+with each other.
+
+Alwyn had returned to Alnwick when his leave was up. He had spent his
+time quietly at the hold. He and his brother had discussed many plans
+by which its defences could be strengthened, but arrived at the same
+conclusion: that it could defend itself, at present, against any small
+party, but must yield, however much its defences were increased, at the
+approach of an invading army; since, even with the assistance of the
+inhabitants of the surrounding districts, it could not maintain itself
+until an army was gathered, and the invaders driven out.
+
+Occasionally an afternoon was devoted to sports on the moor; and, on
+one occasion, John Forster sent messengers down to Yardhope, and other
+villages on the Coquet, and to the holds of his neighbours; inviting
+them to come to a gathering, at which there would be prizes for riding,
+wrestling, running, shooting, and feats of arms on horseback and foot,
+and at which all comers would be entertained.
+
+The result was a gathering such as had not taken place, in that part of
+the country, for years. Over a thousand people assembled, comprising
+women as well as men. The sports began early, and the various events
+were all eagerly contested. Ralph Gray won the horse race, a horse
+which he had brought from the south being far superior, in speed, to
+any of the smaller border horses; although, had the trial been for
+endurance, it would have had but small chance with them. The shooting
+was close, one of Percy Hope's men winning at last. The quarterstaff
+prize was awarded to Long Hackett, one of John Forster's retainers. At
+wrestling Roger bore off the palm. Some of his opponents were, in the
+opinion of lookers on, more skilled at the sport; but his weight and
+strength more than counterbalanced this, and one after another tried,
+in vain, to throw him to the ground; succumbing, themselves, as soon as
+he put out his strength, and theirs began to be exhausted; when,
+drawing them up to him with irresistible strength, he laid them quietly
+on the ground.
+
+Oswald himself carried off the palm in a mile foot race.
+
+At one o'clock the sports were concluded. While they had been going on,
+a score of men were attending to the great joints roasting over
+bonfires, six bullocks having been slaughtered the day before. Ducks,
+geese, and chickens innumerable were also cooking; while, for the table
+in the hold, at which the principal guests sat down, were trout, game,
+and venison pasties. Here wine was provided, while outside a long row
+of barrels of beer were broached, for the commonalty.
+
+Dinner over, there was singing and dancing. Alwyn had engaged, and sent
+from Alnwick, a score of musicians. These were divided into five
+parties, stationed at some little distance apart, and round these the
+younger portion of the gathering soon grouped themselves; while the
+elders listened to border lays sung by wandering minstrels. The days
+were shortening fast and, as many of those present had twenty miles to
+ride, by six o'clock the amusements came to an end, and the gathering
+scattered in all directions, delighted with the day's proceedings;
+which, although they would have been thought of but small account in
+the southern counties, were rare, indeed, in a district so thinly
+populated, and so frequently engaged in turmoil and strife.
+
+Except in the running match, Oswald had engaged in none of the
+contests, he being fully occupied in aiding his mother in welcoming the
+guests, and seeing to their comfort; while his father, assisted by his
+friends, Hope, Gray, and Liddel, superintended the arrangements for the
+sports, and acted as judges. In the afternoon, Oswald and his cousins
+had joined heartily in the dances, and enjoyed the day to the full as
+much as their visitors.
+
+Gatherings of this kind were not uncommon. Shooting, wrestling, and
+sword-playing for the men, and dancing on the green for the young
+people, took place at most of the village fairs; but the gathering at
+Yardhope was long talked about, as a special occasion, from the
+hospitality in which all were included, and the number of the heads of
+the border families who were present, and took part in the proceedings.
+
+Oswald's mother had been the prime mover in the matter. She was proud
+of her son, and thought that it was a good occasion to present him to
+the countryside, as one who was now arriving at manhood, and was
+likely, in time, to make a figure on the border. John Forster had at
+first declared that it was wholly unnecessary, and that such a thing
+had never taken place in his time, or in his father's before him.
+
+"That may be, husband," she said, "but Oswald has been away from us for
+two years, and it may be as much more before he returns. He is like to
+become a knight, before long--Alwyn said that the lad was sure to win
+his spurs--and it would be well that he should not slip out of the
+memory of folks here. Besides, we have his cousins, and it is well that
+they should carry back news that, in spite of the troublous times, we
+can yet be merry on suitable occasions.
+
+"The cost will not be very great. The meat can scarcely be counted,
+seeing that we have as many cattle on the moor as can pick up a living
+there. Moreover, our neighbours all gave us a helping hand, to repair
+the hold after it was sacked last year, and 'tis but right that we
+should hold some sort of gathering, and this will do for the two
+purposes."
+
+The last argument had more weight with John Forster than the former
+ones. Once having consented, he took as much interest in it as did his
+wife; and dug up the pot in which he stowed away any sums that
+remained, at the end of each year, over and above the expenses of the
+hold; and provided all that was required, without stinting.
+
+Three days after the gathering, the Armstrongs returned home, and
+Oswald rode with Roger to Alnwick. The next three months passed quietly
+and uneventfully. Snow was lying deep on the Cheviots, and until spring
+there was little chance of the Scotch making a foray.
+
+Oswald worked hard in the hall, where the knights kept themselves in
+exercise, practised with the young squires, and superintended the
+drilling and practice of the men-at-arms, of whom the number at the
+castle had been much increased; for none doubted that in the spring the
+Scots would, after Henry's invasion, pay a return visit to England, and
+that the northern counties would need a very strong force to hold them
+in check.
+
+He was, several times, sent by Percy with messages to the governors of
+Roxburgh and Jedburgh, and to other commanders; calling upon them to be
+vigilant, and to send in lists of arms and stores required, so that all
+should be in good order to make a stout resistance, when the need came.
+
+When he had received no special orders to return with speed to Alnwick,
+Oswald generally found time to pay a visit of a few hours to the
+Armstrongs. On these excursions Roger and another man-at-arms always
+rode with him, for it would not have been becoming for a squire, and
+messenger of Hotspur, to ride without such escort.
+
+Alwyn had picked out, for Roger's use, one of the strongest horses in
+the castle. It was not a showy animal, having a big ugly head, and
+being vicious in temper; therefore, after some trial, it had been
+handed over to the men-at-arms, instead of being retained for the
+service of the knights. It had, at first, tried its best to establish a
+mastership over the trooper; but it soon found that its efforts were as
+nothing against the strength of its rider, and that it might as well
+try to shake off its saddle as to rid itself of the trooper, the grip
+of whose knees almost stopped its breathing. Oswald, too, was very well
+mounted, Sir Edmund Mortimer having presented him with one of the best
+horses in the stable, upon his leaving him.
+
+Upon nearing Hiniltie one day, just as the new year had begun, Oswald
+was alarmed at seeing smoke wreaths ascending from the knoll behind the
+village upon which the Armstrongs' hold stood. Galloping on, he soon
+saw that his first impressions were correct, and that his uncle's tower
+was on fire. He found the village in confusion.
+
+"What has happened?" he asked, reining in his horse for a moment.
+
+"The hold was suddenly attacked, two hours ago," a man said. "A party
+of reivers rode through here. None had seen them coming, and there was
+no time for us to take our women and children, and hurry to the shelter
+of the hold. Adam Armstrong is away at Roxburgh. Young Allan, with what
+few men there were at the hold, had but just time to shut the gates;
+but these were hewed down, in a short time, by the troopers. There was
+a stout fight as they entered. Allan was cut down and left for dead,
+and the troopers were all killed. Dame Armstrong was slain, and her
+daughters carried off by the reivers; and these, as soon as they had
+sacked the house, set it alight and galloped off. Most of the men here
+were away in the fields, or with the flocks in the valleys, and we were
+too few to hinder them, and could but shut ourselves up in the houses,
+until they had gone."
+
+Oswald had dropped his reins, in speechless dismay.
+
+"It is terrible," he said, at last. "Aunt killed, Janet and Jessie
+carried away, and Allan wounded, perhaps to death!"
+
+"Whence came these villains?" he asked suddenly. "From beyond the
+Cheviots? It can hardly be so, for this part is under the governor of
+Roxburgh, and no English raiders would dare to meddle with any here.
+Besides, my uncle has always been on good terms with them, holding
+himself aloof from all quarrels, and having friends and relations on
+both sides of the border."
+
+"We believe that it was the Bairds," a man said. "There has long been a
+standing quarrel between them and the Armstrongs, partly about stolen
+cattle, but more, methinks, because of the relationship between the
+Armstrongs and your people"--for Oswald's visits to his uncle had made
+his face familiar to the villagers--"and they say that the Bairds have
+sworn that they will never rest, until they have slain the last of the
+Forsters."
+
+"Where is Allan Armstrong?"
+
+"They have carried him down to the last house in the village. The
+priest and Meg Margetson, who knows more of wounds and simples than
+anyone here, are with him."
+
+"Has his mother's body been recovered?"
+
+The man shook his head.
+
+"The hold was on fire, from roof to cellar, before they left," he said.
+"I and others ran up there, directly they had galloped away. The house
+was like a furnace. And indeed, we knew not of her death until a boy,
+who had seen her slain, and had dropped from a window and hidden
+himself till they had gone, came out and told us. He, and two or three
+others, are the only ones left alive of those in the hold, when we
+arrived and saved young Allan; and indeed, whether he lives now, or
+not, I know not. The priest said, when we carried him in, that his
+state was almost beyond hope."
+
+Oswald galloped on to the end of the village, leapt from his horse, and
+threw the reins to Roger, who had been muttering words that he
+certainly would not have found in the missals, or the books, of the
+monastery.
+
+"Is there nothing to be done, Master Oswald?"
+
+"Not at present. We must wait till my uncle returns."
+
+Then he entered the house. He had met the priest frequently, during his
+stay with the Armstrongs; as he entered the room, he was standing by a
+pallet on which Allan was laid, while a very old woman was attending to
+a decoction that was boiling over the fire.
+
+"Is there any hope, father?"
+
+"I know not," the priest replied, shaking his head sorrowfully. "We
+have stanched the wounds, but his head is well nigh cleft open. I have
+some skill in wounds, for they are common enough in this unfortunate
+country, and I should say that there was no hope; but Meg here, who is
+noted through the country round for her knowledge in these matters,
+thinks that it is possible he may yet recover. She is now making a
+poultice of herbs that she will lay on the wound; or rather on the
+wounds, for he has no less than four."
+
+"I think that he will live, young master," the old woman said in a
+quavering, high-pitched voice. "'Tis hard to kill an Armstrong. They
+have ever been a hardy race and, save the lad's father, have ever been
+prone to the giving and taking of blows. I watched by his grandfather's
+bed, when he was in as sore a strait as this; but he came round, and
+was none the worse for it, though the blow would have killed any man
+with a softer skull.
+
+"A curse upon the Bairds, I say. They have ever been a race of thieves
+and raiders, and it is their doings that have brought trouble on the
+border, as long as I can remember."
+
+"Has any gone to bear the news to Adam Armstrong, father?"
+
+"Yes. I sent off a messenger on horseback, as soon as they had gone.
+Adam left early, and the man will meet him on his way back."
+
+Half an hour later, indeed, Adam Armstrong rode in. Oswald met him
+outside. His face was set and hard, and Oswald would scarce have
+recognized the kindly, genial man who had always received him so
+heartily.
+
+"There are hopes that he will live," Oswald said.
+
+There was a slight change in the expression of Armstrong's face.
+
+"'Tis well," he said, "that one should be saved, to take revenge for
+this foul business. All the others are gone."
+
+"I hope we may rescue my cousins."
+
+"We might as well try to rescue a young lamb, that had been carried off
+by an eagle," he said bitterly. "Even could an archer send a shaft
+through the bird's breastbone, the lamb would be bleeding and injured,
+beyond all hope, ere it touched the ground. We may revenge, Oswald, but
+I have no hope of rescue."
+
+Then he went into the house, without further word.
+
+
+
+Chapter 12: A Dangerous Mission.
+
+
+Half an hour later, Adam Armstrong came out of the cottage where his
+son was lying. His mood had changed. He had gathered hope from Meg
+Margetson's confident assurances that there was ground for it.
+
+"Now, let us talk of what had best be done, Oswald," he said, as he led
+the way into the next cottage, where the woman at once turned her
+children out, and cleared a room for him.
+
+"What force could you gather, Uncle?"
+
+"In my grandfather's time," he said, "two hundred Armstrongs, and their
+followers, could gather in case of need; but the family was grievously
+thinned, in the days when Edward carried fire and sword through
+Scotland; and for the last fifty years Roxburgh and these parts have
+been mostly under English rule, and in that time we have never gathered
+as a family. Still, all my kin would, I know, take up this quarrel; and
+I should say that, in twelve hours, we could gather fifty or sixty
+stout fighting men.
+
+"But the Bairds would be expecting us, and can put, with the families
+allied to them and their retainers, nigh three hundred men under arms.
+Their hold is so strong a one that it took fifteen hundred Englishmen,
+under Umfraville, three weeks to capture it. It was destroyed then, but
+it is stronger now than ever.
+
+"Could we get aid from Roxburgh, think you?"
+
+"I fear not, Uncle. I know that the governor has strict orders not to
+give Douglas any pretext for invading us, and to hold his garrison
+together; since the earl may, at any moment, endeavour to capture the
+town before help could arrive. And even were he to send four or five
+hundred men, the Bairds could hold out for a fortnight, at least; and
+long before this Douglas would be down, with an army, to his rescue.
+
+"I have been talking it over with my trusty companion, here, and he
+agrees with me that, unless a body of men-at-arms that would avail to
+capture the fortalice by a sudden assault can be raised, we must trust
+to guile rather than force; and I propose that he and I shall, at once,
+start for the hold and see how matters stand, and where the prisoners
+are confined, and what hope there is of getting them free. I propose to
+send my other man to Yardhope, to tell my father what has happened, and
+to ask him to warn his friends to be ready to cross the border, and to
+join any force you can gather for an attack on the Bairds. It is true
+that stringent orders have been issued that there is to be no raiding
+in Scotland, but my father would not heed that for a moment. The attack
+that has been made upon you, the killing of his wife's sister, the
+wounding of Allan, and carrying off of his nieces would be deemed, by
+him, a grievance sufficient to justify his disregarding all orders.
+Besides which, he has the old grievance against the Bairds, which is
+all the more bitter since they led the Scots to attack Yardhope. I can
+guarantee that, when he gets word from you as to the day and place, he
+will meet you there with at least a hundred spears. It is true that,
+with this force and that which you can bring, he could not hope to
+capture the Bairds' hold; but together you could carry sword and fire
+through his district, before he could gather a force to meet you in the
+field."
+
+"I fear that would not do, Oswald. William Baird would be capable of
+hanging the girls from the battlements, when the first fire was lit."
+
+Oswald was silent. From the tales he had heard of the ferocity of these
+dreaded marauders, he felt that it was more than probable that his
+uncle was right.
+
+"It seems to me," he said, after a pause, "that it were best for you to
+send two men to Parton; which is, as I have heard, though I have never
+been there, ten miles south of the Bairds'. Let them give the name of
+Johnstone; and, at the tavern where they put up, say they expect a
+relative of the same name. As soon as I can find out how the affair had
+best be managed, I will give them instructions as to the plans I
+propose. One will carry them to you, and the other to my father. Will
+Parton be a good place for you to join forces?"
+
+"As well as any other, Oswald. Your plan seems to me a good one. At any
+rate, I can think of nothing better. My brain is deadened by this
+terrible misfortune. Had I my own will, I would ride straight to the
+Bairds' hold and challenge him and his brothers and sons to meet me,
+one after another, in fair combat; and should be well contented if I
+could slay one or two of them, before being myself killed."
+
+"I can quite understand that, Uncle. But your death would be, in no
+way, an advantage to the girls; nay, would rather render them more
+helpless, therefore I pray you to let me carry things out as I have
+planned."
+
+His uncle nodded.
+
+"I shall send out a dozen runners to my friends," he said, "and beg
+them to be here tomorrow morning, early. Then, when I have talked
+matters over with them, I shall ride to Roxburgh and lay the matter
+before the governor. I know that I shall get no help from him; but at
+least, when he hears of a gathering here, he will know that 'tis with
+no evil intention against the English."
+
+Ten minutes later, Oswald's messenger started for Yardhope, with a full
+account of the step he was taking, and of the arrangements that had
+been made. This done, he had a long talk with Roger.
+
+"Now, Roger," he said, "this will be the most dangerous business in
+which we have been concerned; and I should not venture to undertake it,
+did I not know that I could rely, absolutely, upon you."
+
+"I will do my best, master, and will adventure my life all the more
+willingly, since it is in the service of Allan and Janet Armstrong.
+They were always pleasant and friendly with me, at Yardhope, and I like
+them for themselves, as well as because they are your cousins. Now,
+master, what is to be done?"
+
+"Have you your gown with you, Roger?"
+
+"No, master. I know you always told me to take it with me, thinking
+that it might come in useful, and I carried it under my saddle all the
+time we were in Wales; but, seeing that this was but a ride to Jedburgh
+and back, I thought that there would be no occasion for it."
+
+"That is unfortunate, Roger, for it is upon this that we must depend to
+get an entry into the Bairds' hold."
+
+"Well, master, I can doubtless get some rough cloth of the colour, at
+Jedburgh; and indeed, there is a small monastery about three miles
+hence on the road, and it may be that, if Adam Armstrong will go with
+us and say wherefore it is wanted, the prior will let him have one."
+
+"I will see him at once. No time must be lost. While he is away, you
+must shave your head again."
+
+Roger's face fell.
+
+"'Tis hard, master, after it has grown so well to match the rest.
+Still, for so good a purpose I must even give in."
+
+On hearing what was wanted, Armstrong mounted and rode off at once and,
+while he was away, one of the villagers shaved the top of Roger's head
+again. In an hour, Armstrong brought back a monk's gown.
+
+"He was loath to let me have it even, for such a purpose, though I told
+him that you were once a monk of the order. Finally he said that his
+conscience would not allow him to lend it, but that he would sell it to
+me for six pennies, which I gladly gave him."
+
+"It is dark now," Oswald said, "and I know not the road. Can you give
+me some man to put me on the way? We will not make straight for the
+Bairds', but will strike the road from Glasgow, some ten or twelve
+miles north of his place, so that we can come down from that direction.
+Then our guide, after taking us on to the road, had best take charge of
+the horses and lead them to Parton, there to remain with them until
+your messenger, and the one from Yardhope, arrive. It would be as well
+to have the horses there, for we cannot know what need we may have of
+them."
+
+"That I will arrange at once, Oswald. Is there aught else?"
+
+"Yes, Uncle, I must leave my armour and clothes here, and borrow others
+that will pass as a disguise."
+
+"How would you go, Oswald?"
+
+"In truth, it is a difficult matter. That of a minstrel would be the
+best passport, but I know nought of harp or other instrument. I might
+go as a vendor of philters and charms, a sort of half-witted chap,
+whose mother concocted such things."
+
+"They would never let you into the Bairds' castle, Oswald."
+
+"Then I must be a rough man-at-arms, one who had been in the service of
+the Earl of March; and who, when he turned traitor and went over to the
+English, found himself without employment; and asked nothing better
+than to enter the service of someone who will give him bread and meat,
+in return for any services that he can render, whether in hunting up
+any cattle among the hills, or striking a shrewd blow in the service of
+his employer, if needs be."
+
+"That must do, if we can think of nothing better, Oswald. I will
+speedily bring you the things you require, as they will be found in
+every house in the village; and some, alas! will be needed no more by
+those who wore them."
+
+"They must be of good size, Uncle."
+
+"Ay, ay, lad. There must have been some tall fellows, among those they
+slew today."
+
+Half an hour later, Roger and Oswald mounted. His uncle sent two of his
+men with them, saying that it would look strange were one man to come,
+with two horses, to Parton; but that two, saying that their masters
+would follow, would seem a more probable tale.
+
+"They will, if they can, find some quiet farmhouse a mile out of the
+village, and there get lodgings for themselves and beasts. You can
+arrange with them to take up their station on the road, so that you
+can, if needs be, find them."
+
+It was with a sigh that Roger flung himself into the saddle. It was not
+the horse on which he had ridden there, but a strong, shaggy pony.
+
+"He does not look much," one of the men said, "but there is no better
+horse, of the sort, in the country. He has both speed and bottom, and
+can carry you up or down hill, and is as sure-footed as a goat."
+
+Roger had assented to the change, for his own horse was as unlike one
+that a monk would have bestrode as could be well imagined. He had
+obtained a stout staff, to which the village smith had added two or
+three iron rings at each end, rendering it a formidable weapon, indeed,
+in such hands.
+
+"It reminds me of our start for Dunbar, master," he said. "One might
+have a worse weapon than this;" and he swung it round his head, in
+quarterstaff fashion; "still, I prefer a mace."
+
+"That staff will do just as well, Roger. A man would need a hard skull,
+indeed, to require more than one blow from such a weapon."
+
+Now that Adam Armstrong had done all that there was to do, he went
+again to the cottage where Allan lay. He had paid several visits there,
+in the afternoon; but there was nought for him to do, and no comfort to
+be gained from the white face of the insensible lad. Meg assured him,
+however, that he was going on as well as could be expected.
+
+"He is in a torpor, at present," she said; "and may so lie for two or
+three days; but so long as there is no fever he will, I hope, know you
+when he opens his eyes. There is nought to do but to keep wet cloths
+round his head, and to put on a fresh poultice over the wound, every
+hour."
+
+Now Armstrong took his place by his son's pallet. For a time, the work
+of making preparations for Oswald's departure, and of sending off
+messages to his friends, had prevented his thoughts from dwelling upon
+his loss. Throughout the night, the picture of his home, as he had left
+it when he rode out that morning; and the thought that it was now an
+empty shell, his wife dead, his daughters carried off, and his son
+lying between life and death, came to him with full force, and well
+nigh broke him down.
+
+In the meantime, the little party were making across the hills, and
+before morning they came upon the northern road, fifteen miles from the
+Bairds' hold. Here Oswald and Roger dismounted. It was arranged that
+the men should return with the horses into the hills, and should there
+rest until late in the afternoon, and then mount and ride for Parton.
+One or other of them was to come down, at seven o'clock each evening,
+to the road half a mile from the village; and was there to watch till
+nine. If no one came along, they were then to return to their lodging.
+
+"I feel stiff in the legs, master," Roger said; "a fifty-mile ride, up
+and down the hills, is no joke after a hard day's work."
+
+"They will soon come right again, Roger. I feel stiff, myself, though
+pretty well accustomed to horse exercise. However, when we present
+ourselves at the hold, dusty and footsore, we shall look our characters
+thoroughly."
+
+Neither were sorry when they arrived at a small village, a quarter of a
+mile from the Bairds' hold. They went in together to the little ale
+house, and vigorously attacked the rough fare set before them.
+
+"Hast thou travelled far?" their host asked, as he watched them eating.
+
+"Indifferently far," the monk said: "'tis five-and-twenty miles hence
+to Moffat, and it would have seemed farther to me, had not this good
+fellow overtaken me, and fell in with my pace. He is good company,
+though monkish gowns have but little in common with steel pot and
+broadsword; but his talk, and his songs, lightened the way."
+
+"Whither are you going, father?"
+
+"I am making my way to Carlisle," he said. "I have a brother who is
+prior in a small monastery, there, and it is long since I have seen
+him. Who lives at the stronghold I saw on the hills, but a short
+distance away?"
+
+"It is the hold of William Baird, the head of that family; of whom,
+doubtless, you may have heard."
+
+"I have heard his name, as that of a noted raider across the border,"
+the monk said; "a fierce man, and a bold one. Has he regard for the
+church? If so, I would gladly take up my abode there, for a day or two;
+for in truth I am wearied out, it being some years since my feet have
+carried me so long a journey."
+
+"As to that, I say nothing," the host said. "It would depend on his
+humour whether he took you in, or shut the gates in your face without
+ceremony; but methinks, at present, the latter were more likely than
+the former; for his hold is full of armed men, and I should say it were
+wisest to leave him alone, even if you had but the bare moor to sleep
+upon."
+
+"Nevertheless, I can but try," the monk said. "He may be in one of
+those good tempers you spoke of. And I suppose he has also a priest, in
+his fortalice?"
+
+"Ay, the Bairds are not--but I would rather not talk of them. They are
+near neighbours, and among my very best customers."
+
+As he spoke, four armed men came in at the door.
+
+"Good day, Wilson! Whom have you here? An ill-assorted couple, surely.
+A monk, though a somewhat rough one, and a man-at-arms."
+
+"Fellow travellers of a day," Roger said calmly. "We met on the road,
+and as I love not solitude, having enough and to spare of it, I
+accosted him. He turned out a good companion."
+
+"You are a man of sinew yourself, monk, and methinks that you would
+have made a better soldier than a shaveling."
+
+"I thought so sometime, myself," the monk said; "but my parents thought
+otherwise, and it is too late to take up another vocation, now."
+
+"Is that staff yours?" the soldier asked, taking it up, and handling
+it.
+
+"Yes, my son. In these days even a quiet religious man, like myself,
+may meet with rough fellows by the way; and while that staff gives
+support to my feet, it is an aid to command decent behaviour from those
+I fall in with. I have not much to lose, having with me but sufficient
+to buy me victuals for my journey to Carlisle; where, as I have just
+told our host, I am journeying to see a brother, who is prior at a
+convent there."
+
+"This fellow--where did you fall in with him?"
+
+"He overtook me some twenty miles north, on the road to Glasgow."
+
+"And are you travelling to Carlisle, too?" the man said to Oswald.
+
+"Nay," he said, "I purpose not going beyond the border. I have lost my
+employment, and have tried, in vain, to find another as much to my
+liking. I have come south to seek service, with one who will welcome a
+strong arm to wield a sword."
+
+"Hast tried the Douglas?"
+
+"No," he said, "the Douglas has men enough of his own, and methinks I
+should not care to be mewed up in one of his castles. I have had enough
+of that already, seeing that I was a man-at-arms with George Dunbar,
+till he turned traitor and went over to the English."
+
+"You look a likely fellow; but, you know, we do not pay men, here, to
+do our fighting for us. 'Tis all very well for great nobles, like
+Dunbar and Douglas, to keep men always in arms, and ready to ride, at a
+moment's notice, to carry fire and sword where they will. War is not
+our business, save when there is trouble in the air, or mayhap we run
+short of cattle or horses, and have to go and fetch them from across
+the border. It is true that there are always a score or two of us up
+there, for somehow the Bairds have enemies, but most of the followers
+of the house live on their holdings, raise cattle and mountain sheep,
+grow oats, and live as best they can."
+
+"For myself, I would rather live with others," Oswald said. "I am used
+to it, and to live in a hut on the moors would in no way be to my
+fancy; and if I cannot get a place where I have comrades to talk to,
+and crack a joke with, I would rather cross the seas, take service with
+an Irish chieftain, or travel to Wales, where I hear men say there is
+fighting."
+
+"You need not go very far, if it is fighting that you want," the man
+said. "Those who ride with the Bairds have their share, and more, of
+it. If you like to stop here a day or two, I will take an opportunity
+to talk to William Baird, or to one of his sons, if I find a chance;
+but I cannot take you up there, now. At the best of times they are not
+fond of visitors, and would be less so than usual, now."
+
+Other armed men had come in, while the conversation was going on. No
+further attention was paid to the travellers. The others, sitting down
+at a table across the room, talked among themselves.
+
+"I care not for the work," one said presently, raising his voice to a
+higher pitch than that in which the others had spoken. "Across the
+border, I am as ready for work as another; but when it comes to Scot
+against Scot, I like it not."
+
+"Why, man," another said, "what qualms are these? Isn't Scot always
+fighting against Scot? Ay, and has been so, as far back as one has ever
+heard. It does not take much for a Douglas or a Dunbar to get to
+loggerheads; and as to the wild clans of the north, they are always
+fighting among themselves."
+
+"Yes, that is all very well," the other said, "and there is no reason
+why neighbours should not quarrel, here; but I would rather that they
+each summoned their friends, and met in fair fight and had it out, than
+that one should pounce upon the other when not expected, and slay and
+burn unopposed."
+
+"Ay, ay," two or three others of the men agreed. "It were doubtless
+better so, when it is Scot against Scot."
+
+"'Tis border fashion," another put in. "There is no law on the border,
+and we fight in our own fashion. Today it is our turn, tomorrow it may
+be someone else's. We follow our chiefs, just as the northern clansmen
+do; and whether it is a Musgrave or a Baird, a Fenwick or an Armstrong,
+he is chief in his own hold, and cares neither for king nor earl, but
+fights out his quarrel as it may please him. I am one of William
+Baird's men, and his quarrel is mine; and whether we ride against the
+King of Scotland or the King of England, against a Douglas or a Percy,
+an Armstrong or a Musgrave, it matters not the value of a stoup of
+ale."
+
+"That is so, Nigel, and so say we all. But methinks that one may have a
+preference for one sort of fighting over another; and I, myself, would
+rather fight a matter out, man against man, than fall suddenly on a
+hold, where none are ready to encounter us."
+
+Roger, during a pause in the conversation at the other table, got up
+from his seat and stretched himself.
+
+"Well, friend," he said to Oswald, "I will go up and see if they will
+make me welcome, at the hold. If they do, I may see you no more. If
+not, I shall return here to sleep. Therefore I bid you good day, and
+hope that you may find such service as will suit you. Benedicite!"
+
+And, paying for his refreshment, Roger took his staff from the corner,
+and went out.
+
+"A hearty fellow, and a stalwart one," the man who had spoken to him
+said. "I should not care to have a crack over the crown, with that
+staff of his. You met him coming down from the north, comrade?"
+
+"Yes, some twenty miles away. It was near Moffat that I overtook him. I
+would rather drink with him than fight with him. Seldom have I seen a
+stronger-looking man."
+
+"I am of your opinion, comrade; and some of these monks are not bad
+fighters, either. There have been bishops who have led the monks to
+battle, before now, and they proved themselves stout men-at-arms."
+
+After the others had gone out, Oswald strolled through the village, and
+then mounted an eminence whence he could take a view across the valley,
+and of some of the hilltops to the northeast. On one of these, two
+miles away, he could make out a man standing by a horse. He watched him
+for some little time, but beyond taking a few steps backwards and
+forwards, the man did not move.
+
+"He is a lookout," he said to himself, "and is no doubt watching some
+road from Kelso and Jedburgh. Baird will hardly think that the
+Armstrongs can have so soon gathered a force sufficient to attack him,
+but he may have thought it as well to place one of his men on the
+watch.
+
+"I wonder how Roger is getting on! I think they must have taken him in,
+or he would have been back before this."
+
+Roger had walked quietly up the hill on which the Bairds' hold was
+perched. A man stepped forward from the gate, as he neared it.
+
+"None enter here," he said, "without permission from the master."
+
+"Will you tell him that a poor monk, of the order of Saint Benedict, on
+his way from his convent at Dunbar to one near Carlisle, of which his
+brother is prior, prays hospitality for a day or two, seeing that he is
+worn out by long travel?"
+
+The sentry spoke to a man behind him, and the latter took the message
+to William Baird. The latter was in a good humour. He himself had not
+taken part in the raid on the Armstrongs, which had been led by Thomas
+Baird, a cousin; but the fact that the latter had been entirely
+successful, and had burned down Armstrong's house, and brought back his
+daughters, had given him the greatest satisfaction. There was a
+long-standing feud between the two families, and the fact that the
+Armstrongs were on good terms with their English neighbours, and still
+more that one of them had married the sister-in-law of a Forster of
+Yardhope, had greatly embittered the feeling, on his side. He had long
+meditated striking a blow at them, and the present time had been
+exceptionally favourable.
+
+Douglas had his hands full. He was on ill terms with Rothesay, whose
+conduct to his daughter had deeply offended him. The newly-acquired
+land of the Earl of March gave him much trouble. He was jealous of the
+great influence of Albany, at court; and was, moreover, making
+preparations for a serious raid into England. It was not likely, then,
+that he would pay any attention to the complaints the Armstrongs might
+make, of any attack upon them; especially as their aid was of small use
+to him, while the Bairds could, at any moment, join him, in an invasion
+across the border, with three hundred good fighting men.
+
+William Baird had not, as yet, even considered what he should do with
+his captives. He might give them in marriage to some of the younger men
+of his family, or he might hold them as hostages. As to injuring them
+personally, he did not think of it. Slaughter in a raid was lightly
+regarded, but to ill-treat female prisoners would arouse a general
+feeling of dissatisfaction along the border. Reprisals might be made by
+the Armstrongs and their friends, and in any case, there would be such
+widespread reprobation excited, as William Baird, reckless as he was,
+could hardly afford to despise.
+
+Therefore, when Roger's request was brought to him, he said at once:
+
+"Take him up to Father Kenelm. Tell him to look after the monk's
+comfort. This evening he can bring him down to the hall, and I will
+question him as to his journey."
+
+Roger followed the man through the courtyard. He paid, apparently, no
+attention to what was going on there, but a quick glance enabled him to
+perceive that the hold was full of men. He followed his guide up a
+winding stair, to a turret on the wall, the lower story of which was
+inhabited by the priest.
+
+The soldier knocked at the door, and on its being opened by the priest,
+he gave Baird's message to him. He was a tall man, spare and bony. He
+himself was a Baird, and report said that, in his youth, he had ridden
+on many a foray in England. But fighting men were common in the family,
+and it had been thought well that one should enter the church, as it
+was always good to have a friend who could represent them there and,
+should any complaint be made, explain matters, and show that the family
+were in no wise to blame. And moreover, as it was necessary to have a
+priest at the chief fortalice of the family, it was best that it should
+be one who would not be too strict in his penances, and could be
+conveniently silent as to the doings within its walls.
+
+The priest had accepted the role not unwillingly. He was an ambitious
+man, and saw that, as one of the fighting Bairds, there was but small
+opportunity of rising to aught beyond the command of one of the holds.
+Douglas regarded them with no friendly eye, for their breaches of the
+truces brought upon him constant complaints from the English wardens,
+who might, some day or other, lead a force to punish the family, which
+had been one of the few exempted from the general pardon, at the last
+truce. As a priest he would have better opportunities, for the Bairds
+had much influence along the border; and might, some day or other,
+exert it in his favour.
+
+So far, no such opportunity had occurred. It had been a disappointment
+to him that Henry, in his last invasion, had kept along the eastern
+coast; and he hoped that the war, which assuredly would, ere long,
+break out violently, would give him the chance he longed for; and he
+might be sent by his uncle to Douglas, with offers of service, or might
+even go north, and have an interview with Albany.
+
+Once fairly away from Liddesdale, he was resolved that it would be a
+long time, indeed, before he returned. He was now some thirty years of
+age, with a hard, keen face.
+
+"Well, brother," he said, "it is not often that any of your order
+sojourn here. I am glad to have one with whom I can converse, of other
+matters than arms and armour, forays and wars."
+
+"These matters are, indeed, too much in men's mouths," Roger said;
+"though I own that I, myself, in some degree am interested in them;
+for, had I had the choice of a vocation, I would rather have been a
+man-at-arms than a monk."
+
+"I wonder not at that," the other said, "seeing that nature has been
+bountiful to you, in the matter of height and strength; and I doubt not
+that you could, in case of need, use that staff you carry with good
+effect."
+
+"Methinks that I might do so, but happily none have molested me on my
+way, seeing perhaps that my wallet was not likely to be a full one; and
+that, mayhap, it was hardly worthwhile to meddle with me, with so small
+a prospect of plunder."
+
+"But come in, and sit down," the priest said. "My uncle has consigned
+you to my care. We shall sup in half an hour."
+
+"I shall not be sorry," Roger replied, "for though I broke my fast on
+black bread and small beer, down in the village, 'tis but poor
+nourishment for a man who has travelled far, and who has a large frame
+to support."
+
+"But how come you to be here?"
+
+Roger again repeated his story.
+
+"It would have been shorter for you to have travelled down through
+Berwick, brother."
+
+"The difference was not great," Roger replied; "and I had to carry a
+message to Edinburgh, and from there it was shorter to keep west of the
+Pentlands, and come down to Lanark, and thence through Moffat."
+
+"Yes, I suppose it is as short. And you had no trouble on your way?"
+
+Roger shook his head.
+
+"No; I generally join some traveller or other, and that makes the
+journey pass all the quicker. I came down here today with a stout young
+fellow, who overtook me this side of Moffat. He was somewhat out at
+elbow, and I looked askance at him at first; but he turned out a blithe
+companion, and we got on well together. He could troll a good song, and
+my own voice is not wanting in power. It was curious that he also was
+from Dunbar, though not immediately; having, it would seem, wandered
+for some time, on the lookout for service."
+
+"What was he, a cattle drover?"
+
+"No, he had been a man-at-arms, of George of Dunbar--at least, so I
+understood--and when the earl fled, and Douglas took possession of
+Dunbar, he lost his living. He told me that he had made his way down
+here in hopes of finding employment on the border, where blows were
+common, and a good blade was of more use than it was farther north. I
+said that he might have found employment under Albany, or under some
+other great lord; but he said that he had seen the Earl of March a
+fugitive, and that he cared not to enter the service of another noble,
+who might, in turn, be ousted from his place and lose his life; but as
+for Albany, he thought, from what he heard, that he would rather serve
+him than any other master.
+
+"I said, 'Why not Rothesay, who would be King of Scotland?'
+
+"He laughed lightly, and said as Rothesay had managed to get upon ill
+friendship, not only with the Earl of March but with Douglas, and, as
+he heard, with Albany, he thought that his chances of becoming King of
+Scotland were not worth considering."
+
+"He must be a bold varlet, thus to speak irreverently of great ones."
+
+"I think not that he was bold," Roger said, "but only a merry,
+thoughtless young fellow, who in such company as mine let his tongue
+loose, and said what first came into his head. As to the matter,
+methought he spoke not without warrant."
+
+"And he came from the north, now?"
+
+"I know not whence he came last, but I think that he was at Edinburgh,
+and had taken service there, when the English king sat down before it;
+but, as you know, nought came of the siege."
+
+At this moment a horn blew.
+
+"There is supper," the priest said. "We will go down."
+
+The meal was laid in the hall; which, however, was not large enough to
+contain more than the ordinary retainers of the hold. These, and the
+men who had come in at the summons of Baird, were provided for in the
+courtyard, the table being occupied entirely by members of the Baird
+family, and others who always acted with them. These had not yet taken
+their seats, when the priest entered with his companion, whom he at
+once took up to Sir William Baird.
+
+"By Saint Andrew! Monk, I have seen no finer figure, for many a day. A
+pity that a monk's gown should clothe such limbs as yours."
+
+"That has always been mine own opinion," Roger said, with a heartiness
+that raised a smile on the hard faces of the men standing round.
+
+"You look as if you had carried arms."
+
+"I did so, in my wild youth," Roger said, "and had no thought of ever
+donning monk's hood; but I was grievously wounded, in a foray in
+Northumberland, and when I reached my home at Lauder, I well nigh died
+of the fever of the wound; and I swore that, if my life was saved, I
+would become a monk. I got well, and I kept my vow; but methinks, had I
+but known how dull the life was, I would rather have died of the
+fever."
+
+As this story was perfectly true, save the name of his birthplace,
+Roger spoke so heartily that no one doubted his story.
+
+"And your monastery is at Dunbar?
+
+"You have been at Dunbar, Rotherglen. Ask him where the convent stood."
+
+As Roger had stayed there, when with Oswald he was at Dunbar, he was
+able to answer this, and other questions, satisfactorily. The party
+then took their places at table, the priest and Roger sitting at the
+bottom of it. The conversation at the upper end naturally turned on the
+foray, and a general disbelief was expressed, as to the chance of the
+Armstrongs retaliating.
+
+"'Tis out of the question," one of the Bairds said, "they could not
+raise fifty men. Doubtless they will send a complaint to Douglas, but
+he has his hands well full; and is not likely to quarrel with us about
+such a trifle, when he may want our aid, at any moment, either against
+Albany or against the English."
+
+"What do you intend to do with the girls?"
+
+"I have not settled yet," William Baird said, shortly. "At any rate,
+for the present I shall hold them as hostages. I don't think that
+anything is likely to come of the affair; but if we should hear of any
+force approaching, likely to give us trouble, we could send word to
+them that, if an arrow is loosened at our walls, we will hang the girls
+out as marks for their archers. I fancy that will send them trooping
+off again, at once."
+
+As soon as the meal was over, and the carousal began, the priest rose
+and, accompanied by Roger, retired to his chamber.
+
+
+
+Chapter 13: Escape.
+
+
+Oswald, who was thoroughly fatigued with the events of the last
+thirty-six hours, slept soundly, on an armful of rushes that his host
+threw down in a corner of the room for him. At eight o'clock, the man
+who had spoken to him on the previous evening came in.
+
+"I have spoken to William Baird," he said. "I told him that you seemed
+a likely fellow. He called down the monk, and asked him several
+questions about you; and he told me, at last, that I could bring you up
+to see him. So come along, at once."
+
+"Thanks, comrade," Oswald said, as he slung his long two-handed sword
+from his shoulder.
+
+"A likely-looking young fellow, indeed," Baird said to Rotherglen, whom
+he had sent for to be present; "over six feet and, I should fancy, has
+not attained his full width.
+
+"So you would fain take service with me?" he said.
+
+"I want a master," Oswald replied, "and from what I hear, I am more
+likely to see fighting, under you, than under any other on the border."
+
+"And you were with George Dunbar?"
+
+"I was," Oswald replied. "But indeed, the service was not altogether to
+my taste, for we were always pent up in Dunbar; and, save in a street
+broil, there was no need to draw a sword. I was glad enough to leave
+his service, though in truth, I have fared but badly, since."
+
+"Now do you question him, Rotherglen."
+
+A number of questions were put to Oswald, concerning the names of the
+streets, the direction, the name of the principal inns, and the
+approaches to the castle. All these were satisfactorily replied to.
+
+"He knows Dunbar, there is no question about that.
+
+"And you can use your arms?"
+
+"I think so."
+
+"We will have a trial," Baird said. "A man is no use to me, who cannot
+use his weapon. Send Robert here."
+
+In a minute, one of the young Bairds entered. He was a man of about
+twenty-five, tall and sinewy, and was accounted the best swordsman of
+his family.
+
+"Cousin Robert," William Baird said, "this young fellow would enter our
+service; but before I take him, I must see that he knows his business.
+Do you take a turn with the sword with him.
+
+"No, no, not a two-handed sword; I don't want him to be slain. Take a
+couple of swords from the wall. Give him another steel cap, and full
+body armour. That of his own would not keep out a good, downright
+stroke."
+
+By the time that Oswald was armed, a number of the Bairds and their
+friends had assembled in the hall, hearing of what was going to take
+place.
+
+"A fine young fellow, truly," Rotherglen said. "In height and width, he
+matches Robert well, though of course your cousin must be the more
+powerful, seeing that he is some four or five years older than this
+young fellow; who, when he reaches his age, bids fair to be well-nigh
+as strong a man as that monk."
+
+Roger had just entered, with the priest.
+
+"Well, monk," Baird said, "we are going to try the mettle of your
+companion of yesterday."
+
+"I answer not for his mettle," Roger said; "but if he fights as well as
+he talks, he will not do discredit to himself."
+
+As they took their places, facing each other, the lookers on, men well
+qualified to judge of strength and sinew, murmured to each other that
+it would be difficult to find a better-matched pair. They were about
+the same height, both stood lightly on their feet, and their figures
+seemed full of life and activity. Both were smiling, Robert Baird with
+a smile of confidence, and of assurance in his skill; while Oswald's
+face expressed only good temper and, as the others took it, a belief
+that he would, at any rate, be able to make such a defence as would
+assure his being taken into the Bairds' service.
+
+The first rally, indeed, proved more than this. Robert Baird had at
+once taken the offensive, and showered his blows heavily down, while
+springing backwards and forwards with wonderful quickness and activity;
+but Oswald's blade ever met his, and he did not give way an inch, even
+when Baird most fiercely attacked him. Then suddenly he adopted the
+same tactics as his opponent, and pressed him so hotly that he was,
+several times, obliged to give ground. Oswald could twice have got in a
+heavy blow, but he abstained from doing so. He could see that his
+antagonist was a favourite among his kinsmen, and felt that, were he to
+discomfit him, he would excite a feeling of hostility against himself.
+Both, panting from their exertions, drew a step backwards and lowered
+their swords.
+
+"Enough!" William Baird said, "The matter need be pushed no further.
+'Tis long since I have seen so good a bout of swordplay. This young
+fellow has learned his business, and if, in other respects, he does as
+well, he will make a good recruit, indeed.
+
+"What say you, lad? Will you join us for a month, till you see whether
+you like our service, and we can judge how your service will suit us?
+For that time you will have your living here, and drink money. After
+that, if we agree, you can either be a retainer here, or we will give
+you a holding on the moor, build you a shelter, give you a horse, and,
+after our next foray, a clump of cattle."
+
+"That will suit me well," Oswald said; "and I like well the month of
+trial you propose."
+
+"I will take him, if you will let me, Uncle, as my own man," Robert
+Baird said. "If, at the end of the month, he chooses service with us,
+and likes better to follow a master, with half a dozen men, than to
+live alone on the moors. Methinks he would make a cheery companion, and
+one I could take to, heartily; and indeed, during the long winters,
+'tis no slight thing to have one merry fellow, who can keep one alive,
+and of whose mettle and skill you are well assured."
+
+"So let it be, then, Robert. You have tried him, and yours should be
+the advantage. But for the month he shall remain here, under Malcolm's
+eye."
+
+Oswald went down with the man, who was Baird's right hand in the hold.
+
+"What will be my duties?" he asked.
+
+"To keep your arms and armour ready for service."
+
+"That will be an easy task, methinks; for I see that instead of being
+polished and bright, as were ours at Dunbar, the others keep their
+steel caps and back pieces painted a sombre colour."
+
+The other nodded.
+
+"Yes, our arms are for use and not for show; and when we ride by
+moonlight, we care not to have our presence shown, miles away, by the
+glint of the moon on our armour.
+
+"You will do your turn of keeping watch and ward. Just at present there
+will be a good deal of that, for we have been stirring up a wasps'
+nest, and mayhap they may come and try to sting. When you are off duty,
+you will be your own master, save that you had best be within sound of
+the warder's horn.
+
+"I will hand over a horse to you. For the present, it is at that croft
+on the opposite hill. Each of the tenants keeps two or three at our
+service. We have only the Bairds' own horses kept in the hold. It would
+be too much trouble to gather forage for those of the twenty men who
+always live here, and indeed, we have no room for such number.
+
+"Mind that you drink not too much, over in the village there; for
+though the Bairds care not, on feast days, if the whole garrison gets
+drunk, so that there are enough sober to keep watch and ward, they set
+their faces against it at other times, seeing that it leads to broils
+and quarrels."
+
+"I will take care. I like my cup, occasionally; and can drink with
+others, without my head getting addled, but as a rule I care not
+overmuch for it."
+
+After being roughly introduced to several of the retainers as a new
+comrade, Oswald was left to follow his own devices. Presently, Roger
+came out into the courtyard.
+
+"So you have got service, comrade," he said, in a voice that could be
+heard by any of those standing near. "You had better fortune than I had
+expected."
+
+"That have I," he replied. "Still, I thought that it would be hard, if
+one who could use his sword indifferently well, and puts no great value
+on his life, could not find service on the border. How long do you stay
+here?"
+
+This was a question that had been arranged, for had they been seen
+speaking privately together, it might have aroused suspicion.
+
+"Methinks I shall stay here two days, to get rid of my leg weariness. I
+am not so accustomed to long marching as you are."
+
+The real meaning of the question, as arranged, was, "Have you found out
+where the prisoners are kept?"
+
+The answer meant "Yes, and it will not be difficult to get at them."
+
+The evening before, indeed, when he returned with the priest to his
+chamber, they had broached a bottle together. The priest, on his part,
+had asked many questions as to the state of things in Edinburgh, and
+Dunbar; what were the opinions of people with regard to the Duke of
+Albany, and the Prince; and what would probably come of the coldness
+that was said to exist between them.
+
+Roger was able to conceal his ignorance of these matters by saying that
+he knew little of what was passing, for that he had been the cellarer
+in the convent, and went out but little. Nevertheless, he had kept his
+ears open; as they rode north to Jedburgh, he had heard a good deal of
+talk and speculation, and was able to give various pieces of news that
+had not before reached the ears of the priest. He was not long in
+discovering that the latter was ill satisfied with his present
+position, and was ambitious to take part in more important affairs, and
+he presently said:
+
+"I wonder, father, that a man of your ability should be content to
+remain as chaplain in a border hold, when there are so many
+opportunities beyond, for one like you, to make his way in the church."
+
+"In truth," the priest said, "I have had such thoughts myself; and
+hope, some day, to see a little more of the world.
+
+"By the way, can you read and write, brother?" he asked suddenly.
+
+"Assuredly," Roger replied.
+
+He guessed, at once, that the question had been put at the instigation
+of William Baird; who perhaps still had some doubts whether he was
+really a monk, and an affirmative answer would be an almost conclusive
+proof that he was so, for very few outside the walls of the convents,
+even among the nobles and knights, possessed any knowledge of letters.
+
+"I have a missal here," the priest said carelessly, "that has somewhat
+troubled me, being written in a cramped hand. Perhaps you could read it
+for me," and, getting up, he took a roll from a closet.
+
+Roger smiled quietly, as he turned it over. By a private mark upon it,
+he knew that it had been written at Alnwick, and was doubtless the
+proceed of some foray upon a monastery across the border. He ran his
+eye over it; and then, in a sonorous voice, proceeded to read it aloud.
+
+"I thank you," the priest said, when he had finished. "Truly you are an
+admirable reader, and well skilled in deciphering. I wonder that you
+held not some more important post than that of cellarer."
+
+Roger laughed.
+
+"I might have done so," he said, "but in truth, I am not strict enough
+in matters of discipline to suit our prior, and am somewhat over fond
+of the wine cup. More than once, when it seemed that I might have been
+chosen as reader to the monastery, I fell into disgrace, and lost my
+chance; and indeed, I was far better pleased with my post, there, than
+if they had appointed me sub-prior."
+
+Any vestige of doubt there might have been in the priest's mind had
+vanished, as Roger read; for he was conscious that he, himself, could
+not have picked up a manuscript and have deciphered it so easily and
+fluently.
+
+"It must be trying to you, good father," Roger went on, "to be among
+men who, if reports speak truly, are somewhat lawless, and hold even
+the church in but slight respect. Surely, among them there can be but
+little scope for your abilities?"
+
+"'Tis true, brother; but they are, you know, kinsmen of mine. They have
+many foes across the border, and some on this side, and are forced to
+hold their own as they may. It was but two days ago that they were
+obliged to punish a family that have long been at feud with them, and
+who might well have fallen upon their holds, if they marched into
+England with Douglas. However, they have brought off two hostages for
+the good behaviour of these people."
+
+"Yes, I heard a chance word, in the village, that a party had just
+returned from a foray, and had brought back a number of prisoners."
+
+"Not a number, brother, but two girls."
+
+"I have seen no women in the castle," Roger said.
+
+"No. William Baird lost his wife years ago, and cares not to have women
+in the hold. There is not a married man among the garrison. If a man
+takes him a wife, he must go and settle on the lands.
+
+"The women are in a safe place of keeping. They are overhead. There are
+wild young fellows among the Bairds, and the girls are good looking;
+therefore he thought it best to place them in my charge, and that is
+why you see two sentries marching on the battlements, one on each side
+of this turret. He himself keeps the key of their chamber, handing it
+over to me every morning, and receiving it again at night--a precaution
+wholly unnecessary, methinks."
+
+"Surely, surely," Roger said. "I wonder that you are not offended."
+
+"I told him that it was strange he could not trust me, a priest, with
+the charge of them; but he laughed and said, 'As a priest you are well
+enough, Father Kenelm, but remember also that you are a Baird. Though a
+priest, I would trust you to ride with me on a foray across the border;
+but as a Baird, I would not entrust you with the custody of women. You
+may take it as a compliment that I have trusted you as far as I do.'"
+
+Roger's answer to Oswald had been eminently satisfactory to the latter.
+Still more pleased was he when, later on in the day, Roger repeated, as
+he passed him, "They are lodged in the turret, over my chamber."
+
+Oswald was scarcely surprised, for he had noticed that two sentries
+were on the wall on that side, although it was the one farthest removed
+from the direction in which any foes were likely to appear. He had,
+moreover, just before dinner, observed one of the kitchen men go up,
+with two dishes in his hand, by the steps leading to the top of the
+wall, on that side. There was no hindrance to the men going freely in
+and out of the hold, and as no duty had been assigned to him that
+evening, he strolled out of the gate when it became dusk, soon after
+six o'clock, for it was now the beginning of April, 1401, and walked
+down through the village; and then, taking off his armour and steel
+cap, and laying them down under a bush by the roadside, set off at the
+top of his speed in the direction of Parton. He did the ten miles in
+under an hour, and nearly ran against a man who was standing in the
+middle of the road, a short distance from the little town.
+
+"Is that you, Fergus?"
+
+"No, I am John, master. Fergus will take the watch tomorrow evening."
+
+"Good. Keep the horses saddled at this time, every evening; and hold
+them in readiness all night. Things are going on well, and I may be
+here any night. Which is the house?"
+
+"That is it, master, where you see the light, a quarter of a mile
+farther up the hill."
+
+"Where are you sleeping?"
+
+"In the stables, with the horses. It is some ten yards off the right of
+the house."
+
+"Then you must keep watch through the night, by turns, and get your
+sleep in the daytime. I hope we shall get them away without waiting for
+a force to come. The hold is a very strong one, and a strict watch is
+kept at night; and, before we could carry it, we should have all the
+Bairds on the countryside down upon us.
+
+"Can you get me a rope? I want a long and a strong one."
+
+"There are some ropes in the stable, master, but they are in use, and
+would be missed."
+
+"Then run, at the top of your speed, down to the town; and buy a rope
+strong enough to hold the weight of half a dozen men. I shall want a
+hundred feet of it. Here is money."
+
+The man shot away into the darkness and, in a little over a quarter of
+an hour, was back again with the rope. Oswald took off his doublet.
+
+"Wind it round and round me," he said. "Begin under the arms. Wind it
+neatly, and closely, so that it will make no more show than necessary."
+
+This was soon done, and then Oswald started on his way; and an hour
+later entered the tavern, and took his seat with three or four of the
+men from the hold, and called for wine for the party. He sat there for
+some time, and then one said:
+
+"It is half-past eight; we had best be going. At seven o'clock the
+gates are shut; but they are opened, for those who belong to the hold,
+till nine, after which none are admitted till morning, and any who come
+in then are reported to Baird, and they are lucky if they get off with
+half a dozen extra goes of sentry duty. Baird is a good master in many
+things, but he is a bad man to deal with, when he is angry; and if
+anyone was to be out a second time, and he did it too soon after the
+first offence, he would have his skin nearly flayed off his back, with
+a stirrup leather. There is no fooling with the Bairds."
+
+Oswald arranged with Roger that, if the latter remained in the castle,
+he should always come down half an hour before the garrison were
+moving, as they might then exchange a word or two unseen; and
+accordingly, he took his place at an angle of a building, where he
+could keep his eye on the steps leading up to the battlements, on the
+north side.
+
+Presently he saw Roger descending. He waved his hand, and caught his
+follower's eye; and the latter, on reaching the courtyard, at once
+joined him.
+
+"I have a rope, Roger," Oswald began, "that will reach from the turret
+to the foot of the craig. I took it off during the night, and have just
+hidden it away behind a pile of rubbish, in the stable. Are the girls
+locked up?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Is there any getting the key?"
+
+"No, William Baird himself keeps it."
+
+"Then we must have something to force the door open, or to saw round
+the lock."
+
+"The door is studded with iron."
+
+"Are the windows barred?"
+
+"No; but they are mere loopholes, and there is no getting through
+them."
+
+"I suppose there are steps from their room on to the platform above?"
+
+"No doubt. In fact, there are sure to be."
+
+"I suppose that you will have no difficulty in silencing the priest?"
+
+Roger smiled.
+
+"No; I think I can answer for him."
+
+"Could you speak to the girls through the keyhole, Roger?"
+
+"There would be no difficulty about that, master. I have but to choose
+a time when the priest is out."
+
+"Then tell them that we are here, Roger, and they are to be ready to
+escape, whenever we give the signal. Ask them if the trapdoor leading
+on to the platform is fastened, and whether they can unfasten it. If
+not, we must break it in, from above. We can get on to the top of the
+turret, easily enough, by throwing the rope up with a hook attached.
+
+"Of course, the two sentries must be first silenced. I would wait till
+I, myself, should be on sentry there; but that might not occur for a
+week, and you cannot prolong your stay here more than another day;
+therefore, we will try it tonight. I have given the men with the horses
+notice.
+
+"Do you get the priest bound and gagged, by ten o'clock; everything
+will be quiet by that time. I will come noiselessly up the steps. At
+that hour, do you be at the door, and on the lookout for me. The
+sentries will have to be silenced--that is the most difficult part of
+the business."
+
+"We can manage that," Roger said, confidently. "One blow with my
+quarterstaff, on the back of the head under the steel cap, will do that
+noiselessly enough."
+
+"That would not do, Roger. The man would go down with such a crash,
+that the fall of his armour on the flags would be heard all over the
+castle. He must be gripped by the throat, so that he cannot holloa; and
+then bound tightly, and gagged before he has time to get breath."
+
+"I suppose that would be the best way," Roger said regretfully; "but I
+should like to have struck two good blows; one for the sake of Dame
+Armstrong, and one for Allan. However, your plan is the best. The only
+difficulty will be the trapdoor."
+
+"Well, we must look about today, and get a couple of bits of iron that
+we can use as a prise. Still, I hope that it will not be needed. I saw
+a bit of iron, in the stables, that I think I can bend into a hook for
+the rope; and if I can't, I have no doubt that you can.
+
+"That is all. You had better move away now. People will be stirring,
+directly."
+
+That night, at ten o'clock, when all in the hold had been asleep half
+an hour, Oswald rose quietly from the rushes, on which he and a dozen
+of his comrades were sleeping, and made his way noiselessly out of the
+room; went into the stables and fetched the piece of iron, which he
+had, during the day, placed so that he could feel it in the dark; took
+the coil of rope in his hands, and ascended the steps. The top was but
+some ten feet from the turret. He stood quiet, until he heard the
+sentry moving away from him, then he mounted the last steps, and in a
+moment reached the foot of the turret stairs. Roger was standing there.
+
+"All right, master!" he whispered. "I took the priest by surprise, and
+he was gagged before he knew what was happening. I tore the blanket up
+into strips, and tied him down onto his pallet with them. He is safe
+enough.
+
+"Now for the sentries. I will take the one to the right, first. I will
+go out and stand in the angle. It is a dark night, and there is no
+chance of his seeing me. When you hear his walk cease, you will know
+that I have got him. I have managed to bring up a rope, that I have cut
+into handy lengths. Here are two of them.
+
+"There, he has just turned, so I will go at once."
+
+"How about the trapdoor?"
+
+"It is all right, master. It is bolted on the inside. They have tried
+the bolts, and find they can move them;" and with these words, he at
+once stepped noiselessly out.
+
+Oswald stood listening. Presently he heard the returning steps of the
+sentry. They came close up to the turret, and then suddenly ceased.
+
+He at once hurried round. The sentry hung limp in Roger's grasp. Oswald
+bound his hands tightly, and twisted the rope three or four times round
+his body, and securely knotted it. Then he tied the ankles tightly
+together.
+
+"I will lay him down," Roger whispered, when he had done so.
+
+Oswald bent the man's legs and, trussing him up, fastened the rope from
+the ankles to that which bound the wrists. Roger now relaxed his grip
+of the man's throat, thrust a piece of wood between his teeth, and
+fastened it, by a string going round the back of the head. He then took
+off his steel cap, and laid it some distance away.
+
+"That will do for him, master. I reckon that he will be an hour or two,
+before he will get breath enough to holloa, even without that gag."
+
+The other man was captured as silently as the former had been. When he
+was bound, Roger said:
+
+"Now for the hook, master."
+
+"Here is the iron. It was too strong for me to bend."
+
+Roger took it and, exerting his great strength, bent it across his
+knee. Then he took the coil of rope, and tied a knot at the end, and
+with some smaller cord lashed it securely along the whole length of the
+hook.
+
+"Now, Master, do you get on to my shoulders, and I think you will be
+able to hook it to the battlements. It is not above twelve feet. If you
+find that you cannot, step on my head."
+
+"I am sure I can reach it without that, Roger."
+
+And indeed, he found that he could do so easily; and having fixed it
+firmly, he got hold of the rope, and hoisted himself to the top of the
+turret. In a minute, Roger was beside him.
+
+Feeling about, they soon discovered the trapdoor, on which Roger
+knocked three times. Then they heard a grating sound below and,
+shortly, one end of the heavy trapdoor was slightly raised. The two men
+got their fingers under it, and pulled it up, and Janet and Jessie ran
+out, both crying with joy and excitement.
+
+"Hush!" Oswald whispered. "Do not utter a sound. There are sentries on
+other parts of the walls, and the slightest noise might be heard.
+
+"Now, we will knot this rope."
+
+He and Roger set to work, and before long knots were tied, a foot
+apart, along the whole length of the rope.
+
+"I will take you down first, Jessie, for you are the lightest," Oswald
+said.
+
+"Now, Roger, tie us together."
+
+One of the pieces of rope Roger had brought was passed round and round
+them, tying them firmly, face to face.
+
+"Now, Jessie, you had best take hold of the rope, too, and take as much
+of your weight off me as you can. It is a long way down; and, though I
+think that I could carry your weight that distance, it is best that you
+should help me as much as you are able."
+
+The rope was shifted to the outside of the turret. Roger, after fixing
+it firmly, helped them over the battlements, holding Oswald by the
+collar, until he had a firm grasp of the rope in his hands, and
+obtained a hold with his feet.
+
+"That is right, Jessie," he whispered, as the girl also took a firm
+hold of the rope. "You are no weight, like that. Now, let the rope pass
+gradually through your hands and, when I tell you, hold tight by one of
+the knots."
+
+After lowering himself forty feet, Oswald found that he was standing on
+a ledge of rock, three inches wide, at the foot of the wall.
+
+"Now, dear, it will be more difficult," he said. "You must use one of
+your hands, to push yourself off from any rugged points. There are not
+many of them. I had a look at the rock today, and its face is almost
+smooth. I will do the best I can to keep you from it."
+
+In another three minutes, they stood at the foot of the craig. Oswald
+shook the rope violently, to let those above know that they were down.
+Then he untied the cord that bound him to his cousin, who at once sat
+down, sobbing hysterically. Oswald put his hand upon her shoulder.
+
+"Steady, Jessie, steady. You have been brave and quiet, coming down.
+The danger is over now, but we have a long walk and a longer ride
+before us, and you will need all your strength."
+
+In a very short time, Roger and Janet joined them. As soon as she was
+untied, Janet threw her arms round Oswald's neck, and spoke for the
+first time.
+
+"Oh, Oswald, from what have you saved us! How brave and good of you to
+risk so much!"
+
+"Tut, tut, Janet, as if we should leave you here, in the hands of the
+Bairds, without making an effort to free you! Now, come along, dear. Be
+very careful how you walk, till we get down to the bottom. It is pretty
+steep and, if you were to set a stone rolling, we might have them after
+us, in no time. As it is, we shall only have an hour and a half start,
+for the sentries will be relieved at midnight. However, by that time we
+shall be on horseback, and of course they won't know which road we have
+taken."
+
+As soon as they came to level ground, they set off at a run. They were
+but a mile from the village when they heard, on the still night air,
+distant shouts, followed half a minute later by the winding of a horn;
+then, almost immediately, a glimmering light appeared on the highest
+turret of the hold, and this rapidly broadened out into a sheet of
+flame.
+
+"They have discovered our escape, by some misfortune or other," Oswald
+exclaimed, "and they will be after us, before many minutes have passed.
+You must run in earnest now, girls."
+
+"Do you run on, Oswald," Janet said, "you and Roger. We will turn and
+walk back. They will do us no harm."
+
+Oswald thought of the murder of the girls' mother, and knew that, in
+their fury at having been tricked, the Bairds were capable of anything.
+
+"It is not to be thought of," he said. "Such a watch would henceforth
+be kept that there would be no possibility, whatever, of effecting your
+rescue. We must take our chance together.
+
+"What think you had best be done, Roger?"
+
+"In sooth, I know not. I am ready to do whatever you think best."
+
+"We cannot hope to reach Parton, before they overtake us," Oswald said.
+"Besides, the Bairds are sure to have many friends there, and the
+lighted beacon will warn all the countryside that something unusual has
+happened. No, we cannot think of going there."
+
+"But you said that there were horses," Janet said.
+
+"They are but a short distance on this side of the town. We could not
+hope to get there before the Bairds; and, even if we did, it would be a
+quarter of an hour before we could mount and be off."
+
+"Could we not hide and get the horses after they have passed, master?"
+Roger suggested.
+
+"It would be useless, Roger. The road leads up and down this valley,
+and there would be no possibility of riding the horses across the
+hills, at night; so that we should have either to ride down through
+Parton, or up past the Bairds' hold. No, the horses must be given up,
+for the present. The only thing that I can see is to cross the Esk, and
+to take refuge in the hills. I know not if there are any fords, or
+where they are; but, were we to turn to the right, we should be getting
+farther and farther away. The Esk is no great width, and we can carry
+them across it, easily enough."
+
+"The water will be dreadfully cold," Jessie said, with a shiver, for it
+was now the beginning of April.
+
+"Hush, Jessie!" her sister said. "What matters a little cold, when our
+lives are at stake?"
+
+"No, that is our only hope," Oswald said. "Quick, girls, there is no
+time to lose."
+
+The river was but some fifty yards from the road, and they ran down to
+it.
+
+"Now, girls," Oswald said when they reached it, "you must take off your
+cloaks, and all upper garments. Were you to get these wet you would,
+before morning, die of cold. Don't lose a moment. Undress under the
+shelter of these bushes.
+
+"Now, Roger, let us move a few yards away, and then take off our
+doublets and shirts, and swim across, holding them above the water. By
+the time that we are back, the girls will be ready."
+
+"I will carry them across, master. It is of no use two of us going,
+with so light a burden. I shall make nothing of it."
+
+Oswald made no opposition and, a minute later, the shirts and doublets
+were made into a bundle, and bound on Roger's head. He waded into the
+water until it reached his chin, and then swam out. The distance to be
+traversed was but some fifteen yards, and a few strokes of his brawny
+arms brought him to the opposite bank. Having laid down his bundle
+there, he swam quickly back again.
+
+"Are you ready, girls?" Oswald asked.
+
+"Yes," Janet replied, and two white figures came out from the bushes,
+each carrying a bundle.
+
+"Do you go into the bushes again, for a minute. We cannot take you and
+the bundles over together; and it is better that you should stand here,
+in dry things, than wait in wet ones, over there."
+
+A minute sufficed to tie the bundles on the heads of the two men. They
+soon swam across to the other side, left them there, and returned.
+
+"The water is bitterly cold for the girls," Oswald said, as they swam
+across together.
+
+"It is, master, but they will only be in it for a minute, and they will
+soon be warm again."
+
+"Now, girls."
+
+"We have just heard the sound of horses in the distance, Oswald," Janet
+said.
+
+He listened.
+
+"Sound travels far, this still night," he said; "they can only just
+have started. We shall be across long before they come along.
+
+"Now, Jessie, we will take you first. The stream runs strongly, and it
+were best that you went over separately. All you have to do is to put a
+hand on a shoulder of each of us. Come along."
+
+"I will carry her till we get into deep water," Roger said, catching
+the girl up in his arms, and running into the stream.
+
+Jessie gasped, as the water reached her.
+
+"It will be over in a minute," Oswald said encouragingly. "Now, we are
+going to swim. Put your hands upon our shoulders. That is right."
+
+Striking out strongly, they easily carried her until she was in her
+depth.
+
+"Now, dear, get ashore, and stand behind those bushes, and take off
+your wet things and put on your dry ones. We will have Janet across, in
+no time."
+
+The girl was carried across as easily as her sister had been.
+
+"Here is your bundle, dear. Jessie has taken hers. Dress as quickly as
+you can. Stoop down, as soon as you reach the bushes. They will be
+here, directly."
+
+Janet ran to the thicket, and Oswald and Roger threw themselves down
+behind a great stone. Two minutes later, they could hear the thunder of
+hoofs go along the road opposite, but could not make out the figures.
+
+"How many are there of them, do you think, Roger?"
+
+"A dozen or so, master."
+
+"Yes, I should think you are right. However, it makes no difference;
+were there ten times as many, they would not catch us, tonight."
+
+
+
+Chapter 14: In Hiding.
+
+
+The moment the horsemen had gone by, Oswald and Roger hastily dressed
+again. It was three or four minutes before the girls joined them.
+
+"We have been a long time, Oswald, but our fingers are so cold that we
+could not tie the strings."
+
+"You will soon be warm. Climbing the hill will set your blood in
+motion."
+
+There was no hurry now. They were safe until the morning.
+
+"We will make up the hill until you are thoroughly warm, and then we
+will discuss matters."
+
+Before they were very far up the ascent, both girls declared that they
+were comfortably warm again.
+
+"Well, Roger, what do you think our best course will be? The Bairds
+have, of course, sent horsemen along the other road. They will have
+heard, from the priest, that we have but a few minutes' start; and will
+know that we cannot have gone far. The party who passed us will
+doubtless stop at Parton, the other at the next village higher up; and
+they will be sure that either we concealed ourselves as they passed, or
+have taken to the hills on one side or other of the valley. They will
+naturally suppose that it is this side, as it would be madness for us
+to plunge farther into the country to the west; and you may be sure
+there will be scores of men out on these hills, tomorrow, searching for
+us; and some of them may ride nearly to Hiniltie, to cut us off there
+in case we escape the searchers on the hills.
+
+"I think that the only plan will be to hide up for a couple of days, or
+so; then to make our way down again to where the horses are, and then
+make a dash through Parton."
+
+"That would certainly be far the best way," Roger said; "but how are we
+to manage for food for the ladies?"
+
+"We will go on until we get to the top of the hill, Roger, and then
+find a sheltered spot, where they can stop. It is of no use trying to
+go on much farther, for the night is cloudy, and there are no stars to
+be seen, and we should lose our way directly, for there is no wind that
+would serve as a guide as to which way we were travelling. When we find
+a good shelter, we must stop with them; and I will make my way down to
+the place where the horses are, and warn the men as to what has
+happened, and tell them to lie quiet till I come again. I will bring
+back whatever food they may have with them, a big jug of water, and the
+four horse cloths."
+
+"I will go, master."
+
+"I would rather go myself, Roger. I am accustomed to traverse the moors
+at night, and am sure that I can find this place again, without
+difficulty."
+
+On nearing the top of the hill, they came upon a number of rough
+stones.
+
+"We cannot do better than stop here," Oswald said. "It will be bare on
+the top of the hill. Now, Roger, help me to pile a few of these stones
+together, so as to make a sort of shelter."
+
+They set to work at once, Roger's strength enabling him to lift stones
+that ordinary men could scarcely have moved. In a quarter of an hour a
+little inclosure, six feet long by four wide and three high, had been
+constructed. An armful of dry heather was then pulled up, and laid on
+the ground.
+
+"There, girls, I think you will be able to manage to keep yourselves
+warm, by lying close together."
+
+"What are you going to do, Oswald?"
+
+"We shall be all right; and we can, if we like, make another shelter;
+and, if we feel cold, can walk about to warm ourselves. Now, Roger, get
+half a dozen sticks and lay across the top."
+
+While Roger was away getting the sticks, Oswald helped the girls over
+the wall, for no entrance had been left.
+
+"Now, Janet, give me those two wet smocks; I see that you have brought
+them with you."
+
+"What do you want them for, Oswald?"
+
+"I want them for the roof, Janet. It is beginning to freeze hard, and
+it is of no use having walls, if you have not a roof."
+
+"Won't you take my cloak, instead?"
+
+"Certainly not, Janet, you will want your cloak for a covering. Don't
+be silly, but hand them over."
+
+By this time, Roger had returned with the sticks. They were laid across
+the top, and the girls' smocks spread over them.
+
+"Now, go to sleep," Oswald said; "we must be on foot, an hour before
+dawn."
+
+Oswald then started down the hill for Parton. When he got within a mile
+of the town, he could see lights moving about on the road; and guessed
+that the Bairds had got torches, and were making sure that the
+fugitives had not hidden themselves anywhere close to the road; for
+they must have felt certain that they could not have reached the town,
+before being overtaken. When the lights had gone along the road, he
+descended to the river, took off his doublet and shirt, as before, and
+swam over; crossed the road, and was not long in finding the trees that
+marked the spot where he was to turn off to the farmhouse.
+
+He made his way to the stable, raised the latch, and entered. A lamp
+was burning, and the two men sitting and talking together. They leapt
+up, with an exclamation of pleasure, as Oswald entered.
+
+"We were afraid that something might have gone wrong; for, as I was
+waiting for you in the road, I heard a body of horsemen coming along,
+and hid behind the trees. As they went by, one of them said, 'We must
+have passed them long ago, if they came by this road. They had not more
+than a quarter of an hour's start.'
+
+"I heard no more, but it suggested that, maybe, you had managed to
+escape with the ladies, and that the Bairds were in pursuit of you."
+
+"That was exactly the case. We have got them out of the hold, and
+methought that we should have got two hours' start, at least, in which
+case they would not have overtaken us before we had crossed the Liddel,
+at the ford, six miles above the junction of the Esk with it, and were
+well on our road towards Longtown; but by some accident, I know not
+what, the matter was discovered before we have been gone ten minutes.
+As it was certain that they would overtake us, long before we got to
+Parton, we swam the Esk, and I have left the ladies on the hill over
+there, in charge of Roger, while I came here. We know that, by morning,
+the countryside will be up and searching the hills; and that, with the
+two lasses, it would be hopeless for us to try and make our way on to
+Hiniltie.
+
+"Therefore, we decided to hide up for two or three days, then to make
+our way down here at night, mount, and ride through. By that time the
+search down in the valley here will have slackened, and we shall get
+through Parton all right, and our only danger will be at the ford
+across the Liddel; where, possibly, the Bairds may set a guard, lest we
+find our way down there. I had intended that we should take the four
+horses, and that you should make your way to Hiniltie across the hills;
+but as there will now be no great occasion for speed, one of you had
+best ride with us, while the other bears the news to Hiniltie that we
+have carried off the girls.
+
+"You had better settle between yourselves which shall go with us. You
+may take it that there is about equal danger, both ways, for the one
+that goes to Hiniltie must travel cautiously, as it will be a week
+before the Bairds give up the search among the hills."
+
+"We had best decide by lot."
+
+Oswald picked up a piece of straw, and broke off two fragments, one an
+inch longer than the other; and, closing his hand on them, he held the
+two ends out.
+
+"Do you draw," he said, holding it out to Fergus. "The longest straw
+goes to Hiniltie, and shortest with us."
+
+The man drew.
+
+"I have the longest," he said, "and perhaps it were best that it should
+be so, for I know the way thoroughly, having often been over the hills
+in search of missing cattle."
+
+"You will both remain here, till we come. Now, what food have you?"
+
+"We bought a supply in Parton, yesterday evening, and have enough for a
+week; for we thought that some might be needed by the whole party, on
+our way; and moreover, we care not to go down often to the town, as we
+might attract attention."
+
+"That is good. Keep enough for tomorrow, for yourselves; I will take
+the rest."
+
+"There is no need for that. We can get what we want from the house and,
+tomorrow evening, one of us will go down into Parton again."
+
+"Or better still," Oswald said, "give the money to the hind here. I
+suppose there is one."
+
+"Yes; he sleeps in the house."
+
+"Give him money, then, and a present for himself, and get him to fetch
+it for you. Some of the Bairds may remain there, and you may be sure
+that every stranger will be strictly questioned. I want also the four
+horse cloths, which please make into a bundle. Is your water skin
+full?"
+
+"We filled it this afternoon, thinking it possible that we might make a
+hasty start tonight."
+
+"How much does it hold?"
+
+"About two gallons."
+
+"It would have been better had it been four. However, we must manage
+with it. Now, do you know of any ford across the river? for I certainly
+could not swim across, with this load."
+
+"There is one half a mile farther up. We were asking the hind about it,
+the other day, thinking that it might be useful should we have to fly
+suddenly. I will go down with you; and indeed, I shall be glad to go
+the whole way with you, for the provisions and those blankets and the
+skin will be no light weight; and, as I am going to Hiniltie, it will
+cheer Armstrong if I could tell him that I saw his daughters."
+
+"It would be a good plan, Fergus, though in truth the weight would be
+no great burden; but certainly, Armstrong would be pleased to know that
+you had seen his daughters."
+
+A few minutes later they set out, forded the river breast high,
+carrying the loads on their heads; and then, climbing the hill, made
+their way to the shelter, whose exact position Oswald had marked, on
+starting, by a huge boulder that stood on the crest of the hill, some
+fifty feet above it.
+
+Roger was on the lookout. Seeing two figures approaching, when he
+expected but one, he grasped his staff firmly.
+
+"Who comes there?" he asked.
+
+"It is I, Roger. I have brought one of the men with me, to help carry
+the things. He is going to Hiniltie, and thought that Armstrong would
+be pleased to know he had seen his daughters. I have got plenty of
+food, and a skin of water."
+
+"That is capital," Roger said cheerfully. "I was fearing that, having
+so many things to think of, you might forget water."
+
+Oswald went to the shelter.
+
+"Are you awake, Janet?"
+
+"Yes," she replied. "I have been anxious, while you were away."
+
+"Are you cold?"
+
+"I am not very warm," she answered; "but do not trouble about it, we
+shall do very well."
+
+"I have two blankets here," he said, as he removed the covering. "One
+of these I will put over you both, and tuck it well in, each side, to
+keep out the wind that comes in between the stones. Then I will lay
+your smocks over that. I wrung them well, before putting them on the
+sticks; and although I cannot say they are dry, yet they are not damp
+enough to matter, and will help keep you warm. The other blanket I will
+put over the sticks."
+
+"Thank you indeed, Oswald," the girl said, gratefully. "That feels very
+much more comfortable."
+
+"Now, Roger, there is a blanket for you, and one for me, to wrap round
+us, plaid fashion."
+
+"I do not need one, master. In faith, I have more respect for this gown
+than I ever had before--it is wondrously warm and, with the hood over
+my head, I want nothing more."
+
+"That is all very well, Roger. If you don't need it for your shoulders,
+you need it for your legs; for being without hose, and with nought but
+those sandals, you must be freezing. We will walk up and down here, for
+a bit, and do you wrap it round your legs, like a Highlander's
+petticoat. When we have tired ourselves, we will lie down and try to
+get a sleep, for an hour or two."
+
+As they walked, they talked over their plans; and Oswald decided that,
+before daybreak, he would set out on the search for a place of
+concealment.
+
+"I will leave my helmet and breast and back piece behind me," he said,
+"and will take your staff. Then, if I am caught sight of by any party
+in the distance, I shall look like a shepherd; while, had I on my iron
+harness, they would at once suspect me of being of the party, even
+though I were alone. As for you, your monk's robe would be detected,
+miles off."
+
+"I could leave it behind me," Roger said.
+
+"You have not much on underneath, Roger; and your bareness, in such
+weather as this, would be as noticeable as your gown. Mind, before it
+gets light, get the ladies up, and carry our bag of victuals and the
+water skin over the crest. You may be sure that, as soon as it is
+light, there will be many sharp eyes watching the hillside, all along
+here."
+
+The man who had come up with them had already wrapped himself in the
+blanket he had brought with him, had crawled in among the bushes, and
+was, as they could hear by his heavy breathing, already sound asleep.
+After a time Oswald said that, as they had nothing more to settle, he
+would try and get a few hours' rest. There was not the slightest fear
+of surprise, and Roger and he were not long before they were both sound
+asleep. Oswald woke two or three times and, at first sign of dawn,
+shook Roger.
+
+"You had better wake the ladies, in a few minutes, Roger, and get them
+over the crest. Let their man, as soon as he has seen them, start at
+once, keeping along behind the ridge, and warn him not to go down into
+the valley until he is fully a mile beyond Parton. Tell him to look
+carefully along the road, before he begins to descend, and to see that
+it is clear. Even then, let him hide as much as may be, behind
+brushwood and rock, until he gets down. When he has swum the river, let
+him make a wide detour round Parton, so as to come down to the stables
+without being noticed.
+
+"I shall not be very long away. 'Tis scarce likely, among these hills,
+that I shall find any place that we can crawl into; and I think we
+shall have to content ourselves with lying down among the heather. I
+must find a spot where no one, on any hill above, can look down on us.
+We shall be quite safe from any party moving along on the same level as
+ourselves."
+
+Oswald had gone but a little distance, when he determined that no
+better place could be found than the plateau itself. This extended, for
+two or three hundred yards from the edge, looking down into the valley.
+Beyond, the ground sloped sharply down again into a deep hollow; and
+beyond, it was broken into rounded swells, rising one above another. A
+party lying among the heather, where he was standing, could not be seen
+by watchers from any other point. Moreover, it was most important that
+all should be in shelter before it was fairly daylight. He therefore,
+as soon as it was light enough to take in the principal features of the
+scene, hurried back to his companions.
+
+"We can do no better, girls, than to lie down together, two hundred
+yards away. Pick your way through the bushes where they are thinnest,
+so as not to disturb them. Please be off at once, and choose a spot
+close to where the ground falls away, on the other side. Roger and I
+must tumble this shelter down, and scatter the sticks; for if anyone
+searching the hillside came along, he would guess that we had slept
+here, and there would be a hue and cry at once."
+
+The man had left, sometime before, for the valley; having gone off as
+soon as he had spoken to the girls. Oswald and Roger ran down to the
+shelter, speedily threw the stones into a heap, and scattered the
+sticks; then, after glancing round to see that nothing had been left,
+they collected the blankets, provisions, and water skin; and, taking up
+these and Oswald's armour, ran in the direction that Oswald had pointed
+out to the girls.
+
+The ground was thickly covered with heather, and they had to step
+carefully to avoid pressing it down. They reached the edge of the
+plateau without seeing the girls and, after looking round for a minute
+or two, Oswald called aloud.
+
+He was answered by a merry laugh, and Jessie's head rose above the
+heather. They had, indeed, passed within five or six yards of the
+girls.
+
+"That is good, indeed," Oswald said, as he lay down beside them. "If I
+could not see you, when I was sure that you were quite near, there is
+no fear of any searchers lighting upon you.
+
+"The sun has just risen, and a mist still hangs on the top of the
+hills," he went on; "and I am convinced that we cannot have been seen,
+for men placed on the watch are sure to be high up on the hills, and it
+will be some time yet before the sun rises high enough to drive away
+the mist."
+
+Although it was freezing sharply, they felt by no means cold as they
+lay, wrapped in their blankets, with the heather rising well above
+them, and sheltering them from a light breeze that had sprung up at
+sunrise. After chatting with the girls for a time, Roger and Oswald
+left them and, crawling along on their stomachs, got to the edge of the
+descent.
+
+By this time the sun was well above the hills, the mist had cleared
+off, and they had an extensive view. From time to time they caught
+sight of groups of three or four mounted men moving about, searching
+the valleys; while single men, on foot, rambled over the hills.
+
+"They are keeping up an active search, Roger. 'Tis well that we went no
+farther. They will scarce suspect us of lying close to the valley we
+left. I expect the main body has gone much farther. I have no doubt the
+Bairds have a couple of hundred men and boys out. They would call out
+every man and boy from their holdings, and most likely get a couple of
+score of men from their village, and perhaps twice as many from Parton.
+No doubt they will think that, if we came in this direction, we should,
+last night, have found our way to one of the tracks across the hills,
+and it is near these that their search will be the keenest.
+Fortunately, they cannot know that I am here, nor guess that it is to
+Yardhope that we intend to take them, and not to Hiniltie. Still, they
+may expect that we shall try to cross the border, and I fancy we shall
+scarcely get through without a fight."
+
+"All the better," Roger grumbled. "My fingers tingle to bring down this
+staff on the head of some of the Bairds, after all the trouble they
+have given us."
+
+They remained watching until it became dusk, except that, twice during
+the day, they crawled back and partook of a meal with the girls. The
+last time they joined them, Oswald said:
+
+"Now, in half an hour it will be quite dark, and then we can safely get
+up and walk about for a bit. I am sure you must feel stiff, lying still
+so long."
+
+"I have never kept quiet for so long a time, since I can remember,"
+Jessie said, laughing.
+
+"That shows that you have had no illnesses, Jessie. However, I shall be
+glad to get up and stretch my limbs, myself. Half an hour will be
+enough, and then we will have a good, long night. Another day of it,
+and I think it will be safe to start."
+
+The next afternoon they saw a number of parties searching the hills, in
+all directions.
+
+"I expect they have become convinced that we have not tried to get
+straight through, Roger, and are hunting back for us. It is as well
+that it will be dark in another half hour, and they will then have to
+give up their search, for the night. If there were a couple of hours
+more light, I should feel very uneasy."
+
+"So should I, master. You and I would have little chance of mercy, if
+we fell into their hands. It might well be that, in their anger, they
+might slay the ladies, also."
+
+"That would be like enough, Roger. However, there can be no chance of
+their coming here, before it is dark."
+
+At nine o'clock they started, and made their way down, with some
+difficulty and many slips and falls, into the valley. Then they kept
+along near the river, till Oswald was sure they were close to the ford.
+He bade them halt here, and went forward alone. Before he had gone
+fifty yards, he nearly stumbled against a man.
+
+"Is it you, John?"
+
+"Yes, it is I."
+
+"Is all well?"
+
+"It is all well, but I had a fright, yesterday morning. The Bairds
+searched every cottage and hut over the hills, on this side, and they
+say their men rode almost as far as Galloway; but they gave up the
+search before they got here, feeling assured that they must have passed
+you, very soon after you left the hold, and you could never have got as
+far down as this."
+
+"'Tis well they did not search, indeed," Oswald said. "Your story about
+the horses might do well enough, for those who have no interest in the
+matter, but it would never have done for the Bairds. All has been quiet
+today?"
+
+"They seem to have given up searching on this side. I hear that they
+feel sure, now, the ladies have made for Hiniltie; and they have had
+great forces out among the hills, and feel confident that they must
+catch them soon."
+
+"Have you got the horses saddled?"
+
+"They are saddled, and brought down close to the road. Fergus is with
+them."
+
+"Then bring them across, at once. The sooner we are off now, the
+better. Are there any of the Bairds' men in the town?"
+
+"There are a few of them, but as no one has any idea that you are like
+to pass through there, they will not be on the lookout. Besides, all
+will have been among the hills, from daybreak this morning; and I
+expect, by this time, there is scarce a soul awake in Parton."
+
+Oswald returned to the girls, and they went out together to the ford.
+In a couple of minutes the men were seen making their way across,
+riding two horses, and leading the others.
+
+"We thank you heartily," Janet said, "for having so risked your lives
+for us; for, had you been caught with the four horses, they would at
+once have connected you with us, and it would have gone hard with you."
+
+"We have been keeping away from the horses, yesterday and today, just
+going to a distance and lying down where, without being seen ourselves,
+we could watch anyone who went up to the farm. We could have done no
+good, and thought that it was better that we should be able to warn
+you, if they had come and taken the horses away."
+
+After crossing the river, Fergus at once started, on foot, for
+Hiniltie.
+
+They had already discussed how they should ride, and it had been
+settled that, at starting, Janet should ride the fourth horse; and that
+Jessie should ride behind the others, by turns. If an attack was
+threatened, Jessie was to mount behind her sister, and they were to
+take their place between Oswald and Roger, while their own man rode
+close behind them.
+
+It was just ten o'clock as they rode through Parton. Not a light was to
+be seen. The whole place appeared wrapt in sleep. They went through at
+a walk, so that, if any heard them, they would suppose that it was a
+belated party of the searchers, and would give the matter no further
+thought.
+
+After riding for a short distance, they put the horses into a trot.
+Four hours later they halted, at the point where the road down the Esk
+valley divided, one going to the ferry a few hundred yards farther on,
+while the other turned to the left, and followed the bank of the
+Liddel.
+
+John had inquired about the ferry, and learned that the ferryboat no
+longer plied, as, since the troubles began, there was so little traffic
+that it did not pay the ferryman to remain there. As they had already
+decided to cross by the ford, four miles higher up, this did not
+matter. As none of them was aware of its exact position, they decided
+to wait where they were, until daylight.
+
+Searching about, they found a deserted hut, with a shed adjoining it.
+The horses were led into this, and the party then gathered in the hut,
+and John struck a light, while Oswald and Roger broke up a fallen gate,
+and the fire was soon blazing. Although there was not the slightest
+chance of anyone travelling the road, at this hour, they hung one of
+the thick blankets across the window, thus keeping out the cold air, as
+well as preventing the light from being seen. Then the party lay down,
+the men taking it by turns to stand guard outside, being relieved every
+two hours.
+
+As soon as day dawned they again mounted. It was about four miles' ride
+to the point where the road divided, one branch going towards the
+river, some seventy or eighty yards away. Here stood a square building
+of some size, used as a refuge by travellers who arrived when the
+Liddel was swollen, and the ford impracticable.
+
+When the riders had come within a few yards of this building, two men,
+hearing the sound of horses' hoofs, came out. As their eye fell upon
+the party they gave a shout, ran out into the road, and drew their
+swords.
+
+Roger and Oswald rode at them. Parrying a thrust of one of the men,
+Oswald cut him down; while Roger, with a tremendous blow from his
+staff, stretched the other man on the road.
+
+"Ride on, girls! We will follow you," Oswald shouted.
+
+Jessie was sitting behind John, and they and Janet dashed forward, and
+rode into the water. Oswald and Roger followed, as six men, armed with
+spear and sword, ran out from the house. Seeing that they were too
+late, the leader shouted to the others: "Fetch out the horses, and
+chase them!" and, before the party had gained the opposite bank, their
+pursuers dashed into the water.
+
+"Don't press your horses too hardly," Oswald said, as they galloped
+along. "They are too close behind us for us to get help from any of the
+small villages, but they dare not follow us into Longtown, and we have
+barely a ten miles' ride."
+
+They had some two hundred yards' start, and for the first four miles
+held their own; then their pursuers began to gain upon them. One of the
+horses was carrying double, and Roger and Oswald were both heavier than
+any of the moss troopers.
+
+"We shall have a fight for it, Roger."
+
+"That is just what I was thinking, master. Well, there are three of us;
+and, as there are only six of them, we ought not to have much trouble.
+John will be a match for one. Methinks you and I can each make short
+work of a man when they first come up; and with but three of them
+against two, it will be mere child's play."
+
+The road was a narrow one, and little used; and, when they came to the
+foot of a sharp rise, Oswald called to those ahead to stop.
+
+"Jump down, Jessie, and mount behind Janet, and ride on ahead. We will
+soon get rid of these fellows. Be quick!"
+
+The moss troopers were now but seventy or eighty yards behind.
+
+"I shall fight on foot," Roger said, as he leapt off his horse. "I want
+both hands, for this staff."
+
+Turning his horse, and bidding John to do the same, Oswald reined back
+his animal three or four lengths; and when the Bairds' party were
+within twenty yards, touched it with his spur and dashed at them,
+meeting them just abreast of Roger. The first man he met thrust at him
+with his spear, but Oswald parried with his sword, and with a
+back-handed blow smote the man just under the chin, and he fell with a
+crash from his horse. At the same moment he heard a blow like that of a
+smith's hammer, as Roger's staff fell upon the steel cap of the first
+who attacked him.
+
+John was less fortunate, for his opponent's spear struck him in the
+throat, and he fell heavily from his saddle.
+
+"Well stricken, Jock!" one of them shouted. "Ride on after the women.
+We will settle with these fellows."
+
+But before the moss trooper could obey the order, Oswald, with a touch
+of the spur and the bridle, caused his horse to curvet round, and smote
+the man so mighty a blow on the shoulder as well-nigh to sever his arm
+from his body. As he wheeled his horse again he was nigh unseated, by a
+spear thrust that struck him on the breast piece; but, upon recovering,
+he struck his opponent, as he passed, so heavy a blow in the face, with
+the pommel of his sword, that he sent him senseless to the ground.
+
+The other two men had furiously attacked Roger, but, whirling his staff
+round his head, he had kept them both at bay; then the staff descended
+between the ears of one of the horses, which fell headlong; and before
+the rider could get his foot from the stirrup, the staff struck him
+below the steel cap, just in front of the ear, and without a cry he
+fell dead beside his horse. At that the last of the moss troopers
+turned his horse, and galloped off at full speed.
+
+"We have not taken long over that, master," Roger said, with a grim
+smile. "Five men in a minute is not so bad."
+
+"I am afraid John is killed, Roger. See to him."
+
+"Ay, he is sped," Roger replied, as he turned the body over. "The spear
+struck him full in the throat. That is what comes of not learning to
+use your weapons. What shall we do with him?"
+
+"He was a faithful fellow, Roger, and as there is no need for haste
+now, we will give him some sort of burial, and not let him lie here in
+the road."
+
+"We have nought to dig a grave with," Roger remarked.
+
+"No, but there are plenty of stones about."
+
+He dismounted, and with Roger's help carried the dead man a short
+distance away, laid him down by the side of a great boulder, and then
+piled stones around and over him.
+
+"That will do, Roger. 'Tis not like that anyone will disturb those
+stones, for years to come. He will rest as well there as if he lay in a
+grave. Now, let us look to the others."
+
+The man he had struck across the throat, and the last Roger had hit,
+were both dead. Two of the others were but stunned, while the one upon
+whose shoulder Roger's blow had fallen was lying insensible, and
+evidently was fast bleeding to death.
+
+"We can do naught for him," Oswald said. "Even had we the king's leech
+here, we could not save him. Now let us be off."
+
+"Shall we take the horses, master?"
+
+"No, they will be but an encumbrance; and now that poor fellow has
+gone, we have one apiece. Bring his horse along with you."
+
+Mounting, they rode quickly on, and at the top of the hill came up with
+the girls; who, having seen the result of the combat, had waited for
+them.
+
+"Now we are safe and free, thanks to you both," Janet said. "Jessie
+looked back, and saw the fight as we rode. How quickly it was over! But
+I am grieved, indeed, that John has fallen. We saw you carrying off his
+body, and covering it. Jessie had noticed him fall, and we feared 'twas
+all over with him. He was an old retainer of our father's, and a
+faithful one."
+
+"I am sorry, indeed, that he has been slain, Janet; but we could hardly
+expect to come out altogether scatheless."
+
+"Are all the others killed?" Jessie asked.
+
+"No. Two of them are but stunned; and will, ere long, be able to mount
+and ride off again."
+
+"Master Oswald has gained the most honours in the fight. I killed one,
+and stunned another. He has stunned one also, but has slain two."
+
+"I had a better arm, Roger."
+
+"I know not that," Roger replied. "A quarterstaff, of that weight, is a
+fine weapon. I say not that it is to be compared to a mace but, when on
+foot, I would as lief have it as a sword."
+
+"Now, Jessie, do you mount John's horse. We can ride quietly, for
+Longtown is but some three miles ahead."
+
+They rested there for a couple of hours, then mounted again, and
+crossed the Pentlands by a horse track between Cristindury and Gele
+Craigs. Coming down into Tynedale, they put up for the night at the
+first place they came to. At daybreak they set off northwards, crossed
+Reddesdale, and came down, in the afternoon, into the valley of the
+Coquet, within two miles of Yardhope.
+
+Great indeed was the surprise and joy of John Forster and his wife,
+when they made out the two girls riding, with Oswald, towards the hold.
+
+"What miracle is this, lad?" the former said, while his wife was
+embracing her nieces. "We heard, but two days since, of the raid on the
+Armstrongs, and how the girls were carried off by the Bairds."
+
+Here Oswald put his finger to his lips, to stop him from saying aught
+of Jane Armstrong's death. He had, after dismounting, whispered in his
+mother's ear, before she had time to speak to the girls, that as yet
+they knew nought of their mother's death, and that he had left it to
+her to break it to them.
+
+"I have been, since, scouring the country," his father went on, "to try
+to get my friends to take the matter up; but in truth, they were not
+over willing to do so. All know that it is no slight enterprise to
+attack the Bairds in their stronghold. We fared but badly, last time we
+went there, though that was but a blow and a retreat; but all know that
+the Bairds' hold is not to be taken like a country tower. 'Tis greatly
+bigger and stronger than ours, and scarce to be attempted save by a
+royal army; especially as the whole countryside would be swarming round
+us, in a few hours after we crossed the border. This time, too, it is
+no quarrel of my people; and, as they say, the risk would be indeed
+great, and the loss very heavy.
+
+"I sent off a messenger this morning to Armstrong, to tell him that I
+feared I could not raise more than sixty spears; but with these I would
+ride to Hiniltie, and join any force he could collect, and try with him
+to surprise the Bairds' hold and rescue the girls, though it seemed to
+be a mighty dangerous enterprise."
+
+"He will have learnt, yesterday morning, Father, that we have carried
+them off. We could have brought you the news last night, but to do so
+we must have ridden fast and, the girls being with us, we thought it
+were better to take two days over the journey. So we slept in Tynedale
+last night."
+
+"And how did you manage it? For unless you and Roger flew into the
+Bairds' hold, and carried them off on your backs, I see not how it
+could be managed. Why, the place is so strong that even the Douglases
+have not cared to carry out the terms of the treaty, for the arrest of
+William Baird as a notorious breaker of the truce between the two
+countries."
+
+"It was because I knew Armstrong deemed that it was scarce likely a
+force could be gathered, by you and his friends, strong enough to
+undertake such an enterprise, that we decided to rescue them by
+strategy. The affair turned out to be easy enough."
+
+And he then related, in detail, the manner in which he and Roger had
+obtained entry into the hold, and had succeeded in rescuing his
+cousins.
+
+"By the bones of Saint Oswald, from whom you got your name, lad," John
+Forster exclaimed, when he had finished his story, "you have carried
+out the matter marvellously well! Hotspur himself could not have
+contrived it better; and I own that I was wrong, and that that fancy of
+yours, to be able to read and write, has not done you the damage that I
+feared it would. Henceforth I will maintain, with all my might, that
+these things in no way tend to soften a man; but on the contrary, in
+some way sharpen his wits, and enable him to carry out matters with
+plans, and contrivances, such as would scarce be conceived by men who
+had not such advantage.
+
+"But why do we not go inside?"
+
+"I have been keeping you here, Father, because I doubt not that my
+mother has been breaking the news to the girls, of their mother's
+slaughter. I said nought to them about it. They knew the hold was
+burnt, and I told them that Allan was wounded; but I thought that, if I
+gave them the worst part of the news, it would throw them into such
+deep grief as to unfit them for the journey. It might not have been
+discovered till two hours after we had started that they had escaped,
+and in that case we should have been mounted before the Bairds overtook
+us, and it would have been a ride for life, and the girls would have
+needed all their strength and courage to keep them up."
+
+"It was as well so, Oswald, and doubtless your mother will break it
+more easily to them than you could have done. Women are better at such
+things than men, who are given to speak, bluntly and straight, what has
+to be told."
+
+
+
+Chapter 15: Another Mission To Ludlow.
+
+
+While Oswald was talking with his father, Roger had taken the four
+horses round to the long shed, that ran along one side of the wall; and
+had there been telling the moss troopers the same story Oswald had been
+relating to his father, whom he now joined.
+
+"Well, friend Roger," John Forster said as he came up, shaking him
+heartily by the hand; "by my faith, my son is fortunate in having so
+stout a fellow as his henchman."
+
+"'Tis rather that I am fortunate in having him as a master," Roger
+replied. "I have but to strike as he bids me, and there is no need for
+me to think, for my brain bears no proportion to my bulk; and indeed,
+even in the matter of strength he bids fair to equal me, for he seems
+to me to grow taller and stronger every month; which is not surprising,
+seeing that you are, yourself, much beyond the common. In all this
+matter there is no credit due to me, save that I have, as faithfully as
+I could, carried out his orders."
+
+"All men can try to carry out orders, Roger, but it is not all who can
+do it with intelligence. Doubtless, it has something to do with the
+book learning that you have, and in which you were his instructor."
+
+"I think not that it is so, in any way, Master Forster," Roger replied
+quickly, for he liked not the thought that he had gained any advantage,
+whatever, from his stay in the convent. "It might likely be useful to a
+man of small stature, whose thoughts would naturally turn to being a
+scribe, and to making his living by such finicking ways instead of by
+bearing himself as a man should; but for one like myself, 'tis but time
+thrown away. Yet I say not that it may not be useful to Master Oswald,
+who will some day be a knight, and go to court, and have occasion to
+write letters, when he has no scribe at hand to do it for him; but a
+good downright blow is more advantage, to the man that strikes it, than
+all the book learning that he can get."
+
+"I have done well enough without it, Roger; but I think that it must be
+of some use, else why is it that Oswald is so good at devising plans?
+Had I been in his place, when he heard the news of the harrying of
+Hiniltie, and the carrying off of Armstrong's daughters, I should never
+have thought of starting on such an adventure as he did."
+
+"It may be that it may improve the mind, Master Forster, just as
+wielding a mace strengthens the muscles of the arm. I only speak from
+my own experience; and, so far as I can see, all the hours I spent on
+these matters have been as good as wasted."
+
+"Nay, Roger," Oswald, who had been an amused listener to the
+conversation, broke in, "you have had evidence, but lately, that it is
+not so. Had you not been able to read the priest's missal, he would
+have seen, at once, that you were not a monk; but the fact that you did
+so, and that much better and more fluently than he could, himself, have
+read a strange manuscript, was to him a confirmation of your story;
+which not only enabled us to rescue my cousins, but probably saved your
+own skin, to say nothing of mine; for had Baird learned that you were
+deceiving him, he would as likely as not have hung us both over the
+gateway of his hold, as spies."
+
+Roger scratched his head, in some embarrassment.
+
+"I cannot gainsay it, Master Oswald, though I did not think of it
+before; and it is certainly a proof that the time I spent in learning
+was not thrown away; for, as you say, had I not been able to read that
+missal, doubtless it would have gone hard with both of us. I am not
+ashamed to own when I am wrong. It would not be English, or honest, not
+to do so. Reading certainly came in mightily useful, there."
+
+"And you must also remember, Roger," Oswald said with a smile, "that if
+it had not been that you read and wrote, better than most of the other
+monks, the abbot would not have picked you out as my instructor, I
+should not have asked for you to come with me to Scotland, and Sir
+Henry Percy would never have begged the abbot to allow you to go forth
+into the world."
+
+"Say no more, Master Oswald--never again will I say a word against
+reading and writing--I see that they are excellent things, and it never
+entered my thick head how greatly I have benefited by acquiring
+them--but will maintain, against all who say the contrary, that they
+are of great value; and that they in no way tend to soften a man, as I
+can prove in my own person, and also in yours."
+
+At this moment, Mary Forster appeared at the top of the steps.
+
+"Supper is ready," she said. "I have broken the news to the girls. They
+are quite broken hearted, poor things, and I have sent them to bed.
+
+"I suppose you are not leaving us, tomorrow morning, Oswald?"
+
+"No, I shall be off at daybreak, the next day. I must not stay longer,
+for I ought to have been back three days ago, and Sir Henry will be
+wondering what has befallen me."
+
+Talking the matter over, that evening, as to what had best be done with
+the girls, Mary Forster said that they had expressed great anxiety to
+get back, as soon as they could, in order that they might try and
+comfort their father, and nurse Allan; and John Forster said that he
+would ride with them, with four of his men, to Hiniltie, in a day or
+two. The next evening, however, there was a knock at the outside gate;
+and on its being opened, Adam Armstrong himself entered.
+
+"I could not rest, for thinking of the girls," he said, as he entered
+the house. "The man arrived safely, yesterday morning, after having,
+with great difficulty, made his way unobserved through the Bairds, who
+had some fifty or sixty men scattered, all over the hills."
+
+"Do you go to them, Wife, and tell them that their father has arrived.
+
+"They have been terribly upset," John went on, as his wife left the
+room. "They were only told of the loss of their mother after they
+arrived, yesterday. Oswald thought that they would need all their
+strength for the journey, and that it were better that Mary should
+break the news to them, when they got here. We have all felt for you
+sorely, Adam, since your messenger brought the news."
+
+Armstrong pressed his hand, silently.
+
+"She was a good wife to me, John, a right good wife. We buried what
+seemed to be her remains, yesterday morning. It was that, that kept me
+from starting the moment the man came in with the news that Oswald had
+got the girls out of the hands of the Bairds."
+
+"And how is Allan?"
+
+"I trust he will get right, now. He has come partly to his senses,
+though he is still dazed. We had him carried, in a litter, to the
+monastery where I obtained the monk's robe for your man; for I feared
+to leave him in the village, lest the Bairds, furious at the escape of
+the girls, might return to finish their work."
+
+He was about to speak to Oswald, when the door opened, and the girls
+ran in, and it was some time before Adam Armstrong again turned to him.
+
+"Now, lad," he said, "do not think, because I am a long time coming to
+the point, that I think lightly of the service you have rendered me.
+Ah, lad! I could scarce believe my ears, when Fergus told me that you
+and your henchman had got the lasses out of the Bairds' hands, and had
+gone off on horseback with them. I had to put the question, again and
+again, as to whether he was sure that it was really the girls you had
+with you. It seemed to me to be altogether impossible; but I had to
+believe him, at last, though how it came about he could not tell me."
+
+"We had no time for talking," Oswald said. "Every moment was of
+importance. But the matter was simple enough, and worth but a few
+words' telling."
+
+And he then related the manner in which he and Roger had obtained
+entrance to the hold, and had succeeded in getting the girls away.
+
+"It sounds simple enough, in the telling," Armstrong said; "but it
+needed stout hearts, and good nerves, to enter the Bairds' den on such
+an errand. You carried your lives in your hands, and well must you have
+borne out your story, to have passed without suspicion. It was well
+thought of, indeed, and well carried out, and would have done credit to
+the boldest and craftiest leader on the border.
+
+"What say you, John?"
+
+"I am proud of him, Adam. As for myself, I should never have thought of
+such a plan. If I had had the matter in hand, I might have taken twenty
+stout fellows, and tried to scale the walls unseen, and to fall upon
+them with spear and sword, and in the confusion carry the girls off;
+but it would have been a desperate plan, with but small hope of
+success."
+
+"Small indeed, John, small indeed," Armstrong said, shaking his head.
+"With prisoners in the hold, the Bairds were not likely to be caught
+sleeping; and had they been, accustomed to surprises as they are, the
+whole garrison would have been afoot in a minute, and not a man of ye
+would have lived to tell the story. Some such mad thought passed
+through my brain, when I first heard the news, but it was not for long.
+Even with your spears, and others you might gather, and all my friends
+in Tweeddale, we should have had but a small chance of capturing the
+Bairds' hold. We should have had all Annandale and Nithsdale down on
+us, before we could have done it. At any rate, we should have had to
+bide our time, and wait until the Bairds were away to England with all
+their dalesmen; and by that time, none could say what would have become
+of the girls. In fact, there was but one way of doing it, and that is
+the way Oswald hit upon.
+
+"Well, lad, I fear I shall never have an opportunity of repaying the
+debt I owe you; but after this, there is not an Armstrong on the
+border, on our side or yours--for we are half English and half
+Scotch--but will hold you as among our closest of kin, and will give
+you welcome and aid, whensoever you may need it. And where is your man
+Roger?"
+
+"I will call him," Oswald said and, stepping to the door, he shouted to
+his follower; who came out, at once, from one of the outhouses occupied
+by the retainers of the hold.
+
+"Come up, Roger!" Oswald said; "Master Armstrong wishes to see you."
+
+Roger came up and, as he entered, Adam grasped him by the hand.
+
+"Whenever your time for fighting is over, my brave fellow, remember
+that there is a home for you at Hiniltie, so long as an Armstrong
+dwells there. I thought, when I fetched that monk's gown for you, that
+you and my nephew Oswald might be able to gather some news; and let me
+know, possibly, how the girls were faring; but little did I think that,
+alone and unaided, you would rescue them from the hands of the Bairds."
+
+"It was a merry business, Master Armstrong, and pleased me hugely, save
+that it went against my heart to have this bald patch on my head again,
+just when the hair had so well grown and covered it; but it was well
+nigh as good as fighting, to trick the Bairds in their own hold, when
+they, as they thought, were so mightily sure that I was but a harmless
+brother of a monastery. For the rest, it was an easy business, and
+scarce worth talking of."
+
+"It was done easily because it was done well, Roger. It was well
+planned, and well carried out."
+
+"I had nought to do with the planning, and the carrying out was simple
+enough. There were those there who tested me, as to my knowledge of
+Dunbar, and of the monastery I came from, and who further tested my
+knowledge of reading. Once assured that my story was true, they paid no
+further attention to me, believing that I should stay but a day or two,
+to rest myself on my way south."
+
+"You had occasion, however, to use that heavy staff you carried."
+
+"Some slight occasion, but I would that I had had the chance to have
+used it on the heads of some of the Bairds. For what little I did,
+master Armstrong, your daughters thanked me very prettily, and more
+than enough; and therefore, I pray thee, say no more of it.
+
+"And how is your son?"
+
+"He is going on well, and both Meg Margetson and the monks, in whose
+hands I have put him, say that they hope he is out of danger."
+
+The next morning Oswald and Roger mounted, soon after daybreak, and
+rode to Alnwick. It had, the night before, been arranged that the girls
+should, for the present, remain at Yardhope; until the hold at Hiniltie
+was repaired, and put in a state of stronger defence. It was agreed,
+too, that it was as well that no word should be said by Armstrong, on
+his return, as to the whereabouts of his daughters, as the Bairds might
+then, in their anger, make an attack on Yardhope; whereas, at present,
+they could have no reason whatever for suspecting that they were there,
+and, if they obtained news that they were not with their father at
+Hiniltie, would suppose that they had been lodged with some of the
+family elsewhere, or perhaps placed for safety in Jedburgh.
+
+"I had wondered what had become of you," Hotspur said, when Oswald
+entered his apartments, to report his return. "I expected you two or
+three days since, and I indeed wanted you, for other business."
+
+"I am sorry, my lord; but after having fulfilled the orders you gave
+me, to the governors of Roxburgh and Jedburgh, I became engaged in an
+affair of my uncle, Adam Armstrong, of so pressing a character that I
+deemed you would excuse me, when you heard its nature."
+
+And he then briefly related how he had been occupied, since leaving
+Jedburgh.
+
+"'Tis a good excuse, indeed," Hotspur said, "and you must tell me more
+of it this evening, when the earl and my wife can also hear it. As to
+the business I spoke of, it is of no consequence at all; it was but to
+carry a message to the Earl of Westmoreland. This I have now sent, by
+another hand."
+
+The winter passed quietly. Oswald's work was light. He more than once
+rode home for a few days, and once paid a visit to Hiniltie.
+
+Here a number of men were at work. The exterior walls had in no way
+suffered, and the shell of the central building had so far resisted the
+fire, that it was not necessary to rebuild it. The roof and floors had
+been replaced, and the defences considerably strengthened. A portcullis
+had been placed above the door; so that, in case of the outer wall
+being carried, or the gate forced, it could at once be lowered. A
+projecting battlement had been thrown out over this, with openings
+below, through which boiling lead and pitch could be poured on an enemy
+trying to break in. Flanking turrets, for archers, had been built at
+each corner of the house; and the exterior walls had been strengthened
+by towers, in the centre of each face, and on either side of the
+gateway.
+
+"We shall be safe now, I think, Oswald," said Allan, who had almost
+recovered. "The place can hardly be taken by a sudden attack, even by
+all the forces the Bairds could bring against it; and we could get help
+from Jedburgh, long before they could gain even the outside wall. My
+father and I are going, in a fortnight, to fetch the girls. I rode over
+there a week or two since, and found them looking very well and happy,
+with your people; but of course they are anxious to get back again,
+especially as you are so seldom at home."
+
+"If you will fix the day before I go, I will try to be there to meet
+you. I suppose, as soon as spring sets in fairly, we shall be having
+troubles again, and it is certainly as well that Janet and Jessie
+should be at home again before they begin; for although Yardhope is
+strong enough to resist any attack by the Bairds, or any other border
+rangers, it can scarcely hold out against a regular invasion."
+
+Four days after his return to Alnwick, Oswald was sent for by Percy.
+
+"The Scots do not seem to be moving yet," the latter said, "but
+Glendower is ever increasing in strength, and boldness. I have received
+startling news this morning. A party of Welshmen were seen near Ruthyn,
+and Earl Grey, with a body of mounted men, rode out against them. They
+retired at once, and he, briskly pursuing, fell into an ambush and was
+captured.
+
+"'Twould have been thought that Glendower would have put his chief
+enemy to death, at once, but it was not so, and it is said he holds the
+earl to ransom. Glendower has plenty of men, but no doubt needs money
+sorely. He can draw no revenue from his estates in Denbigh, and those
+in South Wales cannot suffice for the expenses of feeding the body of
+men, always under arms. Doubtless he will ask for a great sum, and 'tis
+like that he will get it. Grey is a favourite of the king, and the
+latter will doubtless aid him, for he needs his services to hold Flint
+and Denbighshire against the Welsh.
+
+"Moreover, methinks that the king would, for another reason, make every
+effort to buy Lord Grey's freedom; for it is no secret that he has no
+great love for Mortimer; for although he holds the young Earl of March
+a prisoner, at Windsor, he cannot forget that the lad is the rightful
+heir to the throne, and that the friends of Richard would place him
+there, had they the opportunity. Mortimer is the boy's uncle and, not
+only from his own estates, but as guardian of the young earl's wide
+possessions in Hereford and in Shropshire, is a very powerful noble.
+
+"The king has no real reason for doubting him, for I know that Mortimer
+has no thought of supporting the Earl of March's claim to the throne;
+having held, with the rest of the kingdom, that Henry, who is wise and
+politic, is a far fitter ruler than the lad could be. Doubtless, Henry
+is well aware of this, but he sees that when the young earl grows to
+manhood he might become dangerous; and might supplant him, as he
+supplanted Richard. Thus, then, I have no doubt the king will use every
+effort to obtain the release of Lord Grey, in order that he may act as
+a counterpoise, in the Welsh marches, to the influence of Mortimer.
+
+"However, that is not now the question. It is evident, by this daring
+deed of Glendower, that he will be busy this year; and the success of
+his first attempt will assuredly add to his following. Therefore, as
+the Scots are, at present, quiet, I would that you ride again to
+Ludlow, and sojourn there a while.
+
+"Sir Edmund sends me but scant news, and I would fain know more closely
+how matters are going there, and how great this insurrection is like to
+grow. It may well be that the Scots, seeing how powerful Glendower is
+becoming, will enter into agreement with him, that while he invades the
+west country, they shall pour across the border with all their forces;
+in which case we should be hard pressed, for the king's power in the
+south might be fully engaged against the Welsh, and we should have to
+battle with the whole strength of Scotland, alone. Therefore, write at
+length, giving me full reports of the talk of the country as to the
+bearing of the Welsh, not only beyond the border, but those settled in
+the west counties.
+
+"You will, of course, take the fighting monk with you; and he can aid
+you in this matter, being a good scholar, though a bad monk; so, when
+you are weary of holding the pen, you can dictate the matter to him. I
+will send two well-mounted couriers with you, and will have relays of
+horses placed on the road, so that you can despatch me a letter once a
+week; and they will also, of course, carry any letters Sir Edmund
+Mortimer may wish to send."
+
+"Very well, Sir Henry. Shall I start today?"
+
+"Nay, the matter is not so urgent as all that."
+
+"Then I will ride tomorrow morning."
+
+"Good.
+
+"I am well pleased with you, Oswald. That affair, in which you rescued
+your cousins, showed that you have discretion and ability, as well as
+skill and courage; and you see, the knowledge that you gained at the
+monastery is coming in useful to you, now. As a mark of my approbation,
+I will order that one of my warhorses shall be saddled, and be in
+readiness for you, in the morning. The steed that Mortimer gave you is
+a good one, but you have need of another; for one may fall lame, or be
+killed or wounded, and 'tis well to have a second string to the bow.
+Moreover, riding as you do in my service, 'tis but meet that I should
+provide you with horseflesh.
+
+"I marked you on your horse today, the one you rode when you came here;
+and in truth, you have outgrown it altogether; and though I doubt not
+that the sturdy little beast would, even yet, carry you for a long
+day's journey, 'tis scarce in accordance with your position as our
+representative."
+
+Oswald thanked Hotspur heartily for the gift, for he, himself, had felt
+that he needed a second charger, but had been reluctant to ask his
+father for the money required to buy one; for the expenses of repairing
+the hold, after the last Scotch invasion, had been heavy, and gold was
+a scarce commodity at Yardhope.
+
+He started at daybreak the next morning, riding the fine horse Hotspur
+had given him. Roger rode behind him, and was followed by the two
+lightly-armed men, who were to act as messengers. One of these led
+Oswald's second horse. As soon as they had left the castle, Oswald
+called Roger up to his side.
+
+"Well, Roger, I dare say you are as pleased as I am, that we are on the
+move again. 'Tis nigh five months since we returned from Ludlow and,
+save for our adventure with the Bairds, we have had a quiet time,
+since."
+
+"Think you there will be work with the Welsh again, master?"
+
+"I think so, indeed, Roger. They say that Glendower's forces are
+greatly increasing, and he has captured Lord Grey, and holds him to
+ransom. The king must regret, now, that Parliament refused to listen to
+Glendower's complaints, because he had been one of Richard's men, and
+had perhaps spoken more hotly than was prudent, touching the king's
+murder."
+
+"But they say that Richard is still alive, and that he is with the
+Scots."
+
+"They may say so, Roger, but think you that it is likely? The king's
+figure was well known to hundreds of men. Why does he not show himself?
+Even in Scotland there are many nobles who, during the truces between
+the kingdoms, have been to London, and have known King Richard; and had
+this man been he, they would have recognized him, at once. Besides,
+think you that when the king had Richard caged, in Pomfret, there was
+any chance of his getting free again? It may suit Albany, at present,
+to set up some puppet or other, in order to cause uneasiness to Henry,
+and to render Richard's friends here unwilling to obey the orders of
+the king, and to take the field against the Scots; but had he been
+Richard, 'tis not in Scotland that he would have shown himself, but in
+France, where he would gladly have been received, as Anne of Bohemia's
+husband, and would have had aid and support to urge his claims."
+
+"Well, master, I care not what takes us to Wales. At any rate, I am
+glad to journey thither; for it seems, at present, as if there, only,
+is there a chance of giving and taking hard knocks. How is it that you
+do not take a party of men-at-arms, as you did last time?"
+
+"Mortimer has plenty of men, without them, and the handful that Percy
+can spare would be of little use. I am going principally because
+Hotspur is anxious to be kept well informed of what happens in the
+west, for he feels sure that, if Glendower's power increases, it will
+be needful to send a strong English army there. The Scots will make a
+great invasion, and it will behove all the northern counties, and
+lords, to hold themselves in readiness."
+
+They travelled fast and, in five days after leaving Alnwick, arrived at
+Ludlow.
+
+"Welcome back again, Master Oswald!" Sir Edmund said, when he arrived.
+"I thought that maybe Sir Henry Percy would send you hither. Matters
+here are becoming serious, and 'tis said that there have been Scotch
+emissaries with Glendower, though for the truth of this I cannot
+answer; but Percy will certainly wish to know, well, what passes in the
+west; and I am but a poor hand with the pen, and moreover, too much
+busied to write often. He knows that right well, and I doubt not you
+are instructed to inform him of all that passes."
+
+"You are right, Sir Edmund. It is for that purpose that he has sent me
+hither, charging me to write to him, frequently, as to the situation
+and the power of Glendower; which must needs be on the increase, since
+nought has been done to bring him to reason. And I have also his
+commands, to place myself at your service, and to obey you, in all
+respects, as if I had been your squire."
+
+"I shall be glad for you to ride with my knights," Sir Edmund replied,
+courteously. "I have not forgotten that you did good service, last
+year, and trust that you may find opportunity for winning your spurs."
+
+"I shall be glad, indeed, to do so, Sir Edmund. May I ask where
+Glendower is supposed to be, at present?"
+
+"He has his headquarters on the summit of Plinlimmon, a great hill on
+the borders of Montgomery; and thence ravages and plunders all the
+country round him, slaying all who are supposed to be attached to the
+English cause. Unfortunately, he meets with but little resistance, for
+the castles have, for the most part, been suffered to get into a bad
+state; since, for a hundred years, it has seemed that they would no
+longer be required against the Welsh, who appeared to have become as
+peaceful as the people in our own counties. Many of the knights have
+built themselves more convenient houses, and have let the castles
+become almost ruins.
+
+"Then, too, the garrisons, where garrisons are kept, are for the most
+part composed of Welshmen. These can be no longer trusted, and it is no
+easy matter to obtain Englishmen in their places, for so great is the
+terror caused by the slaughter, by Glendower, of those who fall into
+his hands, that few even of adventurous spirit would, at present, care
+to leave their homes beyond the Severn, to take up such desperate
+service. Glendower's movements are so rapid that there is no notice of
+his coming, and it is not until he and his band suddenly appear,
+burning and slaughtering, that any know of his approach."
+
+"Surely it must be difficult to victual so large a force, on the summit
+of a mountain?"
+
+"It would assuredly be so, only he keeps but a hundred and fifty chosen
+men with him. But, were his beacon fires to be lighted, there would in
+a few hours be ten thousand men on the mountain. Then again, as the
+whole population are with him, were I to start with five hundred men
+from here, the news would reach him, by means of smokes on the hills,
+before I had marched five miles away. 'Tis a warfare in which there is
+no credit to be gained, and much loss to be sustained; and I see not
+that, with anything less than an army large enough to march through
+Wales from end to end, burning the towns and villages, and putting to
+the sword all who resist, the affair can be brought to an end.
+
+"It was only thus that Harold brought Wales to reason, and that so
+strongly that it was two generations ere they ventured again to cross
+the border. It was so that Edward finally stamped out their rebellions,
+and methinks that the work will have to be done again, in the same
+manner. So far from doing good, the king's invasion last autumn has but
+encouraged them; for, though so numerous, his army effected nothing,
+and showed the Welsh how powerless the troops were to enter the
+mountains, or to take the offensive anywhere save on level ground."
+
+Oswald's life, at Ludlow, differed in no way from that at Alnwick. He
+took his meals at the high table, sitting below the knights, with Sir
+Edmund's squires. He practised arms with them; tilted in the courtyard
+of the castle; occasionally rode out, hunting and hawking, with a party
+of knights and ladies; helped to drill the bodies of tenants who, a
+hundred at a time, came in to swell the garrison. Sometimes he carried
+Mortimer's orders to the governors of the castles, or rode with a
+strong party into Hereford or Radnor.
+
+A short time after his arrival, Montgomery was taken by storm by
+Glendower; and all Englishmen, and Welshmen suspected of friendship for
+the English, slain. Shortly afterwards, the suburbs of Welshpool were
+burnt by him, to the great loss of the Earl of Powys; whose annoyance
+was all the greater, since most of his own tenants were under arms,
+with Glendower. Following hard upon these pieces of bad news came word
+that he had fallen upon the Abbey of Cwmhir, six miles from Rhayader,
+in Radnorshire, which he entirely destroyed. The news caused great
+indignation, and the reason for this sacrilegious act was warmly
+discussed at the castle.
+
+"The reason, methinks," Sir Edmund said, after he had listened to the
+knights for some time, "is twofold. In the first place the
+ecclesiastics, for the most part, and the monks of all the orders save
+the Franciscans, favoured King Henry against Richard; but the chief
+reason is the long animosity between the Church and the Bards, of whom
+Glendower is a great patron; and who have done him great service, by
+stirring up the people with their songs. The bards have ever been
+foremost in instigating insurrections in Wales. Edward the First
+attempted to suppress them altogether, and his edict for executing
+them, by martial law, is still unrepealed; and they dare not venture to
+show themselves, in any castle or town held by us. But they have, to a
+man, rallied round Glendower. His house was always open to them, and he
+was even distinguished by some Welsh name, meaning the protector of the
+bards. Now, after being hunted fugitives for so many years, they have,
+no doubt, used their influence with him to stir him up against the
+religious houses."
+
+But a heavier blow still was struck by Glendower, and the feeling at
+Ludlow was nothing short of consternation, when a fugitive arrived from
+the town of New Radnor, saying that the strong castle there had been
+carried by assault, the garrison of three-score men all beheaded, and
+the town laid in ashes. This was the heaviest blow yet struck by
+Glendower. The castle was of great strength, and the town had been
+walled by the Lords of the Marches. That such a place should have been
+carried by Welsh kerns seemed well-nigh incredible, and the execution
+of the whole of the garrison aroused the most lively indignation.
+
+"This is war to the knife, indeed," Sir Edmund Mortimer said; "and yet,
+abhorrent as is this wholesale murder of the garrison, I cannot but own
+that it is a politic step, on the part of Glendower. The news will
+spread throughout Wales, and if so strong a place as New Radnor could
+not defend itself, how can lesser castles hope to do so? Nor, indeed,
+will garrisons care to man the walls, since resistance means death.
+Doubtless there were many Welsh among these men who were murdered, and
+you may be sure that their compatriots, in other castles, will hasten
+to desert and join Glendower."
+
+This, indeed, proved to be the case, the garrisons of the castles
+dwindled away, and hold after hold fell without resistance. Even in
+Ludlow, every precaution was taken; all Welshmen were expelled from the
+town, and the garrison was also purged of them, although some of the
+men-at-arms had served for many years. These men were told that, after
+the troubles were over, they should again be taken into the service if
+they chose; but that, in the present state of things, one traitor might
+endanger the safety of the castle and town; and that, as it was
+impossible to tell who were true men and who had been corrupted by
+Glendower's agents, it was necessary that all should suffer, even if
+innocent.
+
+Among the tenants of Mortimer's estate, and those of the young earl,
+were many Welsh. Against them no measures were taken. They and their
+fathers, sometimes indeed three generations of them, had lived
+peaceably; and had rendered military service, when required, in the
+troubles of England; and Mortimer was reluctant to treat them harshly,
+especially as all declared their readiness to serve, and prove their
+devotion to their English lord.
+
+"They are not sufficiently numerous," he said, "to be a source of any
+danger. Were Glendower to invade England in great force doubtless they
+would join him, to save their lives and those of their families; but
+being but one to four or five of the English tenants, I see not that
+they can be a source of danger to us."
+
+
+
+Chapter 16: A Letter For The King.
+
+
+A large number of Flemings had settled in Wales, having left their own
+country in consequence of the constant troubles there; and many of
+these had set up cloth mills, at Welshpool and other places. Having
+suffered great destruction of property at the hands of Glendower, and
+seeing no hope of the insurrection being put down by the English, they
+resolved to take the matter into their own hands. Fifteen hundred of
+them gathered, secretly, and surrounded Glendower in one of his
+mountain intrenchments.
+
+He repulsed their attacks, but the situation was desperate. Provisions
+ran short. He was unable to summon help, and at last determined, with
+his little body of followers, to endeavour to cut his way out through
+the besiegers. The attack was sudden and fierce. The Flemings, who,
+knowing the smallness of his force, had made no preparations to repel
+an attack, were seized with a panic at the fierce appearance and the
+wild cries of the Welsh, who fell upon them with such fury that two
+hundred of the Flemings were slain, and the Welsh cut their way through
+the beleaguering line.
+
+The news of this feat was received with immense enthusiasm, throughout
+the principality. Great numbers flocked to Glendower's standard; the
+bards sung songs of his victory, at every village in Wales; and so
+formidable did his position become that the Lords of the Marches wrote
+to the king, saying that the matter had gone altogether beyond them,
+and that his presence, with an army, was urgently needed.
+
+Even in Ludlow, extra sentries were placed upon the walls, the garrison
+was kept in a constant state of vigilance, and mounted men were
+stationed, miles out, to bring in the news of the approach of any
+hostile force.
+
+"'Tis a thousand pities," Sir Edmund said, when the news of the defeat
+of the Flemings reached him, "that these fellows did not send news to
+me, a day or two before they undertook this business; for in that case
+I would have myself headed a force of a couple of hundred of my best
+men-at-arms, and joined them at some spot in the mountains; and had we
+been there, you may be sure that Glendower would never have fought his
+way out. The Flemings are doubtless stout fighters, as they have proved
+over and over again, in their own country; but they are all unused to
+mountain warfare, or to fight with wild men, and were doubtless scared
+by the shrill cries with which the Welsh always advance to battle.
+Doubtless, too, these men Glendower keeps with him are his best
+fighters, and they knew that, if they did not succeed in making their
+way out, no mercy would be shown to them, seeing that they have shown
+none themselves. Had the battle been on a plain, I doubt not that the
+Flemings would have stood against many times the number of Welshmen
+that Owen had with him; but this hill warfare was altogether strange to
+them, and of course they had not the habit of quickly rallying, and
+meeting the attack, that is second nature with our men-at-arms. The
+affair is serious, and unless the king comes hither with an army,
+Glendower is likely to have it all his own way on his side of the
+border; and, ere long, there won't be an Englishman left west of the
+Severn."
+
+However Henry, when informed of the danger, lost no time in assembling
+another great army; and in the beginning of June advanced into Wales,
+and ravaged a wide extent of country, carrying his arms into
+Cardiganshire, and destroying the Abbey of Strata Florida, one of the
+most venerable and famous abbeys in Wales. Founded in 1164, it was
+burnt down in 1294, during the wars of King Edward the First with the
+Welsh, but was soon rebuilt. Here Llewellyn, in 1237, convened all the
+chieftains of Wales to take the oath of allegiance. There were two
+copies of the national records, one of which was kept at this abbey,
+and the other at that of Conway.
+
+The abbey having fallen, Henry's army met with scarcely any resistance,
+Glendower knowing that his wild followers were no match for the royal
+troops. He therefore contented himself with harassing them continually,
+and the army suffered greatly by this continued annoyance, as well as
+from fatigue and famine. Thus the king returned across the border
+without having achieved any success, whatever.
+
+The Lords of the Marches were not now ordered to contribute any troops,
+but were to hold their castles strongly; lest, when the army was fairly
+entangled among the mountains, Glendower should make a great incursion
+into England. The only advantage gained by the English invasion was
+that the king, by promises of pardon and rewards, drew away a number of
+the leading men who had hitherto acted with Glendower. Their defection,
+however, was more than made up by the enthusiasm excited by the
+spectacle of the second retirement of a great English army, without
+having effected anything of importance.
+
+So evident was this, that in October Henry again advanced, with the
+contingents of no fewer than twenty-two counties. The season, however,
+was already unfavourable for operations and, after enduring great
+hardships and suffering, the army again fell back, having effected even
+less than the two which had preceded it.
+
+Things, however, turned out fortunately for Oswald. The army had
+advanced a week across the border when a messenger arrived at Ludlow,
+with a letter from London for the king.
+
+"It will be no easy matter to forward it," Sir Edmund said, as the
+despatch was handed to him. "Indeed, I see not how it is to be done.
+Beyond the fact that the king intended to march west, I know nothing
+whatever of his intentions, or of the exact road he was likely to take.
+His orders were strict, that we were to keep our forces well in hand;
+and to send the letter forward would need two hundred men, at least, as
+an escort. It places me in an awkward position, indeed."
+
+"If it so please you, Sir Edmund," said Oswald, who was one of the
+group standing round, when the messenger handed the letter to Mortimer;
+"I will endeavour to carry the despatch for you. Methinks that, while
+fifty men would not succeed in getting through to the army, two might,
+perchance, manage to do so. I shall, of course, ride first to
+Shrewsbury, through which the king passed; and so follow up the course
+he took. There should be no great difficulty in doing that, for the
+march of so great a body of men must have left many traces behind. They
+will, doubtless, have harried the country, for some distance each side
+of the line they followed; and it is not likely that I should meet any
+of the Welsh, until I was near the army. Then, of course, great caution
+would have to be used; for it is like enough that there are parties of
+Glendower's men hanging on its skirts, to cut off stragglers, and
+plunder any waggons whose horses may have fallen by the way."
+
+"'Tis a terribly dangerous service," Sir Edmund said, gravely; "but in
+truth, I see no other way of forwarding this letter; which, for aught I
+know, may be of high importance. But if this is a desperate enterprise,
+it is also one that will bring you great credit, if safely carried
+through. I will myself, if you go, give you a letter to the king,
+saying that you have volunteered for this desperate undertaking, from
+your loyalty to his person, and because it is possible that the letter
+may contain matter of the highest importance, to him and the realm in
+general. I shall add that you have already greatly distinguished
+yourself, in service against the Welsh, and are the trusty esquire of
+my brother-in-law, Sir Henry Percy."
+
+"I quite feel, Sir Edmund, that the enterprise is a dangerous one; but
+I am nevertheless determined, with your permission, to undertake it. My
+henchman and myself have, together, gone through dangers as great; and
+may pass through this, as well."
+
+"I will give you my answer in half an hour, Master Oswald, when I have
+talked it over with my knights, and heard their opinions as to whether
+any better plan can be devised."
+
+Oswald bowed and retired and, seeking out Roger, told him of the offer
+that he had made.
+
+"Well, master, if you are bent upon this enterprise, you will not find
+me backward; and indeed, I am so sick of this six months of idleness,
+and of seeing others marching to Wales to fight, while we do nothing
+here; that, by Saint Bride, were you to ask me to go into Glendower's
+stronghold, and pluck him by the beard, I would willingly go with you."
+
+Oswald laughed.
+
+"'Tis not so bad as that, Roger, and yet 'tis a service of great
+danger. How think you that we had best set about it, on horse or on
+foot?"
+
+Roger looked surprised at the question.
+
+"It would surely be better to go on horseback, master; for if we met
+too many Welshmen to fight, we might at least ride away from them."
+
+"There is truth in that, Roger; but, on the other hand, our feet will
+carry us up and down mountains, and fells, where our horses could not
+go. If mounted, we must travel by beaten tracks, and might be seized by
+parties of Welsh, lurking in the woods, before we knew of their
+presence. Without horses, we could ourselves keep within shelter of the
+trees, and could so evade the observation of any who might be stationed
+on lofty hills, to watch if any body of troops were following the track
+of the army. Moreover, we should have no trouble about forage and water
+for our steeds."
+
+"Enough, master, I see which way your inclinations lie; and as my legs
+have had a long holiday, it is but right that they should carry me for
+a bit; and assuredly, 'tis easier for footmen to hide than it is for
+horsemen."
+
+"I should say, Roger, that it would be best to leave armour, as well as
+horses behind. If we are attacked by numbers, our armour will serve us
+but little; while if without it, we may be able, even if chased, to
+avoid the hands of these Welshmen. They say that they are swift of
+foot; but, as we can hold our own with the Northumbrian border men, we
+ought to be able to do so against these Welsh, especially as our legs
+are nigh a foot longer than those of the greater part of them."
+
+"Very well, master. I myself have no great love for travelling in
+armour, and would almost as soon march in a monk's gown, again, as in
+breastplate and back piece."
+
+"Very well, so we will arrange it. We shall have to carry our
+provisions, for you may be sure that we shall get nothing, whatever,
+while we are following the army. They will strip the country clean. You
+know how terribly they have suffered by famine, on the two previous
+expeditions; and it will assuredly be no better, now. Food, however, we
+can procure at Shrewsbury, from which point we shall take our start."
+
+A retainer, at this moment, came out from the hall, and informed Oswald
+that Sir Edmund would speak with him. When he entered, Mortimer said:
+
+"My knights and I agree that this letter ought to be sent forward to
+the king; for if it contains matters of importance, great harm might
+result from delay, and the king's anger be excited against us, for not
+having sent it to him. His orders to me were strict, that neither I nor
+any of my force should join him; therefore I accept your offer, with
+thanks. Have you formed any plan for your proceeding?"
+
+Oswald repeated the substance of what he had said to Roger.
+
+"I think, perhaps, you are right," Mortimer said, "and that you may
+have more chance of getting safely through, on foot, than if you rode
+with but a small force to escort you. When you are ready to start, I
+will speak to you in private, touching some things connected with your
+journey."
+
+When Oswald returned, Mortimer said to him:
+
+"You see, Master Oswald, the position is by no means simple. There can
+be no doubt that the king regards me with no favourable eye. He holds
+my nephews in his keeping, and doubtless imagines that I bear him ill
+will. As their uncle, he supposes that, should at any time a party be
+formed to place the Earl of March on the throne, I should be the leader
+in the matter; though assuredly I have never given him any reason to
+doubt my loyalty.
+
+"I say not that I approved of the deposition of King Richard; and
+indeed I have not, like Lord Grey and many other nobles, among them the
+Percys, been a warm supporter of King Henry's cause. I hold myself
+altogether neutral, in that matter. I saw that nothing would be more
+ruinous, for the country, than that a boy like my nephew should mount
+the throne; and had a party been formed to make him king, instead of
+Henry, I would have taken no share in it. Nevertheless, there is no
+getting over the fact that, by right, the Earl of March is King of
+England, and there is no saying what may come about in the future; but
+assuredly, at the present time, I am as ready to do my duty towards
+King Henry as are those who are louder in their expressions of
+attachment to him.
+
+"Nevertheless, I am well aware that the king distrusts me. As you see,
+he has not, these three times that he has invaded Wales, come near
+Ludlow. He has not summoned me to join his banner; nay, more, has
+strictly ordered me not to send a man-at-arms to join him.
+
+"I own that this letter troubles me, somewhat. Why should it not have
+been carried to Shrewsbury, instead of being brought hither? It has,
+indeed, come from London, and those who sent it may not know that the
+king would move by Shrewsbury, and not by this line; which would,
+indeed, be more direct for him in advancing into Montgomery and
+Cardiganshire. On the other hand, it may be a snare. If I send it not
+forward, he might blame me greatly for holding it back. If I send it
+forward, and perchance it falls, on the way, into the hands of the
+Welsh, he might harbour the thought, even if he did not accuse me
+openly, of conniving with Glendower. One pretext is as good as another,
+however unlikely it may be, when a king desires to make a quarrel with
+one of his vassals. Your offer to carry it is, then, a very seasonable
+one, and goes far to get me out of the difficulty.
+
+"In the first place, by sending it by you, I afford no ground for him
+to say that I have disobeyed his orders, to send no one of my following
+to his army; and in the next place, whatever suspicion he may have of
+me, assuredly he can have none of the Percys, to whom he so largely
+owes his crown; and that a trusted squire of Hotspur should be the
+bearer of the letter, is sufficient proof that all that could be done,
+was done, for its safe carriage. Should you fail to deliver it, he can,
+at least, not put it down to any fault of mine.
+
+"Sir James Burgon and Sir Philip Haverstone both offered to carry it,
+urging that the danger should fall on them; and not upon you, who are
+still an esquire, and have no duty towards me in the affair; and that
+it were a shame that they should remain here, idle, while you rode,
+perhaps, to your death.
+
+"Assuredly, my feelings were with them and, were it not for the
+circumstances in which I am placed, I should certainly intrust the
+enterprise to them; but on my laying the whole matter before them, and
+pointing out that the coming of two of my knights to him would be a
+breach of the king's orders, they saw that, since you were willing to
+undertake it, it were best that it should be so.
+
+"I doubt not that Henry would, not unwillingly, fasten some quarrel on
+me. He has his army at hand and, did he march hither, he could seize my
+lands, and those of my nephew, and partition them out among his
+friends; for I am in no condition to strike a single blow in my
+defence. We know, well enough, that when a king wishes to get rid of
+one of his nobles, there is never any great difficulty in finding a
+pretext for his arrest, and execution."
+
+"I quite understand, Sir Edmund; and for my part, I will assuredly do
+my best to place this letter in the hands of the king. I shall say
+that, being of Sir Henry Percy's household, and knowing that my lord
+would be glad that I should have the opportunity of striking a blow
+under the king's leading, I volunteered at once, when the letter
+arrived, to bear it to him; and that, seeing his majesty had laid his
+orders on you, to keep all your force in readiness to repel Glendower,
+should he issue out in this quarter, you granted my request that I
+should be its bearer."
+
+"That will do well, Oswald. I know that the danger is by no means
+small, but I trust that you may surmount it. I shall send off a letter,
+today, to Hotspur. Doubtless you will, yourself, be writing to him, and
+explain to him why I have suffered you to undertake so dangerous an
+enterprise."
+
+Two hours later, Oswald, having despatched the messenger to Hotspur
+with his own letter, and that of Mortimer, mounted, and with Roger rode
+to Shrewsbury. Here he was able to gather but little news, as to the
+present position of the army. For four days no messengers had arrived
+from the king.
+
+The last news was to the effect that the army was marching forward,
+through Montgomeryshire. On first starting, they had made a long march
+to Welshpool, and thence had proceeded to Newtown. On the way, the
+Welsh had rushed down from the hills, and had fallen on the baggage,
+slain many of the drivers, and killed so many horses that it had been
+necessary to leave some of the waggons behind.
+
+At Newtown they halted, and parties had been sent out in all directions
+to harry the country, while a part of the force left at Welshpool
+marched upon Llanfair. This was the last news that had come through
+from the king.
+
+But from Welshpool they heard, next day, that there had been several
+skirmishes with the Welsh, and that heavy rains had made the roads all
+but impassable. No more messages had come. This was not surprising, as
+it was certain that the Welsh would close in behind the army, as it
+advanced; and as there would be no great occasion to send news back,
+the king would not care to weaken himself, by detaching escorts of
+sufficient strength to make their way down.
+
+"If we could have been sure which way the king had been going, Roger,
+it would have been much shorter for us to have made direct for
+Llanidloes."
+
+"Certainly it would, Master Oswald; but you see, he might have turned
+more to the north, in which case we should have, perhaps, been unable
+to gather news of his whereabouts, while we should have run no small
+risk of getting our throats cut."
+
+"It is evident, Roger, that the king is marching, at present, in the
+direction of Plinlimmon. No doubt he hopes that Glendower will come
+down and give him battle, but methinks he will not be foolish enough to
+do so. The weather, and the hills, will fight far better for him than
+the Welsh, themselves, can do; and he has but to leave the army to
+wander about through the mountains and forests, as he did last time, to
+ensure that they must, ere long, fall back."
+
+At daybreak the next morning, they set out and rode to Welshpool. This
+being a walled town, and the population almost entirely English, they
+could leave their horses here, in safety. They first went to the
+governor's, and upon Oswald's explaining that they were the bearers of
+a letter for the king, and asking whether he could give them any
+information as to the direction they had best take, he shook his head.
+
+"No news has come hither, for the last five days," he said. "A herd of
+bullocks arrived here, three days since, and were to have been
+forwarded on to the army; but the Welsh are out in force, and every
+road beset. Parties have come down from the hills overlooking us, and
+have fired several houses, that escaped when they last attacked us. My
+force is sufficient to hold the town against any attacks, but I cannot
+spare so many men as would be required to convoy the cattle. I told the
+king so, before he went on; but he said that no Welshman would dare
+show himself, when the army had once passed on; and that every Welsh
+house and village would be destroyed, and all within them put to the
+sword, so that I should have no difficulty in sending forward cattle,
+and other supplies.
+
+"That the villages have been destroyed I have no doubt, for the
+messengers who came in from Llanfair told me that, as they passed over
+the hills, they could see smoke rising from the forests in all
+directions; but whether the inhabitants remained, quietly awaiting the
+arrival of the troops, is more than doubtful. There were beacon fires
+on all the hills, the night before the army left Shrewsbury, and again
+on the next night. Since then, we have seen no more from here, but
+those who came from Llanfair told us that they were burning, on every
+hill, the night they got there; so I have no doubt that the old men,
+women, and children were at once sent off, probably to shelter in the
+Plinlimmon district, or mayhap in the forests of Cader Idris. At any
+rate, we may be sure that very few will be found at their villages. It
+was so the last time the king's army marched along, and the same when
+he made his way through Denbigh to Anglesey.
+
+"The Welsh care little for the burning of their houses. It takes but
+two or three days' work to rebuild them. The harrying of the villages
+will not bring the matter a day nearer to a conclusion. It is by
+destroying the castles and houses of the better class that an effect
+will be produced. The peasants have little to lose. The Welsh gentry
+have houses and estates, and the fear of losing these may drive them to
+abandon Glendower, and to come over to us. Many did so, after the
+king's last invasion. Methinks the best policy would be to spare the
+villagers, and give the peasants no cause for complaint, and to war
+only against their leaders.
+
+"But as to yourself, sir, there is not the most remote chance of your
+getting through; and you had best wait here until the army returns, or
+some levies, who may have arrived late at Shrewsbury, come up on their
+way to join the king."
+
+"I inquired at Shrewsbury, last night, sir; but I heard that no more
+parties were expected, the contingents from all the counties having
+joined the king, at Worcester, on the day ordered. My intention is that
+I and my man-at-arms will leave our horses here, and go forward on
+foot. In that way we can travel, for the most part, through the
+forests; and may escape being seen. We have already left our armour
+behind us, at Ludlow, so as to be able to move more rapidly. We are
+both Northumbrians, and are accustomed to traverse moors and fells;
+and, even should we be seen by any straggling party of the enemy, we
+shall have a fair chance of outrunning them, and throwing them off our
+track. At any rate, it is my duty to endeavour to carry the letter to
+the king."
+
+"Is it a matter of life and death?"
+
+"That I know not, sir. A royal messenger brought it, from London, to
+Ludlow. He had ridden with relays of horses, but had no means of
+getting farther, and begged Sir Edmund Mortimer to forward it. I
+myself, an esquire of Sir Henry Percy, was staying as a guest with Sir
+Edmund--who is, as you know, my lord's brother-in-law--and I
+volunteered to carry it, being anxious to have an opportunity of doing
+service to the king."
+
+"It was a bold offer, young man, and doubtless, when you made it, you
+were scarce aware how dangerous was the business that you undertook.
+Did I think that it would be of any use, I would furnish you with
+twenty men-at-arms to ride with you; but I know that such a force
+would, in no way, add to your safety. You might get as far as
+Llanidloes, or Llanfair, whichever route you might choose, though I
+think not that you would do so; but beyond that, it would be hopeless
+for any force, of less than five hundred good fighting men, to attempt
+to make their way through.
+
+"From what I hear, there are at least fifteen thousand Welshmen in
+arms. Many, doubtless, are with Glendower himself. The rest will be
+scattered among the hills, ready to pounce upon any party who may be
+moving up the valleys to join the king; and there are plenty of places
+where a couple of hundred men could check the advance of an army."
+
+"Then it is all the more necessary, sir, that we should trust to good
+fortune, and to making our way unseen. May I pray you to take care of
+our horses, till we return to claim them? Should we never do so, there
+are doubtless many upon whom you could bestow them; and they are both
+rarely good animals, for one was presented to me by Sir Henry Percy,
+and the other by Sir Edmund Mortimer."
+
+"I will take care of them, willingly. If you do not return, before the
+king marches back; and I find, when he comes, that you did not reach
+him; I will use the horses myself, holding them always as your property
+should you, at any time, return to claim them. Is there aught else that
+I can do to help you?"
+
+"No, sir; what would, of all other things, be most valuable to us would
+be a guide; but, from what I have seen and heard of the Welsh, I fear
+that no reliance, whatever, can be placed on one of them."
+
+"Certainly not at present. Did you take one, he would but slip away at
+the first opportunity; and there is no Englishman, so far as I know,
+who could guide you through the mountains."
+
+"In that case, sir, we must perforce travel close to the roads, so as
+to be sure that we do not wander from the track, but keeping in the
+shelter of the forest."
+
+"That is the only possible course," the governor agreed; "to be lost,
+among those hills, would be certain death. If you failed to fall in
+with anyone, you would die of hunger. If you did meet anyone, you would
+be killed. Glendower spares no Englishman who falls into his hands."
+
+"I don't know that he can be greatly blamed for that, sir," Oswald said
+with a smile, "seeing that the Welsh meet with such scant mercy, from
+us."
+
+"'Tis a savage war," the governor said, shrugging his shoulders, "and
+it seems to me that it will continue, until the last Welshman is
+exterminated."
+
+"That will be a difficult thing, indeed, to effect," Oswald laughed;
+"as difficult as was the extermination of wolves in England; but I hope
+that matters will arrange themselves, long before that. Surely, in
+time, the Welsh leaders will see that the struggle is a hopeless one;
+and that they will lose their homes, and their possessions, and their
+lives, if they continue it.
+
+"Brave as the Welsh may be, they cannot withstand the whole strength of
+England. They may exist in the forests, for a time; but, with all the
+valleys and fertile lands in English hands, they will at last be forced
+to submit."
+
+"It would seem so; but Edward said the same thing, of Scotland. He
+carried fire and sword through it, time after time; and yet Scotland
+has still its king, and holds its own on the border."
+
+"That is so, sir; but Scotland is a large country, whereas Wales is a
+small one; and the towns and castles are English, as are all the ports;
+and the people themselves, although brave, are wholly without
+discipline, and are able to fight only in the mountains; while the
+Scots are strong enough to give battle to us on level ground, and have
+defeated us, more than once."
+
+"My advice to you is to leave the town at night," the governor said, as
+Oswald rose to leave. "There may be many of the Welsh lying round us
+now; and doubtless they learn, from their countrymen here, all that is
+doing. I will give you a scroll, ordering that you are allowed to pass
+out at any time, by night or day."
+
+"Thank you, sir. I had intended to start tomorrow morning, two hours
+before daybreak, so as to get well into the forest before sunrise. I
+shall, of course, go first to Llanidloes; where, doubtless, a strong
+guard will have been left. As far as that I cannot well miss my way, as
+I shall have but to keep along the side of the valley."
+
+"That is so. Beyond that, the river is a mere streamlet, and you will
+have to make across the hills."
+
+"Do you know, sir, whether the force that went to Llanfair was to
+effect a junction with the king?"
+
+"No, I believe not; at any rate, not for the present. The party was to
+march west; the king's force was to move south of Plinlimmon; Lord
+Talbot's to cross the range of hills, and come down upon the river
+Dovey and, if possible, prevent Glendower, if he is still on
+Plinlimmon, from making his way to Dinas Mowddwy, or Cader Idris, or up
+to Snowdon again. The plan is doubtless as good as another, but I doubt
+whether Talbot's force, if ten times as numerous as it is, could
+prevent Glendower from slipping away."
+
+That evening Oswald bought a supply of bread and meat, sufficient to
+last Roger and himself for three days. This was divided in halves and
+placed in bags, which would be slung over their shoulders. The horses
+had already been sent up to the castle and, after sleeping for a few
+hours, the two left the town and, turning to the right, ascended the
+hill.
+
+Oswald carried his sword and dagger. Roger, in addition to these, had a
+heavy oaken quarterstaff.
+
+"This," he said, "may be of service in mountain work, and may suffice
+to crack the skulls of any half-dozen Welshmen we may fall in with."
+
+Both had put on plain leather jerkins and cloth caps, and wore,
+underneath, their own suits with the Percy cognizance embroidered on
+them, in order that they might present themselves in proper attire,
+should they arrive at the king's camp. The weather was already becoming
+cold, and the double suit was therefore not uncomfortable. As the dress
+of the Welsh, in the towns and valleys, was very similar to that worn
+by English villagers; they would attract but little attention, should
+they have cause to take to the road, for any short distance.
+
+Keeping within the edge of the belt of trees, they followed the valley
+down past the ruins of Montgomery, and passed Newtown without entering
+it. Many times during the morning they heard loud shouts, from the
+woods in which they were, answered by similar cries from the other side
+of the valley; and were obliged to move with great caution, for it was
+evident that a considerable number of Welsh were in ambush in the
+woods, in readiness to attack any party who might be proceeding up or
+down the valley.
+
+Towards noon, they were obliged to leave the edge of the forest, and to
+ascend to the brow of the hills; as it was certain that any parties of
+the enemy, who might be in the forest, would be assembled near its
+edge, in readiness to pour suddenly down.
+
+More than once they heard voices, but a short distance away; and
+paused, for a time, to allow parties of men to cross ahead of them.
+Their greatest danger lay in crossing the side valleys, but as the
+Welsh would be expecting no one to come down these, they succeeded in
+crossing without being observed.
+
+They were well content when, just as night was falling, they came down
+upon Llanidloes. Crossing the wooden bridge over the stream, they
+entered the town boldly; for, looking down upon it, they had seen many
+men in armour in the streets, and knew that the place was occupied by
+the English.
+
+At the gate at the end of the bridge they were asked their business,
+but they replied that they could only answer that to the officer
+commanding, and were taken before him.
+
+"Whence come you, friends?" the latter said. "Surely you must be
+English, by your height; but what you are doing here, in times like the
+present, I know not. Come you from the king's army, or from the north?"
+
+"We left Welshpool before daybreak," Oswald said, "and have travelled
+through the forest."
+
+"Then you must be as bold as you are tall, sirs, for the woods are full
+of these wild Welsh."
+
+"Of that we are aware, sir, and we had some difficulty in making our
+way through them, unobserved. I would not answer the guard, when we
+entered; for we are going farther, and had it been mentioned, in the
+hearing of a Welshman, news might have been sent on ahead."
+
+"I think not that you can reach the king. When we last heard, his
+foremost divisions were marching forward, and devastating the country
+on both sides of their line of march. We have heard reports that some
+of the parties have been attacked, and well-nigh destroyed; and certain
+it is that Glendower's men are scattered all over the country.
+
+"We were three days without news, but this morning a strong party came,
+in escorting sick and wounded. They had to fight hard, but beat off
+their opponents, and got in with the loss of a third of their number.
+They had started at night, and fortunately arrived within five miles of
+here, before they were attacked."
+
+"And where is the king now, sir?"
+
+"The king himself is at Capel Bangor, and the army lies between that
+place and Yspetty Cynfyn."
+
+"Then 'tis but a day's march from here!"
+
+"It would be but a short day's march, could you follow the road; but it
+would be impossible to do so, for 'tis beset everywhere, and 'tis so
+rough and hilly that, in places, the men-at-arms had to dismount. You
+will have to wait here till a large force sets out, with provisions;
+for those who came in declare that they will not attempt to return, so
+great is the number of Welshmen along there, and so fierce and reckless
+are they.
+
+"But you have not yet told me who you are, and why you would push on to
+the army thus rashly."
+
+Oswald opened his jerkin, and showed the handsome attire beneath it,
+embroidered with the Percy cognizance.
+
+"I am an esquire of Sir Henry Percy," he said, "and have been staying
+for a while with Sir Edmund Mortimer, whose sister is my lord's wife. A
+royal messenger arrived at Ludlow, with a letter for the king; and as
+there was no other way of bringing it forward, I volunteered to carry
+it, with my man-at-arms, here."
+
+"It was a brave offer, young sir, but I fear that you will scarce be
+able to carry it into effect. The men who came here report that it is
+unsafe to stir a yard from the camp; for those who wander away, for
+however short a distance, are sure to be slain by the lurking Welshmen.
+No resistance is offered when strong parties go out, but less than two
+hundred men-at-arms cannot hope to move, unattacked."
+
+"'Tis for that reason that I have come on foot," Oswald said. "I saw
+that it would be hopeless for two horsemen to get through, but on foot
+we may travel through the woods without being discovered; while if we
+are seen, methinks it would need speedy feet to catch us."
+
+"Well, since you bear a royal letter I cannot stop you; but it seems to
+me that your chance of getting through is small, indeed."
+
+
+
+Chapter 17: Knighted.
+
+
+Rain was coming down in torrents, when Oswald and Roger started the
+next morning. On leaving the town they turned to the left, with the
+intention of making a considerable detour; keeping well away from the
+road, as it was near this that the Welsh would be most likely watching.
+They chose this side because, to the right of the road, the country was
+more broken, rising swell after swell towards Plinlimmon; and it was
+likely that the largest portion of the Welsh would be on that side, so
+that they could, at any time, retire to their fastnesses.
+
+They were soon in the woods. The streams they met with were turbid, and
+full to the brim.
+
+"We shall have trouble with this water, Roger," Oswald said, as they
+waded across one, waist deep. "This is but a little stream, but if
+there are larger ones, as is like enough, we shall have to swim before
+we are done. There is one advantage; in such weather as this, even the
+Welsh will scarce be active."
+
+"They have not got much clothing to wet," Roger said. "Their dress is
+better suited than ours for such weather."
+
+The way was a rough one. Hills, although of no great height, had to be
+crossed, and many streams to be waded. Fortunately, they met with few
+larger than that they had first crossed; for the water from that side
+of the hills made its way, for the most part, direct into the Severn;
+while that which came down from the slopes of Plinlimmon, towards the
+road, fell into a stream; dry in fine weather, but now a raging
+torrent, which ran past Llandulas and into the Severn, at Llanidloes.
+
+"Do you think that we are going right, Roger?" Oswald said, after they
+had been walking for six or seven hours; "for, what with these ups and
+downs, and turnings and windings, there is no saying which is east and
+which is west. If the sun were shining we should be sure of our
+direction, but with these dull leaden clouds there is no saying."
+
+"I have no idea, master. If we were out on a moor we should be able to
+judge, and to make a fairly straight course, keeping the wind and rain
+on one side of us; but in this thick forest, though most of the leaves
+have fallen, those that remain on the branches break up the rain, and
+it seems to come straight down upon us."
+
+Presently they came to another watercourse.
+
+"Why, Roger, the water is going in the other direction!"
+
+"So it is, master. How can that be?"
+
+"It is just possible that we have crossed some dividing point, and the
+water is making its way towards the south, and will fall into some
+other river; but I am very much afraid that the real explanation is,
+that we have entirely lost our way, and are going in the opposite
+direction to that in which we started. The question is, shall we cross
+it or shall we follow it down?"
+
+"Just as you like," Roger said. "For myself, I think that the best way
+would be to find some place where we could shelter. Tomorrow the sun
+may be out again, and that will tell us which way to go. If we start at
+daybreak, and keep it to our back, we can't go far wrong."
+
+"Except that we may pass the army altogether, Roger. They told us that
+the rearmost division was not more than ten miles ahead."
+
+"We must have walked double that already, I should say, master."
+
+"Not so much as that. We have been a long time over it, but it is slow
+travelling over this broken ground, and thick wood. I am sure I hope
+that we have not gone twenty miles, or anything like it; for in that
+case, if we have been keeping fairly in the right direction, we must
+have passed the army. If we have been going in the wrong direction,
+there is no saying where we may be.
+
+"Still, I think that your suggestion is a good one. It is of no use our
+going on, when we may be getting farther away at every step. It is
+lucky that we bought these thick cloaks, at Welshpool; for without them
+we should have been soaked to the skin, hours ago."
+
+"Well, as we have been wetted to the waist a score of times, in the
+streams, I don't see that it would have mattered much, if the rest of
+us had been wet through."
+
+"Well, now let us look for a shelter."
+
+After searching for half an hour, they found a spot where a wall of
+shaly rock barred their way. At one spot some of this had fallen in,
+forming a sort of shallow cave, some three feet deep.
+
+"This is not a bad beginning, Roger, but we must try and make it a
+great deal more snug."
+
+They first cut down some young fir poles, and placed them so as to form
+a sort of penthouse against the wall. On these they piled a number of
+branches, of the same trees, until it was over a foot in thickness.
+
+"So far, so good," Oswald said. "Now, Roger, look about for a fallen
+tree. We have passed scores on our way. You must get a thoroughly
+rotten one, and cut away a portion of the under side; it will be dry
+enough, there."
+
+"You might get a little of that to start with," Roger said; "but the
+ground is covered everywhere with fir cones, and there is no better
+stuff for fires."
+
+Taking off his cloak he laid it down, and they both piled the fir cones
+on this, until a great heap was collected. This they carried into their
+shelter, through an opening they had left in the penthouse.
+
+"We must have something dry to start it with. These cones are a great
+deal too wet to burn, without a good heat to start them. There is
+nothing better than the fir needles, master, if we can find some dry
+ones."
+
+After some searching, a considerable number of these needles were
+collected; some lying under fallen trees, and others swept by the wind
+into rocky corners, where the rain had not reached them.
+
+"Now I think that we shall do, Roger."
+
+As soon as they were inside, Roger produced a large lump of dry fungus
+he had found, on the other side of the Severn; and, by the aid of his
+flint and steel, soon succeeded in striking sparks upon it. As soon as
+these began to spread, he put a little pile of fir needles on it; and,
+blowing gently, bright flames soon darted up. A few more handfuls of
+fuel were added, and fir cones placed at the top; and in a quarter of
+an hour, a clear, bright fire was burning.
+
+The dripping cloaks were hung up to the fir poles, to dry; and the
+jerkins, which were also damp, although the water had not penetrated
+through them, were spread near the fire.
+
+"It was well that I bought this little skin of wine, last night," Roger
+said. "You thought it was better to be without such a burden, but the
+weight of a gallon of wine doesn't count for much, and it makes all the
+difference in our comfort, here."
+
+The rain had soaked through their provision bags, but the bread and
+meat in the centre were dry; and of these they made a hearty meal and,
+laying the wetted food round the fire to dry, they wound up the repast
+with a long draught of wine.
+
+"Now, as soon as our breeches are dry, Master Oswald, we shall be
+thoroughly comfortable."
+
+"Yes, one can wish for nothing better. But we must not forget that some
+Welshmen may come along, and if so, will be sure to want to know what
+is inside."
+
+"Then, unless there happen to be more than a dozen of them, their
+curiosity may cost them dear," Roger said grimly. "I don't think there
+is much fear of it. We have neither seen nor heard of any, since we
+started; and it would be evil fortune, indeed, if a party happened to
+come along just at this spot."
+
+"The fact that we have heard no one is a bad sign, Roger; for it would
+seem to show that we must have gone a long way out of our course."
+
+The rain continued to fall heavily, all that afternoon and throughout
+the night, and no change of the weather was discernible the next
+morning.
+
+"We had best stop here for another day, Roger, unless the sky clears;
+we are not likely to find so good a place for shelter, and it is of no
+use to wander about, when every step may be taking us farther away.
+However, we can climb up to the top of this hill, at whose foot we are,
+and endeavour to get a view over the country."
+
+Roger shook his head.
+
+"In this heavy mist we should not see a quarter of a mile away. We have
+got all our clothes dry, now, and it would be a pity to get them wet
+again, without need or profit. Anyhow, we will find some more of those
+fir cones. Our supply is nearly gone."
+
+In half an hour they had got sufficient to last them all day. There was
+nothing for them then to do but sleep, one or other keeping watch, so
+as to prevent the chance of their being surprised.
+
+Before lying down for the night, Roger looked out.
+
+"Methinks that the rain has stopped, though it would be difficult to
+say, for the drops keep pattering down from the trees. Well, I mightily
+hope that it will be a fine morning."
+
+Oswald was first upon his feet and, on going out, uttered an
+exclamation of satisfaction. The morning was breaking and, though light
+clouds were moving across the sky, glimpses of the blue were visible,
+here and there. Already the light showed where the sun would presently
+rise.
+
+Food was hastily eaten, and they then started on their way again. There
+could be no mistake, now, as to the general direction; and, keeping the
+sun on their right hand, they made their way north. From the top of a
+hill, somewhat higher than the others, they caught a view of
+Plinlimmon.
+
+"If we make straight for it," Oswald said, "we ought to come down on
+the road near the camp. We can go on fearlessly for some time, for the
+Welsh were hardly likely to be moving about, yesterday or the day
+before; and I have no doubt they sheltered themselves, as best they
+could, in arbours like ours."
+
+After walking for another two hours, they heard the distant sound of a
+trumpet.
+
+"That cannot be more than two or three miles away, Roger. Now, we shall
+have to be careful."
+
+They had walked a mile when, as they descended into a glen, they came
+suddenly on a party of twenty Welshmen, sitting round a fire. These had
+been concealed from them by the thick undergrowth, and were not twenty
+yards away, when they first saw them. The Welsh had evidently heard
+them coming, by the rustle of leaves and the breaking of twigs; and two
+or three were standing up, looking in their direction, when they caught
+sight of them. These gave a loud yell, which brought the rest to their
+feet.
+
+"Run, Roger, run. It is a question of legs, now;" and, turning, they
+darted up the hill they had just descended.
+
+Looking back for a moment as, after running for about a mile, they
+reached the crest of a swell; Oswald saw that five of their pursuers
+had distanced their comrades, but were no nearer than when they
+started.
+
+"I think we can hold them, Roger. Take it a little more easily now. We
+are all right as far as speed goes. It is simply a question of bottom."
+
+Their pursuers, however, still stuck to them and, after running for
+another half-mile, the five men were still but some thirty yards
+behind; while their comrades' shouts could be heard through the forests
+and, from time to time, the men close behind them joined in a loud
+quavering cry.
+
+"We must stand and rid ourselves of these fellows, Roger; or we shall
+have half the Welsh nation down on us."
+
+"So I have been thinking, for some time."
+
+"Don't stop suddenly. We will slacken our pace, and they will think
+that our strength is failing, and will redouble their efforts. Then,
+when they are close to us, we will turn suddenly."
+
+They heard a yell of exultation, as their pursuers found that they were
+gaining upon them.
+
+"Choose a clear space, Roger, with room to swing our weapons."
+
+The Welsh were running in a close body, but ten yards behind them, when
+they arrived at a spot clear of trees.
+
+"Now, Roger!"
+
+As he spoke, Oswald drew his sword and swung round, facing his
+pursuers, while Roger did the same. The Welsh, taken by surprise,
+endeavoured to check themselves; but before they could do so, Roger's
+staff fell upon the head of one of them, while Oswald cleft another to
+the chin. With the quickness of an adroit player with the quarterstaff,
+Roger followed up his blow by almost instantaneously driving the other
+end of the staff, with all his force, against the chest of another, who
+was at the point of leaping upon him; and the man fell, as if struck
+with a thunderbolt. So swift had been the movements that the remaining
+two men were paralysed, by the sudden fall of their companions; but
+before they could turn to fly, the weapons descended again, with as
+fatal result as before.
+
+"To the right!" Oswald exclaimed, and he dashed off into the forest
+again, at a right angle to the line that they had before taken. A
+minute later they heard an outburst of yells of fury, from the spot
+they had quitted.
+
+"I don't think they will be quite so ready to follow, now," Roger said.
+"They are like to be some time, before they take up our track again."
+
+"We will break into a walk, in a few minutes, Roger; and then go along
+quietly, and keep our ears open. Their yells will be bringing others
+down, from all directions, and we might run right into the middle of
+another party, if we kept on at this rate."
+
+In another five minutes they dashed down a steep descent, at whose foot
+a streamlet, swelled now into a rushing stream, five or six feet wide,
+was running.
+
+"We will follow this down," Oswald said, as he stepped into it.
+
+It was a little over two feet deep, and they waded along it for a
+couple of hundred yards, and then stepped out, where some rock cropped
+out by the side of the stream. It had not yet dried after the rain, and
+their feet therefore left no marks on it.
+
+"That was a sharp run, Roger," Oswald said as, with rapid but stealthy
+steps, they strode along.
+
+"Ay, it was. My breath was coming short, when you gave the word to
+stop. Another half mile would have finished me. Those Welshmen run
+well."
+
+"I have no doubt we should have beaten them, easily enough, on the open
+ground, Roger; but they are more accustomed to this forest work than we
+are.
+
+"Mind where you tread, and don't put your foot on fallen sticks. There
+must be scores of them in the forest behind, yet, though I don't think
+that they have struck our track. The nearest must be a quarter of a
+mile away. I am not afraid of their overtaking us. It is the risk of
+falling in with other parties that I am afraid of."
+
+They now bore away to the right again. More than once they heard
+parties moving near them, and stood quiet until their voices died away;
+which they quickly did, as all were hurrying towards the spot whence
+the shouting still continued.
+
+For an hour they kept straight onward, and then the trees thinned; and
+as they stepped out from the edge of the forest they saw, to their
+delight, a few tents in front of them, and a large number of soldiers
+scattered about. As they were seen, some of the soldiers caught up
+their arms; but when they saw that but two men were approaching, they
+laid them down again, and proceeded with the work on which most of them
+were engaged; in polishing up their arms and armour, whose brightness
+had been grievously dimmed by the rain. A sub-officer with four men
+came up to them, as they reached the line.
+
+"Who are you, sirs?" he asked.
+
+"I am an esquire of Sir Henry Percy, and have brought hither a letter
+for the king."
+
+The man looked doubtfully at him, and Oswald continued, "I know not
+whether the Earl of Talbot is in the camp, but if so he will, I think,
+recognize me."
+
+"The earl arrived, with five hundred of his men, yesterday," the
+officer said, with a tone of more respect than he had before used. "I
+will take you to his tent;" and he led the way to a tent, pitched a
+short distance away from that before which the royal standard waved.
+
+Oswald took off his cloak, which was rolled up over his shoulder, and
+handed it to Roger, and then opened his jerkin. As they came up to the
+tent the front opened, and the earl himself came out.
+
+"Whom have we here?" he asked the officer.
+
+"They have just come out of the forest, my lord, and this gentleman
+asked to be taken to you, saying that you would recognize him."
+
+The earl looked scrutinizingly at Oswald.
+
+"I seem to know your face, sir," he said, "but I cannot recall where I
+have seen it."
+
+"My name is Oswald Forster, an esquire of Sir Henry Percy. I joined you
+at Chester, my Lord Talbot, with a band of his men; and some of Sir
+Edmund Mortimer's, led by one of his knights."
+
+"I remember now," the earl said. "Yes, I see you wear the Percy badge;
+but how have you got here, and why have you come?"
+
+"I come as a simple messenger, my lord. A royal courier arrived at
+Ludlow, with a letter from London for the king. His majesty had laid
+his commands on Sir Edmund Mortimer, that he was not to weaken his
+force by a single lance; and as, for aught Sir Edmund knew, the letter
+might be of great importance, I volunteered to endeavour to carry it
+through; taking with me only this man-at-arms, on whom I could wholly
+rely, whatever might happen, he having accompanied me on more than one
+dangerous expedition.
+
+"Sir Edmund consented. We rode first to Shrewsbury, to obtain
+information as to the course the king had taken. At Welshpool we left
+our horses behind us, thinking it easier to make our way through the
+woods on foot, seeing that the roads were said to be beset by the
+Welsh. So we reached Llanidloes; and then, hearing where the king was
+then posted, from a convoy of wounded that had been brought in that
+day, and who had been attacked and very hardly treated as they came
+along, we thought to make a detour through the woods, so as to get
+behind any Welshmen who might be watching the road.
+
+"Unfortunately, in the storm of rain, having no guide, we lost our way;
+and were so detained, near two days, in the forest. This morning, the
+weather having changed and the sun come out, we learned the direction
+that we must take. On the way we fell in with a party of some twenty
+Welshmen, who pursued us hotly. We outran all but five. As their shouts
+would have brought large numbers upon us, we stopped and slew them; and
+though search was hot for us, we succeeded in making our way through,
+without adventure, until we came out from the forest, close by."
+
+"Truly it was an adventure of great peril," the earl said, "for the
+Welsh are swarming round us; though we see nought of them, when we are
+once in the saddle. Assuredly you would never have got through, even as
+far as Llanidloes, if you had followed the road on horseback; for the
+last party that came along brought word that the Welsh had felled trees
+across it, in many places, and had broken down the bridges.
+
+"It was a gallant exploit, sir. I will, myself, take you in to the
+king."
+
+Oswald took off his jerkin.
+
+"I am but in poor plight to show myself before his majesty," he said,
+as he handed it to Roger.
+
+"Ah! I remember this good fellow," the earl said. "He is not one easily
+forgotten, for 'tis seldom one sees so stout a man-at-arms.
+
+"As to your dress, 'tis nought; and indeed, it is in better order than
+most in camp, for the soldiers have no tents, and have, for the last
+forty-eight hours, been over their ankles in mud and water.
+
+"Have you been with Mortimer ever since we harried Glendower's valley?"
+
+"No, my lord. I returned after that to the north, and was at Alnwick
+for nine months. Then Sir Henry sent me back again to Ludlow, in order
+that I might keep him well informed of the extent of this rebellion,
+concerning which but few tidings came to him."
+
+They had, by this time, arrived at the entrance of the king's tent. The
+two sentries on duty there stood back and saluted, as the earl entered,
+followed by Oswald.
+
+"This, sire, is a messenger, one Master Oswald Forster, an esquire of
+Sir Henry Percy's. He had been sent by his lord to Ludlow, to keep him
+acquainted with the extent of this rebellion. Some few days since, a
+royal messenger reached the town, with a letter for you; as doubtless,
+in London, they cannot have known which way you were marching, and
+directed it there, so that it might be forwarded to you thence. Sir
+Edmund, having your royal order not to send any force away, would have
+been at a loss how to forward it; deeming that it would need a strong
+body of men-at-arms to penetrate to you, as he knew, from what had
+happened on the two last expeditions, that the Welsh, being unable to
+oppose your advance, would swarm behind you, so as to prevent
+reinforcements or convoys of provisions from reaching you. He was,
+therefore, doubtful as to what course to adopt, when this gentleman
+volunteered to carry it to you; and this he has accomplished, attended
+by but a single follower. Knowing that he could only hope to reach you
+on foot, he and his man-at-arms left their horses at Welshpool; and
+have made their way through the woods on foot, not without adventure,
+having lost their way in the storm, and having slept in the wood for
+two days, and killed five Welshmen, scarcely escaping a crowd of others
+as they came in."
+
+"A very gallant deed, sir," the king said to Oswald, as the latter bent
+upon one knee and handed the letter to him. "By Our Lady, it was no
+slight thing to venture through the woods, swarming with these wild
+Welshmen. How long have you been an esquire to Percy?"
+
+"Over three years, sire."
+
+"I met Master Forster at Chester," the earl said. "He commanded a score
+of Percy's men, and rode with us when we captured Glendower's house.
+The knights with him told me that he and his little band had done
+excellent service, in the fight when the Welsh made their first
+irruption; and that Sir Henry Percy had written in the warmest terms to
+Mortimer, saying that the gentleman stood high in his regard, and that
+he had the most perfect confidence in him, and had selected him for the
+service since he was able to write well, and could, therefore,
+communicate freely with him as to the troubles on the Welsh border."
+
+"And have you been at Mortimer's ever since that time?" the king asked.
+
+Oswald noticed that each time Mortimer's name was mentioned, the king's
+brow was somewhat clouded.
+
+"Not so, your majesty. I returned to the north, with Percy's men, a few
+days after the capture of Glendower's house. I came back to Ludlow in
+the spring."
+
+"Why did Sir Henry Percy despatch you there again?" the king asked,
+sharply.
+
+"From what he said, sire, it was because he was anxious to know whether
+the rebellion was growing, fearing that there might be some
+correspondence between Glendower and the Scots; and that, if it should
+come to a point when you might have to lead the whole force of the
+south to put the Welsh down, the Scots might make a great irruption
+into the northern counties, and it would be needful for him to keep a
+larger body of men than usual under arms; as the earl, his father, and
+the Earl of Westmoreland, would have to stand the whole brunt of the
+matter, for a time, without aid from the south."
+
+The king's brow cleared.
+
+"It was a thoughtful act of Sir Henry," he said; "and 'tis like enough
+that the Scots will, as you say, take advantage of our troubles here;
+and it is well, therefore, that the Lords of the Northern Marches
+should hold themselves in readiness.
+
+"What think you, Talbot? It seems to me that the bold service this
+esquire has performed merits reward."
+
+"I think so, indeed," the earl said. "It was a singular act of
+courage."
+
+The king drew his sword from his scabbard.
+
+"Kneel, sir," he said.
+
+And, as Oswald knelt, the king laid the sword across his shoulder, and
+said, "Rise, Sir Oswald Forster."
+
+Oswald rose.
+
+"I thank you, my Lord King," he said, "and trust that I may live for
+many years to do worthy knightly service to my liege, who has so highly
+honoured me."
+
+"My lord," the king said to Talbot, "I leave it to you to see that this
+young knight is provided with horse and armour. Unfortunately there is
+more than one suit without an owner, at present. You will do well to
+wait with me while I open this letter; which, maybe, contains matter of
+moment."
+
+Feeling that his audience was over, Oswald bowed deeply, and left the
+tent to rejoin Roger.
+
+"What said the king, master?"
+
+"He spoke much more highly of what we had done, Roger, than it
+deserved; and as a reward for the service, he has just knighted me."
+
+"I think that he has done well, master!" Roger exclaimed, joyously. "I
+had hoped that Hotspur would have done it, after that adventure with
+the Bairds; of which, as Alwyn told me, he spoke to him in tones of
+wondrous praise."
+
+"That was a private business, Roger, and he would know that I would
+much rather that, when knighthood came, I should receive it for service
+in the field. The king regards our coming here as a service to himself,
+and therefore rewarded me; but I would rather that it should have been
+for service in the field, against the enemy, than for tramping through
+the forest."
+
+"Yes, but a forest full of Welshmen," Roger said, "who are more to be
+feared, in that way, than when met in open fight."
+
+"Earl Talbot spoke very kindly of me, and said that he had heard that,
+with Percy's men, I had done good service in that fight with the Welsh,
+near Knighton."
+
+"That was certainly pretty hot work, master--I shall get to say Sir
+Oswald, in time; but at present my tongue is not used to it. What are
+we to do now?"
+
+"The king asked Lord Talbot to provide me with armour, and a horse; so
+we must wait until he comes this way."
+
+It was half an hour before the earl came out.
+
+"The letter was of importance," he said, "and it is well that it was
+brought on.
+
+"Now, Sir Oswald, let us see to your matter. Two days ago Sir William
+Baxter was killed, by a sudden attack of the Welsh, while he was
+burning a village. His men rallied, beat off the Welsh, and brought his
+body in; and methinks his armour will fit you, though he was shorter,
+by two or three inches, than yourself."
+
+He accompanied Oswald to one of a small group of tents, standing a
+quarter of a mile farther down the road.
+
+"Is Sir William Baxter's squire here?"
+
+A young man at once came up.
+
+"I was his esquire, my lord."
+
+"I have the king's orders," the earl said, "that his arms, armour, and
+horses are to be handed over, forthwith, to Sir Oswald Forster here,
+who will take command of his troop. He will take over all the other
+belongings of the knight."
+
+The young squire bowed.
+
+"I will hand them over to you, sir."
+
+"You will, of course, take possession of the tent also, Sir Oswald. Sir
+William was one of my knights. He was unwedded, and has no male kin;
+therefore, you need have no hesitation in taking his belongings; which
+indeed we should, in any case, have little chance of taking back with
+us, for our waggons are but few, and will daily become fewer: for on
+such roads as these, both waggons and horses break down, and it will be
+as much as we can do to carry even necessities with us.
+
+"Come to my tent at noon, it lacks but an hour of it, and I will
+present you at dinner to some of my knights; among whom, for the
+present, I shall rank you."
+
+So saying, he turned away. The young squire held open the entrance of
+the tent, for Oswald to enter, and followed him in.
+
+"It seems a strange thing to be thus possessed of another man's goods,"
+he said.
+
+"It is often so," the squire said, "and sometimes even his estates go
+with them, also. As the earl said, Sir William Baxter had none to whom
+these things could have been given; seeing that he had, so far as I
+know, only one sister, to whom armour and horses could be of no use.
+She is one of the Countess of Talbot's ladies."
+
+"And what are you going to do, yourself?"
+
+"For the present, I know not," the squire said. "I had been with Sir
+William Baxter but three years. The knight I served with, before, was
+thrown from his horse and killed; and Sir William, who had been just
+knighted, took me into his service."
+
+"How long have you been a squire?"
+
+"Six years, and I hoped that, in this campaign, I might have done
+something to win my spurs."
+
+"I am but a poor knight, Master--" and he paused.
+
+"Henry Pemberton," the squire said.
+
+"And being but knighted today, and having no lands to keep up my
+knighthood, it may be that the earl will appoint you to another of his
+knights; but should he not do so, I shall be glad if, for the rest of
+this campaign, you will ride with me; and trust that you, too, may have
+an opportunity of gaining knighthood, before it is over. But whether or
+no, as soon as we cross the border again, I doubt not that you will be
+able to find some lord under whom you may gain advancement."
+
+"I will gladly do so, Sir Oswald. 'Tis strange that I should not have
+seen your face before; for, since we left Worcester, I have come to
+know the greater part of the esquires here."
+
+"I arrived but an hour ago," Oswald replied, "having made my way
+through the Welsh, on foot, with that tall fellow you saw without."
+
+"That was a dangerous deed, truly," Pemberton said, in tones of
+surprise. "May I ask why you essayed so perilous a feat?"
+
+"I was the bearer of a despatch for the king. I was an esquire to Sir
+Henry Percy, but have for some time been staying with his
+brother-in-law, Sir Edmund Mortimer.
+
+"Had Sir William a man-at-arms, who served as his servant? For I shall
+make my man-at-arms, who has gone through many adventures with me, has
+fought by my side, and saved my life, my second squire."
+
+"Yes, a very good and trusty fellow."
+
+"Then of course I shall keep him on. Now, will you tell my man to come
+in?
+
+"Roger," he said, "You doubtless heard the earl's words, and I am now
+master of this tent, together with the armour, horses, and clothes of
+Sir William Baxter. Master Henry Pemberton will act as my squire,
+during the campaign. You will be my second squire."
+
+"Well, master, I never looked so high as to become an esquire; and
+would rather remain a simple man-at-arms, were it not that it will keep
+me near you."
+
+"You will find Roger a good comrade, Master Pemberton. He has been a
+man-at-arms at his own choice; for, as he can read and write as well as
+any clerk, he might have done better for himself."
+
+Pemberton looked, with some surprise, at Roger. He himself had not
+these accomplishments, and he was surprised at finding a man-at-arms so
+well endowed.
+
+"As you may tell by his speech," Oswald went on, "he is, like myself, a
+Northumbrian; and has done good service in the wars with the Scots."
+
+"That I can well imagine," the squire said, with a smile. "I would
+certainly wish for no stouter comrade."
+
+"We must see about arms and armour for you, Roger," Oswald said.
+
+"There will be no difficulty about that. None whatever, Sir Oswald. We
+have lost fully three hundred men, since we crossed the border, and a
+hundred and fifty since we came here, four days since. There is a pile
+of harness and arms, lying by the roadside; and there, methinks, it is
+likely it will lie. You have but to go with him, when you have attired
+yourself and buckled on spurs, and you can pick and choose among it.
+Assuredly, no one will gainsay you."
+
+Oswald now changed his attire. The clothes were handsome, and fitted
+him well. Then he buckled on the golden spurs, put on the knightly
+armour--for he had observed that the earl, and the knights that he had
+seen in the camp, all kept on full armour, being ever in expectation of
+sudden attack.
+
+"Truly you make a handsome figure, Sir Oswald," said Roger, who had
+been assisting him. "Little did I think, when I used to rail at you at
+your books, that you would grow into so stalwart a man; and that I
+should follow you in the field, as your squire. Your armour fits you as
+if made for you, save that these cuishes scarce meet your body armour.
+In truth, though bad for him, it was lucky for you that the master of
+this tent came to his death when he did."
+
+"I like a steel cap better than this helmet, though I say not that it
+looks so well."
+
+"Not by a long way," Roger said. "Nought could become you better. What
+cognizance do you mean to take?"
+
+"I have not thought about it, yet. There will be time enough for that,
+after the war is over."
+
+"Well, at any rate, master, I will today set about getting Sir William
+Baxter's off the shield. Methinks that, with some sand from the river
+bed, I shall be able to manage it with an hour's rubbing."
+
+"Now, come along, Roger. There is no time to be lost, for I dine at
+midday with the Earl of Talbot. Master Pemberton will show us where the
+armour is lying."
+
+There was, indeed, a large pile.
+
+Oswald then said, "As you are known, Master Pemberton, you had better
+stop here; for it will take some picking before Roger is suited. As it
+is but two minutes to twelve, I must hurry back to Lord Talbot's tent."
+
+Some seven or eight knights were already there. Lord Talbot introduced
+him to them and, as they dined, Oswald related, at their request, more
+particularly how he had got through the Welsh--a task that seemed to
+them well-nigh impossible, since the soldiers dared not venture even to
+the edge of the forest, so thickly were the Welsh posted there.
+
+"That man-at-arms must be a stalwart fellow, indeed," said one, "to
+kill three Welshmen with nought but a quarterstaff."
+
+"If you had seen the man, and the staff, Sir Victor, you would not be
+surprised," Lord Talbot said. "He stands some six feet four, and has
+shoulders that might rival Samson's. As to his quarterstaff, I marked
+it. It was of oak, and full two inches across; and a blow with it, from
+such arms, would crack an iron casque, to say nothing of a Welsh
+skull."
+
+
+
+Chapter 18: Glendower.
+
+
+For the next ten days the weather was so bad that no operations could
+be carried on. Every little stream was swollen to a raging torrent.
+Horses, carrying men in full armour, could scarce keep their feet on
+the slippery moor; and even the footmen had the greatest difficulty in
+getting about; and all excursions were given up, for the Welsh,
+barefooted and unweighted with armour, would have been able to fall
+upon them to great advantage, and could then evade pursuit, with ease.
+
+The number of sick increased rapidly, and it became necessary to send
+another convoy back to Llanidloes; where the guard were to join the
+force that had gone there, ten days before, and to escort some waggons
+of flour and a number of cattle, that had been brought there from
+Welshpool by a strong levy from Shropshire.
+
+Ten knights, a hundred mounted men-at-arms, as many on foot, and fifty
+archers were considered sufficient to escort the sick; who, to the
+number of two hundred, were closely packed in the ten waggons that were
+to return with flour. Three of Lord Talbot's knights were to form part
+of the escort, and among these Oswald was chosen by the earl.
+
+It was hoped that the convoy would reach the town without being
+attacked, for great pains had been taken to prevent the news of its
+approaching departure getting about; for there were many Welshmen in
+the camp, employed in looking after the baggage animals, and in other
+offices. They had all been hired for the service on the other side of
+the border; but it was believed that some of them, at least, must be in
+communication with the enemy; who were thereby enabled to gather in
+force, to oppose any parties who sallied out from the camp.
+
+The consequence was that, until half an hour before it left, none save
+a few of the leaders were aware of the starting of the convoy. Then
+orders were rapidly issued. The knights and men-at-arms who had been
+selected for the service had but a few minutes to prepare themselves.
+The horses were harnessed to the waggons, and the sick and wounded
+carried out and placed in them, with the greatest expedition, and the
+party set out in less than half an hour after the first order had been
+given. It had gone but a quarter of a mile when the shouts among the
+woods, on either side, showed that the Welsh were vigilant. Horns were
+blown in all directions, the sound growing fainter and fainter, in the
+hills.
+
+"We shall not get through undisturbed," one of the knights said to
+Oswald, who was riding next to him.
+
+"No, I think we shall have fighting. It would have been better had we
+and the men-at-arms been told to leave our horses behind. In this deep
+soil they will be of little use in a fight, and we should do better on
+foot."
+
+"It would be terrible, marching in our heavy armour."
+
+"Doubtless it would have been so, but I should not have minded that.
+The distance is but six miles; and although, in this slippery plain,
+the toil would have been great, methinks that we could have made a
+better fight than on horseback; and as these waggons travel but slowly,
+we could have kept up with them."
+
+"We can dismount, if necessary," the knight said; "but, for my part, I
+would rather ride than tramp through this deep mud."
+
+Their progress was indeed slow, the waggons frequently sank almost up
+to their axles in the mud, and it needed all the efforts of the
+dismounted men to get them out. A deep silence had succeeded the outcry
+in the woods.
+
+"I like not this silence, Sir Oswald," the knight said; when, after an
+hour's hard work, they were still but two miles from the camp.
+
+"Nor do I," Oswald said. "It seems unnatural. Do you not think, Sir
+William, that it would be well if all were to take the picket ropes
+from their horses' necks, and knot them two and two, fastening one end
+to a waggon and the other to a horse's girth. In that way fifty
+men-at-arms might be roped on to the waggons, and would aid those
+drawing them, greatly."
+
+"The idea is a very good one," the knight said.
+
+He rode forward to Sir Eustace de Bohun, who was in command, and
+informed him of Oswald's suggestion, which was at once adopted. As soon
+as it was carried out, the dismounted men were ordered to push behind
+the waggons, which now proceeded at a much faster rate than before.
+
+They were just half-way to the town, and beginning to entertain hopes
+that they should get through without being attacked, when a horn
+sounded; and from the forest on both sides, a crowd of men rushed out,
+and poured a volley of arrows into the convoy. Hasty orders were
+shouted by Sir Eustace, the ropes were thrown off, and the troops
+formed up in a double line on each side of the waggons.
+
+The knights and mounted men formed the outside line, and the footmen
+stood a pace or two behind them; so as to cover them from attack,
+should the Welsh break through. Oswald's esquire was on one side of
+him, Roger on the other.
+
+The waggons continued to move forward, for at this point the road was
+better, running across a bare rock, and the horses were therefore able
+to draw them along without any assistance. Sir Eustace therefore gave
+the order for the escort to continue their way, marching on each side
+of the train.
+
+"We must fight our way through, men," he shouted; "every minute will
+doubtless add to their numbers."
+
+For a short time the arrows flew fast. But the Welsh bows were not to
+be compared, in point of strength, with those used by the English
+archers; and the arrows fell harmlessly upon the armour of the
+men-at-arms, while on the other hand, the English archers shot so
+strongly and truly that, after a short time, the Welsh bowmen fell
+back. As they did so, however, a crowd of footmen poured out from the
+forest; and, with loud shouts and yells, rushed forward.
+
+"Halt the waggons!" Sir Eustace cried. "Keep good order, men, and we
+shall soon drive this rabble off."
+
+The archers had time but to send three flights of arrows among their
+assailants, when these threw themselves upon the line. They were armed
+with short axes, heavy clubs, and other rough weapons; and for a time,
+the horsemen kept their order and beat them back; but as the horns
+continued to sound, the Welsh swarmed down in such numbers that they
+broke in between their mounted foes; some trying to tear them from
+their saddles, while others crept beneath the horses and drove their
+long knives into their stomachs, or tried to hamstring them with their
+axes.
+
+Then the dismounted men-at-arms joined in the fight, and drove the
+enemy back beyond the line. Many of the horsemen were, however,
+dismounted. These joined their mounted comrades when Sir Eustace gave
+the word to charge the multitude, before they could rally for a fresh
+attack.
+
+The Welsh went down in numbers before their lances, but so close was
+the throng that the horsemen were brought to a stand and, slinging
+their spears behind them, betook themselves to sword and mace. Great
+was the slaughter of their opponents, but these pursued their former
+tactics. Horse after horse rolled over in mortal agony and, as they
+fell, the riders were stabbed before they could recover their feet.
+Soon they were broken up into knots; and their dismounted companions,
+with one accord, left the waggons and rushed into the fray, for a time
+beating back the Welsh.
+
+"It were best to dismount," Oswald cried, and he swung himself from the
+saddle, just as one of the enemy hamstrung his horse. Roger and the
+squire did the same, and joined the ranks of the footmen.
+
+"Keep together!" Oswald shouted, to those within hearing; "we can cut
+ourselves a passage through, in that way, while separately we shall
+perish."
+
+Ten or twelve men followed his orders and, gathering in a ring, for a
+time beat off every attack. Looking round, Oswald saw that scarce a man
+remained mounted. The shouts of the English, and the wild war cries of
+the Welsh, rang through the air. In a dozen places fierce contests were
+raging--swords and axes rose and fell, on helmet and steel cap.
+
+In obedience to the shouts of Sir Eustace, who, with three or four
+men-at-arms around him, was still mounted, the English bands tried to
+join each other, and in several cases succeeded. Oswald had been near
+the rear of the convoy when the fight began, and the party with whom he
+fought were separated by some distance from the others, and the
+prospect became more and more hopeless. His squire had fallen, and
+fully half the men who had joined him; and although the loss of the
+Welsh had been many times as great, the number of their assailants had
+in no way diminished.
+
+He and Roger strove, in vain, to cut a way through; and their height
+and strength enabled them to maintain a forward movement, their
+opponents shrinking from the terrible blows of Roger's mace, and the no
+less destructive fall of Oswald's sword; but the men-at-arms behind
+them fared worse, having to retreat with their face to the foe; and
+more than one, falling over the bodies of those slain by their leaders,
+were stabbed before they could rise. Several times the two men turned
+and covered the rear, but at last they stood alone.
+
+"Now, make one effort to break through, Roger;" and they flung
+themselves with such fury upon the Welsh that, for some twenty yards,
+they cut their way through them.
+
+Then Roger exclaimed, "I am done for, master," and fell.
+
+Oswald stood over him and, for a time, kept a clear circle; then he
+received a tremendous blow on the back of his helmet, with a heavy
+club, and fell prostrate over Roger.
+
+When he recovered his senses, the din of battle had moved far away. The
+other groups had gathered together and, moving down, had joined those
+who still resisted on the other side of the road; and, keeping in a
+close body, were fighting their way steadily along.
+
+A number of the Welsh were going over the battlefield, stabbing all
+whom they found to be still living. The sick men in the waggons had
+already been murdered.
+
+A Welshman, whose appearance denoted a higher rank than the others,
+approached Oswald, as soon as he sat up, and called to four or five of
+his countrymen. Oswald, with difficulty, rose to his feet. He still
+wore, round his wrist, the chain that Glendower's daughter had given
+him; and he now pulled this off and held it up, loudly calling out the
+name of Glendower, several times. The Welsh leader waved his followers
+back.
+
+Oswald was unarmed, and evidently incapable of defending himself. He
+came up to him. Oswald held out the chain:
+
+"Glendower, Glendower," he repeated.
+
+The man took the chain, and examined it carefully. Some Welsh words
+were engraved upon the clasp. Oswald was unaware what they were, but
+the words were, "Jane Glendower, from her father."
+
+The Welshman looked much surprised, and presently called to another,
+some distance away. The man came up, and he spoke to him in Welsh.
+
+"How did you obtain this?" the man asked Oswald, in English.
+
+"It was given in token of service, rendered by me and my squire here,
+to Glendower's daughter. She told me that it would be of service if, at
+any time, I were taken prisoner by her father's followers."
+
+This was translated to the Welshman, who said:
+
+"These men must be taken to Glendower. The story may be true, or not.
+The chain may have been stolen. At any rate, the prince must decide as
+to their fate."
+
+He now bade the men round him take off Oswald's armour. As soon as this
+was done, the latter knelt down by Roger's side, and removed his
+helmet.
+
+An arrow, shot from behind, had struck Roger just above the back
+piece--which, being short for him, did not reach to his helmet--and had
+gone through the fleshy part of his neck; while, at the same moment, a
+blow with an axe had cleft the helmet in sunder, and inflicted a deep
+gash on the back of the head.
+
+At a word from their leader, the men at once aided Oswald, who drew out
+the arrow. The wound bled but slightly, and one of the Welshmen,
+tearing off a portion of his garment, bandaged it up. Water was fetched
+from the stream below, and a pad of wet cloth laid on the wound at the
+back of the head, and kept in its place by bandages. As this was done
+Roger gave a faint groan and, a minute after, opened his eyes.
+
+"Do not try to move, Roger," Oswald said. "You are wounded; but not, I
+trust, to death. We are prisoners in the hands of the Welsh, but that
+chain Glendower's daughter gave me has saved our lives."
+
+A rough litter was constructed of boughs. On this Roger, after his
+armour had been taken off, was laid. At their leader's orders six
+Welshmen took it up, while two placed themselves, one on each side of
+Oswald. Then the leader took the head of the party, and moved away into
+the forest.
+
+Oswald's head still swam from the effects of the blow, but as they went
+on the feeling gradually ceased, and he was able to keep up with his
+captors. Their course was ever uphill, and after an hour's walking they
+arrived at a farmhouse, situated just at the upper edge of the forest.
+
+The litter was laid down outside the house. The Welshman went in,
+saying something to his men, who at once sat down on the ground; for
+the journey, with Roger's weight, had been a toilsome one. He made
+signs for Oswald to seat himself by the side of Roger. The latter was
+now perfectly sensible.
+
+"What has happened, master?" he asked.
+
+"We have been badly beaten, Roger; but when I last saw them our men had
+got together, and were fighting their way along the road. I fancy more
+than half have been killed; but, as far as I could see of the field, I
+should say that three or four times as many Welsh had fallen."
+
+"That was a lucky thought of yours, Sir Oswald, about that chain."
+
+"I had always an idea that it might be found useful; and it at once
+occurred to me, as soon as I recovered my senses."
+
+"Are you wounded, too?" Roger asked anxiously.
+
+"No. I was beaten down by a heavy club, and my head still rings from
+the blow. Otherwise, I am uninjured."
+
+"What has happened to me, master?"
+
+"You had an arrow through your neck, Roger; but fortunately it was on
+one side. An inch to the right, and it would have struck your spine, or
+perhaps gone through your windpipe. As it is, it does not seem to have
+done much harm. Very little blood flowed when I pulled the arrow out.
+You have got a bad gash on the back of the head, but your head piece
+broke the force of the blow. It has laid your skull bare, but has not,
+so far as I can see, penetrated it."
+
+"Then we need think no more about it," Roger said.
+
+"Well, that was a fight! The one we had at Knighton was as nothing to
+it."
+
+"Yes, I think that even you could not want a harder one, Roger."
+
+"No; this was quite enough for one day's work. I should like a drink of
+water, if I could get one."
+
+Oswald made signs to one of the men, who went into the house and
+returned with a large jug of water, of which Roger took a deep draught;
+and Oswald then finished the contents, for he, too, was parched with
+thirst.
+
+Half an hour later a tall man, in full armour, followed by a number of
+Welsh chiefs, issued from the forest. He was some five-and-forty years
+old, and of noble presence. The leader of the party who had brought
+Oswald up advanced to meet him; and, saluting him most respectfully,
+spoke to him for a moment, and then produced the chain. Glendower--for
+it was the prince--examined it, and then at once walked up to Oswald,
+who had risen to his feet.
+
+"How became you possessed of this, Sir Knight?"
+
+"It was given me by one of your daughters, sir. I and my squire, here,
+were on guard round your house, on the night after the Earl of Talbot
+took it. We were at some distance from the other guards, when two
+figures rose from the bushes near us. We pursued them and, coming up to
+them, found they were two ladies; and they at once avowed that they
+were your daughters. My instructions were to watch and see that no
+Welshmen approached the house; and nought had been said to me of
+arresting any leaving it, seeing that it was not supposed that any were
+there.
+
+"I war not with women. Being myself from Northumbria, I have no enmity
+with your people. Therefore I let them proceed on their way--a breach
+of duty for which, doubtless, I should have suffered, had it been
+known. Happily, none but my follower here, who was then but a
+man-at-arms, and I a squire, knew of it; and to this moment I have
+spoken of it to no one. As they left us, one of the ladies gave me this
+chain, saying that some day it might be of use to me, should I ever
+fall into the hands of their people. I have carried it on my wrist,
+ever since; and when your follower came up, and I saw the necessity had
+arisen, I showed it to him."
+
+"I have heard the story from my daughters," Glendower said warmly,
+holding out his hand. "They told me how courteously you had treated
+them, and that you had refused to accept the jewels they offered you.
+They said that you had also declined to tell them your name, as it
+might do you injury, should it become known; and I have often regretted
+that I did not know the name of the gentleman who had behaved so nobly
+to them, and had saved them from an English prison. Had they been
+captured, it would have been a sore blow to me, not only in my
+affections but to my cause; for, had he held them in his power, Henry
+could have put a heavy pressure upon me. May I ask, now, what is your
+name, Sir Knight?"
+
+"Sir Oswald Forster. I was, at that time, a squire of Sir Henry
+Percy's."
+
+"Of Hotspur!" Glendower said, in surprise. "I did not know that we had
+levies from the north fighting against us."
+
+"You have not, sir. I had simply been sent, with twenty men-at-arms, by
+Sir Henry to Sir Edmund Mortimer--who is, as you are doubtless aware,
+of kin to Sir Henry, who had married his sister--and was sent by Sir
+Edmund to join the Earl of Talbot and Lord Grey, when they made that
+foray upon your house. After that I returned to the north; but was,
+some months since, again sent to Ludlow, to keep Sir Henry informed of
+the doings on this border."
+
+"But I had heard that Mortimer had sent no troops to Henry's army."
+
+"That is so, sir. I am here by an accident. A despatch came from London
+to Ludlow for the king, and as there was no other way of forwarding it,
+I volunteered to carry it here, and succeeded in doing so: for which
+service the king conferred knighthood upon me, upon my arrival, ten
+days since."
+
+"Ah, then, it was you that I heard of! I was told that two great men
+had been seen in the woods, some distance south of the camp; and that
+they had succeeded in making their escape, after slaying five of my
+followers; and that, though none knew for certain, it was supposed they
+had reached Henry's camp."
+
+"You are right, sir. The two men were my companion, here, and myself."
+
+"It was a notable feat. I think not that any other messenger has got
+through my scouts, since the king left Welshpool. You must be swift of
+foot, as well as brave and courteous; for I heard that you had outrun
+the greatest part of those who followed you."
+
+"We in the north have to be swift of foot," Oswald said, with a smile,
+"for the Scots keep us in practice; either in escaping them, when they
+come in too great a force to be resisted; or in following them, when it
+is our turn to pursue.
+
+"I trust, sir, that you will put myself and my squire to ransom, and
+will take my word for the payment; for, until I go north, I have no
+means of satisfying it."
+
+"That will I not," Glendower said. "Or rather, I will take a ransom;
+since, were I to release you without one, it might cause surprise and
+inquiry; and it were well that your noble conduct to my daughters
+should not be known, for Henry would not be likely to regard it
+favourably. Therefore we will put you to ransom at the sum of a crown
+for yourself, and a penny for your squire."
+
+"I thank you, indeed, sir, and shall ever feel beholden to you; and I
+will, moreover, give you my knightly word that, whatever service I may
+have to perform, I will never again war with the Welsh.
+
+"May I ask if any of our party succeeded in reaching Llanidloes?"
+
+"Yes, some sixty or seventy of them got in. They fought very well; and
+indeed, in close combat my Welshmen cannot, at present, hold their own
+against your armour-clad men. Still, though it would have pleased me
+better had we annihilated the force, our success has been sufficient to
+give Henry another lesson that, though he may march through Wales, he
+holds only the ground on which he has encamped.
+
+"Now, Sir Oswald, I pray you to enter my abode. 'Tis a poor place,
+indeed, after my house in the Vale of the Bards; but it suffices for my
+needs."
+
+Before entering, he gave orders that Roger should be carried to an
+upper room, and despatched a messenger to order his own leech, as soon
+as he had done with the wounded, to come up and attend to him. Then he
+led the way into a room, where a meal was prepared. In a few words in
+Welsh he explained to his chiefs, who had been much surprised at the
+manner in which he had received Oswald, that the young knight had, at
+one time, rendered a great service to his daughters, Jane and Margaret;
+but without mentioning its precise nature. His experience had taught
+him that even those most attached to his cause might yet turn against
+him; and were they to relate the story, it might do serious injury to
+Oswald.
+
+"You must, on your way back," he said presently to the young knight,
+"call and see my daughters; who are at present staying with their
+sister, who is married to Adda ap Iorwerth Ddu. They would be
+aggrieved, indeed, if they heard that you had been here, and that I had
+not given them the opportunity of thanking you, in person."
+
+Oswald remained for a fortnight with Glendower, while Roger's wound was
+healing. At the end of that time he learned that Henry, having marched
+into Cardigan and ravaged the country there, was already retiring; his
+army having suffered terribly from the effects of the weather, the
+impossibility of obtaining supplies, and the constant and harassing
+attacks by the Welsh.
+
+Glendower was often absent, but when at the house he conversed freely
+with Oswald, who was no longer surprised at the influence that he had
+obtained over his countrymen. His manners were courteous in the
+extreme, and his authority over his followers absolute. They not only
+reverenced him as their prince, the representative of their ancient
+kings, and their leader in war, but as one endowed with supernatural
+power.
+
+The bards had fanned this feeling to the utmost, by their songs of
+marvels and portents at his birth, and by attributing to him a control
+even over the elements. This belief was not only of great importance to
+him, as binding his adherents closer to him; but it undoubtedly
+contributed to his success, from the fact of its being fully shared in
+by the English soldiery; who assigned it as the cause of the
+exceptionally bad weather that had been experienced, in each of the
+three expeditions into the country, and of the failure to accomplish
+anything of importance against him.
+
+This side of the character of Glendower puzzled Oswald. Several times,
+when talking to him, he distinctly claimed supernatural powers; and
+from the tone in which he spoke, and the strange expression his face at
+this time assumed, Oswald was convinced that he sincerely believed that
+he did possess these powers. Whether he originally did so; or whether
+it had arisen from the adulation of the bards, the general belief in
+it, and the successes he had gained; Oswald could not determine. Later,
+when Glendower sullied his fair fame by the most atrocious massacres,
+similar to that which had already taken place at the storming of New
+Radnor--atrocities that seemed not only purposeless, but at utter
+variance with the courtesy and gentleness of his bearing--Oswald came
+to believe that his brain had, to some extent, become unhinged by
+excitement, flattery, and superstition.
+
+At the end of the fortnight Roger's wound, although not completely
+healed, was in such a state that it permitted his sitting on horseback,
+and Oswald became anxious to be off. Glendower, who was about to set
+out to harass the rear of the army, as it retired from Cardiganshire,
+at once offered to send a strong escort with him; as it would have been
+dangerous, in the extreme, to have attempted to traverse the country
+without such a protection. Two excellent horses, that had been captured
+in the engagement with the English, were handed over to him, for his
+own use and that of Roger. Oswald's own armour was returned to him, and
+he was pleased to find that it had been carefully attended to, and was
+as brightly burnished as when it came into his possession.
+
+When Glendower bid them adieu, he presented each of them with rings,
+similar to those he himself wore.
+
+"You have promised that you will not fight against me again; but it may
+be that, on some errand or other, you may ride into Wales; or that you
+may be staying, as you did before, at some castle or town near the
+border, when we attack it. You have but to show these rings to any
+Welshman you may come across, and you may be sure of being well
+treated, as one of my friends.
+
+"I trust that, when we meet again, the war will be over; and that my
+title to the kingdom of Wales may be recognized, by your king and
+people, as it is on this side of the border."
+
+"Well, Sir Oswald," Roger said, as they rode away, accompanied by
+twenty of Glendower's followers, under the orders of an officer; "we
+have got out of that scrape better than could have been expected. When
+you and I were alone, in the midst of that crowd of Welshmen, I thought
+that it was all over with us."
+
+"So did I, Roger. You see, that matter of our getting Glendower's
+daughters away, uninjured, has borne good fruit."
+
+"It has indeed," Roger agreed. "I thought it much more likely, too,
+that it would have gone the other way."
+
+"Be sure you keep a silent tongue as to that, Roger; and remember that
+our story is, that I have been put at knightly ransom, and on the
+condition that I will never serve in Wales again. When we once get
+across the border we will ride straight for Northumberland, without
+going near Ludlow. I observed that the king much doubted the Mortimers,
+and were we to return there, and the news came to his ears, he might
+take it as a proof that there was an understanding between Glendower
+and Mortimer; and that it was to this that leniency, such as had been
+shown to no other prisoners, was due; whereas, if we go straight to
+Percy, 'tis not likely that the matter will ever come to his hearing,
+and at any rate, if it did so, he would scarce connect Mortimer with
+our escape."
+
+"I understand, Sir Oswald; and will, you may be sure, keep silent as to
+aught beyond what you have bade me say."
+
+Two days' journey brought them to the house of Glendower's married
+daughter. On the officer stating that the knight with him had been
+sent, under his escort, by Glendower himself, she requested that he
+should be shown in. Her husband was away.
+
+"What is the knight's name?" she asked.
+
+"Sir Oswald Forster, Lady."
+
+"I have never, so far as I know, heard it before. Methought that he
+might be one whom I may have met, in the houses of my two sisters
+married to Englishmen, in Hereford; but I have no memory of the name.
+Show him in, sir."
+
+Roger had removed Oswald's helmet, while the officer was away.
+
+"Come with me, Roger," he said, "since we were both concerned in this
+affair."
+
+He bowed deeply to the Lady Isabel; who, as she returned his salute,
+saw with surprise that his face was quite strange to her.
+
+"It seems, Sir Oswald," she said, "from the tenor of the message given
+me by the officer, that you have come to me as a visitor; and that 'tis
+as an escort, only, that he has been sent with you?"
+
+"That is so, Lady; but 'tis as a visitor rather to your sisters, the
+Ladies Jane and Margaret, that I am here. I had, once, the pleasure of
+meeting them."
+
+Glendower's daughter at once told a maid, who was working with her when
+the officer had entered, to request her sisters to come to her; and
+these entered the room a minute later.
+
+Isabel, seeing that they did not appear to recognize the young knight,
+said:
+
+"Our father has sent this gentleman, Sir Oswald Forster, whom you know,
+to visit you."
+
+The two girls looked with surprise at Oswald.
+
+"Do you not know this gentleman?" their sister asked, in equal
+surprise.
+
+"He is not known to us," Jane replied. "I have never seen him
+before--at least, that I can remember."
+
+"We have met before, nevertheless, Lady," Oswald said, with a smile;
+"though it may well be that you do not remember my face, or that of my
+squire there; seeing that we were together but a few minutes, and that
+in the moonlight."
+
+The girls looked up at him puzzled, and then their eyes fell upon
+Roger.
+
+"Now I know!" Margaret exclaimed. "Look at the squire's height. Surely,
+Jane, these are the two soldiers who allowed us to pass them, that
+night when we fled from Sycharth."
+
+"That is so," Oswald said. "I thought that you were more likely to
+recognize my squire than myself, seeing that I have grown several
+inches since then, and have but lately assumed this knightly armour in
+which you see me."
+
+"Oh, sir," Jane said, going swiftly up to him and holding out her hand,
+which he raised to his lips; as he did that of Margaret, as she
+followed her sister; "we have thought of you so often, and have prayed
+that you should both be rewarded for your kindness to us! How glad I am
+to see you again, and have an opportunity of thanking you!
+
+"You have heard, Isabel, of our adventure, and how we escaped, by the
+kindness of two Englishmen on guard near the edge of the forest, from
+being carried as prisoners to London; where, but for them, we should
+now be lodged in some dungeon of the usurper; but till now, I have
+never known the name of our preserver.
+
+"Thanks also to you, good squire," she said, turning to Roger.
+
+"I but carried out the orders of my master," Roger said, colouring like
+a boy, as she held out her hand to him. "There is no credit due to me."
+
+"But how came you here?" Lady Isabel asked Oswald.
+
+"Your sisters have, although they know it not, more than repaid their
+obligations to me; for while they may perhaps owe their liberty to me,
+I owe my life to them.
+
+"See, ladies," and he turned to Jane, "there is the chain you gave me.
+I have worn it, always, on my wrist. I and my squire were beaten down
+by, your father's followers; my squire grievously wounded and
+insensible, while I had been left for dead, though but stunned from a
+blow. I luckily recovered my senses, just as those employed in
+despatching the wounded came up; and, happily remembering your
+bracelet, I took it off and held it up, calling out your father's name.
+
+"Struck, I suppose, by the action and words, an officer examined the
+bracelet closely; and, making out the inscription on the clasp, had my
+squire and myself taken to the house where your father lodged, so that
+the manner of my being possessed of the trinket might be explained. On
+your father's return he recognized it; and, having heard from you the
+circumstances of our meeting, treated us with the greatest kindness and
+hospitality; and freed us without ransom, save a nominal one in order
+that, on my return, I could say that I had been put to ransom. On the
+recovery of my squire from his wounds, he restored our armour to us,
+presented us with horses, and sent us here under escort, deeming that
+you might be glad to see us."
+
+"There he was indeed right," Jane said. "We have oft regretted that you
+would not accept a more valuable jewel than that little chain, which
+was given to me by my father, when I was but a child. But 'tis well,
+indeed, that you so withstood us; for had it been any other of our
+jewels but this, it would not have been recognized."
+
+"That is so, Lady and, since my capture, I often thought that it was
+strange it so happened."
+
+After staying a day there, Oswald continued his journey; to the regret
+of the ladies, who were glad to hear that he would never again fight
+against the Welsh. His escort accompanied him, as near the border as it
+was safe for them to go. The next day they rode into Chester, and then,
+by easy stages, up to Alnwick.
+
+Oswald went to Hotspur's apartments, as soon as he entered the castle.
+
+"I congratulate you heartily," Hotspur said, as he entered. "I see that
+you have won your spurs. I said to myself, when I received your letter,
+saying that you were starting to carry a letter to the king, that your
+enterprise would bring you either death or a pair of gold spurs. I am
+glad, indeed, to see that it was the latter.
+
+"I hear that the king's army is falling back. A messenger brought me
+news from my kinsman. He said that it was but a rumour that had reached
+him; but that it seemed likely enough, for it was said that they had
+suffered terribly, both from the weather and the attacks of the Welsh."
+
+"That rumour is true, Sir Henry, and also that the army is retiring."
+
+"And they have done no more than they did before?"
+
+"No more, indeed, Sir Henry. They have burnt many villages, and slain
+many Welshmen; but they have done nothing, whatever, towards subduing
+Glendower."
+
+
+
+Chapter 19: The Battle Of Homildon Hill.
+
+
+"But how have you made your way back, ahead of the army?" Hotspur
+asked, after Oswald had given him full information as to the military
+operations.
+
+"Roger and I were left for dead, in that fight I have told you of, near
+Llanidloes; and we fell into the hands of the Welsh, and were taken
+before Glendower, who treated us well, and put me to ransom, with the
+engagement that I was not again to bear arms, in Wales."
+
+"That was a strange leniency, on his part," Hotspur exclaimed; "for I
+hear he puts to the sword all who fall into his hands, without any
+regard for the rules of civilized war."
+
+"He is a strange man, Sir Henry, and subject, I fancy, to changeable
+moods. When I was brought before him he was in a happy one, over the
+success he had gained; and it may be that he took a liking for me. At
+any rate, he fixed my ransom at a very small sum."
+
+"Which I will, of course, pay," Hotspur said, "since you were my
+squire, and were at Ludlow on my service."
+
+"I thank you much, Sir Henry, but 'tis so small a sum that I myself
+discharged it, without difficulty."
+
+"'Tis strange, most strange, that you should have gone into the lion's
+den, and have come out unscathed. Strange, indeed, that Glendower, who,
+as we know, is greatly in want of money, should have fixed your ransom
+at a low sum. How much was it, Sir Oswald?"
+
+"I will tell you the story, Sir Henry, though I would tell no one else;
+for my freedom is due to something that happened, nigh two years ago,
+when I was first with Sir Edmund Mortimer. I failed in what was my
+strict duty, although I disobeyed no orders that I had received, and my
+conscience altogether acquits me of wrong."
+
+"You may be sure, Sir Oswald, that the matter will go no further; and
+knowing you as I do, I feel sure that, whatever the matter was, it was
+not to your discredit."
+
+"So I trust, myself, my lord; but it might have cost me my head, had
+the king come to know it. I will first tell you that my ransom was
+fixed at a crown, and that of Roger at a penny."
+
+Hotspur, who had been looking a little grave, laughed.
+
+"Surely never before was so much bone and sinew appraised at so small a
+sum."
+
+"It was so put, simply that I might, with truth, avow that I was put to
+ransom. However, I paid the crown and the penny, and have so discharged
+my obligations.
+
+"This was how the matter came about;" and he related the whole
+circumstances to Sir Henry; and the manner in which the little chain,
+given to him by Glendower's daughter, had been the means of saving his
+life.
+
+"I blame you in no way, Sir Oswald," Hotspur said cordially, when he
+had heard the story; "though I say not that the king would have viewed
+the matter in the same light. Still, you held to the letter of your
+orders. You were placed there to give warning of the approach of any
+hostile body, and naught was said to you as to letting any man, still
+less any women, depart from the place. But indeed, how could I blame
+you? Since heaven itself has assoiled you. For assuredly it was not
+chance that placed on your arm the little trinket that, alone, could
+have saved your life from the Welsh.
+
+"Now to yourself, Sir Oswald. You will, I hope, continue my knight, as
+you have been my squire."
+
+"Assuredly, Sir Henry, I have never thought of anything else."
+
+"Very well, then; I will, as soon as may be, appoint to you a double
+knight's feu. I say a double feu, because I should like to have you as
+one of the castle knights, and so have much larger service from you,
+than that which a knight can be called upon to render, for an ordinary
+feu. I will bid Father Ernulf look through the rolls, and see what feus
+are vacant. One of these I will make an hereditary feu, to pass down
+from you to your heirs, irrevocably; the other will be a service feu,
+to support the expenses caused by your extra services, and revocable
+under the usual conditions."
+
+A week later there was a formal ceremonial at the castle, and in the
+presence of the earl, Hotspur, and the knights and gentlemen of their
+service, Oswald took the oath of allegiance to Sir Henry Percy; and
+afterwards, as required by law, to the king; and received from Hotspur
+deeds appointing him to two knight's feus, including the villages of
+Stoubes and Rochester, in Reddesdale. There were, at the time, six
+knight's feus vacant; and as Percy had left it to him to choose which
+he liked, he had selected these, as they lay but a twelve miles' ride,
+over the hills, from his father's place in Coquetdale.
+
+The oath of allegiance to the king, as well as to the feudal lord, was
+enacted by Henry the Second; with the intention of curbing, to some
+extent, the power of the great vassals; but although taken by all
+knights, on being presented with a feu, it was deemed of no effect in
+the case of the immediate lord being at war with the king; and whenever
+troubles arose, the lord's vassals always sided with him, it being
+universally understood that the oath to him, from whom they had
+received their land, was paramount over that to the king.
+
+There having been several formalities to be observed, and matters to be
+discussed, Oswald was unable to ride home until after this ceremony had
+taken place; but upon the following morning he and Roger started early,
+and arrived, that evening, at Yardhope. His welcome was a warm one, and
+the satisfaction of his father, and the delight of his mother, at
+seeing him in knightly armour was great, indeed; and it increased when
+he told them that he had received knighthood at the hands of the king
+himself, and that Hotspur had granted him the feus of Stoubes and
+Rochester.
+
+"Then we shall have you within a ride of us," his mother exclaimed.
+"That will be pleasant, indeed."
+
+"The feus have always gone together," John Forster said, "and Stoubes
+castle, although small, is a strong one. How many tenants will you
+have?"
+
+"Twenty-three. That, at least, was the number of names set down in the
+parchments."
+
+"That is not bad, as a beginning. Of course, you will keep some ten or
+twelve retainers in the castle; and with such men as will come in from
+the villages, at the approach of danger, you will be able to muster
+fifty or sixty in all for the defence."
+
+"I shall live chiefly at Alnwick, Father. Rochester is given to me as
+an hereditary feu, but I shall hold Stoubes for extra service at the
+castle; and I have little doubt that Percy will, if I do him good
+service, make it also hereditary. He as much as said so."
+
+"It will make a good portion, lad. Yardhope is a knight's feu, though I
+have never taken up the knighthood; and the Percys know that I should
+fight just as stoutly, as John Forster, as if I wore knightly armour;
+but though the lands are wide they are poor, while yours are fertile,
+lying down by the river. Moreover, Coquetdale is more liable to Scotch
+incursions than Reddesdale, as the road into Scotland runs along it. If
+needs be we can lend a hand to each other; though, both together, we
+could not hold either your place or mine against a strong invasion.
+
+"Now, tell us how it was that you won your spurs; and how it was that
+the king, himself, knighted you."
+
+"After I have eaten and drank I will do so, Father; for indeed, Roger
+and I are well-nigh famishing."
+
+After the meal, he related the whole story of his adventures.
+
+"Well, lad, you were in luck," his father said, when he had finished.
+"The help you gave those maidens might have brought your head to the
+block; but it turned out well, and was the saving of your life, so I
+will say nought against the deed; especially as you owed no allegiance
+either to Mortimer or to Talbot, and were, save for the orders that
+Hotspur had given you, your own master."
+
+Two days later, having sent over, on the morning after his arrival, a
+message to the tenants to present themselves at Stoubes to take their
+oaths to him, Oswald, accompanied by his father, rode into Reddesdale.
+He found the castle a much stronger place than Yardhope, which was but
+a fortified house; while this was a moated building, with strong walls
+and flanking towers, and a keep that could be held successfully, even
+if the walls were captured by a sudden assault.
+
+At twelve o'clock the tenants assembled. Oswald read to them the two
+parchments, and they then took the oaths to him. They were well
+satisfied to have a young knight as their lord; for the feus had been
+held by a minor, who had died two years before; and had not been at the
+castle since he was taken away, as a child, to be brought up at the
+town of Alnwick, where he had remained under the eye of the Percys. It
+had long been understood, however, that the feu would not be granted to
+him; for he was weakly from his birth, and wholly unfitted for the
+charge of a castle, so near the Scottish border.
+
+According to feudal usage, each tenant expected that he would be called
+upon to pay a heavy sum, under the name of a relief, as was customary
+in the case of a new lord taking possession; and they were greatly
+relieved when Oswald told them that, as he already possessed armour and
+horses, he would quit them for a fourth part of the usual amount;
+although he should, of course, require their services to enable him to
+repair such dilapidations as the castle had suffered, during the long
+term that it had stood empty.
+
+For the next three months, he stayed in Stoubes. Roger had been sent
+off at once, with two men-at-arms, to bring the horses and armour that
+had been left at Welshpool; bearing a letter to the governor from
+Oswald, thanking him much for having taken care of them, and saying
+briefly that he had been left on the field for dead, after the fight
+near Llanidloes; but had recovered, and been well treated by Glendower,
+who had put him to ransom. He took money with him, to pay the expenses
+for the keep of the horses; and returned, with them and the armour,
+after an absence of three weeks.
+
+Passing through Worcester on his way back, he had, at Oswald's order,
+purchased for himself clothes suitable for his position as an esquire.
+As for armour, it had been arranged that he should have it made for him
+at Alnwick, as it would be difficult to obtain a suit sufficiently
+large for him.
+
+At the end of the three months the necessary repairs to the castle were
+finished. The gates had been greatly strengthened with thick bands of
+iron, the moat cleared out, and at various points the defences had been
+strengthened. The small amount of furniture then deemed necessary still
+remained there and, where needful, had been repaired and put in good
+order. Eight men-at-arms had been taken by Oswald into his service, and
+a trusty man appointed as seneschal.
+
+Then, after paying another visit to Yardhope, Oswald rode, with Roger
+and two well-mounted men-at-arms, to Alnwick.
+
+It was now April, and bad news had just arrived. Glendower had
+commenced the campaign with great vigour, as the appearance of a comet
+had been interpreted, by the bards, as an omen most favourable to him,
+and his force had greatly increased during the winter. He had destroyed
+the houses and strong places of all Welshmen who had not taken up arms
+at his orders, and had closely blockaded Carnarvon. He marched to
+Bangor, levelled the cathedral, and that of Saint Asaph, by fire, burnt
+the episcopal palaces and canons' houses. So formidable did he become
+that the king issued writs, to the lieutenants of no fewer than
+thirty-four counties, to assemble their forces at Lichfield, to crush
+Glendower.
+
+The latter had now taken the offensive, and advanced towards Hereford,
+and carried fire and sword through Mortimer's lands. Sir Edmund
+gathered his own and his nephew's tenants and retainers, from
+Herefordshire and Radnorshire, and advanced against Glendower. The
+armies met on the 22nd of June, 1402, at a short distance from
+Knighton. The battle was obstinately fought, but was decided by the
+desertion of the Welsh tenants, and by the Welsh bowmen in Mortimer's
+service turning their bows against his men-at-arms; and, finally, the
+English were defeated, with the loss of eleven hundred men, Sir Edmund
+himself being made a prisoner.
+
+After the battle the Welsh behaved with the greatest savagery; killing
+all the wounded, stripping the fallen, and horribly mutilating their
+bodies. The news created great excitement at Alnwick and, had not the
+situation in the north been critical, Percy would have gathered his
+forces and marched, with all speed, to avenge the defeat and capture of
+his brother-in-law.
+
+The Earl of Dunbar, with many of the tenants of his former estates, and
+numbers of the English borderers, had entered Scotland and carried out
+considerable raids. In revenge for this, Douglas despatched Thomas
+Halliburton and Patrick Hepburn, each with a considerable force, to
+invade Northumberland. Halliburton ravaged the country as far as
+Bamborough, collected great spoils, and returned with them. Hepburn,
+who had a still larger force, penetrated farther into England, carried
+his ravages to within a few miles of Alnwick; and then retired north,
+with an enormous amount of booty.
+
+When, however, he had crossed the border into the country known as the
+Merse, north of Berwick, the Earl of Dunbar fell upon him at West
+Nesbit, and completely defeated him. Hepburn himself, with a large
+number of his men, fell in the battle; and many important prisoners
+were captured. This battle was fought on the same day that Glendower
+defeated Mortimer.
+
+The victory caused great exultation on the border; but Alwyn said to
+his nephew:
+
+"Although this is good, as far as it goes, Oswald, you may be sure that
+Douglas will not brook this disaster with patience, but will gather the
+Scottish forces; and we may expect him, ere long, at the head of twenty
+thousand men, and we shall have a fight as stiff as that of Otterburn.
+We shall have Northumberland ablaze, and you will see that the earl and
+Hotspur will soon be preparing to meet the storm.
+
+"These last forays took them by surprise; and, as lords of the marches,
+they have suffered serious humiliation, for this victory was not
+theirs, but the work of Dunbar; and had he not intercepted the Scots,
+on their own side of the border, they would have returned, scatheless,
+with the spoils of our northern districts. This disgrace will spur them
+on to make great efforts, and these will be needed, or we shall see
+Northumberland, Cumberland, and Durham in flames."
+
+Alwyn was not mistaken. Messengers were sent off to all those holding
+knights' feus, throughout the county, bidding them to prepare to answer
+to the Percy's call; and to hold themselves, and their tenants, in
+readiness to march to any point fixed upon for a general rendezvous.
+They were to warn all the countryside that, directly news arrived that
+the Scots were in motion, they were to drive their cattle and horses to
+the nearest fortified town, or to take them to hiding places among the
+hills. Everything of value was to be taken away, or hidden, so that the
+enemy should find but empty houses.
+
+Oswald rode to Yardhope, with the message to his father.
+
+"I know, Father," he said, "that it needed not to warn you; but as it
+was but a short distance out of my way to come round here, I thought
+that I would pay you a day's visit."
+
+"No, lad; directly I heard of the victory of Dunbar, I said to myself,
+this will bring the Scots upon us in force. Douglas will never put up
+with the defeat, and will make every effort to turn the tables. I shall
+send all there is worth taking away, to a shepherd's hut among the
+fells; and shall, as soon as I hear that Douglas's preparations are
+well-nigh complete, journey with your mother to Alnwick, and leave her
+there. I shall return, and with my men will drive the cattle and horses
+to places where there is little chance of the Scots finding them; and
+will then, after leaving three or four men to look after them, come
+back to Alnwick.
+
+"What do you propose to do?"
+
+"I shall do much the same, Father. Stoubes is strong enough to hold out
+against any ordinary raid, but not against an army led by Douglas. I
+shall remove the furnishing and tapestry, and shall send the most
+valuable into Alnwick, and have the rest of them hidden in the woods.
+These are the orders that have been sent, all along the border. Any
+whose places are so strong that they may well defend themselves, for
+some time, are to gather all their neighbours there. The rest are to
+repair to Alnwick, to join Percy's force.
+
+"You see, there is no knowing where the storm may break. The Scots may
+cross the Cheviots anywhere between Berwick and Carlisle; and, until
+their movements are known, the earl and Hotspur must keep their forces
+at Alnwick, in readiness to march wheresoever required.
+
+"Hotspur has sent messengers down to the Midlands, to engage as many
+archers as he can get. Of course, we have many here; but the borderers
+are spearmen rather than archers, and it were well to strengthen our
+force. Still, however large a force he may raise, we cannot hope to
+check their first incursion. The whole country is open to them and, if
+they enter near Carlisle, they may be in the heart of Cumberland, or
+Durham, before we are fairly in motion. We may count, however, on
+meeting them as they retire, if not before."
+
+Oswald then rode to his own place, bade all the tenants prepare to ride
+with him to Alnwick, at an hour's notice; and either to send their
+women and children on there, as soon as it was known that the Scotch
+army was gathering strongly on the border; or else to gather stores of
+provisions, up in the hills, and to send the women and children there,
+the moment word came that the Scots were on the move.
+
+The news of Mortimer's defeat and capture had been received, by the
+time Oswald returned to Alnwick.
+
+"'Tis bad news, indeed," Percy said to him, "and I know that, as you
+have been staying so long at Ludlow, you will be deeply grieved at the
+misfortune that has befallen Mortimer. However, I doubt not that he
+will soon be ransomed. I know that the king appointed a commission of
+knights, to treat at once with Glendower for Lord Grey's ransom, and
+has given orders for the raising of the great sum demanded. It is to be
+gathered from a tax on church properties, and in other ways; and
+doubtless he will do the same for Mortimer, whose lands have been so
+harried, by the Welsh, that it will be impossible to raise any large
+sum from the tenants."
+
+"I fear, Sir Henry," Oswald said, "that the king will be lukewarm on
+the subject. During his three invasions, he has never once summoned Sir
+Edmund to join him; nor has he passed through Ludlow, as he might well
+have done, seeing that it is a central position, and the nearest way
+for an army marching towards Plinlimmon. I remarked, too, that when I
+mentioned Mortimer's name in my discourse with him, the king's brow
+clouded, as if ill pleased at the name."
+
+"Then he acts wrongly," Hotspur said angrily. "Mortimer has given no
+cause for offence. He has never, in any way, upheld the cause of the
+young Earl of March; and knows, well enough, that it would be madness
+to set up his claim to the throne, when Henry has given no cause for
+complaint, and that the boy's existence seems to be well-nigh forgotten
+by the country.
+
+"However, as soon as this business is over I will, myself, to London;
+and will beg the king to exercise the same benevolence, in the case of
+Mortimer, as he has shown on behalf of Lord Grey. Why, he might as well
+suspect us, to whom he largely owes his kingdom, as Mortimer, seeing
+that my wife is aunt to the young earl."
+
+Early in August it became known that preparations were being made, upon
+a great scale, by Douglas for the invasion of England; and that, as
+Military Governor of Scotland, he had summoned all the great nobles to
+join, with their forces; and it was even said that numbers of French
+knights were, on account of the long friendship between France and
+Scotland, crossing the seas, to fight under Douglas against their old
+enemies.
+
+"Methinks," Hotspur said to his knights, "there can be little doubt
+that there is an agreement between Scotland and Glendower; and this
+would account for the fury the Welshmen have been showing, and the
+manner in which they have destroyed the cathedrals, churches, and
+castles alike; and so forced Henry to march against them, with the
+forces of the greater part of England, just when Douglas is preparing
+to assail us here.
+
+"The forces of Westmoreland, Cumberland, Durham, and Northumberland, if
+together, might hope to make a stout resistance, even against so large
+a force as Douglas is collecting; but we cannot so gather. The Earl of
+Westmoreland, who commands the forces of his own county and Cumberland,
+must needs hold them together; lest the Scots pour down, besiege
+Carlisle, and carry fire and sword through those counties.
+
+"From here up to Berwick the country has been so plundered, and
+devastated, that it is almost a desert; and I can draw no strength from
+there. As to Durham, they urge, and with some truth that, as the Scots
+have, before now, laid portions of their county waste, they cannot send
+their forces so far north as this place; as it would leave them
+unprotected, should the enemy march through Tynedale into their county.
+
+"The king has entered Wales with the fighting men of thirty-four
+counties, so from him no aid can be expected; and it seems to me that
+we shall be quite unable to make head against the invasion; though
+assuredly, when we have gathered our forces, and are joined by those
+Dunbar will bring us, we will meet them as they return, spoil laden, to
+the border."
+
+Well-mounted messengers had been placed on every road by which the
+Scots could cross the border; and on the 18th of August, one came with
+the news that, twelve hours before, they had crossed into Cumberland at
+Kirksop Foot; that they were reported to be ten thousand strong; and
+that a dozen villages were already in flames. Another portion of their
+army had crossed near Tynehead, and were pouring into Tynedale.
+
+John Forster and his wife had arrived, some days before. Oswald had
+found comfortable lodgings for his mother in the town, which was
+already crowded with women and children from the border. His father had
+left again, at once; but returned, with twenty spears, twelve hours
+after the messenger had brought the news.
+
+"I had two or three of my men out," he said to Oswald, as he rode in
+and dismounted in the castle yard; "but as soon as I heard that the
+Scots had entered Tynedale, I knew that it was time to be off, for they
+are sure to send over strong parties to ravage Coquetdale. The road was
+well-nigh blocked, in some places, with fugitives. In spite of the
+warnings that have been issued, most of the people seem to have thought
+that the Scots could never come in their direction, and the news has
+caused a panic.
+
+"However, near the border the Scots will find but little plunder. We
+have had so many invasions that no man is foolish enough to spend money
+on aught that he cannot easily carry away, and the raiders will, there,
+find but empty houses. They may sweep in some of the cattle from the
+hills, to supply them with food on their march; but more than this they
+will not take, as they go south, as it would be but an encumbrance."
+
+In a few days a strong force was collected at Alnwick; but, though
+chafing at the news of the terrible devastations, that were being made
+by the Scots in Cumberland and Durham, the Earl and Hotspur could, at
+present, do nothing. The invasion was, indeed, one of the most
+disastrous that had ever taken place; and after having almost
+devastated the two counties, Douglas, with the united force, and an
+enormous train of waggons laden with plunder, great quantities of
+cattle, and other spoil, turned north again, at the end of the second
+week of September.
+
+In the meanwhile, Percy's force had been steadily growing. He had early
+resolved that upon the return of the Scots the battle must be fought,
+and contented himself with sending small bodies, of well-mounted
+knights and horsemen, to hover in the neighbourhood of the Scotch army;
+and to keep him informed of their intentions, and the route they seemed
+disposed to take.
+
+Douglas had carried his devastations up to the walls of Newcastle, but
+had not attempted to attack that strongly-defended town. He had,
+indeed, gathered as much spoil as could possibly be taken along; and he
+moved north in a quiet and leisurely way, being greatly hampered by the
+enormous train of loaded waggons.
+
+As soon as the Earl of Northumberland and his son saw that he intended
+to march up through Northumberland, instead of returning by the line
+that he had come through Tynedale, they set their force in motion and
+marched out; leaving a sufficient strength to hold Alnwick, should
+Douglas attack it. Being joined, two days later, by the Earl of Dunbar,
+they posted themselves in a position whence they could march to
+intercept the Scots, upon any road they might follow on their way
+north.
+
+On the 12th, they learned for certain that the Scots were following the
+road that would take them through Wooler. Moving instantly, the Earl
+with his forces came up to them, posted on a hill, a mile to the
+northwest of Homildon. He at once seized a hill facing it, and disposed
+his knights, men-at-arms, and spearmen along the crest.
+
+Hotspur would straightway have charged down, and attacked the Scots in
+their position; but Dunbar put his hand on his bridle, and urged him,
+strongly, to await the assault; and to provoke the Scots into taking
+the offensive by galling them with his archers, in which he was far
+superior to them; while, on the other hand, they were much stronger in
+spears and horsemen.
+
+Hotspur, seeing the goodness of the advice, assented to it; and ordered
+the archers to descend, at once, into the valley between the two hills;
+and to launch their arrows against the Scots. On descending, it was
+found that the Scottish bowmen were already in the valley. These they
+speedily drove up the hill, and then sent their arrows thick and fast
+among the Scottish men-at-arms.
+
+Douglas had, like the Earl of Dunbar, perceived at what disadvantage
+the party who took the offensive would have to fight; and had
+determined to stand on the defensive, especially as, if he moved
+forward, the English could detach bodies of horsemen to work round the
+hill, and fall upon his immense train of waggons.
+
+For a time, he refused to accede to the earnest entreaties of his
+knights to advance. But as man after man fell under the English arrows,
+their impatience increased; until one of his best knights, Sir John
+Swinton, rode a few paces out of the ranks, and in a loud voice said:
+
+"My brave comrades, what fascinates you today, that you stand like deer
+and fawns in a park to be shot; instead of showing your ancient valour,
+and meeting your foes hand to hand? Let those who will descend with me
+and, in the name of God, we will break that host and conquer; or if
+not, we will at least die with honour, like soldiers."
+
+A mighty shout followed his words, and the whole Scottish host dashed
+down the hill. The English archers fell back a little, still shooting
+as they did so; but halted a short way up the hill, and shot so hotly
+and strongly that they pierced helmet and armour with their arrows.
+
+Nothing could withstand these missiles, shot by the finest and
+strongest bowmen in the world. The Scots rolled over in heaps. Douglas,
+although clad in the most perfect steel armour, was wounded in five
+places, one arrow destroying the sight of one of his eyes. He fell from
+his horse, and utter confusion reigned in the Scottish ranks.
+
+Swinging their bows behind them, the archers drew their axes and rushed
+into the crowd, effecting a terrible slaughter. Douglas was made
+prisoner, as was the Earl of Fife, a son of the Regent Albany, the
+Earls of Moray and Angus and Orkney. Two barons, eighty knights, among
+whom were several Frenchmen, and several other persons of rank were
+also captured; while Swinton, Gordon, and many other knights and
+gentlemen were slain, together with seven hundred of the commonalty.
+With the exception only of Flodden, no battle on the Border was so
+fatal to the Scottish nobility, whose defeat was effected by the
+archers only.
+
+The confusion was so terrible that the Earl of Northumberland refused
+to allow his knights and men-at-arms to charge, seeing that they must
+trample down both friend and foe; therefore they stood as passive
+spectators of the desperate fight, not a lance being couched nor a blow
+struck by any of them. When all was over they took up the pursuit of
+the fugitives; many of these were overtaken and killed, and the pursuit
+was continued to the Tweed, where, not knowing the fords, many of the
+fugitives were drowned while endeavouring to swim the river.
+
+"Roger, what say you to that?" Oswald asked, as he and his squire drew
+rein, after pursuing the enemy for some distance.
+
+Roger's face expressed the strongest disgust.
+
+"Well, Sir Oswald, I don't call it a battle, at all. Who ever heard of
+a battle where neither knight nor man-at-arms drew sword? 'Tis out of
+all reason to fight in that manner."
+
+"Nevertheless, Roger, as we have won a great victory, what matter is it
+whether we or the archers bore the chief hand in it? The last battle we
+fought in was a different matter. We had plenty of fighting, but no
+victory."
+
+"It was more to my taste, nevertheless," Roger grumbled, "even though
+the Welsh well nigh made an end of me; and, for myself, I could not
+help hoping that the archers would be beaten, and leave it to us to
+take our part in the fighting. They had done more than their share when
+they had broken the Scottish ranks, and slain I know not how many; and
+it would have been fair of them, after that, to draw back, and leave it
+to us to finish the business."
+
+"'Tis well as it is, Roger, and for one I am well satisfied. We have
+given the Scots a lesson that will keep them quiet for a long time. We
+have recovered all the spoil they were carrying off, and we could have
+won nothing more, had we been in the thick of the melee, and come out
+of it, perhaps, sorely wounded again."
+
+Roger, however, was by no means satisfied; and, to the end of his life,
+always fell into a bad temper when the battle of Homildon was spoken
+of.
+
+All the prisoners of consequence were taken to Alnwick, where the army
+fell back; much to the disgust of some of the more eager spirits, who
+would fain have crossed the frontier, and made reprisals for the woes
+the Scots had inflicted. Northumberland, however, was well satisfied
+with what had been won, and did not wish to provoke the Scots to
+extremities; feeling that with so many of their leaders in his hands,
+he might be able to arrange terms that would ensure peace, for a
+considerable time, on the border.
+
+The prisoners were all treated with great kindness and consideration.
+They were lodged in the castle, and were treated as guests rather than
+as prisoners.
+
+Oswald and his father were both pleased to hear, two days after the
+battle, that when the Scottish dead were examined, the bodies of
+William Baird and ten of his kinsmen were found, lying together. They
+had resisted desperately to the last, refusing to surrender themselves;
+well knowing that their misdeeds and many depredations, in England,
+would bring them to the gallows, if taken alive.
+
+"Well, Father, we shall be able to live in peace for a time, now. No
+doubt the Bairds have brought with them every spear they could muster,
+for none would willingly have stayed at home, when there was a promise
+of gathering so much booty; therefore their strength must be altogether
+broken, and it will be long, indeed, before the Bairds ride in a raid
+into Northumberland."
+
+His father nodded.
+
+"'Tis a good thing, Oswald, assuredly; though I would rather that we
+had had the attacking of them in their own hold. Still, at any rate,
+there is an end of the feud for years to come; and I shall be able to
+lie down to sleep, without wondering whether they will be knocking at
+the gate, before morning."
+
+
+
+Chapter 20: The Percys' Discontent.
+
+
+During the time that had elapsed, between his receiving the news of
+Mortimer's capture by Glendower, and the battle of Homildon Hill, Percy
+had written several times to the king, with reference to his taking the
+same steps to ransom Mortimer that he had taken on behalf of Lord Grey.
+The king, however, answered very coldly; and one of his letters more
+than hinted that he believed that Mortimer had voluntarily placed
+himself in Glendower's hands, and that an agreement existed between
+them. Not only was Hotspur furious at such an accusation, but the earl,
+himself, was deeply angered.
+
+"'Tis past all belief," Hotspur said, "that such a charge should be
+made. Had Mortimer wished to join Glendower, he could have gone to him,
+not as a prisoner, but at the head of three thousand good fighting men.
+Why should he have thrown away the lives of twelve hundred of his own
+vassals, and those of his nephew? Nay, more, had Mortimer intended
+treachery, he might have marched and fallen on the rear of the king's
+army, entangled among the Welsh mountains and forests, while Glendower
+fell upon him from in front. 'Tis a lie, and bears its mark on its
+face; 'tis but an excuse for refusing to ransom Mortimer, who he hopes
+will be kept a prisoner for years, and whose estates he will thus be
+able to appropriate. 'Tis an insult not only to Mortimer but to us, to
+whom he owes his crown.
+
+"But let him beware! Those who built up, can pull down."
+
+The knights standing round put their hands on their sword hilts,
+significantly. The king was, to the followers of great barons, a person
+of but small consequence in comparison with their lord; and they would
+draw their swords, at the latter's order, as willingly against a king
+as against a foreign foe. That it was their duty to do so was so fully
+recognized that, in the troubles between the king and his nobles, while
+the latter were, if defeated, executed for treason, their vassals were
+permitted to return home unmolested; and it was not until the battle of
+Barnet that Edward, enraged at the humiliation that he had suffered,
+when he had been obliged to fly to France, gave orders that no quarter
+was to be shown to Warwick's vassals and retainers.
+
+Northumberland and Hotspur were still smarting under this treatment of
+Mortimer when, eight days after the battle, the messenger they had
+despatched to the king, in Wales, with the report of their great
+victory, and the capture of Douglas and other important nobles,
+returned with an order from the king that these prisoners were not to
+be ransomed.
+
+This order was received with passionate indignation by the earl and
+Hotspur. Although not altogether contrary to the usages of the age,
+since similar orders had, more than once been, issued by Edward the
+Third; the ransom of prisoners taken in battle was regarded as one of
+the most important sources of revenue, and as the means of defraying
+the expenses that nobles and knights were put to in aiding, with their
+vassals, the king in his wars. Occasionally, however, in the case of
+prisoners of importance, monarchs deemed it necessary, for political
+reasons, to forbid the ransom of prisoners.
+
+The Scottish nobles were as indignant as the Percys. They had regarded
+it as a matter of course that they would be shortly liberated. Their
+ransom, however heavy, would be soon forthcoming; for it was one of the
+conditions on which land was held that, in case of the lord being taken
+prisoner, each of his tenants must contribute largely, in proportion to
+his holding, towards the payment of his ransom.
+
+The order of the king clearly meant that they were to be taken to
+London and held there as hostages, perhaps for years; and so not only
+to ensure England against another invasion, but to further any designs
+of conquest that the king might entertain. With three of the great
+earls of Scotland--one of them the son of the Regent--and Douglas, the
+military leader of the Scots, in his hands; and with the Earl of Dunbar
+as his ally, Scotland would be practically at his mercy.
+
+An important meeting was held at Alnwick, at which the Scottish nobles,
+the Earl of Northumberland, and Hotspur were alone present, and here
+matters of vital interest to the kingdom were arranged.
+
+For six months things remained in the same state. The king's fourth
+expedition into Wales had effected no more than the preceding.
+Glendower was still virtually master of Wales. Cardiff had been burned
+by him, with its numerous priories and convents, with the exception of
+that of the Franciscans; the castle of Penmarc, and the town and castle
+of Abergavenny had been burned, and other strong places captured.
+
+The Percys remained, during this time, sullen and inactive; although
+somewhat mollified by the thanks voted them by Parliament. The king, as
+a reward for their services, bestowed upon them the estates of Douglas.
+This, however, they treated with scorn, for as well might he have
+presented to them the city of Naples or Paris; since, unless all
+Scotland was conquered, they could not come into peaceful mastership of
+the Douglas estates. Nor, indeed, could the king have intended it in
+earnest; for he was far too politic to think of adding so great an
+increase of territory to the estates of the Percys, who had already
+shown their power by placing him on the throne, and who might some day
+take back what they had given him, by declaring in favour of the Earl
+of March.
+
+One day in February, 1403, Oswald was summoned from Stoubes to Alnwick
+and, on his arrival there, was requested to go to the earl's chamber.
+Such a summons was extremely unusual. Hotspur had his own estates, and
+his own retinue and following; and was, jointly with his father, warden
+of the marches; and though he dwelt, generally, with him at Alnwick, he
+had his own portion of the castle. Thus it was seldom that the earl had
+any communication with Hotspur's knights.
+
+Hastening to obey, Oswald found Hotspur with his father.
+
+"I have a mission for you, Sir Oswald," Hotspur said, "on the part of
+the earl and myself. You know that, for a long time, there has been a
+disputation between my father and the Earl of Westmoreland, respecting
+the Scottish prisoners. The earl sent a small force to fight under me
+at Homildon, but it was a mere handful; and on the strength of this he
+advanced a claim to a considerable share of the ransoms of the
+prisoners; or, since they could not be ransomed, to the custody of the
+persons of the Earls of Moray and Angus. The king has now, contrary to
+all reason, inflicted upon us the indignity of appointing four
+commissioners, two of whom are but knights and the other two men of no
+consequence, to inquire into the question between my father and my
+uncle, the Earl of Westmoreland.
+
+"Does he think that two of his earls are going to submit themselves to
+so gross an indignity?--we, who are as much masters in the north of
+England as he is in the south--and even that he owes to us. I have
+ridden over and seen Westmoreland, who is as indignant as we are, and
+we at once arranged the little matter in which we are at variance, and
+agreed upon common measures.
+
+"But this is not all. Seeing that the king absolutely refused to do to
+Mortimer the same service that he did to Lord Grey, whose ransom he has
+now paid--and who, by the way, has married Glendower's daughter,
+Jane--Mortimer's vassals, with some aid from ourselves, have raised the
+money required to free Mortimer. Now the king has interfered, and has
+given orders that such ransom shall not be paid. 'Tis evident that he
+determines to drive us to extremities.
+
+"I tell you these things, in order that you may see how intolerable the
+condition of affairs has become. My father and myself believe that it
+is the judgment of heaven upon us, for having helped to dethrone King
+Richard, the lawful sovereign of this country, and to place this
+usurper on the throne. Even had Richard's conduct rendered his
+deposition necessary, we did wrong in passing over the lawful heir, the
+young Earl of March. 'Tis true he was but a child, at that time; but he
+is older now, and we feel shame that he should be kept as a prisoner,
+by Henry. Had not the king perjured himself, we should not have been
+led into this error; for, before we assisted him, he swore a great oath
+that he had no intention of gaining the throne, but only to regain his
+own dukedom of Lancaster. It was on that ground that we lent him our
+aid; and now, forsooth, this perjured usurper treats us, who made him,
+as dirt under his feet!
+
+"We are resolved to suffer it no longer; and since we may not ransom
+Mortimer, we will secure his freedom in other ways, and for this you
+may give us your aid."
+
+"Assuredly, Sir Henry, and my Lord Earl," Oswald, who was deeply
+indignant at the unworthy treatment of his lords, replied hotly. "My
+life is at your service."
+
+"I expected nothing else," Hotspur said, warmly. "The matter stands
+thus. Owen Glendower was a warm partisan of King Richard, and was one
+of the few who remained faithful to the end; thereby incurring the deep
+hostility of Henry, and of his adherent Lord Grey. It was for this his
+lands were unjustly seized, for this that Henry's parliament refused to
+accede to his complaints, and so drove him to take up arms. Thus, then,
+in an enterprise against Henry, Glendower is our natural ally; and we
+intend to propose to him that alliance, undertaking that, if he will
+give us aid, his claim to the crown of Wales shall be acknowledged, and
+that he shall govern his country without interference from England.
+
+"There is none who could carry out this negotiation so well as
+yourself, since you can, by virtue of that ring he gave you, pass
+unarmed to him; while any other knight would be assuredly slain. You
+will bear a letter, signed by the earl and myself, offering him our
+friendship and alliance, on those terms; and explain to him, more
+fully, the manner in which we have been driven to throw off Henry's
+authority. You can tell him that we shall proclaim the Earl of March
+lawful king; and if he agrees to join in our project, which would be
+clearly both to his liking and advantage, it would be as well that he
+should, as soon as we move, which may not be for some time yet, release
+Sir Edmund Mortimer; who, as the boy's uncle, will assuredly raise his
+vassals on his behalf, now that Henry has shown such animosity against
+him."
+
+"I will gladly undertake the mission, my lord; and all the more gladly,
+since it may lead to the liberation of Sir Edmund Mortimer, who treated
+me with the greatest kindness and condescension, during my stay at
+Ludlow."
+
+"Prepare to start tomorrow, then," the earl said. "The letter shall be
+ready for you tonight; and beyond what my son has told you, you can
+tell Glendower that we have good hopes of large help from Scotland;
+with whom, it is said, he is already in alliance."
+
+The next morning Oswald started, taking no one but Roger with him. He
+had, the evening before, told his squire only that he was starting on a
+journey; promising to tell him more, as they rode. Accordingly, when
+well away from Alnwick, he beckoned to Roger to bring up his horse
+alongside of him.
+
+"Where think you that we are going, Roger? I will give you fifty
+guesses, and would warrant that you would not come at the truth."
+
+"It matters nothing to me, master; so that I ride with you, I am
+content."
+
+"You know, Roger, how grievously the king has treated the Percys; how
+he has prevented their taking ransom for their prisoners, and has
+refused to ransom Sir Edmund Mortimer; how he, in bitter jest, offered
+the earl the estates of Douglas; and how he has put upon them the
+indignity of sending four men, of no import, to decide upon their
+difference with Westmoreland?"
+
+"Ay, ay, Sir Oswald, everyone knows this, and not a few have wondered
+that the Percys have suffered these things, in quietness."
+
+"A fresh thing has happened, Roger. The tenants of Mortimer, with aid
+from the earl and Hotspur, have raised the sum that Glendower demanded
+as ransom; and now the king has laid on them his order, that this money
+is not to be paid."
+
+"By our Lady," Roger exclaimed wrathfully, "this is too much! Sir
+Edmund is a noble gentleman, and that the king should refuse to allow
+his friends to ransom him passes all bounds."
+
+"So the earl and Hotspur consider," Oswald said, "and, ere long, you
+will see that they will hoist the banner of the young Earl of March,
+and proclaim him King of England."
+
+"'Tis good," Roger exclaimed, slapping his hand on his leg. "To me it
+matters nought who is King of England, but I always held that it was
+hard that King Richard should be deposed, and murdered, by one who was
+not even his lawful successor. I am not one to question the conduct of
+my lord, but I always thought that the Percys were wrong in bringing
+this usurper over."
+
+"They feel that themselves, Roger, and consider the ingratitude of the
+king to be a punishment upon them, for having aided him to the throne."
+
+"But what has this to do with your journey, master?"
+
+"It has much to do with it, Roger, seeing that I am on my way to
+Glendower, to offer him alliance with the Percys."
+
+"A good step!" Roger exclaimed. "We know that these Welsh can fight."
+
+"Moreover, Roger, it may bring about the freeing of Mortimer; for the
+evil feeling the king has shown against him will surely drive him to
+raise all his vassals, and those of the young earl, in Herefordshire
+and elsewhere; and thus the Percys will gain two powerful allies,
+Glendower and Mortimer; and as they advance from the north, the Welsh
+and Mortimer will join them from the west. When victory is gained,
+there will be peace on the Welsh marches. Owen will be recognized for
+what he is, the King of Wales; and doubtless he will then suffer the
+English to live quietly there, just as the Welsh have lived quietly in
+England.
+
+"Then, too, all the western counties will see that it is their interest
+to side with Mortimer and Glendower. Four times, during the last three
+years, have they been called out, and forced to leave their homes to
+follow the king into Wales; and as often have had to return, leaving
+behind them many of their number. They will see that, if Glendower is
+acknowledged King of Wales, this hard and grievous service will no
+longer be required of them."
+
+"That is so, Sir Oswald, and in truth I like the project well. It
+matters not a straw to me who is king; but if a king treats my lords
+scurvily, I am ready to shout 'Down with him!' and to do my best to put
+another up in his place; though, indeed, 'tis a salve to my conscience
+to know that the man I am fighting against is a usurper, and one who
+has set himself up in the place of the lawful king."
+
+"My conscience in no way pricks me, Roger. I fight at my lord's order,
+against his foes. That is the duty I have sworn to. As between him and
+the king, 'tis a matter for him alone. At the same time, I am glad that
+the business is likely to end in the rescue of a knight who has been
+very kind to me. Between Henry and the young Earl of March I have no
+opinion; but it seems to me that, since Henry ascended to the throne by
+might, and by the popular voice, he has no cause to complain, if he is
+put out of it by the same means."
+
+"But, should the war go against the Percys, master?"
+
+"That, again, is a matter for the earl and Hotspur. They know what
+force they and the Earl of Westmoreland can put in the field. They know
+that Glendower can aid with ten thousand Welshmen, and that Mortimer
+can raise three or four thousand men from his vassals. They should know
+what help they can count on from Scotland; and doubtless, during the
+last six months, have made themselves acquainted with the general
+feeling respecting the king. It is upon them that the risk chiefly
+falls. We knights and men-at-arms may fall in the field of battle; but
+that is a risk that we know we have to face, when we take to the
+calling of arms. If our cause is lost, and we escape from the
+battlefield, we have but to depart to our holds or our villages, and we
+shall hear nought more of the affair; while our lords, if taken, would
+lose their heads. It will be a grief for us to lose masters we love,
+and to have to pay our quittance with money or service to a new lord;
+but beyond that, we risk nought save our lives in battle. Therefore I
+trouble myself, in no way, as to the matter between the Percys and the
+king, which I take it in no way concerns me; and am content to do my
+duty, and to render my service, as I have sworn to do."
+
+"It is well, Sir Oswald," Roger said, after a long pause, "that
+Glendower gave us those rings; for from all accounts he and his
+Welshmen are more furious than ever, and there would be small chance of
+our ever reaching him, without them. The chain did its work, last time.
+'Tis not every Welshman who would stop to examine it before striking,
+and few who could read the inscription, if they did so; while 'tis like
+that most of them are well acquainted with Glendower's signet."
+
+"That is so; but nevertheless, Roger, it will be better, when we have
+once crossed the border, that you should ride behind me with a white
+flag displayed; as a token that we come, not for war, but on a peaceful
+mission. 'Tis probable, at any rate, that any band of Welshmen who may
+meet us will, in that case, before attacking, stop to inquire on what
+errand we come."
+
+They rode fast, for the earl had said that he needed to have the news
+of Glendower's decision, before proceeding further in the matter, and
+in four days arrived on the border. At Shrewsbury Oswald inquired,
+carelessly, of the host of the inn where he put up, where Glendower was
+now thought to be; as he intended to journey south to Hereford, and
+would fain know whether there was any risk of falling in with bands of
+the marauders.
+
+"Methinks, Sir Knight, that you may travel without uneasiness; seeing
+that the country between this and Hereford has been so harassed, by
+them, that there is nought to tempt them to cross the border, save with
+so large a force that they can invade Gloucester or Worcestershire. Men
+say, moreover, that Glendower is, at present, in Cardiganshire. There
+are still a few Welsh inhabitants here. They declare that they are
+loyal to the king, and love not their wild countrymen. Whether it is
+so, or not, I cannot say; but they certainly manage to keep up
+communications with the Welsh. This may be for a treacherous purpose,
+or it may be as they say; that, knowing that they and all belonging to
+them would be slain, should Glendower capture the town; they, for their
+own safety, try to learn his intentions and movements, in order to warn
+us, should a surprise be intended."
+
+Starting early the next morning, Oswald crossed into Montgomeryshire,
+by a road through Worktree Forest, so as to avoid both Ludlow and
+Welshpool; and kept along by a country track, near the border of
+Radnor, so passing south of Llanidloes. As soon as they had left
+Radnorshire, Roger fastened to his spear a white cloth they had brought
+from Shrewsbury; then they continued their journey west.
+
+It was not until they had crossed the Wye, here an insignificant
+stream, that they came upon a native of the country. They were
+following a track, between two rough hills covered with brushwood, when
+a man, evidently of the better class, stepped out before them.
+
+"Sir Knight," he said in English, "'tis a strange sight to see an
+Englishman, with one esquire, travelling alone by so wild and lonely a
+road as this; and strange, indeed, that he should bear a flag of truce;
+for were you here on your king's business, you would surely be attended
+with a braver show. I had notice, two hours ago, brought by one who had
+seen you cross the Wye; and in the bushes round lie fifty men who, did
+I raise my hand, would let fly their arrows against you. But if you
+have reason for your coming this way, assuredly we should not hinder
+you."
+
+Oswald held out his hand.
+
+"This signet ring, sir, was given me by Glendower, who said that any
+Welshman to whom I might show it would act as my guide and escort to
+him. I come on an important mission, not from the king, but from one
+from whom Glendower may be glad to hear; therefore I pray you take me
+to him, or at least send a party of your men; for I might,
+peradventure, fall in with some who would shoot before they
+questioned."
+
+"'Tis assuredly the prince's signet," the man said, after carefully
+examining it, "and right gladly will I escort you to him. He is, at
+present, at Aberystwith."
+
+"Thanks for your courtesy, sir. To whom am I speaking?"
+
+"My name is Howel ap Ryddyn. You passed my abode, which cannot be seen
+from the road; and I would, were you not pressed for time, gladly
+entertain you; but if we push forward, we may reach Aberystwith before
+nightfall, and I make no question that would better suit your wishes."
+
+"Thanks, sir. My business is somewhat urgent, and I shall be glad to
+meet the prince, as soon as possible. Indeed, I should not be sorry to
+reach a spot where we can sup and sleep, seeing that we have twice
+slept in the woods, since we left Shrewsbury."
+
+The man called out an order, in Welsh. Four men at once issued from the
+bushes, and under their guidance the horsemen soon reached Aberystwith.
+
+"I had scarce expected this pleasure, Sir Oswald," Glendower said
+warmly, as the young knight entered. "To what good fortune do I owe
+your visit?
+
+"But no, 'tis but poor hospitality questioning thus, when it will be
+time enough to talk of such things, later."
+
+"And 'tis a matter that is best discussed in private," Oswald replied,
+in an undertone.
+
+"And how have you fared since we parted?"
+
+"Since I saw you, over a year ago, the time has passed quietly, save
+for the battle with the Scots; where, although we beat them, there was
+no credit gained by the knights and men-at-arms; seeing that the
+archers, alone, did the fighting."
+
+"So I heard. On our side, we have been busy ever since."
+
+"And successful, too, as I have heard."
+
+"Yes, fortune has been in our favour. Lord Grey's ransom has been of
+much use to us and, having married my daughter Jane, he can no longer
+be considered a foe. Yet, to do him justice, he would not promise even
+to stand neutral; though, unless under special orders from the king, he
+will not draw his sword again. I love a stanch man; and though Grey has
+taken, as I consider, the wrong side, he stands to it faithfully. I
+offered him freedom, without ransom, if he would promise neutrality,
+and that, when I had put down all other opposition, he would hold his
+Welsh lands from me; but he refused, and said that he would rather
+remain in chains, all his life, than be false to his vows to Henry.
+
+"That was good, and I would that all Welshmen were as faithful. They
+take the oath to me one week, and make their peace with Henry the next.
+Nay, some, to please him, would go so far as to try to assassinate me.
+Two such plots have there been this year, and it was only that I wore a
+good mail shirt under my garments, that my life was saved from a bow
+shot, and from one who professed to be my warm friend, and who had
+taken bread with me, half an hour before.
+
+"It is destiny, Sir Oswald. The powers watch over me, and keep me from
+harm; and these will, I know, protect me to the end, against the stroke
+of English foes, or of Welsh traitors."
+
+After supper was over, Glendower led Oswald to his private chamber.
+
+"Now, Sir Oswald, you can speak freely. I have placed a guard outside
+the door, and there is no fear of interruption. Do you come on your own
+account, or from another?"
+
+"I come from the Earl of Northumberland, and his son Sir Henry Percy;
+and am charged, in the first place, to deliver this letter to you; and
+then to give you such further intelligence, as to the matter, as it may
+be needful for you to know."
+
+"From the Percys!" Glendower said, in surprise, as he cut the silk that
+held the roll together.
+
+His countenance expressed great surprise, as he read the contents.
+
+"There is no snare in this?" he said suddenly, after reading it through
+two or three times, and looking sharply at Oswald. "'Tis not from the
+Percys, who, more than any other, assisted the usurper to the throne,
+that I should have looked for such an offer."
+
+"I should be the last to bring such a letter to you, Glendower, were
+there aught behind what is written. The earl and Hotspur spoke of the
+matter at length to me. They regret, now, the part they took in
+enthroning Henry; at whose hands they have now received such
+indignities that they are resolved, if it may be, to undo their work,
+and to place the lawful king, the young Earl of March, on the throne."
+
+He then related the various complaints that the Percys had against the
+king, and told Glendower that the matter had been brought to a head by
+Henry's refusal to allow them to pay the ransom that had been collected
+for Sir Edmund Mortimer.
+
+"Whom have they with them?" Glendower asked, after listening in
+silence.
+
+"They have the Earl of Westmoreland, who, like themselves, is greatly
+offended at the appointment of four commissioners, men of no standing
+or position, to judge between two of the great barons of England; blood
+relations, too, whose difference is on a matter of but small
+importance. No other name was mentioned before me, but the earl stated
+that he looked for much assistance from Scotland."
+
+"Ay, ay! As they hold in their hands Douglas, and the Regent's son,
+Moray, and Angus, they may well make terms with Scotland. Yes, it is a
+very great plot, and since I can get no ransom for Mortimer, and he can
+raise some three or four thousand men, he would be of more value to us
+free than as a prisoner."
+
+"It is not only that," Oswald said. "The fact that he, as young March's
+uncle, should head his following and raise his banner, will show that
+the Percys and you are not using young March's name as a mere pretext
+for taking up arms. If Mortimer, the head of his house during his
+minority, and guardian of his estates, were with them, men would see
+that 'tis really a struggle to place the lawful king on the throne; and
+many would join who, did they think it was but an affair between the
+Percys, of whom they know but little in the south, and you, whom they
+have been taught to consider a rebel, would stand aloof."
+
+"'Tis well thought of, and the project pleases me. Even without such
+allies, I may hold my mountains and continue my warfare, but there
+could be neither peace nor prosperity for years; but with the overthrow
+of the usurper, and my acknowledgment as King of Wales, and of the
+entire independence of the country, from the Dee to the Severn, the
+freedom of my country might be permanently secured.
+
+"But I will give no certain answer, tonight. 'Tis a matter to be turned
+over in my mind, as it seems to me that I may gain much good by the
+alliance; and that, even if the Percys fail in their enterprise, I can
+be no worse off than I am, at present."
+
+It was not until the following evening that Glendower gave a decided
+answer.
+
+"I accept Percy's offer," he said. "I have thought it over in every
+way; even putting aside the benefits, to my country and myself, I would
+enter upon it; were it but for the satisfaction of seeing the usurper,
+and murderer of my dear master, King Richard, have the same measure
+meted out to him that he gave to his sovereign. Tonight I will write an
+answer to the Percys, for you to bear to them. Tomorrow morning I will
+ride, with you, to the stronghold where Mortimer is at present held in
+durance; and if he consents to join us, I will give him his freedom,
+without ransom."
+
+They started the next morning, early; and at noon arrived at a strong
+house, lying in the heart of the hills.
+
+"It were best that you should see him first, Sir Oswald, and explain
+the matter to him. After that, I will meet him with you."
+
+Great was the astonishment of Sir Edmund, when Oswald was ushered into
+the little room in which he was confined. It was some ten feet square,
+furnished with a pallet, chair, and small table. The window was very
+strongly barred, and Oswald observed, with pain, that his ten months'
+imprisonment had told very heavily upon Mortimer.
+
+"Why, Oswald! Ah! I see I should say Sir Oswald. What brings you here?
+Some good news, I trust. Has my ransom been collected?"
+
+"It has been collected, Sir Edmund," Oswald said, as they shook hands,
+"but the king, who refused altogether to pay your ransom, as he did
+Lord Grey's, has forbidden the money, raised partly by your tenants and
+partly by the tenants of your nephew, to be handed over. 'Tis clear
+that he views you as an enemy; and has, indeed, ventured to declare his
+belief that your capture by Glendower was a thing arranged,
+beforehand."
+
+"He lies!" Sir Edmund exclaimed angrily. "We fought stoutly and, had it
+not been for the treachery of the Welsh bowmen, should have won the
+day.
+
+"Then how stands the matter, Sir Oswald, and how is it that you are
+here?"
+
+Oswald then related the purport of his mission, and gave Mortimer some
+messages with which Hotspur had charged him, on the evening before he
+started.
+
+"Assuredly I will join," Sir Edmund exclaimed, when Oswald brought his
+story to a conclusion. "Have I not suffered enough by keeping a force
+on foot, by having my lands harried and my vassals slain, in order to
+support Henry's claims to the kingdom of Wales, only to be suspected of
+treachery? Had I intended to join Glendower, I should have done so a
+year before; and with my force and his, we could have kept Henry at
+bay. Why should I have kept up the pretext of loyalty, when there was
+nought to have prevented my joining Glendower? Why should I have fought
+him, at the cost of the lives of some twelve hundred of my men, when I
+could have marched them into his camp, as friends? Why should I suffer
+nine months of close imprisonment, at the hands of an ally?
+
+"Henry lied, and knew that he lied, when he brought such a charge
+against me. He wished to be able to work his will on the young earl,
+and maybe to murder him as he murdered Richard, without there being one
+powerful enough to lift his voice to condemn the murder. All is at an
+end between us, and henceforth I am his open enemy, as he is mine; and
+would be heart and soul with the Percys in the overthrow of Henry, even
+if my nephew were not concerned, and did the earl purpose, himself, to
+grasp the crown."
+
+"Glendower is below, Sir Edmund, and will himself speak to you; but he
+thought that it were best that I should first open the matter to you."
+
+A quarter of an hour later the keeper of the hold came up, and said
+that the prince bade Sir Edmund to descend and speak with him. As they
+entered the room where Glendower was waiting, the latter glanced at
+Oswald, inquiringly.
+
+"The matter is settled," the latter said. "Sir Edmund will join us,
+with heart and hand."
+
+"I am indeed glad to hear it, Sir Oswald.
+
+"Sir Edmund Mortimer," he went on, courteously, "hitherto we have
+regarded each other as enemies; henceforth we are friends, and you are
+my guest and not my prisoner. I have thought it over, and methinks that
+you must tarry here, till we have certain news of the day on which the
+Percys will set on foot their enterprise. It would not be safe for you
+to return to your estates, until you are in a position to call your
+vassals to arms at once; for the king, were he to hear that you were at
+Ludlow, might call on the lieutenants of the western counties, and the
+owners of all the castles, to attack you at once. Therefore, until it
+is time to strike, it were best that you should remain with me.
+
+"I do not propose that you should accompany me on my expeditions, for
+to do so might do harm across the border. I will, therefore, assign you
+a suitable house at Aberystwith, with such attendance and furnishing as
+are due to a guest of your quality.
+
+"The prospect seems to be a fair one. The northern lords, aided by the
+Scots, should by themselves be a match for any gathering Henry could
+collect at short notice; and, joined by my forces and yours, should
+surely be able to overthrow all opposition."
+
+"So it appears to me," Sir Edmund said. "'Tis indeed a powerful
+confederation and, if all goes well, ought to leave no option to the
+usurper but to die in battle, or to fly to France."
+
+"Will you return with us to Aberystwith, Sir Oswald?" Glendower
+presently asked the young knight.
+
+"I will ride straight for England, with your permission," Oswald said.
+"I am already thirty miles on my way, and the Percys urged me to return
+as soon as possible."
+
+"So be it. As soon as we have dined, an officer and four horsemen will
+be in readiness to ride with you, as an escort."
+
+A week later Oswald reached Alnwick. He was the bearer of letters from
+Glendower and Mortimer, and was able to report the complete success of
+his mission. As a mark of his satisfaction, the earl ordered a deed of
+gift to be made to him, of a large strip of land extending over the
+hills between Stoubes and Yardhope.
+
+"Some day," he said, as he handed the document to him, "you will be
+master of Yardhope, and by thus joining that feu to that of Stoubes,
+you will have an estate that will make you a power in the upper glades
+of Reddesdale and Coquetdale; and will support the dignity of a knight
+banneret, which I now bestow upon you, and also appoint you a deputy
+warden of the marches, with power of life and death over all marauders,
+reivers, and outlaws. I have long felt that it would be well that there
+should be one who, in case of necessity, could raise a hundred spears;
+and so prevent bodies of marauders, from the other side of the border,
+making sudden irruptions into the dales; and from what I have heard of
+you, from Sir Henry, I am sure that you will carry out the charge most
+worthily."
+
+The new acquisition would not very largely increase Oswald's revenues,
+for the greater portion of the grant was hill and moor. Nevertheless,
+there were a good many houses and small villages scattered in the
+dales, and it was these that raised the tract of land to the value of a
+knight's feu.
+
+In point of position, however, it was a large addition. As a knight
+banneret, with the castle of Stoubes at one end of his holding, and the
+hold of Yardhope at the other, he would occupy an important position on
+the border; and could raise at least a hundred spears among his
+tenants, in addition to the men-at-arms of the two strongholds.
+
+Three days later Hotspur released the whole of his Scottish prisoners; and
+sent them, under escort, to the border. The Percys now began, in earnest,
+their preparations for war. For greater convenience Hotspur went down to
+Morpeth, while the earl betook himself to Berwick-on-Tweed, where he could
+confer more easily with his Scottish allies; who, on their part, were
+carrying out the condition on which they had been released without ransom;
+namely, that they would join their forces to those of the Percys.
+
+Oswald made another journey to Wales, this time by ship from Carlisle
+to Aberystwith, and there acquainted Glendower and Mortimer with the
+preparations that had been made, assuring them that the rising would
+take place at the end of May. He also asked Glendower to raise as large
+an army as possible, without delay; and Sir Edmund Mortimer to betake
+himself at once to Hereford, there to raise his banner and summon his
+vassals, and those of the Earl of March, to join him--the king having,
+on his return from his last expedition, entered Ludlow, seized
+Mortimer's plate and other property, and appointed to the governorship
+of Ludlow a knight on whose devotion he could rely.
+
+
+
+Chapter 21: Shrewsbury.
+
+
+The Percys' preparations could not be carried on without exciting
+attention; and in March the king, seeing that the open defiance of his
+authority, by the release of the Scottish prisoners, would assuredly be
+followed by armed rebellion, which the Douglas would probably have
+pledged himself to aid as the condition of his release, began, on his
+side, to make similar preparations. Levies were called out, and the
+Prince of Wales was appointed to the command of the Welsh marches, and
+the governorship of Wales.
+
+Towards the end of June Douglas, faithful to his agreement, crossed the
+frontier; and was at once joined by Hotspur, with the force he had
+gathered. Hotspur's father was lying sick at Berwick, but was to
+follow, as speedily as possible, with the army collected in the north
+of the county, and from Dunbar's estates.
+
+It had been arranged that Glendower should meet the allies at
+Lichfield; and on his being joined by his uncle, the Earl of
+Westmoreland, with his following, Hotspur marched south. His intention
+was, after effecting a junction with Glendower, to march and give
+battle to the army with which Henry and the Prince of Wales were
+advancing against him. At Lichfield, however, he learned that Glendower
+had not completed his preparations in sufficient time to join him. He
+therefore changed his direction, and made for Shrewsbury, towards which
+place Glendower was marching.
+
+Percy's array had swollen as he went south. He had been joined by a
+number of archers, from Cheshire, and by other adherents of the late
+king; these regarding the war as an attempt, not to place the Earl of
+March upon the throne, but to overthrow the usurper who had dethroned
+their king.
+
+Oswald rode with sixty spearmen from his own estate; while his father,
+with thirty men from Yardhope, rode in his company. Both regarded the
+failure of Glendower to come to the place appointed as a serious
+misfortune.
+
+"Of course," Oswald said, "if he joins us at Shrewsbury, before the
+king comes up, it will not matter much; and indeed would be, in one
+respect, the better. Mortimer with his force will be coming on; and
+though he is scarce likely to arrive at Shrewsbury in time for the
+battle, for he could not leave Wales, to summon his levies to the
+field, until the Prince of Wales had drawn off his force and marched to
+join his father; his reinforcement, afterwards, will fill up the gaps
+in our ranks, and be a great assistance, should Henry be able to rally
+another army in the Midlands. He cannot hope to do so before we reach
+London."
+
+"That sounds fairly, Oswald, but 'tis always better to carry out the
+plans you have made; and this absence of Glendower, at the point
+arranged, to my mind augurs ill."
+
+Henry was an able general. Believing that the Percys would make for the
+Welsh border, he had posted himself at Burton-on-Trent; but as soon as
+he heard that they had changed their course he started for Shrewsbury,
+and marched so quickly that he arrived there before Hotspur, thus
+throwing himself between the Percys and the Welsh.
+
+Hotspur, on arriving near the town, was enraged at hearing that
+Glendower had not arrived, according to his promise. The king's army
+was encamped on the eastern side of the town, and the northern forces
+took post a short distance away. That night Hotspur sent a document
+into the royal camp, declaring Henry to be forsworn and perjured: in
+the first place because he had sworn, under Holy Gospel, that he would
+claim nothing but his own proper inheritance, and that Richard should
+reign to the end of his life; secondly, because he had raised taxes and
+other impositions, contrary to his oath, and by his own arbitrary
+power; thirdly, because he had caused King Richard to be kept in the
+castle of Pontefract, without meat, drink, or fire, whereof he perished
+of hunger, thirst, and cold. There were other clauses, some of them
+regarding his conduct to Sir Edmund Mortimer. The claims of the young
+Earl of March to the throne were also set forward, and the document
+ended with a defiance.
+
+Henry simply sent, as reply, that he had no time to lose in writing;
+but that he would, in the morning, prove in battle whose claims were
+false and feigned.
+
+Nevertheless, in the morning, when the two armies were arrayed in the
+order of battle, the king sent the Abbot of Shrewsbury to propose an
+amicable arrangement. Hotspur and Douglas, however, rejected the offer.
+The trumpets then blew on either side, and the armies joined battle.
+
+Their numbers were about equal. Each consisted of some fourteen
+thousand men. Douglas and Hotspur had taken their place in the centre
+of their line, having behind them a party of their best knights. These
+charged with fury down upon the king's standard, which stood in the
+centre of his array. Hotspur and Douglas, his former rival, were
+accounted two of the best knights in Christendom, and the fury of their
+charge was irresistible. The centre of the royal line was cleft in
+sunder, the king's guards were at once dispersed; and, had not Henry
+taken the precaution of arraying himself in plain armour, while two of
+his knights had put on royal surcoats, the battle would at once have
+been decided.
+
+As it was, the two knights were both killed, as were the Earl of
+Stafford and Sir Walter Blount. The royal standard was overthrown, and
+the young Prince of Wales sorely wounded in the face.
+
+He had already shown signs of great military talent; and, in spite of
+his wound, now showed a courage and presence of mind that justified the
+confidence his father had shown, in giving him important commands. He
+rode hither and thither among the disorganized troops, saw that the gap
+in the centre was again closed up, and was ever to be met where the
+fight was hottest.
+
+The impetuous charge of Hotspur and Douglas was the ruin of themselves,
+and their army. Had they paused until their troops had advanced close
+to the enemy, and the mounted men-at-arms were all ranged closely
+behind them, and in a position to support them, the fight would
+assuredly have speedily terminated in their favour; but before these
+arrived the royal army had closed its ranks, and the rebel leaders,
+with all their principal knights, were cut off from the main body. In
+vain the men of the north tried to cut their way through the southern
+ranks, and to come to the assistance of their chiefs; who, surrounded
+now by the English knights and men-at-arms, were fighting desperately
+against overwhelming numbers.
+
+An hour after the battle began, many parties of Welshmen came up and
+joined in the conflict; but the absence of leaders, and the loss of
+their respective captains, Hotspur and Douglas, paralysed the efforts
+of the Northumbrians and the Scottish contingent. Yet both fought
+stoutly, and suffered very heavy losses.
+
+For upwards of two hours Hotspur maintained the unequal fight; but at
+length an arrow pierced Hotspur's visor, and he fell dead from his
+horse. Further resistance was useless, and the survivors of the group,
+which had been reduced to a mere handful, surrendered. For another half
+hour the main battle raged; then came the news that Hotspur was killed,
+and Douglas and Westmoreland prisoners; the English horsemen dashed
+down on the flanks of the northern line, the spearmen pressed forward,
+and the Scotch and Northumbrians broke and fled.
+
+When the knights first charged, Oswald had been with his own following,
+and a hundred other horsemen, on the left flank. As soon as he saw what
+had happened, he endeavoured to ride round the right flank of the royal
+army; but was met by a much larger force of men-at-arms and, after hard
+fighting, driven back. Oswald himself, with Roger on one hand and his
+father on the other, had several times hewed his way deep into the
+enemy's squadron; and would have been cut off, had not the Yardhope
+moss troopers spurred furiously in to the rescue, and brought them all
+off again.
+
+Several times the charge was renewed, but ineffectually. Half the rebel
+army had been killed; and when, at last, the infantry broke, and it was
+clear that there was no more to be done, Oswald, who was wounded in
+half a dozen places, called the survivors of his troop to follow him;
+and, with his party, rode off in good order.
+
+A mile from the field they halted for a few minutes. Not one of them
+but had been more or less severely wounded in the desperate melee. They
+now took off their armour, and bandaged each other's wounds; and then,
+mounting again, they rode off.
+
+"What do you say, Father," Oswald asked; "shall we circle round, and
+join Glendower? We know that his army is close at hand and, were they
+to attack tonight, they should win an easy victory; for the king's men
+have suffered well nigh as sorely as we have."
+
+"No, Oswald; we have done enough. We have not been fighting for the
+Earl of March. We have been simply following our feudal lord, as we
+were bound to do. He is dead, and we have nought to do with this
+quarrel. What is it to us whether March or Henry is king?"
+
+They were not pursued. The greater part of the English cavalry were
+exhausted by their exertions against Hotspur and Douglas. Their loss
+was extremely heavy, and those in a condition to pursue took up the
+comparatively easy work of cutting down the flying footmen.
+
+The battle had been a disastrous one, for both sides. Their losses were
+about even, the number who fell altogether being put at ten thousand
+men. With Douglas, the Earl of Westmoreland, Baron of Kinderton, Sir
+Richard Vernon, and other knights were captured. Westmoreland,
+Kinderton, and Vernon were at once executed on the field of battle, as
+rebels; but Douglas, as a foreign knight, was simply viewed as a
+prisoner of war, and was kindly treated.
+
+Glendower took no advantage of the opportunity for striking a blow at
+the royal army; and instead of attacking it, when spent by fatigue and
+encumbered with wounds, retired at once to Wales. Had he, instead of
+doing this, marched to meet Sir Edmund Mortimer, who was hurrying
+forward with a powerful array, the united force would have been fully
+double the strength of the English army; and a great commander would,
+at once, have fought a battle that would probably have altered the
+whole course of events in England. Glendower's conduct here showed
+that, although an able partisan leader in an irregular warfare, he had
+no claim whatever to be considered a great general.
+
+Travelling rapidly, Oswald and his party crossed the Tyne; and hearing
+that the earl, now recovered from his illness, was marching down with
+his army to join his son, they rode to meet him. It was a painful duty
+that Oswald had to discharge, and the old earl, when he heard of the
+defeat of the army, the death of the son to whom he was deeply
+attached, and the capture of his brother, the Earl of Westmoreland,
+gave way to despair, dismissed his army to their homes at once, and
+retired, completely broken down in body and spirit, to his castle at
+Warkworth.
+
+So depressed was he that when royal messengers arrived, summoning him
+in the king's name to surrender, and journey with him to London, he
+instantly obeyed. When questioned by the king why he had displayed the
+banner of revolt against him, he said he had done so on the urging of
+Hotspur; and the king, who was always inclined to leniency, when
+leniency was safe, pardoned him, and permitted him to retain his
+dignity and estates.
+
+Oswald speedily recovered from his wounds, but his father suffered
+much.
+
+"I have fought my last fight, Oswald," he said, when his son rode over
+to see him, a few days after their return from the south. "I say not
+that I am about to die, but only that methinks I shall never be able to
+wield sword manfully again. I have talked the matter over with your
+mother, and she agrees with me that it were well that I handed over
+Yardhope to you. I do not mean that I should leave the old place--for
+generations my fathers have lived and died here, and I would fain do
+the same--but that I should hand over to you the feu, and you should
+take oath for it to Northumberland, and lead its retainers in the
+field. Were it that there was a chance of another raid by the Bairds, I
+would still maintain my hold myself; but their power was altogether
+broken, at Homildon.
+
+"Moreover, the border Scots and we are at peace now, as we have not
+been so long as memories run; seeing that we have fought side by side
+against the King of England, and have suffered the same misfortune in
+defeat; therefore, I can hang up my sword.
+
+"But for you there may be more fighting. From what I know of the old
+earl, I am sure that he will never forgive Hotspur's death; and
+although, at present, he is reinstated in his estates, there can be no
+doubt that the king will strike further blows against the power of the
+Percys. Northumberland is a valiant soldier, tenacious in his purposes,
+and lasting in his hatreds. Had it not been that he was utterly broken
+by the news that we brought him, he would assuredly have marched down
+with his army, and tried to join Glendower and Mortimer; and at least
+have died fighting, the end that he would best like. I doubt not that
+we shall see his banner raised again, ere long."
+
+"I hope not, Father. The undertaking would be desperate."
+
+"However that may be, Oswald, as I can no longer render service for the
+feu, I wish to hand it over to you. 'Tis but a nominal change, but I
+should like to see the estate yours. I and my fathers have held our
+own, and were content to do so, adding somewhat to our means by such
+plunder as we could carry off from Scotland; but you have greatly
+advanced the family, and as a deputy warden of the marches, it is as
+well that Yardhope should be added to your holding. I should be glad,
+too, to have you known as Sir Oswald Forster of Yardhope, and not as
+Sir Oswald Forster of Stoubes; and in time, if things go well with you,
+I charge you to build a castle here, in place of this hold; which has
+been good enough for plain men like myself and my father, but which is
+no fit residence for the estate you now hold.
+
+"I don't mean to say that I wish you always to live here, for, maybe,
+Stoubes is a more pleasant abode, standing in a fair country, and with
+the climate somewhat less hard than this; but I should like you to come
+up here, at times, and to be known as Forster of Yardhope."
+
+"I will carry out your wishes, Father; but it would please me more for
+things to remain as they have been."
+
+"My plan is best, lad. I shall be seneschal here for you, and little
+will be changed; save that you will ride at the head of the retainers,
+instead of myself. 'Tis not meet that I should hold the feu, when I can
+no longer render due service.
+
+"Your mother is wholly of opinion that I have done enough of fighting
+for my life, and should trouble myself no longer with raidings and
+wars. Your mother has shown sound judgment, and her advice has
+generally been good; though I never fully recognized this, till I saw
+what great good had come of her wishing you to learn to read and write;
+for it is to that, to no small extent, that you owe your rapid rise and
+present dignity."
+
+Accordingly, a few days later, Oswald rode with his father to
+Warkworth, to which castle the earl had returned after his visit to
+England. At the request of John Forster he received back the feu from
+him, and appointed his son to it. This done, Oswald rode to pay a visit
+to his cousins; while his father returned to Yardhope, with two
+retainers he had brought with him.
+
+Oswald had not seen Adam Armstrong, since the latter had come to
+Yardhope after the rescue of his daughters; and he was received by him
+with the greatest warmth, as also by Allan, who, although now nearly
+recovered from his wounds, had, fortunately for himself, not gained
+sufficient strength to be able to accompany Douglas, either to Homildon
+or in his march into England to join Percy.
+
+The girls were out when he rode up; but, upon their return, both showed
+the greatest pleasure, Jessie being the most demonstrative in her
+welcome.
+
+"It has always been a sore subject with me, Oswald," Allan said, "that
+you should have ridden away in that gallant enterprise to rescue my
+sisters, while I was lying here helpless; and knew, indeed, nought of
+it, until after you had taken them safely to Yardhope.
+
+"Ah! Roger, I am glad to see you again; and to thank you, too, for the
+share you took in it."
+
+"In faith, Master Allan, there are no great thanks due. It was but a
+poor affair, and I had but one opportunity, and that not worth naming,
+of striking a hearty blow. It seems to me that these things are never
+fairly divided. Both in that adventure, and at Homildon, I scarce
+struck a blow; while in that affair in Wales, and at Shrewsbury, there
+was even more fighting than I cared for. I had to be nursed like a
+child after the first, and I am still stiff from the wounds that I got
+in the second.
+
+"There should be reason in such matters. It vexed me sorely that we had
+to ride away from the Bairds, without striking a few good blows in part
+payment of their raid here."
+
+"I am very glad that you did not have to do so," Janet said. "I think
+there was quite enough excitement in it, and especially as we went down
+that rope; though indeed, you are so strong that I felt that I was
+quite safe with you."
+
+Roger laughed.
+
+"I could have carried two of you; and sooth, you did not show your
+confidence at the time, for you held on so tightly to the rope that I
+began to think that we should never get to the bottom."
+
+"You told me to hold tight," Janet said, indignantly.
+
+"Yes, yes, that was natural enough. The difficulty was, that you would
+not let go, and at each knot it was as much as I could do to get you to
+let it slide through your fingers."
+
+"Very well, Master Roger. Then I shall take care not to let you lower
+me down a rope again."
+
+"I trust there will never be the need," Roger laughed; "but indeed,
+although your weight was as nothing, I felt uneasy myself as we went
+down; for I feared that I might grip you too tightly, seeing that I am
+altogether unaccustomed to the handling of girls."
+
+"Well, I suppose, Roger," Jessie said, "that now the wars are over, you
+will be marrying and settling down."
+
+"I don't know how that might be," Roger replied, slowly. "I do not say
+that the matter has never entered my mind; and seeing that I am now
+seven-and-thirty, 'tis one that should not be much longer delayed. I
+mean not that I have ever thought as to who should be the woman, but I
+have thought whether, when the time comes that Sir Oswald takes him a
+wife, it would not be well that I should do the same.
+
+"But I know not how I stand. The abbot of Alnwick has, so far, allowed
+me to go out into the world, to unfrock myself, and to become a
+man-at-arms instead of a peaceful monk; but I have not been dispensed
+from my vows of celibacy and, were I to marry, the matter might be
+taken up by the Church, and I might be put to many and sore penances,
+and punishments, for the breach of them."
+
+The others all laughed at the seriousness with which Roger had answered
+the girl's jesting remark.
+
+"It is a matter that I have never thought of before, Roger," Oswald
+said; "but assuredly it would, as you say, be fitting and right that,
+when I take a mistress, you should do so also--like master like man,
+you know. Since your thoughts have been turned that way, I will see the
+abbot, next time I go to Alnwick, and lay the case before him. Of a
+truth you have made a most excellent man-at-arms, and 'tis equally
+certain that you were an exceedingly bad monk. It would doubtless be
+well that you should obtain a complete absolution from your vows; for
+although I am sure that the good abbot regards you, now, as altogether
+beyond his control, and would take no steps against you were he to hear
+of your marriage, it might not be so in the case of his successor. He
+is an old man, and the next abbot may be of a very different character;
+and, looking through the books of the convent, he might say, 'What has
+become of Brother Roger? I see no record of his death.'
+
+"Then, pushing matters further, he might discover your backsliding, and
+might summon you before him, and there is no saying what pains and
+penalties he might inflict upon you."
+
+Roger moved uneasily in his seat.
+
+"Do not speak of such a thing, I pray you, master--imprisonment in a
+cell, flagellation, nay, even worse might befall me at the hands of a
+rigorous abbot; for in truth, nought could well be more serious than
+the offences that I have already committed; and he might hold that,
+even though the present abbot had been backward in taking notice of the
+matter, this in no way would absolve him from doing his duty.
+
+"And indeed, as it is, it was to Hotspur that he gave permission for me
+to go out into the world. Hotspur is dead, and there is nought but my
+own word in the matter."
+
+"That, at any rate, I can put right, Roger, by going myself to the
+abbot; and learning, from his lips, that he did give that permission to
+Hotspur. Moreover, I received it from Hotspur's own lips. Still, it
+would be useful for me to obtain, from the abbot, a letter giving full
+absolution for all offences committed, up to the present time."
+
+"That would be a great thing," Roger said eagerly. "'Tis a matter that
+I have often turned over in my mind, when on a long day's ride, and I
+have thought of what might happen were a new man to become abbot of
+Alnwick; but such an absolution would assuredly go for much. No one can
+doubt, more especially an abbot, that absolution by an abbot is most
+effectual; and that the offences committed before it are wholly wiped
+out, and cannot be revived."
+
+"It would be best to obtain total absolution from your vows. Can the
+abbot grant that, Roger?"
+
+"'Tis a moot question," Roger replied. "Many affirm that he can do so,
+and assuredly many abbots have exercised that power; others again hold
+that, although abbots cannot lawfully do so, bishops can; while a few
+maintain that even these are incapable, and that nothing short of the
+absolution by the Holy Father himself is of avail. Still, whatever be
+the true state of things, I should be well satisfied with an abbot's
+absolution, and still more so by a bishop's; for though, were a great
+prince concerned, someone interested might contest the matter, none
+would be likely to do so in the case of a man-at-arms or an esquire."
+
+"Very well, Roger. Then I will endeavour to obtain a full absolution
+from your vows, by the abbot; and should he decline to give them I
+will, when I next see the earl, pray him, in consideration of the good
+services that you have rendered, to obtain it for you from the bishop."
+
+"And you have not yourself thought of marrying, Oswald?" Adam Armstrong
+said.
+
+"Nay, Uncle. I came of age but a few days since, and it will be time to
+think of taking me a wife four or five years hence. So, until these
+troubles have wholly ceased, it were better, methinks, for a knight to
+remain unwed than to take a wife, with the risk of leaving her a young
+widow."
+
+"In that case, Oswald, methinks there would be little marrying in
+Northumberland; for, saving short truces, and these but ill observed,
+there is ever trouble on the border."
+
+"I speak not of that," Oswald replied. "Doubtless we shall always be
+subject to border raids, on both sides, and even to serious wars
+between the two countries; but I speak not of that, but of troubles in
+England. 'Tis natural to fight when Englishmen and Scotchmen meet,
+arrayed in battle; but when Englishmen meet Englishmen, 'tis terrible
+indeed; and though the slaughter at Shrewsbury was great beyond
+measure, who yet can say that the fire is extinguished? As long as one
+may be called to arms again, by the earl, it is, in good sooth, better
+to remain single than to have to ride to the wars, leaving the young
+wife behind."
+
+"Spoken very wisely and well, Oswald," Adam Armstrong laughed. "'Tis
+well to argue as to policy; but such arguments go for nought, as soon
+as a man's heart is fixed on any particular woman."
+
+"It may be so, Uncle; but as I have never thought of marriage, I am
+able to look at the matter dispassionately."
+
+"Ah! Well, the time will come, Oswald, and you will then speedily come
+to consider that there are other things than the reasonableness of
+waiting to be considered.
+
+"By the way, I trust that, should England invade Scotland again by the
+valley of the Esk, you will not forget our debt to the Bairds. Though I
+lamented the disaster at Homildon, where many of my friends and
+acquaintances fell; I could not but feel that the death of William
+Baird, and so many of his kin, was a relief, indeed, to me. I have
+strengthened my hold, as you see, but I should have been ever obliged
+to remain on guard. The Bairds never forgive nor forget, and the manner
+in which they were tricked out of their captives must have discomposed
+them sorely, and rankled in their minds; and, sooner or later, they
+would have tried to wipe out the memory in blood. I wonder that they
+had not done it before Homildon, but doubtless they had other matters
+in hand.
+
+"Now I can live in peace; but I, too, have not forgotten the injuries I
+have suffered at their hands, and should rejoice, greatly, did I hear
+that their stronghold had been levelled to the ground."
+
+"I hope that it will be long before our kings march against Scotland
+again. The ill success of all our efforts should have taught them that,
+do what they will, they will never conquer Scotland; and Henry is not
+likely to court another failure, such as he met with two years since.
+'Tis not like the wars with the Welsh. They are a different people,
+speaking in a different language, while we and the lowland Scots are of
+one blood and one language--scarce a noble in Scotland who is not of
+Norman descent--and a quarrel between us seems, to me, almost as bad as
+a civil war."
+
+"I hope that all will come to think so, some day, Oswald; but as long
+as the two kingdoms stand apart, with various interests and different
+alliances, it will hardly be likely that there will be a permanent
+peace between them."
+
+"That is so," Oswald agreed. "'Tis the part that Scotland plays by her
+alliance with France, and the aid she gives her by always choosing the
+time when we are fighting there to fall upon us, that keeps the trouble
+afoot. If Scotland would hold herself aloof from France, I see no
+reason why we should interfere with her in any way."
+
+"No good has ever come to us from such alliance. No French army has
+ever gone to Scotland, to aid her when pressed by Englishmen. France
+uses Scotland but as a cat's paw, with which to annoy and weaken
+England."
+
+"That may be so; but you must remember that France does aid Scotland,
+when she keeps the main army of England busily occupied."
+
+"Yes; but she does not fight England with that intent. She simply
+fights to gain back the provinces she has lost, and is ready to make
+peace when it suits, wholly regardless of the interest of Scotland."
+
+"France is never to be trusted," Oswald said. "Glendower made a treaty
+with her, a few years ago, and what good has it done to him? Why, when
+he needed her aid the most, she had made a truce with England. 'Tis
+whispered that she made a treaty with the Percys, and what good came of
+it? She is ever ready to make treaties, but never observes them, unless
+it is to her plain interest to do so."
+
+"I suppose it is with nations as it is with individuals, Oswald.
+Selfishness has a large share in the management of affairs. France,
+being a powerful country, is glad enough, when pressed by the English,
+to have diversions made for her, whether in Scotland or Ireland; but
+she has no idea of putting herself out, for the sake of her allies,
+when she desires peace with England."
+
+France had indeed been quick to take advantage of the trouble caused to
+Henry by the rising in the north. While he was gathering his army,
+although there was a truce with England, a French expedition, in which
+many of the royal princes took part, had invaded Guienne, captured
+several castles held by the English adherents, made frequent descents
+on our coast, plundered every ship they met with, captured a whole
+fleet of merchantmen, taken the islands of Guernsey and Jersey and,
+while Henry was fighting at Shrewsbury, landed near Plymouth and
+plundered the whole country round. On the news reaching them of the
+result of the battle of Shrewsbury, they at once burned Plymouth to the
+ground, and then, re-embarking, sailed for France. All remonstrances on
+the part of Henry were met by declarations that these raids were
+carried on without the knowledge of the French king, and were greatly
+against his inclinations, which were wholly for the strictest
+observance of the truce.
+
+Nevertheless, a few months later, the Count of Saint Pol landed a force
+in the Isle of Wight; but the people of the island rose in arms, and
+defeated the invaders, who sailed hastily away.
+
+Although, having other matters in hand, Henry professed to believe the
+French king's assurances; the sailors and ship masters were in no way
+content to suffer unresistingly, and the men of the seaports of the
+east coast, and of Plymouth and Fowey, banded themselves together, and
+carried on war on their own account; capturing several fleets of ships,
+loaded with wine and other valuable commodities; burning the coast
+towns; and making several raids into the interior of France, and
+carrying off much plunder.
+
+Enraged at this retaliation, the French incited the Flemings, Dutch,
+and Hollanders to cruise against the English; and these, sailing in
+great ships, executed so many atrocities upon English crews and ships
+that, later, Henry himself sent out a fleet, under his second son, who
+executed his commission, effectually destroying ships, burning towns,
+and putting the people to the sword without mercy.
+
+Thus the breaches of the peace by the French recoiled terribly upon
+themselves, and they suffered vastly greater loss than they had
+inflicted upon the English.
+
+From the time when he let slip the opportunities, both of joining
+Hotspur and of falling on the royal army after their victory,
+Glendower's power declined. For a time he continued to capture castles,
+and to carry out raids across the border, but gradually he was driven
+back to his mountain strongholds. His followers lost heart. He became a
+fugitive, and died on the 20th of September, 1415, in the sixty-first
+year of his age, at the house of one of his married daughters, whether
+at Scudamore or Mornington is unknown.
+
+Mortimer died in Harlech Castle, during the time it was besieged by the
+English. It is said that his death was caused by depression and grief
+at the misfortunes that had befallen him.
+
+The Earl of Northumberland, as John Forster had anticipated, raised the
+standard of revolt in 1405, in concert with the Archbishop of York and
+some other nobles; but before he could join these with his forces, they
+had been forced to surrender to the king, who had marched north with a
+great army. The archbishop and some of his associates were executed,
+and the earl, finding himself unable to oppose so great a force, fled
+into Scotland. Alnwick surrendered without resistance, and Warkworth
+after a siege of eight days. Berwick was captured, and its governor and
+several knights executed.
+
+Escaping from Scotland, where he feared that he might be seized and
+surrendered to England, the earl sailed to Wales, and for some little
+time stayed with Glendower; then he crossed to the Continent, and in
+1408 landed in Yorkshire and again raised his standard. The sheriff of
+the county called out the levies, and attacked him at Branham Moor,
+where the old earl was killed and his followers defeated.
+
+In 1415 the king, being on the eve of war with France, and anxious to
+obtain the goodwill and support of the Northumbrians, restored
+Hotspur's son, who had been for years a fugitive in Scotland, to the
+estates and honours of his father and grandfather.
+
+Fortunate it was, for Oswald, that the capture of his fellow
+conspirators caused the earl to retreat, in 1405, without giving
+battle. The young knight had, at his summons, called out his tenants,
+and with them and his retainers had joined Percy. As soon as the latter
+decided to fly to Scotland, his force scattered, and Oswald returned
+home with his following.
+
+He took no part in the final rising. Before this took place he had
+married his cousin, Janet. His father lived to be present at the
+wedding, but died the following year; and, in accordance with his
+wishes, Oswald took up his abode at Yardhope, which he largely added
+to, and strongly fortified. Here his mother lived with him until her
+death, ten years later.
+
+Oswald offered to Roger the command of his castle at Stoubes, but the
+burly squire preferred staying at Yardhope, with his master. He himself
+had taken a wife, the daughter of one of the principal tenants on the
+estate, on the same day that Oswald married Janet.
+
+His uncle, after the surrender of Alnwick, lived at Yardhope until, at
+the return of Hotspur's son as Earl of Northumberland, he resumed his
+old position as captain of the garrison, and maintained it until his
+death.
+
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #19070 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19070)